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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54519 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54519)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Observations and Reflections Made in the
-Course of a Journey through France, Ital, by Hester Lynch Piozzi
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Observations and Reflections Made in the Course of a Journey through France, Italy, and Germany, Vol. II (of II)
-
-Author: Hester Lynch Piozzi
-
-Release Date: April 9, 2017 [EBook #54519]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OBSERVATIONS AND REFLECTIONS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Robert Connal and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by the
-Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica) at
-http://gallica.bnf.fr)
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note: Mrs. Piozzi’s own manner of writing has been
-retained, including spelling and grammar that is inconsistent and
-perhaps unfamiliar to the modern reader.
-
-
-
-
-
- OBSERVATIONS AND REFLECTIONS
- MADE IN THE COURSE OF A
- JOURNEY
- THROUGH
- _FRANCE, ITALY, AND GERMANY._
-
- By HESTER LYNCH PIOZZI.
-
- IN TWO VOLUMES.
- VOL. II.
-
- LONDON:
- Printed for A. STRAHAN; and T. CADELL in the Strand.
- M DCC LXXXIX.
-
-
-
-
-OBSERVATIONS AND REFLECTIONS
-
-MADE IN A JOURNEY THROUGH
-
-France, Italy, and Germany.
-
-
-
-
-NAPLES.
-
-
-On the tenth day of this month we arrived early at Naples, for I think
-it was about two o’clock in the morning; and sure the providence of God
-preserved us, for never was such weather seen by me since I came into the
-world; thunder, lightning, storm at sea, rain and wind, contending for
-mastery, and combining to extinguish the torches bought to light us the
-last stage: Vesuvius, vomiting fire, and pouring torrents of red hot lava
-down its sides, was the only object visible; and _that_ we saw plainly in
-the afternoon thirty miles off, where I asked a Franciscan friar, If it
-was the famous volcano? “Yes,” replied he, “that’s our mountain, which
-throws up money for us, by calling foreigners to see the extraordinary
-effects of so surprising a phænomenon.” The weather was quiet then, and
-we had no notion of passing such a horrible night; but an hour after
-dark, a storm came on, which was really dreadful to endure; or even look
-upon: the blue lightning, whose colour shewed the nature of the original
-minerals from which she drew her existence, shone round us in a broad
-expanse from time to time, and sudden darkness followed in an instant:
-no object then but the fiery river could be seen, till another flash
-discovered the waves tossing and breaking, at a height I never saw before.
-
-Nothing sure was ever more sublime or awful than our entrance into Naples
-at the dead hour we arrived, when not a whisper was to be heard in the
-streets, and not a glimpse of light was left to guide us, except the
-small lamp hung now and then at a high window before a favourite image of
-the Virgin.
-
-My poor maid had by this time nearly lost her wits with terror, and the
-French valet, crushed with fatigue, and covered with rain and sea-spray,
-had just life enough left to exclaim--“_Ah, Madame! il me semble que nous
-sommes venus icy exprès pour voir la fin du monde_[1].”
-
-The Ville de Londres inn was full, and could not accommodate our family;
-but calling up the people of the Crocelle, we obtained a noble apartment,
-the windows of which look full upon the celebrated bay which washes the
-wall at our door. Caprea lies opposite the drawing-room or gallery,
-which is magnificent; and my bed-chamber commands a complete view of the
-mountain, which I value more, and which called me the first night twenty
-times away from sleep and supper, though never so in want of both as at
-that moment surely.
-
-Such were my first impressions of this wonderful metropolis, of which I
-had been always reading summer descriptions, and had regarded somehow as
-an Hesperian garden, an earthly paradise, where delicacy and softness
-subdued every danger, and general sweetness captivated every sense;--nor
-have I any reason yet to say it will not still prove so, for though wet,
-and weary, and hungry, we wanted no fire, and found only inconvenience
-from that they lighted on our arrival. It was the fashion at Florence
-to struggle for a Terreno, but here we are all perched up one hundred
-and forty two steps from the level of the land or sea; large balconies,
-apparently well secured, give me every enjoyment of a prospect, which
-no repetition can render tedious: and here we have agreed to stay till
-Spring, which, I trust, will come out in this country as soon as the new
-year calls it.
-
-Our eagerness to see sights has been repressed at Naples only by finding
-every thing a sight; one need not stir out to look for wonders sure,
-while this amazing mountain continues to exhibit such various scenes of
-sublimity and beauty at exactly the distance one would chuse to observe
-it from; a distance which almost admits examination, and certainly
-excludes immediate fear. When in the silent night, however, one listens
-to its groaning; while hollow sighs, as of gigantic sorrow, are often
-heard distinctly in my apartment; nothing can surpass one’s sensations
-of amazement, except the consciousness that custom will abate their
-keenness: I have not, however, yet learned to lie quiet, when columns
-of flame, high as the mountain’s self, shoot from its crater into the
-clear atmosphere with a loud and violent noise; nor shall I ever forget
-the scene it presented one day to my astonished eyes, while a thick
-cloud, charged heavily with electric matter, passing over, met the fiery
-explosion by mere chance, and went off in such a manner as effectually
-baffles all verbal description, and lasted too short a time for a painter
-to seize the moment, and imitate its very strange effect. Monsieur de
-Vollaire, however, a native of France, long resident in this city, has
-obtained, by perpetual observation, a power of representing Vesuvius
-without that black shadow, which others have thought necessary to
-increase the contrast, but which greatly takes away all resemblance of
-its original. Upon reflection it appears to me, that the men most famous
-at London and Paris for performing tricks with fire have been always
-Italians in my time, and commonly Neapolitans; no wonder, I should think,
-Naples would produce prodigious connoisseurs in this way; we have almost
-perpetual lightning of various colours, according to the soil from whence
-the vapours are exhaled; sometimes of a pale straw or lemon colour, often
-white like artificial flame produced by camphor, but oftenest blue,
-bright as the rays emitted through the coloured liquors set in the window
-of a chemist’s shop in London--and with such thunder!!--“For God’s sake,
-Sir,” said I to some of them, “is there no danger of the ships in the
-harbour here catching fire? why we should all fly up in the air directly,
-if once these flashes should communicate to the room where any of the
-vessels keep their powder.”--“Gunpowder, Madam!” replies the man, amazed;
-“why if St. Peter and St. Paul came here with gunpowder on board, we
-should soon drive them out again: don’t you know,” added he, “that every
-ship discharges her contents at such a place (naming it), and never comes
-into our port with a grain on board?”
-
-The palaces and churches have no share in one’s admiration at Naples,
-who scorns to depend on man, however mighty, however skilful, for _her_
-ornaments; while Heaven has bestowed on her and her _contorni_ all that
-can excite astonishment, all that can impress awe. We have spent three or
-four days upon Pozzuoli and its environs; its cavern scooped originally
-by nature’s hand, assisted by the armies of Cocceius Nerva--ever
-tremendous, ever gloomy grotto!--which leads to the road that shews you
-Ischia, an old volcano, now an island apparently rent asunder by an
-earthquake, the division too plain to beg assistance from philosophy:
-this is commonly called the _Grotto di Posilippo_ though; you pass
-through it to go to every place; not without flambeaux, if you would go
-safely, and avoid the necessity the poor are under, who, driving their
-carts through the subterranean passage, cry as they meet each other, to
-avoid jostling, _alla montagna_, or _alla marina_, _keep to the rock
-side_, or _keep to the sea side_. It is at the right hand, awhile before
-you enter this cavern, that climbing up among a heap of bushes, you find
-a hollow place, and there go down again--it is the tomb of Virgil; and,
-for other antiquities, I recollect nothing shewed me when at Rome that
-gave me as complete an idea how things were really carried on in former
-days, as does the temple of _Shor Apis_ at Pozzuoli, where the area is
-exactly all it ever was; the ring remains where the victim was fastened
-to; the priests apartments, lavatories, &c. the drains for carrying the
-beast’s blood away, all yet remains as perfect as it is possible. The
-end of Caligula’s bridge too, but that they say is not his bridge, but a
-mole built by some succeeding emperor--a madder or a wickeder it could
-not be--though here Nero bathed, and here he buried his mother Agrippina.
-Here are the centum camera, the prisons employed by that prince for the
-cruellest of purposes; and here are his country palaces reserved for the
-most odious ones: here effeminacy learned to subsist without delicacy or
-shame, hence honour was excluded by rapacity, and conscience stupefied by
-constant inebriation: here brainsick folly put nature and common sense
-upon the rack--Caligula in madness courted the moon to his embraces--and
-Sylla, satiated with blood, retired, and gave a premature banquet to
-those worms he had so often fed with the flesh of innocence: here dwelt
-depravity in various shapes, and here Pandora’s chambers left scarcely a
-_Hope_ at the bottom that better times should come:--who can write prose
-however in such places!--let the impossibility of expressing my thoughts
-any other way excuse the following
-
- VERSES.
-
- I.
-
- First of Achelous’ blood,
- Fairest daughter of the flood,
- Queen of the Sicilian sea,
- Beauteous, bright Parthenope!
- Syren sweet, whose magic force
- Stops the swiftest in his course;
- Wisdom’s self, when most severe,
- Longs to lend a list’ning ear,
- Gently dips the fearful oar,
- Trembling eyes the tempting shore,
- And sighing quits th’ enervate coast,
- With only half his virtue lost.
-
- II.
-
- Let thy warm, thy wond’rous clime,
- Animate my artless rhyme,
- Whilst alternate round me rise
- Terror, pleasure, and surprise.--
- Here th’ astonish’d soul surveys
- Dread Vesuvius’ awful blaze,
- Smoke that to the sky aspires,
- Heavy hail of solid fires,
- Flames the fruitful fields o’erflowing,
- Ocean with the reflex glowing;
- Thunder, whose redoubled sound
- Echoes o’er the vaulted ground!--
- Such thy glories, such the gloom
- That conceals thy secret tomb,
- Sov’reign of this enchanted sea,
- Where sunk thy charms, Parthenope.
-
- III.
-
- Now by the glimm’ring torch’s ray
- I tread Pozzuoli’s cavern’d way--
- Hollow grot! that might beseem
- Th’ Ætnean cyclop, Polypheme:
- And here the bat at noonday ’bides,
- And here the houseless beggar hides,
- While the holy hermit’s voice
- Glads me with accustom’d noise.
- Now I trace, or trav’llers err,
- Modest Maro’s sepulchre,
- Where nature, sure of his intent,
- Is studious to conceal
- That eminence he always meant
- We should not see but feel.
- While Sannazarius from the steep
- Views, well pleas’d, the fertile deep
- Give life to them that seize the scaly fry,
- And to their poet--_immortality_.
-
- IV.
-
- Next beauteous Baia’s warm remains invite
- To Nero’s stoves my wond’ring sight;
- Where palaces and domes destroy’d
- Leave a flat unwholesome void:
- Where underneath the cooling wave,
- Ordain’d pollution’s fav’rite spot to lave,
- Now hardly heaves the stifled sigh
- Hot, hydropic luxury.
- Yet, chas’d by Heav’n’s correcting hand,
- Tho’ various crimes have fled the land;
- Tho’ brutish vice, tyrannic pow’r,
- No longer tread the trembling shore,
- Or taint the ambient air;
- By destiny’s kind care arrang’d,
- Th’ inhabitants are scarcely chang’d;
- For birds obscene, and beasts of prey,
- That seek the night and shun the day,
- Still find a dwelling there.
-
- V.
-
- If then beneath the deep profound
- Retires unseen the slipp’ry ground;
- If melted metals pour’d from high
- A verdant mountain grows by time,
- Where frisking kids can browze and climb,
- And softer scenes supply:
- Let us who view the varying scene,
- And tread th’ instructive paths between,
- See famish’d Time his fav’rite sons devour,
- Fix’d for an age--then swallow’d in an hour;
- Let us at least be early wise,
- And forward walk with heav’n-fix’d eyes,
- Each flow’ry isle avoid, each precipice despise;
- Till, spite of pleasure, fear, or pain,
- Eternity’s firm coast we gain,
- Whence looking back with alter’d eye,
- These fleeting phantoms we’ll descry,
- And find alike the song and theme
- Was but--an empty, airy dream.
-
-When one has exhausted all the ideas presented to the mind by the sight
-of Monte Nuovo, made in one night by the eruption of Solfa Terra, now
-sunk into itself and almost extinguished; by the lake Avernus; by the
-Phlegræan fields, where Jupiter killed the giants, with such thunderbolts
-as fell about our ears the other night I trust, and buried one of them
-alive under mount Ætna; when one has seen the Sybil’s grott, and the
-Elysian plains, and every seat of fable and of verse; when one has run
-about repeating Virgil’s verses and Claudian’s by turns, and handled the
-hot sand under the cool waves of Baia; when one has seen Cicero’s villa
-and Diana’s temple, and talked about antiquities till one is afraid of
-one’s own pedantry, and tired of every one’s else; it is almost time
-to recollect realities of more near interest to such of us as are not
-ashamed of being Christians, and to remember that it was at Pozzuoli St.
-Paul arrived after the storms he met with in these seas. The wind is
-still called here _Sieuroc_, o sia _lo vento Greco_; and their manner
-of pronouncing it led me to think it might possibly be that called in
-Scripture _Euroc_lydon, abbreviated by that grammatical figure, which
-lops off the concluding syllables. The old Pastor Patrobas too, who
-received and entertained the Apostle here, lies interred under the altar
-of an old church at Pozzuoli, made out of the remains of a temple to
-Jupiter, whose pillars are in good preservation: I was earnest to see
-the place at least, as every thing named in the New Testament is of true
-importance, but one meets few people of the same taste: for Romanists
-take most delight in venerating traditionary heroes, and Calvinists,
-perhaps too easily disgusted, desire to venerate no heroes at all.
-
-Some curious inscriptions here, to me not legible, shew how this poor
-country has been overwhelmed by tyrants, earthquakes, Saracens! not
-to mention the Goths and Vandals, who however left no traces _but_
-desolation: while, as the prophet Joel says, “_The ground was as the
-garden of Eden before them, and behind them a desolate wilderness_.”
-
-These Mahometan invaders, less savage, but not less cruel, afforded at
-least an unwilling shelter in that which is now their capital, for the
-wretched remains of literature. To their misty envelopement of science,
-fatigued with struggling against perpetual suffocation, succeeded
-imposture, barbarism, and credulity; with superstition at their head, who
-still keeps her footing in this country: and inspires such veneration for
-St. Januarius, his name, his blood, his statue, &c. that the Neapolitans,
-who are famous for blasphemous oaths, and a facility of taking the most
-sacred words into their mouths on every, and I may say, on _no_ occasion,
-are never heard to repeat _his_ name without pulling off their hat, or
-making some reverential sign of worship at the moment. And I have seen
-Italians from other states greatly shocked at the grossness of these
-their unenlightened neighbours, particularly the half-Indian custom of
-burning figures upon their skins with gunpowder: these figures, large,
-and oddly displayed too, according to the coarse notions of the wearer.
-
-As the weather is exceedingly warm, and there is little need of clothing
-for comfort, our Lazaroni have small care about appearances, and go
-with a vast deal of their persons uncovered, except by these strange
-ornaments. The man who rows you about this lovely bay, has perhaps the
-angel Raphael, or the blessed Virgin Mary, delineated on one brawny
-sun-burnt leg, the saint of the town upon the other: his arms represent
-the Glory, or the seven spirits of God, or some strange things, while a
-brass medal hangs from his neck, expressive of his favourite martyr: whom
-they confidently affirm is so madly venerated by these poor uninstructed
-mortals, that when the mountain burns, or any great disaster threatens
-them, they beg of our Saviour to speak to St. Januarius in their behalf,
-and intreat him not to refuse them his assistance. Now though all this
-was told me by friends of the Romish persuasion; and told me too with a
-just horror of the superstitious folly; I think my remarks and inferences
-were not agreeable to them, when expressing my notion that it was only
-a relick of the adoration originally paid to Janus in Italy, where the
-ground yielding up its frost to the soft breath of the new year, is not
-ill-typified by the liquefaction of the blood; a ceremony which has
-succeeded to various Pagan ones celebrated by Ovid in the first book
-of his Fasti. We know from history too, that perfumes were offered in
-_January_ always, to signify the renovation of _sweets_; and this was
-so necessary, that I think Tacitus tells us Thrasea was first impeached
-for absence at the time of the new year, when in _Janus_’s presence, &c.
-good wishes were formed for the Emperor’s felicity; and no word of ill
-omen was to be pronounced.--_Cautum erat apud Romanos ne quod mali ominis
-verbum calendis_ Januariis _efferretur_; says Pliny: and the _strenæ_
-or new-years gifts, called now by the French “les _etrennes_,” and
-practised by Lutherans as well as Romanists, is the self-same veneration
-of old _Janus_, if fairly traced up to Tatius King of the Sabines, who
-sought a laurel bough plucked from the grove of the goddess _Strenia_, or
-_Strenua_, and presented it to his favourites on the first of _January_,
-from whence the custom arose; and Symmachus, in his tenth book,
-twenty-eighth epistle, mentions it clearly when writing to the Emperors
-Theodosius and Arcadius--“Strenuarum _usus adolevit auctoritate Tatii
-regis, qui verbenas felicis arboris ex luco Strenuæ anni_.”
-
-Octavius Cæsar took the name of Augustus on the first of January in
-Janus’s temple, by Plancus’s advice, as a lucky day; and I suppose our
-new-year’s ode, sung before the King of England, may be derived from
-the same source. The old Fathers of the Church declaimed aloud against
-the custom of new-years gifts, because they considered them as of Pagan
-original. So much for _Les Etrennes_.
-
-As to _St. Januarius_, there certainly was a martyr of that name at
-Naples, and to him was transferred much of the veneration originally
-bestowed on the deity from whom he was probably named. One need not
-however wander round the world with Banks and Solander, or stare so at
-the accounts given us in Cook’s Voyages of _tattowed Indians_, when
-Naples will shew one the effects of a like operation, very _very_ little
-better executed, on the broad shoulders of numberless Lazaroni; and of
-this there is no need to examine books for information, he who runs over
-the Chiaja may read in large characters the gross superstition of the
-Napolitani, who have no inclination to lose their old classical character
-for laziness--
-
- Et in otia natam
- Parthenopen;
-
-says Ovid. I wonder however whether our people would work much surrounded
-by similar circumstances; I fancy not: Englishmen, poor fellows! must
-either work or starve; these folks want for nothing: a house would be an
-inconvenience to them; they like to sleep out of doors, and it is plain
-they have small care for clothing, as many who possess decent habiliments
-enough, I speak of the Lazaroni, throw almost all off till some holiday,
-or time of gala, and sit by the sea-side playing at moro with their
-fingers.
-
-A Florentine nobleman told me once, that he asked one of these fellows to
-carry his portmanteau for him, and offered him a _carline_, no small sum
-certainly to a Neapolitan, and rather more in proportion than an English
-shilling; he had not twenty yards to go with it: “_Are you hungry,
-Master?_” cries the fellow. “_No_,” replied Count Manucci, “_but what of
-that?_”--“_Why then no more am I_:” was the answer, “_and it is too hot
-weather to carry burthens_:” so turned about upon the other side, and lay
-still.
-
-This class of people, amounting to a number that terrifies one but to
-think on, some say sixty thousand souls, and experience confirms no less,
-give the city an air of gaiety and cheerfulness, and one cannot help
-honestly rejoicing in. The Strada del Toledo is one continual crowd:
-nothing can exceed the confusion to a walker, and here are little gigs
-drawn by one horse, which, without any bit in his mouth, but a string
-tied round his nose, tears along with inconceivable rapidity a small
-narrow gilt chair, set between the two wheels, and no spring to it, nor
-any thing else which can add to the weight; and this flying car is a kind
-of _fiacre_ you pay so much for a drive in, I forget the sum.
-
-Horses are particularly handsome in this town, not so large as at
-Milan, but very beautiful and spirited; the cream-coloured creatures,
-such as draw our king’s state coach, are a common breed here, and shine
-like sattin: here are some too of a shining silver white, wonderfully
-elegant; and the ladies upon the Corso exhibit a variety scarcely
-credible in the colour of their cattle which draw them: but the coaches,
-harness, trappings, &c. are vastly inferior to the Milanese, whose
-liveries are often splendid; whereas the four or five ill-dressed
-strange-looking fellows that disgrace the Neapolitan equipages seem to
-be valued only for their number, and have very often much the air of Sir
-John Falstaff’s recruits.
-
-Yesterday however shewed me what I knew not had existed--a skew-ball or
-pye-balled ass, eminently well-proportioned, coated like a racer in an
-English stud, sixteen hands and a half high, his colour bay and white
-in large patches, and his temper, as the proprietor told me, singularly
-docile and gentle. I have longed perhaps to purchase few things in my
-life more earnestly than this beautiful and useful animal, which I might
-have had too for two pounds fifteen shillings English, but dared not,
-lest like Dogberry I should have been written down for an ass by my merry
-country folks, who, I remember, could not let the Queen of England
-herself possess in peace a creature of the same kind, but handsomer
-still, and from a still hotter climate, called the Zebra.
-
-Apropos to quadrupeds, when Portia, in the Merchant of Venice, enumerates
-her lovers, she names the Neapolitan prince first; who, she says, does
-nothing, for his part, but talk of his horse, and makes it his greatest
-boast that he can shoe him himself. This is almost literally true of a
-nobleman here; and they really do not throw their pains away; for it is
-surprising to see what command they have their cattle in, though bits are
-scarcely used among them.
-
-The coat armour of Naples consists of an unbridled horse; and by what I
-can make out of their character, they much resemble him;
-
- Qualis ubi abruptis fugit præsæpia vinclis
- Tandem liber æquus, &c. &c. &c.[2];
-
-generous and gay; headstrong and violent in their disposition; easy to
-turn, but difficult to stop. No authority is respected by them when some
-strong passion animates them to fury: yet lazily quiet, and unwilling
-to stir till accident rouses them to terror, or rage urges them forward
-to incredible exertions of suddenly-bestowed strength. In the eruption
-of 1779, their fears and superstitions rose to such a height, that they
-seized the French ambassador upon the bridge, tore him almost out of his
-carriage as he fled from Portici, and was met by them upon the Ponte
-della Maddalena, where they threatened him with instant death if he did
-not get out of his carriage, and prostrating himself before the statue
-of St. Januarius, which stands there, intreat his protection for the
-city. All this, however, Mons. le Comte de Clermont D’Amboise did not
-comprehend a word of; but taking all the money out of his pocket, threw
-it down, happily for him, at the feet of the figure, and pacified them at
-once, gaining time by those means to escape their vengeance.
-
-It was, I think, upon some other occasion that Sir William Hamilton’s
-book relates their unworthy treatment of the venerable Archbishop, who
-refused them the relicks with which they had no doubt of saving the
-menaced town; but every time Vesuvius burns with danger to the city, they
-scruple not to insult their Sovereign as he flies from it; throwing large
-stones after his chariot, guards, &c.; making the insurrection, it is
-sure to occasion, more perilous, if possible, than the volcano itself.
-And last night when _La Montagna fu cattiva_[3], as their expression was,
-our Laquais de Place observed that it might possibly be because so many
-hereticks and unbelievers had been up it the day before. “Oh! let us,” as
-King David wisely chose, “fall into the hands of God--not into those of
-man.”
-
-I wished exceedingly to purchase here the genuine account of
-Massaniello’s far-famed sedition and revolt, more dreadful in a
-certain way than any of the earthquakes which have at different times
-shaken this hollow-founded country. But my friends here tell me it was
-suppressed, and burned by the hands of the common executioner, with many
-chastisements beside bestowed upon the writer, who tried to escape, but
-found it more prudent to submit to justice.
-
-Thomas Agnello was the unluckily-adapted name of the mad fisherman who
-headed the mob on that truly memorable occasion: but it is not an unusual
-thing here to cut off the first syllable, and by the figure aphæresis
-alter the appellation entirely. By that device of dropping the _to_, he
-has been called Massaniello; and this is one of their methods to render
-the patois of Naples as unintelligible to us, as if we had never seen
-Italy till now; and one is above all things tormented with their way
-of pronouncing names. Here are Don and Donna again at this town as at
-Milan however, because the King of Spain, or _Ré Cattolico_, as these
-people always call him, has still much influence; and they seem to think
-nearly as respectfully of him as of their own immediate sovereign, who
-is however greatly beloved among them; and so he ought to be, for he is
-the representative of them all. He rides and rows, and hunts the wild
-boar, and catches fish in the bay, and sells it in the market, as dear
-as he can too; but gives away the money they pay him for it, and that
-directly: so that no suspicion of meanness, or of any thing worse than a
-little rough merriment can be ever attached to his truly-honest, open,
-undesigning character.
-
-Stories of monarchs seldom give me pleasure, who seldom am persuaded to
-give credit to tales told of persons few people have any access to, and
-whose behaviour towards those few is circumscribed within the laws of
-insipid and dull routine; but this prince lives among his subjects with
-the old Roman idea of a window before his bosom I believe. They know the
-worst of him is that he shoots at the birds, dances with the girls, eats
-macaroni, and helps himself to it with his fingers, and rows against the
-watermen in the bay, till one of them burst out o’bleeding at the nose
-last week, with his uncourtly efforts to outdo the King, who won the
-trifling wager by this accident: conquered, laughed, and leaped on shore
-amidst the acclamations of the populace, who huzzaed him home to the
-palace, from whence he sent double the sum he had won to the waterman’s
-wife and children, with other tokens of kindness. Mean time, while he
-resolves to be happy himself, he is equally determined to make no man
-miserable.
-
-When the Emperor and the Grand Duke talked to him of their new projects
-for reformation in the church, he told them he saw little advantage they
-brought into _their_ states by these new-fangled notions; that when
-he was at Florence and Milan, the deuce a Neapolitan could he find in
-either, while his capital was crowded with refugees from thence; that in
-short they might do _their_ way, but he would do his; that he had not
-now an enemy in the world, public or private; and that he would not make
-himself any for the sake of propagating doctrines he did not understand,
-and would not take the trouble to study: that he should say his prayers
-as he used to do, and had no doubt of their being heard, while he only
-begged blessings on his beloved people. So if these wise brothers-in-law
-would learn of him to enjoy life, instead of shortening it by unnecessary
-cares, he invited them to see him the next morning play a great match at
-tennis.
-
-The truth is, the jolly Neapolitans lead a coarse life, but it is an
-unoppressed one. Never sure was there in any town a greater shew of
-abundance: no settled market in any given place, I think, but every
-third shop full of what the French call so properly _ammunition de
-Bouche_, while whole boars, kids and small calves dangle from a sort of
-neat scaffolding, all with their skins on, and make a pretty appearance.
-Poulterers hang up their animals in the feathers too, not lay them on
-boards plucked, as at London or Venice.
-
-The Strada del Toledo is at least as long as Oxford Road, and straight
-as Bond-street, very wide too, the houses all of stone, and at least
-eight stories high. Over the shops live people of fashion I am told, but
-the persons of particularly high quality have their palaces in other
-parts of the town; which town at last is not a large one, but full as an
-egg: and Mr. Clarke, the antiquarian, who resides here always, informed
-me that the late distresses in Calabria had driven many families to
-Naples this year, beside single wanderers innumerable; which wonderfully
-increased the daily throng one sees passing and repassing. To hear the
-Lazaroni shout and bawl about the streets night and day, one would really
-fancy one’s self in a semi-barbarous nation; and a Milanese officer,
-who has lived long among them, protested that the manners of the great
-corresponded in every respect with the idea given of them by the little.
-His account of female conduct, and that even in the very high ranks,
-was such as reminded me of Queen Oberea’s sincerity, when Sir Joseph
-Banks joked her about Otoroo. It is however observable, and surely very
-praiseworthy, that if the Italians are not ashamed of their crimes,
-neither are they ashamed of their contrition. I saw this very morning an
-odd scene at church, which, though new to _me_, appeared, perhaps from
-its frequent repetition, to strike no one but myself.
-
-A lady with a long white dress, and veiled, came in her carriage, which
-waited for her at the door, with her own arms upon it, and three servants
-better dressed than is common here, followed and put a lighted taper
-in her hand. _En cet état_, as the French say, she moved slowly up the
-church, looking like Jane Shore in the last act, but not so feeble; and
-being arrived at the steps of the high altar, threw herself quite upon
-her face before it, remaining prostrate there at least five minutes, in
-the face of the whole congregation, who, equally to my amazement, neither
-stared nor sneered, neither laughed nor lamented, but minded their own
-private devotions--no mass was saying--till the lady rose, kissed the
-steps, and bathed them with her tears, mingled with sobs of no affected
-or hypocritical penitence I am sure. Retiring afterwards to her own seat,
-where she waited with others the commencement of the sacred office,
-having extinguished her candle, and apparently lighted her heart; I felt
-mine quite penetrated by her behaviour, and fancied her like our first
-parent described by Milton in the same manner:
-
- To confess
- Humbly her faults, and pardon beg; with tears
- Watering the ground, and with her sighs the air
- Frequenting, sent from heart contrite, in sign
- Of sorrow unfeign’d, and humiliation meek.
-
-Let not this story, however, mislead any one to think that more general
-decorum or true devotion can be found in churches of the Romish
-persuasion than in ours--quite the reverse. This burst of penitential
-piety was in itself an indecorous thing; but it is the nature and genius
-of the people not to mind small matters. Dogs are suffered to run about
-and dirty the churches all the time divine service is performing; while
-the crying of babies, and the most indecent methods taken by the women
-to pacify them, give one still juster offence. There is no treading for
-spittle and nastiness of one sort or another, in all the churches of
-Italy, whose inhabitants allow the filthiness of Naples, but endeavour to
-justify the disorders of other cities; though I do believe nothing ever
-equalled the Chiesa de Cavalieri at Pisa, in any Christian land. Santa
-Giustina at Padua, the Redentore at Venice, St. Peter’s at Rome, and some
-of the least frequented churches at Milan, are exceptions; they are kept
-very clean, and do not, by the scandalous neglect of those appointed to
-keep them, disgrace the beauty of their buildings.
-
-Here has, however, been a dreadful accident which puts such slight
-considerations out of one’s head. A Friar has killed a woman in the
-church just by the Crocelle inn, for having refused him favours he
-suspected she had granted to another. No step is taken though towards
-punishing the murderer, because he is _religioso, è di più cavaliere_.
-What a miracle that more such outrages are not daily committed in
-a country where profession of sanctity, and real high birth, are
-protections from law and justice! Surely nothing but perfect sobriety and
-great goodness of disposition can be alleged as a reason why worse is not
-done every day. I said so to a gentleman just now, who assured me the
-criminal would not escape very severe castigation; and that perhaps the
-convent would inflict such severities upon that gentleman as would amply
-supply the want of activity in the exertion of civil power.
-
-It is a stupid thing not to mention the common dress of the ordinary
-women here, which ladies likewise adopt, if they venture out on foot,
-desiring not to be known. Two black silk petticoats then serve entirely
-to conceal their whole figure; as when both are tied round their waist,
-one is suddenly turned up, and as they pull it quick over their heads, a
-loose trimming of narrow black gauze drops over the face, while a hook
-and eye fastens all close under the chin, and gives them an air not
-unlike our country wenches, who throw the gown tail over their heads,
-to protect them from a summer’s shower. The holiday dresses mean time of
-the peasants round Naples, are very rich and cumbersome. One often sees
-a great coarse raw-boned fellow on a Sunday, panting for heat under a
-thick blue velvet coat comically enough; the females in a scarlet cloth
-petticoat, with a broad gold lace at the bottom, a jacket open before,
-but charged with heavy ornaments, and the head not unbecomingly dressed
-with an embroidered handkerchief from Turkey, exactly as one sees them
-represented here in prints, which they sell dear enough, God knows;
-and ask, as I am informed by the purchasers, not twice or thrice, but
-four or five times more than at last they take, as indeed for every
-thing one buys here: One portrait is better, however, than a thousand
-words, when single figures are to be delineated; but of the Grotta del
-Cane, description gives a completer idea than drawing. Both are perhaps
-nearly unnecessary indeed, when speaking of a place so often and so
-accurately described. What surprised me most among the ceremonies of this
-extraordinary place was, that the pent up vapour shut in an excavation
-of the rock, should, upon opening the door, gradually move forwards a
-few yards, but not rise up above a foot from the surface, nor, by what I
-could observe, ever dissipate in air; I think we left it hovering over
-the favourite spot, when the poor cur’s nose had been forcibly held in it
-for a minute or two, but he took care after his recovery to keep a very
-judicious distance. Sporting with animal life is always highly offensive;
-and the fellow’s account that his dog was used to the operation, and
-had already gone through it eight times, that it did him no harm,
-&c. I considered as words used merely to quiet our impatience of the
-experiment, which is infinitely more amusing when tried upon a lighted
-flambeau, extinguishing it most completely in a moment. What connection
-there is between flame and vitality, those who know more of the matter
-than I do, must expound. Certain it is, that many sorts of vapour are
-equally fatal to both; and where fermentation is either going forward,
-or has lately been, people accustomed to such matters always try with a
-candle whether the cask is approachable by man or not; and I once saw
-a terrifying accident arise in a great brewhouse, from the headstrong
-stupidity of a workman who would go down into a vat, the contents of
-which had lately been drawn off, without sending his proper præcursor the
-candle, to enquire if all was safe. The consequence was half expected by
-his companions, who hearing him drop off the steps, and fall flat to the
-bottom, began instantly hooking him up again, but there were no signs
-of life; some ran for their master, others for a surgeon, but we were
-nearest at hand, and recollecting what one had read of the recovery of
-dogs at Naples, by tossing them suddenly into the lake Agnano, we made
-the men carry their patient to the cooler, and plunging him over head
-and ears, restored his life, exactly in the manner of the Grotta del
-Cane experiment, which succeeded so completely in this fellow’s case, I
-remember, that waking after the temporary suspension, we had much ado
-to impress so insensible a mortal with a due sense of the danger his
-rashness had incurred.
-
-But it is time to tell of Herculaneum, Pompeia, and Portici; of a
-theatre, the scene of gaiety and pleasure, overwhelmed by torrents of
-liquid fire! the inhabitants of a whole town surprised by immediate and
-unavoidable destruction! Where that very town indeed was built with the
-lava produced by former eruptions, one would think it scarce possible
-that such calamities could be totally unexpected;--but no matter, life
-must go on, though we all know death is coming;--so the bread was baking
-in their ovens, the meat was smoking on their dishes, some of their
-wine already decanted for use, the rest in large jars (_amphora_), now
-petrified with their contents inside, and fixed to the walls of the
-cellars in which they stand.--How dreadful are the thoughts which such
-a sight suggests! how _very_ horrible the certainty, that such a scene
-may be all acted over again to-morrow; and that we, who to-day are
-spectators, may become spectacles to travellers of a succeeding century,
-who mistaking our bones for those of the Neapolitans, may carry some of
-them to their native country back again perhaps; as it came into my head
-that a French gentleman was doing, when I saw him put a human bone into
-his pocket this morning, and told him I hoped he had got the jaw of a
-Gaulish officer, instead of a Roman soldier, for future reflections to
-energize upon. Of all single objects offered here to one’s contemplation,
-none are more striking than a woman’s foot, the _print_ of her foot I
-mean, taken apparently in the very act of running from the river of
-melted minerals that surrounded her, and which now serves as an intaglio
-to commemorate the misery it caused. Another melancholy proof of what
-needs no confirmation, is the impression of a sick female, known to be
-so from the _stole_ she wore, a drapery peculiar to the sex; her bed,
-converted into a substance like plaster of Paris, still retains the form
-and covering of her who perished quietly upon it, without ever making
-even an effort to escape.
-
-That one of these towns is crushed, or rather buried, under loads of
-heavy lava, and is therefore difficult to disentangle, all have heard;
-that Pompeia is only lightly covered with pumice-stones and ashes, is new
-to nobody; it is in the power, as a Venetian gentleman said angrily, of
-an English hen and chickens to scratch it open in a week, though these
-lazy Neapolitans will leave it not half dislodged, before a new eruption
-swallows all again.
-
-Our visit to Portici was more than equally provoking in the same way; to
-see deposited there all the antiques which are so curious in themselves,
-so _very_ valuable when considered as specimens of ancient art, and of
-the mode of living practised in ancient Rome, kept at a place where I do
-sincerely believe they will be again overwhelmed and confounded among the
-king of Naples’s furniture, to the great torture of future antiquarians,
-and to the disgrace of present insensibility.
-
-The _triclinia_ and _stibadia_ used at supper by the old Romans prove
-the verses which our critics have been working at so long, to have been
-at least well explained by them, and do infinite honour to those who,
-without the advantage of seeing how the utensils were constructed, knew
-perfectly well their way of carrying on life, from their acquaintance
-with a language long since _dead_, and I am sure _buried_ under a heap
-of rubbish heavier and more difficult to remove than all the lava heaped
-on Herculaneum; but it is a source of perpetual wonder, and let me add
-perpetual pleasure too, to know that Cicero, and Virgil, and Horace, if
-alive, would find their writings as well understood, ay and as perfectly
-tasted, by the scholars of Paris and London, as they had ever been by
-their own old literary acquaintance.
-
-The sight of the _curule_ chair was charming, and one thought of old
-Papyrius, his long white beard, and ivory stick with which he reproved
-the insolence of a Gaulish soldier, who, when Brennus entered the city,
-seeing all those venerable senators sitting in a row, took them for
-inanimate figures, and stroked Papyrius’s beard, to feel whether he was
-alive or no. The _curule_ chair was so called from _currus_ a chariot,
-and this we examined had holes bored in it, where it had been fixed to
-the car: I do think there is just such a one in the British Musæum,
-but that did not much engage my attention, so great is the influence
-of locality upon the mind. The way in which they decypher the old MSS.
-here likewise is pretty and curious, and requires infinite patience,
-which as far as they have gone has not been well repaid; the operation
-_laboriosius est quam Sibyllæ folia colligere_[4], to use the words of
-Politian, whose right name I learned at Florence to be _Messer Angelo di
-Monte Pulciano_.
-
-May not, however, a more important consequence than any yet mentioned be
-found deducible from what we have seen this day? for if _Jesus Christ_
-condescended to use the Roman, or commonly adopted custom of supping on
-a _triclinium_ (as it is plain he did by the recumbent posture of St.
-John), when eating the Passover for the last time with his disciples at
-Jerusalem; that sect of Christians called Romanists ought sure to be
-the _last_, not _first_, to exclude from salvation all such of their
-brethren as do not receive the Lord’s Supper precisely in _their way_;
-when nothing can be clearer, from our blessed Saviour’s example, than
-that he thought old forms, if laudable, not necessary or essential to
-the well-performing a devotional rite; seeing that to eat the Passover
-according to original institution, those who communicated were bound to
-take it _standing_, and with a staff in their hands beside as expressive
-of more haste.
-
-The Christmas season here at Naples is very pleasingly observed; the
-Italians are peculiarly ingenious in adorning their shops I think, and
-setting out their wares; every grocer, fruiterer, &c. now mingles orange,
-and lemon, and myrtle leaves, among the goods exposed at his door, as we
-do greens in the churches of England, but with infinitely more taste; and
-this device produces a very fine effect upon the whole, as one drives
-along _la Strada del Toledo_, which all morning looks showy from these
-decorations, and all evening splendid from the profusion of torches,
-flambeaux, &c. that shine with less regularity indeed, but with more
-lustre and greater appearance of expensive gaiety, than our neat, clean,
-steady London lamps. Some odd, pretty, moveable coffee-houses too, or
-lemonade-shops, set on wheels, and adorned, according to the possessor’s
-taste, with gilding, painting, &c. and covered with ices, orgeats, and
-other refreshments, as in emulation each of the other, and in a strange
-variety of shapes and forms too, exquisitely well imagined for the most
-part,--help forward the finery of Naples exceedingly: I have counted
-thirty of these _galante_ shops on each side the street, which, with
-their necessary illuminations, make a brilliant figure by candle-light,
-till twelve o’clock, when all the show is over, and every body put out
-their lights and quietly lie down to rest. Till that hour, however, few
-things can exceed the tumultuous merriment of Naples, while _volantes_,
-or running footmen, dressed like tumblers before a show, precede all
-carriages of distinction, and endeavour to keep the people from being run
-over; yet whilst they are listening to Policinello’s jokes, or to some
-such street orator as Dr. Moore describes with equal truth and humour,
-they often get crushed and killed; yet, as Pope says,
-
- See some strange comfort ev’ry state attend:--
-
-The _Lazaroni_ who has his child run over by the coach of a man of
-quality, has a regular claim upon him for no less than twelve _carlines_
-(about five shillings English); if it is his wife that meets with
-the accident, he gets two _ducats_, live or die; and for the master
-of the family (house he has none) three is the regular compensation;
-and no words pass here about _trifles_. Truth is, human life is lower
-rated in all parts of Italy than with us; they think nothing of an
-individual, but see him perish (excepting by the hand of justice) as a
-cat or dog. A young man fell from our carriage at Milan one evening;
-he was not a servant of ours, but a friend which, after we were gone
-home, the coachman had picked up to go with him to the fireworks which
-were exhibited that night near the _Corso_: there was a crowd and an
-_embarras_, and the fellow tumbled off and died upon the spot, and nobody
-even spoke, or I believe _thought_ about the matter, except one woman,
-who supposed that he had neglected to cross himself when he got up behind.
-
-The works of art here at Naples are neither very numerous nor very
-excellent: I have seen the vaunted present of porcelain intended for
-the king of England, in return for some cannon presented by him to this
-court; and think it more entertaining in its design than admirable as a
-manufacture. Every dish and plate, however, being the portrait as one may
-say of some famous Etruscan vase, or other antique, dug out of the ruins
-of these newly-discovered cities, with an account of its supposed story
-engraved neatly round the figure, makes it interesting and elegant, and
-worthy enough of one prince to accept, and another to bestow.
-
-There is a work of art, however, peculiar to this city, and attempted
-in no other; on which surprising sums of money are lavished by many of
-the inhabitants, who connect or associate to this amusement ideas of
-piety and devotion: the thing when finished is called a _presepio_, and
-is composed in honour of this sacred season, after which all is taken to
-pieces, and arranged after a different manner next year. In many houses
-a room, in some a whole suite of apartments, in others the terrace upon
-the house-top, is dedicated to this very uncommon show; consisting of
-a miniature representation in sycamore wood, properly coloured, of the
-house at Bethlehem, with the blessed Virgin, St. Joseph, and our Saviour
-in the manger, with attendant angels, &c. as in pictures of the nativity;
-the figures are about six inches high, and dressed with the most exact
-propriety. This however, though the principal thing intended to attract
-spectators’ notice, is kept back, so that sometimes I scarcely saw it
-at all; while a general and excellent landscape, with figures of men at
-work, women dressing dinner, a long road in real gravel, with rocks,
-hills, rivers, cattle, camels, every thing that can be imagined, fill
-the other rooms, so happily disposed too for the most part, the light
-introduced so artfully, the perspective kept so surprisingly!--one
-wonders and cries out, it is certainly but a baby-house at best; yet
-managed by people whose heads naturally turned towards architecture and
-design, give them power thus to defy a traveller not to feel delighted
-with the general effect; while if every single figure is not capitally
-executed, and nicely expressed beside, the proprietor is truly miserable,
-and will cut a new cow, or vary the horse’s attitude, against next
-Christmas _coûte qui coûte_: and perhaps I should not have said so
-much about the matter, if there had not been shewn me within this last
-week, _presepios_ which have cost their possessors fifteen hundred or
-two thousand English pounds; and, rather than relinquish or sell them,
-many families have gone to ruin: I have wrote the sums down in letters,
-not figures, for fear of the possibility of a mistake. One of these
-playthings had the journey of the three kings represented in it, and the
-presents were all of real gold and silver finely worked; nothing could be
-better or more livelily finished.--“But, Sir,” said I, “why do you dress
-up one of the Wise Men with a turban and _crescent_, six hundred years
-before the birth of Mahomet, who first put that mark in the forehead of
-his followers? The eastern Magi were not _Turks_; this is a breach of
-_costume_.” My gentleman paused, and thanked me; said he would enquire if
-there was nothing heretical in the objection; and if all was right, it
-should be changed next year without fail.
-
-A young lady here of English parents, just ten years old, asked me,
-very pertinently, “Why this pretty sight was called a _Presepio_?” but
-said she suddenly, answering herself, “I suppose it is because it is
-_preceptive_:” such a mistake was more valuable than knowledge, and gave
-me great esteem of her understanding; the little girl’s name was Zaffory.
-
-The King’s _menagerie_ is neither rich in animals, nor particularly well
-kept: I wonder a man of his character and disposition should not delight
-in possessing a very fine one. The bears however were as tame as lapdogs;
-there was a wolf too, larger than ever I saw a wolf, and an elephant that
-played a hundred tricks at the command of his keeper, little less a
-beast than he; but as Pope says, after Horace,
-
- Let bear or elephant be e’er so white,
- The people sure, the people are the sight.
-
-Let us then tell about the two assemblies, _o sia conversazioni_, where
-one goes in search of amusement as to the rooms of Bath or Tunbridge
-exactly; only that one of these places is devoted to the _nobiltà_, the
-other is called _de’ buoni amici_; and such is the state of subordination
-in this country, that though the great people may come among the little
-ones, and be sure of the grossest adulation, a merchant’s wife, shining
-in diamonds, being obliged to stand up reverentially before the chair of
-a countess, who does her the honour to speak to her; the poor _amici_ are
-totally excluded from the subscription of the nobles, nor dare even to
-return the salutation of a superior, should a good-natured person of that
-rank be tempted, from frequently seeing them at the rooms, to give them a
-kind nod in the street or elsewhere. All this seems comical enough to us,
-and I had much ado to look grave, while a beautiful and well-educated
-wife of a rich banker here, confessed herself not fit company for an
-ignorant mean-looking woman of quality. But though such unintelligible
-doctrines make one for a moment ashamed both of one’s sex and species,
-that lady’s knowledge of various languages, her numerous accomplishments
-in a thousand methods of passing time away with innocent elegance, and a
-sort of studied address never observed in Italy before, gave me infinite
-delight in her society, and daily increased my suspicion that she was a
-foreigner, till nearer intimacy discovered her a German Lutheran, with
-a singular head of thick blonde hair, so unlike those I see around me.
-We grew daily better acquainted, and she shewed me--but not indignantly
-at all--some ladies from the higher assembly sitting among _these_, very
-low dressed indeed, a knotting-bag and counters in their lap, to shew
-their contempt of the company; while such as spoke to them stood before
-their seat, like children before a governess in England, as long as the
-conversation lasted.
-
-I inquired if the men confined their addresses wholly to their own rank?
-She said, beauty often broke the barrier, and when a pretty woman of the
-second rank got a _cavalier servente_ of the first, much happiness and
-much distinction was the consequence: but alas! he will not even _try_ to
-push her up among the people of fashion, and when he meets any is sure to
-look ashamed of his mistress; so that her felicity can consist only in
-triumphing over equals, for to rival a superior is here an impossibility.
-
-Our Duke and Dutchess of Cumberland have made all Naples adore them
-though, by going richly dressed, and behaving with infinite courtesy and
-good-humour, at an assembly or ball given in the _lower rooms_, as the
-English comically call them. A young Palermitan prince applauded them for
-it exceedingly; so I took the liberty to express my wonder. “Oh,” replied
-he, “we are not ignorant how much English manners differ from our own: I
-have already, though but just eighteen years old, as sovereign of my own
-state, under the King of both Sicilies, condemned a man to death _because
-he was a rascal_, but the law and the people govern in England I know.”
-My desire of hearing about Sicily, which we could not contrive to visit,
-made me happy to cultivate Prince Ventimiglia’s acquaintance; he was
-very studious, very learned of his age, and uncommonly clever: told me of
-the antiquities his island had to boast, with great intelligence, and a
-surprising knowledge of ancient history.
-
-We wished to have made a party to go in the same company to Pæstum, but
-my cowardice kept me at home, so bad was the account of the roads and
-accommodation; though Abate Bianconi of Milan, for whom I have so much
-esteem, bid me remember to look at the buildings there attentively;
-adding, that they were better worth our observation than all the boasted
-antiquities at Rome; “as they had seen (said he) the original foundation
-of her empire, and outlived its decay: that they had seen her second
-birth too, and power under some of her pontiffs over all Europe about six
-or seven centuries ago; and that they would now probably remain till all
-_that_ was likewise abolished, with only slight traces left behind to
-shew that _fuimus_, &c.”
-
-How mortifying it is to go home and never see this Pæstum! Prince
-Ventimiglia went there with Mr. Cox; he professes his intention soon
-to visit England, concerning the manners and customs of which he is
-very inquisitive, and not ill-versed in the language; but books drop
-oddly into people’s hands: This gentleman commended Ambrose Philips’s
-Pastorals, and I remember the Florentines seemed strangely impressed
-with the merit of the other Philips as a poet. Bonducci has translated
-his Cyder, and calls him _emulous of Milton_, in good time! but it is
-difficult to distinguish jest from earnest in a foreign language.
-
-I will not, if I can help it, lose sight of our Sicilian however,
-till I have made him tell me something about Dionysius’s Ear, about
-the eruptions of Ætna, and the _Castagno a cento cavalli_, which, he
-protests, is not magnified by Brydone.
-
-It is wonderfully mortifying to think how little information after all
-can be obtained of any thing new or any thing strange, though so far from
-one’s own country. What I picked up most curious and diverting from our
-conversation, was his expression of surprise, when at our house one day
-he read a letter from his mother, telling him that such a lady, naming
-her, remained still unmarried, and even unbetrothed, though now past
-ten years old. “She will,” said I, “perhaps break through old customs,
-and chuse for herself, as she is an orphan, and has no one whom she need
-consult.”--“Impossible, Madam!” was the reply.--“But tell me, Prince,
-for information’s sake, if such a lady, this girl for example, should
-venture to assert the rights of humanity, and make a choice somewhat
-unusual, _what would come of it?_”--“Why nothing in the world would come
-of it,” answered he; “the lass would be immediately at liberty again, for
-no man so circumstanced could be permitted to leave the country _alive_
-you know, nor would her folly benefit his family at all, as her estate
-would be immediately adjudged to the next heir. No person of inferior
-rank in our country would therefore, unless absolutely mad, set his life
-to hazard for the sake of a frolic, the event of which is so well known
-beforehand;--less still, because, if _love_ be in the case, all _personal
-attachment_ may be fully gratified, only let her but be once legally
-married to a man every way her equal.” Could one help recollecting
-Fielding’s song in the Virgin unmasked? who says,
-
- For now I’ve found out that as Michaelmas day
- Is still the forerunner of Lammas;
- So wedding another is just the right way
- To get at my dear Mr. Thomas.
-
-I will mention another talk I had with a Sicilian lady. We met at the
-house of the Swedish minister, Monsieur André, uncle to the lamented
-officer who perished in our sovereign’s service in America; and while
-the rest of the company were entertaining themselves with cards and
-music, I began laughing in myself at hearing the gentleman and lady
-who sat next _me_, called by others _Don Raphael_ and _Donna Camilla_,
-because those two names bring Gil Blas into one’s head. Their agreeable
-and interesting conversation however soon gave my mind a more serious
-turn when discoursing on the liberal premiums now offered by the King of
-Naples to those who are willing to rebuild and repeople Messina. Donna
-Camilla politely introduced me to a very sick but pleasing-looking lady,
-who she said was going to return thither: at which _she_, starting,
-cried, “Oh God forbid, my dear friend!” in an accent that made me think
-she had already suffered something from the concussions that overwhelmed
-that city in the year 1783. Her inviting manner, her soft and interesting
-eyes, whose languid glances seemed to shew beauty sunk in sorrow, and
-spirit oppressed by calamity, engaged my utmost attention, while Don
-Raphael pressed her to indulge the foreigner’s curiosity with some
-particulars of the distresses she had shared. Her own feelings were all
-she could relate she said--and those confusedly. “You see that girl
-there,” pointing to a child about seven or eight years old, who stood
-listening to the harpsichord: “she escaped! I cannot, for my soul, guess
-how, for we were not together at the time.”--“Where were _you_, madam,
-at the moment of the fatal accident?”--“Who? _me_?” and her eyes lighted
-up with recollected terror: “I was in the nursery with my maid, employed
-in taking stains out of some Brussels lace upon a brazier; two babies,
-neither of them four years old, playing in the room. The eldest boy,
-dear lad! had just left us, and was in his father’s country-house. The
-day grew _so_ dark all on a sudden, and the brazier--Oh, Lord Jesus! I
-felt the brazier slide from me, and saw it run down the long room on its
-three legs. The maid screamed, and I shut my eyes and knelt at a chair.
-We thought all over; but my husband came, and snatching me up, cried,
-_run, run_.--I know not how nor where, but all amongst falling houses
-it was, and people shrieked so, and there was _such_ a noise! My poor
-son! he was fifteen years old; he tried to hold me fast in the crowd. I
-remember kissing _him_: Dear lad, dear lad! I said. I could speak _just
-then_: but the throng at the gate! Oh that gate! Thousands at once! ay,
-thousands! thousands at once: and my poor old confessor too! I knew him:
-I threw my arms about his aged neck. _Padre mio!_ said I--_Padre mio!_
-Down he dropt, a great stone struck his shoulder; I saw it coming, and
-my boy pulled me: he saved my life, dear, dear lad! But the crash of the
-gate, the screams of the people, the heat--Oh such a heat! I felt no more
-on’t though; I saw no more on’t; I waked in bed, this girl by me, and her
-father giving me cordials. We were on shipboard, they told me, coming
-to Naples to my brother’s house here; and do you think I’ll ever go
-back _there_ again? No, no; that’s a curst place; I lost my son in it.
-_Never, never_ will I see it more! All my friends try to persuade me, but
-the sight of it would do my business. If my poor boy were alive indeed!
-but _he!_ ah, poor dear lad! he loved his mother; he held _me_ fast--No,
-no, I’ll never see that place again: God has cursed it _now_; I am sure
-he has.”
-
-A narrative so melancholy, so tender, and so true, could not fail of its
-effect. I ran for refuge to the harpsichord, where a lady was singing
-divinely. I could not listen though: _her_ grateful sweetness who told
-the dismal story, followed me thither: she had seen my ill-suppressed
-tears, and followed to embrace me. The tale she had told saddened my
-heart, and the news we heard returning to the Crocelle did not contribute
-to lighten its weight, while an amiable young Englishman, who had long
-lain ill there, was now breathing his last, far from his friends, his
-country, or their customs; all easily dispensed with, perhaps derided,
-during the bustle of a journey, and in the madness of superfluous
-health; but sure to be sighed after, when life’s last twilight shuts in
-precipitately closer and closer round a man, and leaves him only the
-nearer objects to repose and dwell on.
-
-Such was Captain ----’s situation! he had none but a foreign servant
-with him. We thought it might sooth him to hear “_Can I do any thing
-for you, Sir?_” in an English voice: so I sent my maid: he had no
-commands he said; he could not eat the jelly she had made him; he wished
-some clergyman could be found that he might speak to: such a one was
-vainly enquired for, till it was discovered that ill-health had driven
-Mr. Mentze to Naples, who kindly administered the last consolation a
-Christian can receive; and heard the next day, when confined himself to
-bed, of his countryman’s being properly thrust by the banker into the
-_Buco Protestante_; so they contemptuously call a dirty garden one drives
-by in this town, where not less than a hundred people, small and great,
-from our island, annually resort, leaving fifty or sixty thousand pounds
-behind them at a moderate computation; though if their bodies are obliged
-to take _perpetual_ apartments here, no better place has been hitherto
-provided for them than this kitchen ground; on which grow cabbages,
-cauliflowers, &c. sold to their country folks for double price I trow,
-the remaining part of the season.
-
-Well! well! if the Neapolitans do bury Christians like dogs, they make
-some singular compensations we will confess, by nursing dogs like
-Christians. A very veracious man informed me yester morning, that his
-poor wife was half broken-hearted at hearing such a Countess’s dog
-was run over; “for,” said he, “having suckled the pretty creature
-herself, she loved it like one of her children.” I bid him repeat the
-circumstance, that no mistake might be made: he did so; but seeing me
-look shocked, or ashamed, or something he did not like,--“Why, madam,”
-said the fellow, “it is a common thing enough for ordinary men’s wives to
-suckle the lapdogs of ladies of quality:” adding, that they were paid for
-their milk, and he saw no harm in gratifying one’s _superiors_. As I was
-disposed to see nothing _but_ harm in disputing with such a competitor,
-our conference finished soon; but the fact is certain.
-
-Indeed few things can be foolisher than to debate the propriety of
-customs one is not bound to observe or comply with. If you dislike them,
-the remedy is easy; turn yours and your horses heads the other way.
-
- 20th January 1786.
-
-Here are the most excellent, the most incomparable fish I ever eat; red
-mullets, large as our maycril, and of singularly high flavour; besides
-the calamaro, or ink-fish, a dainty worthy of imperial luxury; almond and
-even apple trees in blossom, to delight those who can be paid for coarse
-manners and confined notions by the beauties of a brilliant climate. Here
-are all the hedges in blow as you drive towards Pozzuoli, and a snow of
-white May-flowers clustering round Virgil’s tomb. So strong was the sun’s
-heat this morning, even before eleven o’clock, that I carried an umbrella
-to defend me from his rays, as we sauntered about the walks, which are
-spacious and elegant, laid out much in the style of St. James’s Park, but
-with the sea on one side of you, the broad street, called Chiaja, on the
-other. What trees are planted there however, either do not grow up so as
-to afford shade, or else they cut them, and trim them about to make them
-in pretty shapes forsooth, as we did in England half a century ago.
-
-Be this as it will, the vaunted view from the castle of St. Elmo, though
-much more deeply _interesting_, is in consequence of this defect less
-_naturally_ pleasing than the prospect from Lomellino’s villa near Genoa,
-or Lord Clifford’s park, called King’s Weston, in Somersetshire; those
-two places being, in point of mere situation, possessed of beauties
-hitherto unrivalled by any thing I have seen. Nor does the steady
-regularity of this Mediterranean sea make me inclined to prefer it to
-our more capricious or rather active channel. Sea views have at best too
-little variety, and when the flux and reflux of the tide are taken away
-from one, there remains only rough and smooth: whereas the hope which its
-ebb and flow keep constantly renovating, serves to animate, and a little
-change the course of one’s ideas, just as its swelling and sinking is of
-use, to purify in some degree, and keep the whole from stagnation.
-
-I made inquiry after the old story of Nicola Pesce, told by Kircher,
-and sweetly brought back to all our memories by Goldsmith, who, as Dr.
-Johnson said of him, touched nothing that he did not likewise adorn; but
-I could gain no addition to what we have already heard. That there was
-such a man is certain, who, though become nearly amphibious by living
-constantly in the water, only coming sometimes on shore for sleep and
-refreshment, suffered avarice to be his ruin, leaping voluntarily into
-the Gulph of Charybdis to fetch out a gold cup thrown in thither to
-tempt him--what could a gold cup have done one would wonder for Nicola
-Pesce?--yet knowing the dangers of the place, he braved them all it
-seems for this bright reward; and was supposed to be devoured by one of
-the polypus fish, who, sticking close to the rocks, extend their arms
-for prey. When I expressed my indignation that he should so perish;
-“He forgot perhaps,” said one present, “to recommend himself to Santo
-Gennaro.”
-
-The castle on this hill, called the Castel St. Elmo, would be much my
-comfort did I fix at Naples; for here are eight thousand soldiers
-constantly kept, to secure the city from sudden insurrection; his majesty
-most wisely trusting their command only to Spanish or German officers, or
-some few gentlemen from the northern states of Italy, that no personal
-tenderness for any in the town below may intervene, if occasion for
-sudden severity should arise. We went to-day and saw their garrison,
-comfortably and even elegantly kept; and I was wicked enough to rejoice
-that the soldiers were never, but with the very utmost difficulty,
-permitted to go among the towns-men for a moment.
-
-To-morrow we mount the Volcano, whose present peaceful disposition has
-tempted us to inspect it more nearly. Though it appears little less
-than presumption thus to profane with eyes of examination the favourite
-alembic of nature, while the great work of projection is carrying on;
-guarded as all its secret caverns are too with every contradiction; snow
-and flame! solid bodies heated into liquefaction, and rolling gently
-down one of its sides; while fluids congeal and harden into ice on the
-other; nothing can exceed the curiosity of its appearance, now the lava
-is less rapid, and stiffens as it flows; stiffens too in ridges very
-surprisingly, and gains an odd aspect, not unlike the pasteboard waves
-representing sea at a theatre, but black, because this year’s eruption
-has been mingled with coal. The connoisseurs here know the different
-degrees, dates, and shades of lava to a perfection that amazes one;
-and Sir William Hamilton’s courage, learning, and perfect skill in
-these matters, is more people’s theme here than the Volcano itself.
-Bartolomeo, the Cyclop of Vesuvius as he is called, studies its effects
-and operations too with much attention and philosophical exactness,
-relating the adventures he has had with our minister on the mountain to
-every Englishman that goes up, with great success. The way one climbs is
-by tying a broad sash with long ends round this Bartolomeo, letting him
-walk before one, and holding it fast. As far as the Hermitage there is
-no great difficulty, and to that place some chuse to ride an ass, but I
-thought walking safer; and there you are sure of welcome and refreshment
-from the poor good old man, who sets up a little cross wherever the fire
-has stopt near his cell; shews you the place with a sort of polite
-solemnity that impresses, spreads his scanty provisions before you
-kindly, and tells the past and present state of the eruption accurately,
-inviting you to partake of
-
- His rushy couch, his frugal fare,
- His blessing and repose.
-
- GOLDSMITH.
-
-This Hermit is a Frenchman. _J’ai dansé dans mon lit tans de fois_[5],
-said he: the expression was not sublime when speaking of an earthquake,
-to be sure; I looked among his books, however, and found Bruyere. “Would
-not the Duc de Rochefoucault have done better?” said I. “Did I never see
-you before, Madam?” said he; “yes, sure I have, and dressed you too,
-when I was a hair-dresser in London, and lived with Mons. Martinant, and
-I dressed pretty Miss Wynne too in the same street. _Vit’elle encore?
-Vit’elle encore?_[6] Ah I am old now,” continued he; “I remember when
-black pins first came up.” This was charming, and in such an unexpected
-way, I could hardly prevail upon myself ever to leave the spot; but Mrs.
-Greatheed having been quite to the crater’s edge with her only son, a
-baby of four years old; shame rather than inclination urged me forward; I
-asked the little boy what he had seen; I saw the chimney, replied he, and
-it was on fire, but I liked the elephant better.
-
-That the situation of the crater changed in this last eruption is of
-little consequence; it will change and change again I suppose. The
-wonder is, that nobody gets killed by venturing so near, while red-hot
-stones are flying about them so. The Bishop of Derry did very near get
-his arm broke; and the Italians are always recounting the exploits of
-these rash Britons who look into the crater, and carry their wives and
-children up to the top; while we are, with equal justice, amazed at the
-courageous Neapolitans, who build little snug villages and dwell with as
-much confidence at the foot of Vesuvius, as our people do in Paddington
-or Hornsey. When I enquired of an inhabitant of these houses how she
-managed, and whether she was not frighted when the Volcano raged, lest it
-should carry away her pretty little habitation: “Let it go,” said she,
-“we don’t mind now if it goes to-morrow, so as we can make it answer by
-raising our vines, oranges, &c. against it for three years, our fortune
-is made before the fourth arrives; and then if the red river comes we can
-always run away, _scappar via_, ourselves, and hang the property. We only
-desire three years use of the mountain as a hot wall or forcing-house,
-and then we are above the world, thanks be to God and St. Januarius,” who
-always comes in for a large share of their veneration; and this morning
-having heard that the Neapolitans still present each other with a cake
-upon New-year’s day, I began to hug my favourite hypothesis closer,
-recollecting the old ceremony of the wheaten cake seasoned with salt,
-and called _Janualis_ in the Heathen days. All this however must still
-end in mere conjecture; for though the weather here favours one’s idea
-of Janus, who loosened the furrow and liquefied the frost, to which the
-melting our martyr’s blood might, without much straining of the matter,
-be made to allude; yet it must be recollected after all, that the miracle
-is not performed in this month but that of May, and that St. Januarius
-did certainly exist and give his life as testimony to the truth of our
-religion, in the third century. Can one wonder, however, if corruptions
-and mistakes should have crept in since? And would it not have been
-equal to a miracle had no tares sprung up in the field of religion, when
-our Saviour himself informs us that there is an enemy ever watching his
-opportunity to plant them?
-
-These dear people too at Rome and Naples do live so in the very hulk of
-ship-wrecked or rather foundered Paganism, have their habitation so at
-the very bottom of the cask, can it fail to retain the scent when the
-lees are scarce yet dried up, clean or evaporated? That an odd jumble of
-past and present days, past and present ideas of dignity, events, and
-even manner of portioning out their time, still confuse their heads,
-may be observed in every conversation with them; and when a few weeks
-ago we revisited, in company of some newly-arrived English friends, the
-old baths of Baiæ, Locrine lake, &c. Tobias, who rowed us over, bid us
-observe the Appian way under the water, where indeed it appears quite
-clearly, even to the tracks of wheels on its old pavement made of very
-large stones; and seeing me perhaps particularly attentive, “Yes,
-Madam,” said he, “I do assure you, that _Don_ Horace and _Don_ Virgil, of
-whom we hear such a deal, used to come from Rome to their country-seats
-here in a day, over this very road, which is now overflowed as you see
-it, by repeated earthquakes, but which was then so good and so unbroken,
-that if they rose early in the morning they could easily gallop hither
-against the _Ave Maria_.”
-
-It was very observable in our second visit paid to the Stuffe San
-Germano, that they had increased prodigiously in heat since mount
-Vesuvius had ceased throwing out fire, though at least fourteen miles
-from it, and a vast portion of the sea between them; it vexed me to
-have no thermometer again, but by what one’s immediate feelings could
-inform us, there were many degrees of difference. I could not now bear my
-hand on any part of them for a moment. The same luckless dog was again
-produced, and again restored to life, like the lady in Dryden’s Fables,
-who is condemned to be hunted, killed, recovered, and set on foot again
-for the amusement of her tormentors; a story borrowed from the Italian.
-
-Solfaterra burned my fingers as I plucked an incrustation off,
-which allured me by the beauty of its colours, and roared with more
-violence than when I was there before. This horrible volcano is by no
-means extinguished yet, but seems pregnant with wonders, principally
-combustible, and likely to break with one at every step, all the earth
-round it being hollow as a drum, and I should think of no great thickness
-neither; so plainly does one hear the sighings underneath, which some of
-the country people imagine to be tortured spirits howling with agony.
-
-It is supposed that Lake Agnano, where the dog is flung in, if the dewy
-grass do not suffice to recover him, with its humidity and freshness,
-as it often does; is but another crater of another volcano, long ago
-self-destroyed by scorpion-like suicide; and it is like enough it may be
-so. There are not wanting however those that think, or say at least, how
-a subterraneous or subaqueous city remains even now under that lake, but
-lies too deep for inspection.
-
-_Sia come sia_[7], as the Italians express themselves, these environs are
-beyond all power of comprehension, much more beyond all effort of words
-to describe; and as Sannazarius says of Venice, so I am sure it may be
-said of this place, “That man built Rome, but God created Naples:” for
-surely, surely he has honoured no other spot with such an accumulation
-of his wonders: nor can any thing more completely bring the description
-of the devoted cities mentioned in Genesis before one’s eyes, than these
-concealed fires, which there I trust burst up unexpectedly, and, attended
-by such lightning as only hot countries can exhibit, devoured all at
-once, nor spared the too incredulous inquirer, who turned her head back
-with contempt of expected judgments, but entangling her feet in the
-pursuing stream of lava, fixed her fast, a monument of bituminous salt.
-
-Though surrounded by such terrifying objects, the Neapolitans are not,
-I think, disposed to cowardly, though easily persuaded to devotional
-superstitions; they are not afraid of spectres or supernatural
-apparitions, but sleep contentedly and soundly in small rooms, made for
-the ancient dead, and now actually in the occupation of old Roman bodies,
-the catacombs belonging to whom are still very impressive to the fancy;
-and I have known many an English gentleman, who would not endure to
-have his courage impeached by _living wight_, whose imagination would
-notwithstanding have disturbed his slumbers not a little, had he been
-obliged to pass one night where these poor women sleep securely, wishing
-only for that money which travellers are not unwilling to bestow; and
-perhaps a walk among these hollow caves of death, these sad repositories
-of what was once animated by valour and illuminated by science, strike
-one much more than all the urns and lachrymatories of Portici.
-
-How judicious is Mr. Addison’s remark, “That _Siste Viator!_ which has a
-striking effect among the Roman tombs placed by the road side, loses all
-its power over the mind when placed in the body of a church:” I think
-he might have said the same, had he lived to see funereal urns used as
-decorations of hackney-coach pannels, and _Caput Bovis_ over the doors in
-New Tavistock-street.
-
-It is worth recollecting however, that the Dictator Sylla is supposed
-to be the first man of consequence who ordered his body to be burned
-at Rome, as till then, burial was apparently the fashion: his death,
-occasioned by the _morbus pedicularis_, made his interment difficult, and
-what necessity suggested to be done for him, grew up into a custom, and
-the sycophants of power, ever hasty to follow their superiors, now shewed
-their zeal even in _post obit_ imitation. But while I am writing, more
-modern and less tyrannic claimants for respect agreeably disturb one’s
-meditations on the cruelty and oppression used by these wicked possessors
-of immortal though ill-gotten fame.
-
-The Queen of Naples is delivered, and we are all to make merry: the
-_Castello d’Uovo_, just under our windows, is to be illuminated: and from
-the Carthusian convent on the hill, to my poor solitary old acquaintance
-the hermit and hair-dresser, who inhabits a cleft in mount Vesuvius, all
-resolve to be happy, and to rejoice in the felicity of a prince that
-loves them.--Shouting, and candles, and torches, and coloured lamps,
-and Polinchinello above all the rest, did their best to drive forward
-the general joy, and make known the birth of the royal baby for many
-miles round the capital; and there was a splendid opera the next night,
-in this finest of all fine theatres, though that of Milan pleases me
-better; as I prefer the elegant curtains which festoon it over the boxes
-there, to our heavy gilt ornaments here at Naples; and their boasted
-looking-glasses, never cleaned, have no effect as I perceive towards
-helping forward the enchantment. A _festa di ballo_, or masquerade,
-given here however, was exceedingly gay, and the dresses surprisingly
-rich: _our_ party, a very large one, all Italians, retired at one in
-the morning to quite the finest supper of its size I ever saw. Fish of
-various sorts, incomparable in their kinds, composed eight dishes of
-the first course; we had thirty-eight set on the table in that course,
-forty-nine in the second, with wines and dessert truly magnificent, for
-all which Mr. Piozzi protested to me that we paid only three shillings
-and sixpence a head English money; but for the truth of that he must
-answer: we sate down twenty-two persons to supper, and I observed there
-were numbers of these parties made in different taverns, or apartments
-adjoining to the theatre, whither after refreshment we returned, and
-danced till day-light.
-
-The theatre is a vast building, even when not inhabited or set off
-by lights and company: all of stone too, like that of Milan; but
-particularly defended from fire by St. Anthony, who has an altar and
-chapel erected to his honour, and showily decorated at the door; and on
-Sunday night, January the twenty-second, there were fireworks exhibited
-in honour of himself and his _pig_, which was placed on the top, and
-illuminated with no small ingenuity: the fire catching hold of his tail
-first--_con rispetto_--as said our Cicerone. But _il Rè Lear è le sue tre
-Figlie_ are advertised, and I am sick to-night and cannot go.
-
- Oh what a time have I chose out, &c.
- To wear a kerchief--would I were not sick!
-
-My loss however is somewhat compensated; for though I could not see our
-own Shakespear’s play acted at Naples, I went some days after to one of
-the charming theatres this town is entertained by every evening, and
-saw a play which struck me exceedingly: the plot was simply this--An
-Englishman appears, dressed precisely as a Quaker, his hat on his head,
-his hands in his pockets, and with a very pensive air says he will
-take that pistol, producing one, and shoot himself; “for,” says he,
-“the politics go wrong at home now, and I hate the ministerial party,
-so England does not please me; I tried France, but the people there
-laughed so about nothing, and sung so much out of tune, I could not bear
-France; so I went over to Holland; those Dutch dogs are so covetous and
-hard-hearted, they think of nothing but their money; I could not endure
-a place where one heard no sound in the whole country but frogs croaking
-and ducats chinking. _Maladetti!_ so I went to Spain, where I narrowly
-escaped a sun-stroke for the sake of seeing those idle beggarly dons,
-that if they do condescend to cobble a man’s shoe, think they must do it
-with a sword by their side. I came here to Naples therefore, but ne’er a
-woman will afford one a chase, all are too easily caught to divert _me_,
-who like something in prospect; and though it is so fine a country, one
-can get no fox-hunting, only running after a wild pig. Yes, yes, I _must_
-shoot myself, the world is so _very_ dull I am tired on’t.”--He then
-coolly prepares matters for the operation, when a young woman bursts
-into his apartment, bewails her fate a moment, and then faints away. Our
-countryman lays by his pistol, brings the lady to life, and having heard
-part of her story, sets her in a place of safety. More confusion follows;
-a gentleman enters storming with rage at a treacherous friend he hints
-at, and a false mistress; the Englishman gravely advises him to shoot
-himself: “No, no,” replies the warm Italian, “I will shoot _them_ though,
-if I can catch them; but want of money hinders me from prosecuting
-the search.” _That_ however is now instantly supplied by the generous
-Briton, who enters into their affairs, detects and punishes the rogue
-who had betrayed them all, settles the marriage and reconciliation of
-his new friends, adds himself something to the good girl’s fortune, and
-concludes the piece with saying that he has altered his intentions, and
-will think no more of shooting himself, while life may in all countries
-be rendered pleasant to him who will employ it in the service of his
-fellow-creatures; and finishes with these words, that _such are the
-sentiments of an Englishman_.
-
-Were this pretty story in the hands of one of our elegant dramatic
-writers, how charming an entertainment would it make us! Mr. Andrews
-shall have it certainly, for though very flattering in its intentions
-towards our countrymen, and the _ground-plot_, as a _surveyor_ would call
-it, well imagined; the play itself was scarcely written I believe, and
-very little esteemed by the Italians; who made excuses for its grossness,
-and said that their theatre was at a very low ebb; and so I believe it
-is. Yet their genius is restless, and for ever fermenting; and although,
-like their volcano, of which every individual has a spark, it naturally
-throws out of its mouth more rubbish than marble; like that too, from
-some occasional eruptions we may gather gems stuck fast among substances
-of an inferior nature, which want only disentangling, and a new polish,
-to make them valued, even beyond those that reward the toil of an
-expecting miner.
-
-The word gems reminds one of _Capo di Monte_, where the king’s
-_cameos_ are taken care of, and where the medallist may find perpetual
-entertainment; for I do believe nothing can exceed the riches of this
-collection; though it requires good eyes, great experience, and long
-study, to examine their merits with accurate skill, and praise them
-with intelligent rapture: of these three requisites I boast none, so
-cannot enjoy this regale as much as many others; but I have a mortal
-aversion to those who encumber the general progress of science by
-reciprocating contempt upon its various branches: the politician however,
-who weighs the interests of contending powers, or endeavours at the
-happiness of regulating some particular state; who studies to prevent
-the encroachments of prerogative, or impede advances to anarchy; hears
-with faint approbation, at best, of the discoveries made in the moon
-by modern astronomers--discoveries of a country where he can obtain no
-power, and settle no system of government--discoveries too, which can
-only be procured by peeping through glasses which few can purchase, at
-a place which no man can desire to approach. While the musical composer
-equally laments the fate of the fossilist, who literally buries his
-talent in the ground, and equally dead to all the charms of taste, the
-transports of true expression, and the delights of harmony, rises with
-the sun only to shun his beams, and seek in the dripping caverns of the
-earth the effects of his diminished influence. The medallist has had much
-of this scorn to contend with; yet he that makes it his study to register
-great events, is perhaps next to him who has contributed to their birth:
-and this palace displays a degree of riches _en ce genre_, difficult to
-conceive.
-
-I was, however, better entertained by admiring the incomparable
-Schidonis, which are to be found only here: he was a scholar, or rather
-an imitator, of Correggio; and what he has done seems more the result
-of genius animated by observation, than of profound thought or minute
-nicety; he painted such ragged folks as he found upon the _Chiaja_; yet
-his pictures differ no less from the Dutch school, than do those which
-flow from the majestic pencil of the demi-divine Caracci and their
-followers, and for the same reason; their minds reflected dignity and
-grace, his eyes looked upon forms finely proportioned, though covered
-with tatters, or perhaps scarcely covered at all; no smugness, no
-plumpness, no _vulgar_ character, ever crossed the fancy of Schidone;
-for a _Lazaroni_ at Naples, like a sailor at Portsmouth, is no mean
-character, though he is a coarse one; it is in the low Parisian, and the
-true-bred London blackguard, we must look for innate baseness, and near
-approaches to brutality; nor are the Hollanders wanting in originals I
-trust, when one has seen so many copies of the human form from their
-hands, divested of soul as I may say, and, like Prior’s Emma when she
-resolves to ramble with her outlawed lover,
-
- And mingle with the people’s wretched lee--
- Oh line extreme of human infamy!--
- Lest by her look or colour be exprest
- The mark of aught high-born, or ever better drest.
-
-Here is a beautiful performance too of the Venetian school--a
-resurrection of Lazarus, by Leandro Bassano, esteemed the best
-performance of that family, and full of merit--the merit of _character_
-I mean; while Mary’s eyes are wholly employed, and her mind apparently
-engrossed by the Saviour’s benignity, and almighty power; Martha thinks
-merely on the present exertion of them, and only watches the deliverance
-of her beloved brother from the tomb: the restored Lazarus too--an
-apparent corpse, re-awakened suddenly to a thousand sensations at once,
-wonder, gratitude, and affectionate delight!--How can one coldly sit to
-hear the connoisseurs _admire the folds of the drapery_? Lanfranc’s St.
-Michael too is a very noble picture; and though his angel is infinitely
-less angelic than that of Guido, his devil is a less ordinary and vulgar
-devil than that of his fellow-student, which somewhat too much resembles
-the common peeping satyr in a landscape; whereas Lanfranc’s Lucifer seems
-embued with more intellectual vices--rage, revenge, and ambition.
-
-But I am called from my observations and reflexions, to see what the
-Neapolitans call _il trionfo di Policinello_, a person for whom they
-profess peculiar value. Harlequin and Brighella here scarcely share the
-fondness of an audience, while at Venice, Milan, &c. much pleasantry is
-always cast into _their_ characters.
-
-The triumph was a pageant of prodigious size, set on four broad wheels
-like our waggons, but larger; it consisted of a pyramid of men,
-twenty-eight in number, placed with wonderful ingenuity all of one
-size, something like what one has seen exhibited at Sadler’s Wells, the
-Royal Circus, &c.; dressed in one uniform, viz. the white habit and
-puce-coloured mask of _caro_ Policinello; disposed too with that skill
-which tumblers alone can either display or describe; a single figure,
-still in the same dress, crowning the whole, and forming a point at the
-top, by standing fixed on the shoulders of his companions, and playing
-merrily on the fiddle; while twelve oxen of a beautiful white colour, and
-trapped with many shining ornaments, drew the whole slowly over the city,
-amidst the acclamations of innumerable spectators, that followed and
-applauded the performance with shouts.
-
-What I have learned from this show, and many others of the same kind, is
-of no greater value than the derivation of _his name_ who is so much the
-favourite of Naples: but from the mask he appears in, cut and coloured so
-as exactly to resemble a _flea_, with hook nose and wrinkles, like the
-body of that animal; his employment too, being ever ready to hop, and
-skip, and jump about, with affectation of uncommon elasticity, giving his
-neighbours a sly pinch from time to time: all these circumstances, added
-to the very intimate acquaintance and connection all the Neapolitans
-have with this, the least offensive of all the innumerable insects
-that infest them; and, last of all, _his name_, which, corrupt it how
-we please, was originally _Pulicinello_; leaves me persuaded that the
-appellation is merely _little flea_.
-
-A drive to Caserta, the king’s great palace, not yet quite finished,
-carries me away from this important study, and leaves me little time to
-enjoy the praises due to a discovery of so much consequence.
-
-The drive perhaps pleased us better than the palace, which is a
-prodigious mass of building indeed, and to my eye appears to cover more
-space than proud Versailles itself; court within court, and quadrangle
-within quadrangle; it is an enormous bulk to be sure--not pile--for it
-is not high in proportion to the surrounding objects somehow; and being
-composed all of brick, presents ideas rather of squat solidity, than
-of princely magnificence. Ostentation is expected always to strike, as
-elegance is known to charm, the beholder; and space seldom fails in
-its immediate effect upon the mind; but here the _valley_ (I might say
-_hole_) this house is set in, looks too little for it; and offends one
-in the same manner as the more beautiful buildings do at Buxton, where
-from every hill one expects to tumble down upon the new Crescent below.
-The stair-case is such, however, as I am persuaded no other palace can
-shew; vastly wider than any the French king can boast, and infinitely
-more precious with regard to the marbles which compose its sides. The
-immensity of it, however, though it enhances the value, does not do much
-honour to the taste of him who contrived it. No apartments can answer the
-expectations raised by such an approach; and in fact the chapel alone is
-worthy an ascent so fit for a triumphal procession, instead of a pair of
-stairs. That chapel is I confess of exquisite beauty and elegance; and
-there is a picture, by Mengs, of the blessed Virgin Mary’s presentation
-when a girl, that is really _paitrie des graces_; it scarcely can be
-admired or commended enough, and one can scarcely prevail on one’s self
-ever to quit it. Her marriage, a picture on the other side, is not so
-happily imagined; but it seems as if the painter thought that joke too
-good to part with, that there never was a particularly excellent picture
-of a wedding; and that Poussin himself failed, when having represented
-all the six other sacraments so admirably, that of marriage has been
-found fault with by the connoisseurs of every succeeding generation.
-
-Well! if the palace at Caserta must be deemed more heavy than handsome,
-I fear the gardens must likewise be avowed to be laid out in a manner
-one would rather term savage than natural: all artifice is banished
-however: the king of Naples scorns petty tricks for the amusement of
-petty minds;--he turns a whole river down his cascade,--_a real one_;
-and if its formation is not of the first rate for assuming an appearance
-of nature, it has the merit of being sincerely that which others only
-pretend to be: while I am told that his architects are now employed in
-connecting the great stones awkwardly disposed in two rows down each side
-the torrent, with the very rocks and mountains among which the spring
-rises; if they effect this, their cascade will, so far as ever I have
-read or heard, be single in its kind.
-
-Van Vittelli’s aqueduct is a prodigiously beautiful, magnificent,
-and what is more, a useful performance: having the finest models of
-antiquity, he is said to have surpassed them all. Why such superb and
-expensive methods should be still used to conduct water up and down
-Italy, any more than other nations, or why they are not equally necessary
-in France and England, nobody informs me. Madame de Bocages enquired long
-ago, when she was taken to see the fountain Trevi at Rome, why they had
-no water at Paris but the Seine? I think the question so natural, that
-one wishes to repeat it; and one great reason, little urged by others,
-incites me to look with envy on the delicious and almost innumerable
-gushes of water that cool the air of Naples and of Rome, and pour
-their pellucid tides through almost every street of those luxurious
-cities: _it is this_, that I consider them as a preservative against
-that dreadfullest of all maladies, canine madness; a distemper which,
-notwithstanding the excessive heat, has here scarcely a name. Sure it is
-the plenty of drink the dogs meet at every turn, that must be the sole
-cause of a blessing so desirable.
-
-My stay has been always much shorter than I wished it, in every great
-town of Italy; but _here!_ where numberless wonders strike the sense
-without fatiguing it, I do feel double pleasure; and among all the new
-ideas I have acquired since England lessened to my sight upon the sea,
-those gained at Naples will be the last to quit me. The works of art may
-be found great and lovely, but the drunken Faun and the dying Gladiator
-will fade from one’s remembrance, and leave the glow of Solfaterra and
-the gloom of Posilippo indelibly impressed. Vesuvius too! that terrified
-me so when first we drove into this amazing town, what future images can
-ever obliterate the thrilling sensations it at first occasioned? Surely
-the sight of old friends after a tedious absence can alone supply the
-vacancy that a mind must feel which quits such sublime, such animated
-scenery, and experiences a sudden deprivation of delight, finding
-the bosom all at once unfurnished of what has yielded it for three
-swiftly-flown months, perpetual change of undecaying pleasures.
-
-To-morrow I shall take my last look at the Bay, and driving forward, hope
-at night to lodge at Terracina.
-
-
-
-
-JOURNEY FROM NAPLES TO ROME.
-
-
-The morning of the day we left our fair Parthenope was passed in
-recollecting her various charms: every one who leaves her carries off the
-same sensations. I have asked several inhabitants of other Italian States
-what they liked best in Italy except home; it was Naples always, dear
-delightful Naples! When I say this, I mean always to exclude those whose
-particular pursuits lead them to cities which contain the prize they
-press for. English people when unprejudiced express the like preference.
-Attachments formed by love or friendship, though they give charms to
-every place, cannot be admitted as a reason for commending any one above
-the rest. A traveller without candour it is vain to read; one might as
-well hope to get a just view of nature by looking through a coloured
-glass, as to gain a true account of foreign countries, by turning over
-pages dictated by prejudice.
-
-With the nobility of Naples I had no acquaintance, and can of course
-say nothing of their manners. Those of the middling people seem to be
-behind-hand with their neighbours; it is so odd that they should never
-yet have arrived at calling their money by other names than those of the
-weights, an _ounce_ and a _grain_; the coins however are not ugly.
-
-The evening of the day we left this surprising city was spent out of its
-king’s dominions, at Terracina, which now affords one of the best inns in
-Italy; it is kept by a Frenchman, whose price, though high, is regulated,
-whose behaviour is agreeable, and whose suppers and beds are delightful.
-Near the spot where his house now stands, there was in ancient Pagan
-days a temple, erected to the memory of the beardless Jupiter called
-Anxurus, of which Pausanias, and I believe Scaliger too, take notice;
-though the medal of Pansa is _imago barbata, sed intonsa_, they tell
-me; and Statius extends himself in describing the innocence of Jupiter
-and Juno’s conversation and connection in their early youth. Both of
-them had statues of particular magnificence venerated with very peculiar
-ceremonies, erected for them in this town, however, _ut Anxur fuit quæ
-nunc Terracinæ sunt_[8]. The tenth Thebaid too speaks much _de templo
-sacro et Junoni puellæ, Jovis Axuro_[9]; and who knows after all whether
-these odd circumstances might not be the original reason of Anxur’s
-grammatical peculiarity, well known to all from the line in old _Propria
-que maribus_,
-
- Et genus Anxur quod dat utrumque?
-
-This place was founded and colonised by Æmilius Mamercus and Lucius
-Plautus, Anno Mundi 3725 I think; they took the town of Priverna, and
-sent each three hundred citizens to settle this new city, where Jupiter
-Anxurus was worshipped, as Virgil among so many other writers bears
-testimony:
-
- Circeumque jugum, queis Jupiter Anxuris arvis
- Præsidet[10].
-
- 7th ÆNEID.
-
-Æmilius Mamercus was a very pious consul, and when he served before with
-Genutius his colleague, made himself famous for driving the nail into
-Minerva’s temple to stop the progress of the plague; he was therefore
-likely enough to encourage this superstitious worship of the beardless
-Jupiter.
-
-Some books of geography, very old ones, had given me reason to make
-enquiry after a poisonous fountain in the rocks near Terracina. My
-enquiries were not vain. The fountain still exists, and whoever drinks it
-dies; though Martial says,
-
- Sive salutiferis candidus Anxur acquis[11].
-
-The place is now cruelly unwholesome however; so much so, that our French
-landlord protests he is obliged to leave it all the summer months,
-at least the very hot season, and retire with his family to Molo di
-Gaeta. He told us with rational delight enough of a visit the Pope had
-made to those places some few years ago; and that he had been heard
-to say to some of his attendants how there was no _mal aria_ at all
-thereabouts in past days: an observation which had much amazed them. It
-was equally their wonder how his Holiness went o’walking about with a
-book in his hand or pocket, repeating verses by the sea-side. One of them
-had asked the name of the book, but nobody could remember it. “Was it
-_Virgil_?” said one of our company. “_Eh mon Dieu, Madame, vous l’avez
-divinée_[12],” replied the man. But, O dear (thought I), how would these
-poor people have stared, if their amiable sovereign, enlightened and
-elegant as his mind is, had happened to talk more in their presence of
-what he had been reading on the sea shore, _Virgil_ or _Homer_; had he
-chanced to mention that _Molo di Gaeta_ was in ancient times the seat of
-the Lestrygones, and inhabited by canibals, men who eat one another! and
-surely it is scarcely less comical than curious, to recollect how Ulysses
-expresses his sensations on first landing just by this now lovely and
-highly-cultivated spot, when he pathetically exclaims,
-
- ----Upon what coast,
- On what _new_ region is Ulysses tost?
- Possest by wild barbarians fierce in arms,
- Or men whose bosoms tender pity warms?
-
- POPE’S ODYSSEY.
-
-Poor Cicero might indeed have asked the question seven or eight centuries
-after, in days falsely said to be civilized to a state of perfection;
-when his most inhuman murder near this town, completed the measure of
-their crimes; who to their country’s fate added that of its philosopher,
-its orator, its acknowledged father and preserver.--Cruel, ungrateful
-Rome! ever crimson with the blood of its own best citizens--theatre of
-civil discord and proscriptions, unheard of in any history but her’s;
-who, next to Jerusalem in sins, has been next in sufferings too; though
-twice so highly favoured by Heaven--from the dreadful moment when all
-her power was at once crushed by barbarism, and even her language
-rendered _dead_ among mankind--to the present hour, when even her second
-splendours, like the last gleams of an _aurora borealis_, fade gradually
-from the view, and sink almost imperceptibly into decay. Nor can the
-exemplary virtues and admirable conduct of _this_, and of her four last
-princes, redeem her from ruin long threatened to her past tyrannical
-offences; any more than could the merits of Marcus Aurelius and Antoninus
-Pius compensate for the crimes of Tiberius, Caligula, and Nero.--Let the
-death of Cicero, which inspired this rhapsody, contribute to excuse it;
-and let me turn my eyes to the bewitching spot--
-
- Where Circe dwelt, the daughter of the day.
-
-That such enchantresses should inhabit such regions could have been
-scarce a wonder in Homer’s time I trow; the same country still retains
-the same power of producing singers, to whom our English may with
-propriety enough cry out;
-
- ----Hail, _foreign_ wonder!
- Whom certes our rough shades did never breed.
-
- MILTON.
-
-That she should be the offspring of Phœbus too, in a place where the
-sun’s rays have so much power, was a well-imagined fable one may _feel_;
-and her instructions to Ulysses for his succeeding voyage, just, apt,
-and proper: enjoining him a prayer to Crateis the mother of Scylla, to
-pacify her rapacious daughter’s fury, is the least intelligible of all
-Circe’s advice, to me. But when I saw the nasty trick they had at Naples,
-of spreading out the ox-hides to dry upon the sea shore, as one drives to
-Portici; the Sicilian herds, mentioned in the Odyssey, and their crawling
-skins, came into my head in a moment.
-
-We have left these scenes of fabulous wonder and real pleasure however;
-left the warm vestiges of classic story, and places which have produced
-the noblest efforts of the human mind; places which have served as no
-ignoble themes for truly immortal song; all quitted now! all left for
-recollection to muse on, and for fancy to combine: but these eyes I fear
-will never more survey them. Well! no matter--
-
- When like the baseless fabric of a vision,
- The cloud-capt tow’rs, the gorgeous palaces,
- The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
- Yea all which it inherit, shall dissolve;
- And like some unsubstantial pageant faded
- Leave not a wreck behind.
-
-
-
-
-ROME.
-
-
-We are come here just in time to see the three last days of the carnival,
-and very droll it is to walk or drive, and see the people run about the
-streets, all in some gay disguise or other, and masked, and patched, and
-painted to make sport. The Corso is now quite a scene of distraction; the
-coachmen on the boxes pretending to be drunk, and throwing sugar-plumbs
-at the women, which it grows hard to find out in the crowd and confusion,
-as the evening, which shuts in early, is the festive hour: and there
-is some little hazard in parading the streets, lest an accident might
-happen; though a temporary rail and _trottoir_ are erected, to keep
-the carriages off. Our high joke, however, seems to consist in the
-men putting on girls clothes: a woman is somewhat a rarity at Rome,
-and strangely superfluous as it should appear by the extraordinary
-substitutes found for them on the stage: it is more than wonderful to
-see great strong fellows dancing the women’s parts in these fashionable
-dramas, pastoral and heroic ballets as they call them. _Soprano_ singers
-did not so surprise me with their feminine appearance in the Opera; but
-these clumsy _figurantes_! all stout, coarse-looking men, kicking about
-in hooped petticoats, were to me irresistibly ridiculous: the gentlemen
-with me however, both Italians and English, were too much disgusted
-to laugh, while _la premiere danseuse_ acted the coquet beauty, or
-distracted mother, with a black beard which no art could subdue, and
-destroyed every illusion of the pantomime at a glance. All this struck
-nobody but us foreigners after all; tumultuous and often _tender_
-applauses from the pit convinced us of _their heart-felt_ approbation!
-and in the parterre fat gentlemen much celebrated at Rome for their taste
-and refinement.
-
-As their exhibition did not please our party, notwithstanding its
-singularity, we went but once to the theatre, except when a Festa di
-Ballo was advertised to begin at eleven o’clock one night, but detained
-the company waiting on its stairs for two hours at least beyond the time:
-for my own part I was better amused _outside_ the doors, than _in_.
-Masquerades can of themselves give very little pleasure except when they
-are new things. What was most my delight and wonder to observe, was the
-sight of perhaps two hundred people of different ranks, all in my mind
-strangely ill-treated by a nobleman; who having a private supper in the
-room, prevented their entrance who paid for admission; all mortified, all
-crowded together in an inconvenient place; all suffering much from heat,
-and more from disappointment; yet all in perfect good humour with each
-other, and with the gentleman who detained in longing and ardent, but
-not impatiently-expressed expectation, such a number of _Romans_: who,
-as I could not avoid remarking, certainly deserve to rule over all the
-world once more, if, as we often read in history, _command_ is to be best
-learned from the practice of _obedience_.
-
-The masquerade was carried on when we had once begun it, with more taste
-and elegance here, than either at Naples or Milan; so it was at Florence,
-I remember; more dresses of contrivance and fancy being produced. We had
-a very pretty device last night, of a man who pretended to carry statues
-about as if for sale: the gentlemen and ladies who personated the figures
-were incomparable from the choice of attitudes, and skill in colouring;
-but _il carnovale è morto_, as the women of quality told us last night
-from their coaches, in which they carried little transparent lanthorns of
-a round form, red, blue, green, &c. to help forward the shine; and these
-they throw at each other as they did sugar plums in the other towns,
-while the millions of small thin bougie candles held in every hand, and
-stuck up at every balcony, make the _Strada del Popolo_ as light as day,
-and produce a wonderfully pretty effect, gay, natural, and pleasing.
-
-The unstudied hilarity of Italians is very rejoicing to the heart, from
-one’s consciousness that it is the result of cheerfulness really felt,
-not a mere incentive to happiness hoped for. The death of Carnovale, who
-was carried to his grave with so many candles suddenly extinguished at
-twelve o’clock last night, has restored us to a tranquil possession of
-ourselves, and to an opportunity of examining the beauties of nature and
-art that surround one.
-
-St. Peter’s church is incontestably the first object in this city, so
-crowded with single figures: That this church should be built in the form
-of a Latin cross instead of a Greek one may be wrong for ought I know;
-that columns would have done better than piers inside, I do not think;
-but that whatever has been done by man might have been done better, if
-that is all the critics want, I readily allow. This church is, after all
-their objections, nearer to perfect than any other building in the world;
-and when Michael Angelo, looking at the Pantheon, said, “Is this the best
-our vaunted ancestors could do? If so, I will shew the advancement of the
-art, in suspending a dome of equal size to this up in the air.” he made a
-glorious boast, and was perhaps the only person ever existing who could
-have performed his promise.
-
-The figures of angels, or rather cherubims, eight feet high, which
-support the vases holding holy water, as they are made after the form
-of babies, do perfectly and closely represent infants of eighteen or
-twenty months old; nor till one comes quite close to them indeed, is
-it possible to discern that they are colossal. This is brought by some
-as a proof of the exact proportions kept, and of the prodigious space
-occupied, by the area of this immense edifice; and urged by others, as
-a peculiarity of the _human_ body to deceive so at a distance, most
-unjustly; for one is surprised exactly in the same manner by the doves,
-which ornament the church in various parts of it. _They_ likewise appear
-of the natural size, and completely within one’s reach upon entering
-the door, but soon as approached, recede to a considerable height, and
-prove their magnitude nicely proportioned to that of the angels and other
-decorations.
-
-The canopied altar, and its appurtenances, are likewise all colossal
-I think, when they tell me of four hundred and fifty thousand pounds
-weight of bronze brought from the Pantheon, and used to form the wreathed
-pillars which support, and the torses that adorn it. Yet airy lightness
-and exquisite elegance are the characteristics of the fabric, not gloomy
-greatness, or heavy solidity. How immense then must be the space it
-stands on! four hundred and sixty-seven of my steps carried me from the
-door to the end. Warwick castle would be contained in its middle _aisle_.
-Here are one hundred and twenty silver lamps, each larger than I could
-lift, constantly burning round the altar; and one never sees either
-them, or the light they dispense, till forced upon the observation of
-them, so completely are they lost in the general grandeur of the whole.
-In short, with a profusion of wealth that astonishes, and of splendour
-that dazzles, as soon as you enter on an examination of its secondary
-parts, every man’s _first_ impression at entering St. Peter’s church,
-must be surprise at seeing it so clear of superfluous ornament. This is
-the true character of innate excellence, the _simplex munditiis_, or
-_freedom from decoration_; the noble simplicity to which no embellishment
-can add dignity, but seems a mere appendage. Getting on the top of this
-stupendous edifice, is however the readiest way to fill one’s mind with
-a deserving notion of its extent, capacity, and beauty; nor is any
-operation easier, so happily contrived is the ascent. Contrivance here
-is an ill-chosen word too, so luminous so convenient is the walk, so
-spacious the galleries beside, that all idea of danger is removed, when
-you perceive that even round the undefended cornice, our king’s state
-coach might be most safely driven.
-
-The monuments, although incomparable, scarcely obtain a share of your
-admiration for the first ten times of your surveying the place; Guglielmo
-della Porta’s famous figure, supporting that dedicated to the memory
-of Paul the Third, was found so happy an imitation of female beauty
-by some madman here however, that it is said he was inflamed with a
-Pigmalion-like passion for it, of which the Pontiff hearing, commanded
-the statue to be draped. The steps at almost the end of this church we
-have all heard were porphyry, and so they are; how many hundred feet long
-I have now forgotten:--no matter; what I have not forgotten is, that I
-thought as I looked at them--why so they _should_ be porphyry--and that
-was all. While the vases and cisterns of the same beautiful substance
-at Villa Borghese attracted my wonder; and Clement X.’s urn at St. John
-de Lateran, appeared to me an urn fitter for the ashes of an Egyptian
-monarch, Busiris or Sesostris, than for a Christian priest or sovereign,
-since universal dominion has been abolished. Nothing, however, _can_
-look very grand in St. Peter’s church; and though I saw the general
-benediction given (I hope partook it) upon Easter day, my constant
-impression was, that the people were below the place; no pomp, no glare,
-no dove and glory on the chair of state, but what looked too little for
-the area that contained them. Sublimity disdains to catch the vulgar
-eye, she elevates the soul; nor can long-drawn processions, or splendid
-ceremonies, suffice to content those travellers who seek for images that
-never tarnish, and for truths that never can decay. Pius Sextus, in his
-morning dress, paying his private devotions at the altar, without any
-pageantry, and with very few attendants, struck me more a thousand and
-a thousand times, than when arrayed in gold, in colours, and diamonds,
-he was carried to the front of a balcony big enough to have contained
-the conclave; and there, shaded by two white fans, which, though really
-enormous, looked no larger than that a girl carries in her pocket,
-pronounced words which on account of the height they came from were
-difficult to hear.
-
-All this is known and felt by the managers of these theatrical
-exhibitions so certainly, that they judiciously confine great part of
-them to the _Capella Sestini_, which being large enough to impress
-the mind with its solemnity, and not spacious enough for the priests,
-congregation, and all, to be lost in it, is well adapted for those
-various functions that really make Rome a scene of perpetual gala during
-the holy week; which an English friend here protested to me he had never
-spent with so little devotion in his life before. The _miserere_ has,
-however, a strong power over one’s mind--the absence of all instrumental
-music, the steadiness of so many human voices, the gloom of the place,
-the picture of Michael Angelo’s last judgment covering its walls, united
-with the mourning dress of the spectators--is altogether calculated with
-great ingenuity to give a sudden stroke to the imagination, and kindle
-that temporary blaze of devotion it is wisely enough intended to excite:
-but even this has much of its effect destroyed, from the admission of too
-many people: crowd and bustle, and struggle for places, leave no room for
-any ideas to range themselves, and least of all, serious ones: nor would
-the opening of our sacred music in Westminster Abbey, when nine hundred
-performers join to celebrate _Messiah_’s praises, make that impression
-which it does upon the mind, were not the king, and court, and all the
-audience, as still as death, when the first note is taken.
-
-The ceremony of washing the pilgrims feet is a pleasing one: it is seen
-in high perfection here at Rome; where all that the pope personally
-performs is done with infinite grace, and with an air of mingled majesty
-and sweetness, difficult to hit, but singularly becoming in him, who is
-both priest of God, and sovereign of his people.
-
-But how, said Cyrus, shall I make men think me more excellent than
-themselves? _By being really so_, replies Xenophon, putting his words
-into the mouth of Cambyses. Pius Sextus takes no deeper method I believe,
-yet all acknowledge his superiour merit: No prince can less affect state,
-nor no clergyman can less adopt hypocritical behaviour. The Pope powders
-his hair like any other of the Cardinals, and is, it seems, the first
-who has ever done so. When he takes the air it is in a fashionable
-carriage, with a few, a very few guards on horseback, and is by no means
-desirous of making himself a shew. Now and then an old woman begs his
-blessing as he passes; but I almost remember the time when our bishops
-of Bangor and St. Asaph were followed by the country people in North
-Wales full as much or more, and with just the same feelings. One man
-in particular we used to talk of, who came from a distant part of our
-mountainous province, with much expence in proportion to his abilities,
-poor fellow, and terrible fatigue; he was a tenant of my father’s, who
-asked him how he ventured to undertake so troublesome a journey? It was
-to get my good Lord’s blessing, replied the farmer, _I hope it will
-cure my rheumatism_. Kissing the slipper at Rome will probably, in a
-hundred years more, be a thing to be thus faintly recollected by a few
-very old people; and it is strange to me it should have lasted so long.
-No man better knows than the present learned and pious successor of St.
-Peter, that St. Peter himself would permit no act of adoration to his
-own person; and that he severely reproved Cornelius for kneeling to him,
-charging him to rise and stand upon his feet, adding these remarkable
-words, _seeing I also am a man_[13]. Surely it will at last be found out
-among them that such a ceremony is inconsistent with the Pope’s character
-as a Christian priest, however it may suit state matters to continue it
-in the character of a sovereign. The road he is now making on every side
-his capital to facilitate foreigners approach, the money he has laid out
-on the conveniencies of the Vatican, the desire he feels of reforming a
-police much in want of reformation, joined to an immaculate character
-for private virtue and an elegant taste for the fine arts, must make
-every one wish for a long continuance of his health and dignity; though
-the wits and jokers, when they see his arms up, as they are often placed
-in galleries, &c. about the palace, and consist of a zephyr blowing on
-a flower, a pair of eagle’s wings, and a few stars, have invented this
-Epigram, to say that when the Emperor has got his eagle back, the King of
-France his fleurs de lys, and the stars are gone to heaven, Braschi will
-have nothing left him but the _wind_:
-
- Redde aquilam Cæsari, Francorum lilia regi,
- Sydera redde polo, cætera Brasche tibi.
-
-These verses were given me by an agreeable Benedictine Friar, member of a
-convent belonging to St. Paul’s _fuor delle mura_; he was a learned man,
-a native of Ragusa, had been particularly intimate with Wortley Montague,
-whose variety of acquirements had impressed him exceedingly.
-
-He shewed us the curiosities of his church, the finest in Rome next to
-St. Peter’s, and had silver gates; but the plating is worn off and only
-the brass remains. There is an old Egyptian candlestick above five feet
-high preserved here, and many other singularities adorn the church.
-The Pillars are 136 in number, all marble, and each consisting of one
-unjoined and undivided piece; 40 of these are fluted, and two which did
-belong to a temple of Mars are seven feet and a half each in diameter.
-Here is likewise the place where Nero ran for refuge to the house of his
-freed-man, and in the cloister a stone, with this inscription on it,
-
- _Hoc specus accepit post aurea tecta Neronem_[14].
-
-Here is an altar supported by four pillars of red porphyry, and here
-are the pictures of all the popes; St. Peter first, and our present
-Braschi last. It has given much occasion for chat that there should
-now be no room left to hang a successor’s portrait, and that he who now
-occupies the chair is painted in powdered hair and a white head-dress,
-such as he wears every day, to the great affliction of his courtiers, who
-recommended the usual state diadem; but “No, no,” said he, “there have
-been _red cap Popes_ enough, mine shall be only white,” and _white it is_.
-
-This beautiful edifice was built by the Emperor Theodosius, and there
-is an old picture at the top, of our Saviour giving the benediction in
-the form that all the Greek priests give it now. Apropos, there have
-been many sects of Oriental Christians dropt into the Church of Rome
-within these late years; a very venerable old Armenian says Greek mass
-regularly in St. Peter’s church every day before one particular altar;
-his long black dress and white beard attracted much of my notice; he
-saw it did, and now whenever we meet in the street by chance he kindly
-stands still to bless me. But the Syriac or Maronites have a church to
-themselves just by the _Bocca della Verita_; and extremely curious we
-thought it to see their ceremonies upon Palm Sunday, when their aged
-patriarch, not less than ninety-three years old, and richly attired with
-an inconvenient weight of drapery, and a mitre shaped like that of Aaron
-in our Bibles exactly, was supported by two olive coloured orientals,
-while he pronounced a benediction on the tree that stood near the altar,
-and was at least ten feet high. The attendant clergy, habited after their
-own eastern taste, and very superbly, had broad phylacteries bound on
-their foreheads after the fashion of the Jews, and carried long strips of
-parchment up and down the church, with the law written on them in Syriac
-characters, while they formed themselves into a procession and led their
-truly reverend principal back to his place. An exhibition so striking,
-with the view of many monuments round the walls, sacred to the memory
-of such, and such a bishop of Damascus, gave so strong an impression of
-Asiatic manners to the mind, that one felt glad to find Europe round one
-at going out again. One of the treasures much renowned in it we have seen
-to-day, the transfiguration painted by Rafaelle; it was the _first_ thing
-the Emperor _did_ visit when he came to Rome, and so a Franciscan Friar
-who shews it, told us. He saw a gentleman walk into church it seems, and
-leaving his friends at dinner, went out to converse with him. “_Pull
-aside the curtain, Sir_,” said the stranger, “_for I am in haste to see
-this master-piece of your immortal Raphael_.” I was as willing to be in
-a hurry as he, says the Friar, and observed how fortunate it was for us
-that it could not be moved, otherwise we had lost it long ago; for, Sir,
-said I, they would have carried it away from poor _Monte Citoria_ to
-some finer temple long ago; though, let me tell you, this is an elegant
-Doric building too, and one of Bramante’s best works, much admired by
-the English in particular. I hope, if it please God now that I should
-live but a very little longer, I may have the honour of shewing it _the
-Emperor_. “Is he expected?” enquired the gentleman. “Every day, Sir,”
-replies the Friar. “And _well now_,” cries the foreigner, “what sort of
-a man do you expect to see?” “Why, Sir, you seem a traveller, did _you_
-ever see him?” quoth the Franciscan. “Yes, sure, my good friend, very
-often indeed, he is as plain a man as myself, has good intentions, and an
-honest heart; and I think you would like him if you knew him, because he
-puts nobody out of their way.”
-
-This dialogue, natural and simple, had taken such hold of our good
-_religieux_’s fancy, that not a word would he say about the picture,
-while his imagination was so full of the prince, and of his own
-amazement at the salutation of his companions, when returning to the
-refectory;--“Why, Gaetano,” cried they, “thou hast been conversing with
-_Cæsar_:”--I too liked the tale, because it was artless, and because it
-was true. But the picture surpasses all praise; the woman kneeling on the
-fore-ground, her back to the spectators, seems a repetition of the figure
-in Raphael’s famous picture of the Vatican on fire, that is shewn in the
-chambers called particularly by his name; where the personifications of
-Justice and Meekness, engraved by Strange, seize one’s attention very
-forcibly; it is observable, that the first is every body’s favourite in
-the painting, the last in the engraving.
-
-Raphael’s Bible, as one of the long galleries is comically called by the
-connoisseurs, breaks one’s neck to look at it. The stories, beginning
-with Adam and Eve, are painted in small compartments; the colouring as
-vivid now as if it were done last week; and the _arabesques_ so gay
-and pretty, they are very often represented on fans; and we have fine
-engravings in England of all, yet, though exquisitely done, they give one
-somehow a false notion of the whole: so did Piranesi’s prints too, though
-invaluable, when considered by themselves as proofs of the artist’s
-merit. His judicious manner, however, of keeping all coarse objects
-from interfering with the grand ones, though it mightily increases the
-dignity, and adds to the spirit of his performance, is apt to lead him
-who wishes for information, into a style of thinking that will at last
-produce disappointment as to general appearances, which here at Rome is
-really disproportionate to the astonishing productions of art contained
-within its walls.
-
-But I must leave this glorious Vatican, with the perpetual regret of
-having seen scarcely any thing of its invaluable library, except the
-prodigious size and judicious ornaments of it: neither book nor MS.
-could I prevail on the librarian to shew me, except some love-letters
-from Henry the Eighth of England to Anne Boleyn, which he said were
-most likely to interest _me_: they were very gross and indecent ones to
-be sure; so I felt offended, and went away, in a very ill humour, to
-see Castle St. Angelo; where the emperor Adrian intended perpetually
-to repose; but the urn containing his ashes is now kept in a garden
-belonging to one of the courts in the palace, near the Apollo and other
-Greek statues of peculiar excellence. From his tomb too, some of the
-pillars of St. Paul’s were taken, and this splendid mausolæum converted
-into a sort of citadel, where Sixtus Quintus deposited three millions
-of gold, it is said; and Alexander the Sixth retired to shield himself
-from Charles the Eighth of France, who entered Rome by torch-light in
-1494, and forced the Pope to give him what the French historians call
-_l’investiture du royaume de Naples_; after which he took Capua, and
-made his conquering entry into Naples the February following, 1495;
-Ferdinand, son of Alphonso, flying before him. This Pope was the father
-of the famous Cæsar Borgia; and it was on this occasion, I believe, that
-the French wits made the well-known distich on his notorious avarice and
-rapacity:
-
- Vendit Alexander claves, altaria, Christum,
- Vendere jure potest, emerat ille prius[15].
-
-This Castle St. Angelo went once, I believe, under the name of the
-Ælian Bridge, when the emperor Adrian first fixed his mind on making a
-monument for himself there. The soldiers of Belisarius are said to have
-destroyed numberless statues which then adorned it, by their odd manner
-of defending the place from the Gothic assaulters. It is now a sort of
-tower for the confinement of state prisoners; and decorated with many
-well-painted, but ill-kept pictures of Polydore and Julio Romano.
-
-The fireworks exhibited here on Easter-day are the completest things of
-their kind in the world; three thousand rockets, all sent up into the air
-at once, make a wonderful burst indeed, and serve as a pretty imitation
-of Vesuvius: the lighting up of the building too on a sudden with
-fire-pots, had a new and beautiful effect; we all liked the entertainment
-vastly.
-
-I looked here for what some French _recueil_, _Menagiana_ if I remember
-rightly, had taught me to expect; this was some brass cannon belonging to
-Christina queen of Sweden, who had caused them to be cast, and added an
-engraving on them with these remarkable words;
-
- Habet sua fulmina Juno[16].
-
-No such thing, however, could be found or heard of. Indeed a search after
-truth requires such patience, such penetration, and such learning, that
-it is no wonder she is so seldom got a glimpse of; whoever is diligently
-desirous to find her, is so perplexed by ignorance, so retarded by
-caution, so confounded by different explications of the same thing
-recurring at every turn, so sickened with silly credulity on the one
-hand, and so offended with pertness and pyrrhonism on the other, that it
-is fairly rendered impossible for one to keep clear of prejudices, while
-the steady resolution to do so becomes itself a prejudice.--But with
-regard to little follies, it is better to laugh at than lament them.
-
-We were shewn one morning lately the spot where it is supposed St.
-Paul suffered decapitation; and our _Cicerone_ pointed out to us three
-fountains, about the warmth of Buxton, Matlock, or Bristol water,
-which were said to have burst from the ground at the moment of his
-martyrization. A Dutch gentleman in company, and a steady Calvinist,
-loudly ridiculed the tradition, called it an idle tale, and triumphantly
-expressed his _certain conviction_, that such an event _could not
-possibly_ have ever taken place. To this assertion no reply was made;
-and as we drove home all together, the conversation having taken a
-wide range and a different turn, he related in the course of it a long
-Rousseau-like tale of a lady he once knew, who having the strongest
-possible attachment to one lover, married another upon principles of
-filial obedience, still retaining inviolate her passion for the object of
-her choice, who, adorned with every excellence and every grace, continued
-a correspondence with her across the Atlantic ocean; having instantly
-changed his hemisphere, not to give the husband disturbance; who on his
-part admired their letters, many of which were written in _his_ praise,
-who had so cruelly interrupted their felicity. Seeing some marks of
-disbelief in my countenance, he begun observing, in an altered tone of
-voice, that _common_ and _vulgar_ minds might hold such events to be out
-of possibility, and such sentiments to be out of nature, but it was only
-because they were _above_ the _comprehension_ and beyond the reach of
-people educated in large and corrupt capitals, Paris, Rome, or London,
-to think true. Now was not some share of good breeding (best learned in
-great capitals perhaps) necessary to prevent one from retorting upon such
-an orator--that it was more likely nature should have been permitted
-to deviate in favour of Paul the apostle of Jesus Christ, than of a
-fat inhabitant of North Zealand, no way distinguished from the mass of
-mankind?
-
-But we have been called to pass some moments on the Cælian hill; and see
-the _Chiesa di San Gregorio_, interesting above all others to travellers
-who delight in the vestiges of Pagan Rome: as, having been built upon a
-Patrician’s house, it still to a great degree retains the form of one;
-while to the scholar who is pleased with anecdotes of ecclesiastical
-history, the days recur when the stone chair they shew us, contented the
-meek and venerable bishop of Rome who sate in it, while his gentle spirit
-sought the welfare of every Christian, and refused to persecute even
-the benighted and unbelieving Jews; opposing only the arms of piety and
-prayer, to the few enemies his transcendent excellence had raised him.
-His picture here is considered as a master-piece of Annibale Caracci;
-and it is strange to think that the trial-pieces, as they are called,
-should be erroneously treated of in the Carpenteriana: when speaking of
-the contention between the two scholars, to decide which the master sent
-for an old woman, Monsieur de Carpentier tells us the dispute lay between
-Domenichino and Albano--a gross mistake; as it was Guido, not Albano, who
-ventured to paint something in rivalry with Domenichino, relative to St.
-Andrew and his martyrdom; and these trial-pieces produced from her the
-same preference given by every spectator who has seen them since; for
-when Caracci (unwilling to offend either of his scholars, as both were
-men of the highest rank and talents) enquired of _her_ what _she_ thought
-of Guido’s performance?--“Indeed,” replied the old woman, “I have never
-yet looked at it, so fully has my mind been occupied by the powers shewn
-in that of Domenichino.”
-
-The _vecchia_ is here at Rome the common phrase when speaking of your
-only female servant, a person not unlike an Oxford or Cambridge bed-maker
-in appearance; and much amazed was I two days ago at the answer of _our_
-_vecchia_, when curiosity prompted me to ask her age:--“_O, Madam, I am a
-very aged woman_,” was the reply, “_and have two grandchildren married; I
-am forty-two years old_, poveretta me!” I told an Italian gentleman who
-dined with us what Caterina had said, and begged him to ask the _laquais
-de place_, who waited on us at table, a similar question. He appeared a
-large, well-looking, sturdy fellow, about thirty-eight years old; but
-said he was scarce twenty-two; that he had been married six years, and
-had five children. How old was your wife when you met?--“Thirteen, Sir,”
-answered Carlo: so all is kept even at least; for if they end life sooner
-than in colder climates, they begin it earlier it is plain.
-
-Yet such things seem strange to _us_; so do a thousand which occur in
-these warm countries in the commonest life. Brick floors, for example,
-with hangings of a dirty printed cotton, affording no bad shelter for
-spiders, bugs, &c.; a table in the same room, encrusted with _verd
-antique_, very fine and worthy of Wilton house; with some exceeding good
-copies of the finest pictures here at Rome; form the furniture of our
-present lodging: and now we have got the little casement windows clean to
-look at it, I pass whole hours admiring, even in the copy, our glorious
-descent from the cross, by Daniel de Volterra; which to say truth loses
-less than many a great performance of the same kind, because its merits
-consist in composition and design; and as sentiment, not style, is
-translatable, so grouping and putting figures finely together can be
-easier transmitted by a copy, than the meaner excellencies of colouring
-and finishing. Homer and Cervantes may be enjoyed by those who never
-learned their language, at least to a great degree; while a true taste
-of Gray’s Odes or Martial’s Epigrams has been hitherto found exceedingly
-difficult to communicate. It would, however, be cruel to deny the merit
-of colouring to Daniel de Volterra’s descent from the cross, only because
-being painted in fresco it has suffered so terribly by time and want of
-care, but it is now kept covered, and they remove the curtain when any
-body desires to contemplate its various beauties.
-
-The church of Santa Maria Maggiore has been too long unspoken of, rich
-as it is with the first gold torn from the unfortunate aborigines of
-America; a present from Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain to the Pope,
-in return for that permission he had given them to exert and establish
-their sanguinary sway over those luckless nations. One pillar from the
-temple of Peace is an ill-adapted ornament to this edifice, built nearly
-in the form of an ancient _basilica_; and with so expensive a quantity
-of gilding, that it is said two hundred and fifty thousand pounds were
-expended on one chapel only, which is at last inferior in fame and beauty
-to _cappella Corsini_; in riches and magnificence to _cappella Borghese_,
-where an amethyst frame of immense value surrounds the names, in gold
-cypher, of our blessed Saviour and his Mother, the ground of which is of
-transparent jasper, and cannot be matched for elegance or perfection,
-being at least four feet high (the tablets I mean), and three feet wide.
-But to this Borghese family, I am well persuaded, it would be a real
-fatigue to count the wealth which they enjoy.
-
-Villa Pamphili is a lovely place, or might be made so; but laying out
-pleasure grounds is not the forte of Italian taste. I never saw one of
-them, except Lomellino of Genoa, who had higher notions of a garden than
-what an opera scene affords; and that is merely a range of trees in great
-pots with gilded handles, and rows of tall cypresses planted one between
-every two pots, all straight over against each other in long lines; with
-an octangular marble bason to hold water in the middle, covered for the
-most part with a thick green scum.
-
-At Villa Pamphili is a picture of Sanctorius, who made the weighing
-balance spoken of by Addison in the Spectator; it was originally
-contrived for the Pamphili Pope. And here is an old statue of Clodius
-profaning the mysteries of the Bona Dea, as we read in the Roman history.
-And here are camels working in the park like horses: we found them
-playing about at their leisure when we were at Pisa, and at Milan they
-were shewed for a show; so little does one state of Italy connect with
-another. These three cities cannot possibly be much further from each
-other than London, York, and Exeter; yet the manners differ entirely,
-and what is done in one place is not known at all in the other. It must
-be remembered that they are all separate states.
-
-At the Farnesini palace our amusements were of a nature very contrary
-to this; but every place produces amusement when one is willing to be
-pleased. After looking over the various and inestimable productions
-of art contained there, we came at last to the celebrated marriage of
-Alexander’s Roxana; where, say some of the books of description, the
-world’s greatest hero is represented by Europe’s greatest painter. Some
-French gentlemen were in our company, and looking steadily at the picture
-for a while, one of them exclaimed, “_A la fin voila ce qui est vrayment
-noble; cet Alexandre là; il paroit effectivement le roy de France
-même_[17].”
-
-The Spada palace boasts Guercino’s Dido, so disliked by the critics, who
-say she looks spitted; but extremely esteemed by those that understand
-its merit in other respects. There is also the very statue kept at this
-palace, at the feet of which Cæsar fell when he was assassinated at
-the capitol: those who shew it never fail to relate his care to die
-gracefully; which was likewise the last desire that occupied Lucretia’s
-mind: Augustus too, justly considering his life as scenical, desired the
-_plaudits_ of his friends at its conclusion: and even Flavius Vespasian,
-a plain man as one should think during a pretty large portion of his
-existence, wished at last to _die like an emperor_. That this statue
-of Pompey should have been accidentally found with the head lying in
-one man’s ground and the body in another, is curious enough: a rage for
-appropriation gets the better of all the love of arts; so the contending
-parties (like the sisters in David Simple, with their fine-worked carpet)
-fairly severed the statue, and took home each his half; the proprietor
-of this palace meanwhile purchased the two pieces, stuck them once more
-together, and here they are.--Pity but the sovereign had carried both off
-for himself.--Pius Sextus however is not so disposed: he has had a legacy
-left him within these last years, to the prejudice of some nobleman’s
-heirs; who loudly lamented _their fate_, and _his tyranny_ who could take
-advantage, as they expressed it, of their relation’s caprice. The Pope
-did not give it them back, because they behaved so ill, he said; but
-neither did he seize what was left him, by dint of despotic authority;
-_he went to law_ with the family for it, which I thought a very strange
-thing; _and lost his cause_, which I thought a still stranger.
-
-We have just been to see his gardens; they are poor things enough;
-and the device of representing Vulcan’s cave with the Cyclops, in
-_water_-works, was more worthy of Ireland than Rome! Monte Cavallo is
-however a palace of prodigious dignity; the pictures beyond measure
-excellent; his collection of china-ware valuable and tasteful, and there
-are two Mexican jars that can never be equalled.
-
-Villa Albani is the most dazzling of any place yet however; and the
-caryatid pillars the finest things in it, though replete with wonders,
-and distracting with objects each worthy a whole day’s attention. Here
-is an antique list of Euripides’s plays in marble, as those tell me who
-can read the Greek inscriptions; I lose infinite pleasure every day,
-for want of deeper learning. Pillars not only of _giall’ antique_, but
-of _paglia_[18], which no house but this possesses, amaze and delight
-_indocti doctique_ though; the Vatican itself cannot shew such: a red
-marble mask here, three feet and a half in diameter, is unrivalled; they
-tell you it is worth its own weight in louis d’ors: a canopus in basalt
-too; and cameos by the thousand.
-
-Mengs should have painted a more elegant Apollo for the centre of such
-a gallery; but his muses make amends; the Viaggiana says they are all
-portraits, but I could get nobody to tell me whose. The Abbé Winckelman,
-who if I recollect aright lost his life by his passion for _virtù_,
-arranged this stupendous collection, in conjunction with the cardinal,
-whose taste was by all his contemporaries acknowledged the best in Rome.
-
-We were carried this morning to a cabinet of natural history belonging to
-another cardinal, but it did not answer the account given of it by our
-conductors.
-
-What has most struck me here as a real improvement upon social and civil
-life, was the school of Abate Sylvester, who, upon the plan of Monsieur
-L’Epée at Paris, teaches the deaf and dumb people to speak, read, write,
-and cast accounts; he likewise teaches them the principles of logic,
-and instructs them in the sacred mysteries of our holy religion. I am
-not naturally credulous, nor apt to take payment in words for meanings;
-much of my _life_ has been spent, and all my _youth_, in the tuition of
-babies; I was of course less likely to be deceived; and I can safely say,
-that they did appear to have learned all he taught them: that appearance
-too, if it were no more, is so difficult to obtain, the patience required
-from the master is so very great, and the good he is doing to mankind
-so extensive, that I did not like offensively to detect the difference
-between _knowing_ a syllogism and _appearing_ to know it. With regard
-to morality, the pupils have certainly gained many præcognita. While
-the capital scholars were shewing off to another party, I addressed a
-girl who sat working in the window, and perceived that she could explain
-the meaning of the commandments competently well. To prove the truth, I
-pretended to pick a gentleman’s pocket who stood near me; _peccato!_ said
-the wench distinctly; she was about ten years old perhaps: but a little
-boy of seven was deservedly the master’s favourite; he really possessed
-the most intelligent and interesting countenance I ever saw, and when to
-explain the major, minor, and consequence, he put the two first together
-into his hat with an air of triumph, we were enchanted with him. Some one
-to teize him said he had red hair; he instantly led them to a picture of
-our Saviour which hung in the room, said it was the same colour of his,
-and ought to be respected.
-
-Surely it is little to the credit of us English, that this worthy Abbé
-Sylvester should have a stipend from government; that Monsieur L’Epée de
-Paris should be encouraged in the same good work; that Mr. Braidwood’s
-Scotch pupils should justly engage every one’s notice--while _we sleep!_
-A friend in company seeing me fret at this, asked me if I, or any one
-else, had ever seen or heard of a person really qualified for the common
-duties of society by any of these professors;--“That a deaf and dumb man
-should understand how to discourse about the hypostatic union,” added
-he, “I will not desire; but was there ever known in Paris, Edinburgh, or
-Rome, a deaf and dumb shoemaker, carpenter, or taylor? Or did ever any
-watchmaker, fishmonger, or wheelwright, ever keep and willingly employ a
-deaf and dumb journeyman?”--Nobody replied; and we went on our way to see
-what was easier decided upon and understood--the tomb of Raphael at the
-Pantheon.
-
-Among the many tours that have been written, a musical tour, an
-astronomical tour, &c. I wonder we have never had a sepulchral tour,
-making the tombs of famous men its object of attention. That Raphael,
-Caracci, with many more people of eminence, sleep at the Pantheon, is
-however but a secondary consideration; few can think of the monuments in
-this church, till they have often contemplated its architecture, which
-is so finely proportioned that on first entering you think it smaller
-than it really is: the pillars are enormous, the shafts all of one piece,
-the composition Egyptian granite; these are the sixteen which support
-the portico built by Agrippa; whose car, adorned with trophies and drawn
-by brazen horses, once decorated the pediment, where the holes formed
-by the cramps which fastened it are still visible. Genseric changed the
-gate, and connoisseurs know not where he placed that which Agrippa made:
-the present gate is magnificent, but does not fit the place; much of
-the brass plating was removed by Urban the Eighth, and carried to St.
-Peter’s: he was the Barberini pope; and of him the people said--
-
- Barbarini faciunt barbara, &c.
-
-He was a poet however, and could make epigrams himself; there is a very
-fine edition of his poems printed at Paris under the title of _Maffei
-Barberini Poemata_; and such was his knowledge of Greek literature,
-that he was called the Attic bee. The drunken faun asleep at Palazzo
-Barberini, by some accounted the first statue in Rome, we owe wholly to
-his care in its preservation.
-
-But the Pantheon must not be quitted till we have mentioned its pavement,
-where the precious stones are not disposed, as in many churches, without
-taste or care, apparently by chance; here all is inlaid, so as to
-enchant the eye with its elegance, while it dazzles one with its riches:
-the black porphyry, in small squares, disposed in compartments, and
-inscribed as one may call it in pavonazzino perhaps; the red, bounded
-by serpentine; the granites, in giall antique, have an undescribable
-effect; no Florence table was ever so beautiful: nor can we here regret
-the caryatid pillars said by Pliny to have graced this temple in his
-time; while the four prodigious columns, two of Egyptian granite, two of
-porphyry, still remain, and replace them so very well. Montiosius, who
-sought for the pillars said by Pliny to have been placed by Diogenes, an
-Athenian architect, as supporters of this temple, relates however, that
-in the year 1580 he saw four of them buried in the ground as high as
-their shoulders: but it does not seem a tale much attended to; though I
-confess my own desire of digging, as he points out the place so exactly,
-on the right hand side of the portico. The best modern caryatids are in
-the old Louvre at Paris, done by Goujon; but those of Villa Albani are
-true antiques, perfect in beauty, inestimable in value.
-
-The church that now stands where a temple to Bacchus was built, _fuori
-delle mura_, engaged our attention this morning. Nothing can be fresher
-than the old decorations in honour of this jocund deity; the figures
-of men and women carrying grapes, oxen drawing barrels, &c. all the
-progress of a gay and plenteous vintage; a sacrifice at the end. I forget
-to whom the church is now dedicated, but _it is_ a church; and from under
-it has been dug up a sarcophagus, all of one piece of red porphyry, which
-represents on its sides a Bacchanalian triumph; the coffin is nine feet
-long, and the Pope intends removing it to the Vatican, as a companion
-to that of Scipio Æmilianus, found a few months ago; his name engraven
-on it, and his bones inside. Before the proper precautions could be
-taken however, _they_ were flung away by mistaken zeal and prejudice;
-but an Englishman, say they, who loves an unbeliever, got possession of
-a _tooth_: meantime the ashes of the emperor Adrian, who, as Eusebius
-tells us, set up the figure of a swine on the gates of Bethlehem, built
-a temple in honour of Venus, on Mount Calvary; another to Jupiter,
-upon the hill whence our Saviour ascended into heaven in sight of his
-disciples;--_his_ ashes are kept in a gilt pine-apple, brought from
-Castle St. Angelo, and preserved among other rarities in the Pope’s
-musæum. So poor Scipio’s remains needed not to have been treated worse
-than _his_, as we know not how good a Christian he might have made,
-had he lived but 150 years later: we are sure that he was a wise and a
-warlike man; that he fulfilled the scriptures unwittingly by burning
-Carthage; and that he protected Polybius, whom he would scarcely suffer
-out of his sight.
-
-After looking often at the pictures of St. Sebastian, I have now seen
-his church founded by Constantine: he lies here in white marble, done by
-Bernini; and here are more marvellous columns.--I am tired of looking out
-words to express their various merits.
-
-The catacombs attract me more strongly; here, and here alone, can one
-obtain a just idea of the melancholy lives, and dismal deaths, endured
-by those who first dared at Rome to profess a religion inoffensive
-and beneficial to all mankind. San Filippo Neri has his body somewhat
-distinguished from the rest of these old pious Christians, among whom
-he lived to a surprising age, making a cave his residence. Relics are
-now dug up every day from these retreats, and venerated as having once
-belonged to martyrs murdered for their early attachment to a belief
-now happily displayed over one quarter of the world, and making daily
-progress in another not discovered when those heroic mortals died to
-attest its truth. There is however great danger of deception in digging
-out the relics, these catacombs having been in Trajan’s time made a
-burial-place for slaves; and such it continued to be during the reign
-of those Roman emperors who despised rather than persecuted the new
-religion in its infancy. The consciousness of this fact should cure the
-passion many here shew for relics, the authenticity of which can never
-be ascertained. Those shewn to the people in St. Peter’s church one
-evening in the holy week, all came from here it seems; and loudly do our
-Protestant travellers exclaim at their idolatry who kneel during the
-exposure; though for my life I cannot see how the custom is _idolatrous_.
-He who at the moment a dead martyr’s robe is shewn him, begs grace of God
-to follow that great example, is certainly doing no harm, or in any wise
-contradicting the rules of our Anglican church, whose collects for every
-saint’s day express a like supplication for power to imitate that saint’s
-good example; if once they worship the relics indeed, it were better
-they were burned; and to say true, they should not be exposed without a
-sermon explaining their use, lest vulgar minds might be unhappily misled
-to mistake the real end of their exposure, and profanely substitute the
-creature for the Creator. Meanwhile no one has a right to ridicule the
-love of what once belonged to a favourite character, who has ever felt
-attachment to a dead friend’s snuff-box, or desire of possessing Scipio
-Æmilianus’s tooth.
-
-But the best effort to excite temporary devotion, and commemorate sacred
-seasons, was the illuminated cross upon Good Friday night, depending
-from the high dome of St. Peter’s church; where its effect upon the
-architecture is strangely powerful, so large are the masses both of
-light and shade; whilst the sublime images raised in one’s mind by its
-noble simplicity and solitary light, hover before the fancy, and lead
-recollection round through a thousand gloomy and mysterious passages,
-with no unsteady pace however, while she follows the rays which beam from
-the Redeemer’s cross. Being obliged indeed to go with company to these
-solemnities, takes off from their effect, and turns imagination into
-another channel, disagreeably enough, but it must be so; where there is a
-thing to be seen every one will go to see it, and that which was intended
-to produce sensations of gladness, gratitude, or wonder, ends _in being
-a show_. The consciousness of this fact only kept me from wishing to see
-the Duomo di Milano, or the cathedral of Canterbury illuminated just so,
-with lamps placed in rows upon a plain wooden cross; which surely would
-have, upon those old Gothic structures, an unequalled effect as to the
-forming of light and shadow.
-
-But let us wish for any thing now rather than a _fine sight_. I am tired
-with the very word _a sight_; while the Jesuits church here at Rome,
-with the figure of St. Ignatius all covered with precious stones, with
-bronze angels by Bernini, and every decoration that money can purchase
-and industry collect, rather dazzles than delights one, I think.
-
-The Italians seem to find out, I know not why, that it is a good thing
-the Jesuits are gone; though they steadily endeavour to retain those
-principles of despotism which it was their peculiar province to inspire
-and confirm, and whilst all men must see that the work of education goes
-on worse in other hands. Indeed nothing can be wilder than committing
-youth to the tuition of monks and nuns, unless, like them, they were
-intended for the cloister. Young people are but too ready to find fault
-with their teachers, and these are given into the hands of those teachers
-who have a fault _ready found_. Every christian, every moral instruction
-driven into their tender minds, weakens with the experience that he or
-she who inculcated it was a recluse; and that they who are to live in the
-world forsooth, must have more enlarged notions: whereas, to a Jesuit
-tutor, no such objection could be made; they were themselves men of the
-world, their institution not only permitted but obliged them to mingle
-with mankind, to study characters, to attend to the various transactions
-passing round them, and take an active part. It was indeed this spirit
-pushed too far, which undid and destroyed their order, so useful to the
-church of Rome. Connections with various nations they found best obtained
-by commerce, and the sweets of commerce once tasted, what body of men has
-been yet able to relinquish? But the principles of trade are formed in
-direct opposition to that spirit of subordination by which alone _their_
-existence could continue; and it is unjust to charge any single event or
-person with the dissolution of a body, incompatible with that state of
-openness and freedom to which Europe is hastening. Incorporated societies
-too carry, like individuals, the seeds of their own destruction in their
-bosoms;
-
- As man perhaps the moment of his breath
- Receives the lurking principle of death;
- The young disease, which must subdue at length,
- Grows with his growth, and strengthens with his strength.
-
-Every warehouse opened in every part of Europe, every settlement obtained
-abroad, facilitated their undoing, by loosening the band which tied them
-close together. Extremes can never keep their distance from each other,
-while human affairs trot but in a circle; and surely no stronger proof of
-that position can be found, than the sight of Quakers in Pensylvania, and
-Jesuits in Paraguay, who lived with their converted Indian neighbours,
-alike in harmony, and peace, and love.
-
-We have been led to reflections of this sort by a view of girls portioned
-here at Rome once a year, some for marriage and others for a nunnery;
-the last set were handsomest and fewest, and the people I converse with
-say that every day makes almost visible diminution in the number of
-monks and nuns. I know not, however, whether Italy will go on much the
-better for having so few convents; some should surely be left, nay some
-_must_ be left in a country where it is not possible for every man to
-obtain a decent livelihood by labour as in England: no army, no navy,
-very little commerce possible to the inland states, and very little need
-of it in any; little study of the law too, where the prince or baron’s
-lips pronounce on the decision of property; what must people do where
-so few professions are open? Can they _all_ be physicians, priests,
-or shopkeepers, where little physic is taken, and few goods bought?
-There are already more clergy than can live, and I saw an _abate_ with
-the _petit collet_ at Lucca, playing in the orchestra at the opera for
-eighteen pence pay. Let us be all contented with the benefits received
-from heaven, and let us learn better than to set up _self_, whether
-nation or individual, as a standard to which all others must be reduced;
-while imitation is at last but meanness, and each may in his own sphere
-serve God and love his neighbours, while variety renders life more
-pleasing. _Quod sis esse velis_[19], is an admirable maxim, and surely
-no self-denial is necessary to its practice; while God has kindly given
-to Italians a bright sky, a penetrating intellect, a genius for the
-polite and liberal arts, and a soil which produces literally, as well as
-figuratively, almost spontaneous fruits. He has bestowed on Englishmen a
-mild and wholesome climate, a spirit of application and improvement, a
-judicious manner of thinking to increase, and commerce to procure, those
-few comforts their own island fails to produce. The mind of an Italian
-is commonly like his country, extensive, warm, and beautiful from the
-irregular diversification of its ideas; an ardent character, a glowing
-landscape. That of an Englishman is cultivated, rich, and regularly
-disposed; a steady character, a delicious landscape.
-
-I must not quit Rome however without a word of Angelica Kauffman, who,
-though neither English nor Italian, has contrived to charm both nations,
-and shew her superior talents both here and there. Beside her paintings,
-of which the world has been the judge, her conversation attracts all
-people of taste to her house, which none can bear to leave without
-difficulty and regret. But a sight of the Santa Croce palace, with its
-disgusting _Job_, and the man in armour so visibly horror-striken, puts
-all painters but Salvator Rosa for a while out of one’s head. This
-master’s works are not frequent, though he painted with facility. I
-suppose he is difficult to imitate or copy, so what we have of him is
-_original_. There are too many living objects here in Job’s condition,
-not to render walking in the streets extremely disagreeable; and though
-we are told there are seventeen markets in Rome, I can find none, the
-_forum boarium_ being kept alike in all parts of the city for ought I
-see; butchers standing at their shop doors, which are not shut nor the
-shop cleaned even on Sundays, while blood is suffered to run along the
-kennels in a manner very shocking to humanity. Mr. Greatheed made me
-remark that the knife they use now, is the same employed by the old
-Romans in cutting up the sacrificed victim; and there are in fact
-ancient figures in many bas-reliefs of this town, which represent the
-inferior officers, or _popæ_, with a priest’s albe reaching from their
-arms and tucked up tight, with the sacrificing knife fastened to it,
-exactly as the modern butcher wears his dress. The apron was called
-_limus_, and there was a purple welt sewed on it in such a manner as to
-represent a serpent:
-
- Velati limo, et verbenâ tempora vincti[20];
-
-which Servius explains at length, but gives no reason for the serpentine
-form, by some people exalted, particularly Mr. Hogarth, as nearly allied
-to the perfection of all possible grace. This looks hypothetical, but
-when the map of both hemispheres displayed before one, shews that the
-Sun’s path forms the same line, called by pre-eminence Ecliptic, we will
-pardon their predilection in its favour.
-
-But it is time to take leave of this _Roma triumphans_, as she is
-represented in one statue with a weeping province at her foot, _so_
-beautiful! it reminded me of Queen Eleanor and fair Rosamond. The
-Viaggiana sent me to look for many things I should not have found
-without that instructive guide, particularly the singular inscription on
-Gaudentius the actor’s tomb, importing that Vespasian rewarded him with
-death, but that _Kristus_, for so Christ is spelt, will reward him with
-a finer theatre in heaven. He was one of our early martyrs it appears,
-and an altar to _him_ would surely be now more judiciously placed at a
-play-house door than one to good St. Anthony, under whose protection the
-theatre at Naples is built; with no great propriety it must be confessed,
-when that Saint, disgusted by the levities of life, retired to finish
-his existence, far from the haunts of man, among the horrors of an
-unfrequented desert. So has it chanced however, that by many sects of
-Christians, the player and his profession have been severely reprobated;
-Calvinists forbid them their walls as destructive to morality, while
-Romanists, considering them as justly excommunicated, refuse them the
-common rites of sepulture. Scripture affords no ground for such severity.
-Dr. Johnson once told me that St. Paul quoted in his epistles a comedy of
-Menander; and I got the librarian at Venice to shew me the passage marked
-as a quotation in one of the old editions: it is then a fair inference
-enough that the apostle could never have prohibited to his followers
-the sight of plays, when he cited them himself; they were indeed more
-innocent than any other show of the days he lived in, and if well managed
-may be always made subservient to the great causes of religion and
-virtue. The passage cited was this:
-
- Evil communication corrupts good manners.
-
-And now with regard to the present state of morals at Rome, one must not
-judge from staring stories told one; it is like Heliogabalus’s method of
-computing the number of his citizens from the weight of their cobwebs. It
-is wonderful to me the people are no worse, where no methods are taken to
-keep them from being bad.
-
-As to the society, I speak not from myself, for I saw nothing of it; some
-English liked it, but more complained. Wanting amusement, however, can be
-no complaint, even without society, in a city so pregnant with wonders,
-so productive of reflections; and if the Roman nobles are haughty,
-who can wonder; when one sees doors of agate, and chimney-pieces of
-amethyst, one can scarcely be surprised at the possessors pride,
-should they in contempt turn their backs upon a foreigner, whom they
-are early taught to consider as the Turks consider women, creatures
-formed for their _use_ only, or at best _amusement_, and devoted to
-certain destruction at the hour of death. With such principles, the
-hatred and scorn they naturally feel for a protestant will easily swell
-into superciliousness, or burst out into arrogance, the moment it is
-unrestrained by the necessity of forms among the rich, and the desire of
-pillage in the poor.
-
-But I shall be glad _now_ to exchange lapis lazuli for violets, and
-verd antique for green fields. Here are more amethysts about Rome than
-lilacs; and the laburnum which at this gay season adorns the environs
-of London, I look for in vain about the Porta del Popolo. The proud
-purple tulip which decorates the ground hereabouts, opposed to the
-British harebell, is _Italy_ and _England_ again; but the _harebell_ by
-cultivation becomes a _hyacinth_, the _tulip_ remains where it began. We
-are now at the 16th of April, yet I know not how or why it is, although
-the oaks, young, small, and straggling as they are, have the leaves come
-out all broad and full already, though the fig is bursting out every day
-and hour, and the mulberry tree, so tardy in our climate, that I have
-often been unable to see scarcely a bud upon them even in May, is here
-completely furnished. Apple trees are yet in blossom round this city, and
-the few elms that can be found, are but just unfolding. Common shrubs
-continue their wintry appearance, and in the general look of spring
-little is gained. The hedges now of Kent and Surrey are filled with
-fragrance I am sure, and primroses in the remoter provinces torment the
-sportsmen with spoiling the drag on a soft scenting morning; while limes,
-horse-chesnuts, &c. contribute to produce an effect not so inferior to
-that fostered by Italian sunshine, as I expected to find it.
-
-Why the first breath of far-distant summer should thus affect the oak
-and fig, yet leave the elm and apple as with us, the botanists must
-tell; few advances have been made in vegetation since we left Naples,
-that is certain; the hedges were as forward near Pozzuoli two full
-months ago. And here are no China oranges to be bought; no, nor a
-cherry or strawberry to be seen, while every man of fashion’s table in
-London is covered with them; and all the shops of Covent-garden and St.
-James’s-street hang out their luxurious temptations of fruit, to prove
-the proximity of summer, and the advantages of industrious cultivation.
-Our eating pleased me more at every town than this; where however a man
-might live very well I believe for sixpence a-day, and lodge for twenty
-pounds a-year; and whoever has no attachment to religion, friends, or
-country, no prejudices to plague his neighbours with, and no dislike
-to take the world as it goes, for six or seven years of his life, may
-spend them profitably at Rome, if either his business or his pleasure be
-made out of the works of art; as an income of two, or indeed one hundred
-pounds _per annum_, will purchase a man more refined delights of that
-kind here, than as many thousands in England: nor need he want society at
-the first houses, palaces one ought to call them, as Italians measure no
-man’s merit by the weight of his purse; they know how to reverence even
-poverty, and soften all its sorrows with an appearance of respect, when
-they find it unfortunately connected with noble birth. His own country
-folk’s neglect, as they pass through, would indeed be likely enough to
-disturb his felicity, and lessen the kindness of his Roman friends, who
-having no idea of a person’s being shunned for _any_ other _possible
-reason_ except the want of a pedigree, would conclude that _his_ must be
-essentially deficient, and lament their having laid out so many caresses
-on an impostor.
-
-The air of this city is unwholesome to foreigners, but if they pass
-the first year, the remainder goes well enough; many English seem very
-healthy, who are established here without even the smallest intention
-of returning home to Great Britain, for which place we are setting out
-to-morrow, 19th April 1786, and quit a town that still retains so many
-just pretences to be styled the first among the cities of the earth; to
-which almost as many strangers are now attracted by curiosity, as were
-dragged thither by violence in the first stage of its dominion, impelled
-by superstitious zeal in the second. The rage for antiquities now seems
-to have spread its contagion of connoisseurship over all those people
-whose predecessors tore down, levelled, and destroyed, or buried under
-ground their statues, pictures, every work of art; Poles, Russians,
-Swedes, and Germans innumerable, flock daily hither in this age, to
-admire with rapture the remains of those very fabrics which their own
-barbarous ancestors pulled down ten centuries ago; and give for the
-head of a _Livia_, a _Probus_, or _Gallienus_, what emperors and queens
-could not then use with any efficacy, for the preservation of their own
-persons, now grown sacred by rust, and valuable from their difficulty to
-be decyphered. The English were wont to be the only travellers of Europe,
-the only dupes too in this way; but desire of distinction is diffused
-among all the northern nations, and our Romans here have it more in
-their power, with that prudence to assist them which it is said they do
-not want, if not to _conquer_ their neighbours once again, at least to
-_ruin_ them, by dint of digging up their dead heroes, and calling in the
-assistance of their old Pagan deities, _now_ useful to them in a _new_
-manner, and ever propitious to this city, although
-
- Enlighten’d Europe with disdain
- Beholds the reverenc’d heathen train,
- Nor names them more in this her clearer day,
- Unless with fabled force to aid the poet’s lay.
-
- R. MERRY.
-
-
-
-
-FROM ROME TO ANCONA.
-
-
-In our road hither we passed through what remains of Veia, once so
-esteemed and liked by the Romans, that they had a good mind, after
-they had driven Brennus back, to change the seat of empire and remove
-it there; but a belief in augury prevented it, and that event was put
-off till Constantine, seduced by beauties of situation, made the fatal
-change, and broke the last thread which had so long bound tight together
-the fasces of Roman sway. We did not taste the _Vinum Veientanum_
-mentioned by Martial and Horace, but trotted on to Civita Castellana,
-where Camillus rejected the base offer of the schoolmaster of Fescennium;
-a good picture of his well-judged punishment is still preserved in the
-Capitol.
-
-The first night of our journey was spent at Otricoli, where I heard the
-cuckoo sing in a shriller sharper note than he does in England. I had
-never listened to him before since I left my own country, and his song
-alone would have convinced me I was no longer in it. Porta di Fuga
-at Spoleta gates, commemorating poor Hannibal’s precipitate retreat
-after the battle of Thrasymene, may perhaps detain us a while upon this
-Flaminian way; it was not Titus Flaminius though, whose negotiations
-ruined Hannibal for ever, that gave name to the road, but Caius of the
-same family; they had been Flamens formerly, and were therefore called
-Flaminius, when drawn up by accident or merit into notice; the same
-custom still obtains with us: we have _Dr. Priestley_ and _Mr. Parsons_.
-
-Narni Bridge cost us some trouble in clambering, and more in disputing
-whether it was originally an aqueduct or a bridge--or both. It is a
-magnificent structure, irregularly built, the arches of majestic height,
-but all unequal. There was water enough under it when I was there to take
-off the impropriety apparent to many of turning so large an arch over
-so small a stream. Yet notwithstanding that the river was much swelled
-by long continuance of the violent rains which lately so overflowed the
-city of Rome, assisted by the Tyber, that people went about the streets
-in boats, notwithstanding the snows tumbled down from the surrounding
-mountains, must have much increased the quantity, and lowered the colour
-of the river:--We found it even _now_ yellow with brimstone, and well
-deserving the epithet of _sulphureous Nar_.
-
-The next day’s drive carried us forward to Terni, where a severe
-concussion of the earth suffered only three nights since, kept all the
-little town in terrible alarm; the houses were deserted, the churches
-crowded, supplications and processions in every street, and people
-singing all night to the Virgin under our window.
-
-Well! the next morning we hired horses for our gentlemen; a little
-cart, not inconvenient at all, for my maid and me; and scrambled over
-many rocks to view the far-famed waterfall, through a sweet country,
-pleasingly intersected with hedges and planted with vines; the ground
-finely undulated, and rising by gradations of hill till the eye loses
-itself among the lofty Appenines; surly as they seem, and one would
-think impervious; but against human art and human ambition, the boundary
-of rocks and roaring seas lift their proud heads in vain. Man renders
-them subservient to his imperial will, and forces them to facilitate,
-not impede his dominion; while ocean’s self supports his ships, and the
-mountain yields marble to decorate his palace.
-
-This is however no moment and no place to begin a panegyric upon the
-power of man, and of his skill to subjugate the works of nature, where
-the people are trembling at its past, and dreading its future effects.
-
-The cascade we came to see is formed by the fall of a whole river, which
-here abruptly drops into the Nar, from a height so prodigious, and by a
-course so unbroken, that it is difficult to communicate, so as to receive
-the idea: for no eye can measure the depth of the precipice, such is
-the tossing up of foam from its bottom; and the terrible noise heard
-long before one arrives so stunned and confounded all my wits at once,
-that many minutes passed before I observed the horror in our conductors,
-who coming with us, then first perceived how the late earthquake had
-twisted the torrent out of its proper channel, and thrown it down another
-neighbouring rock, leaving the original bed black and deserted, as a
-dismal proof of the concussion’s force.
-
-One of our English friends who had visited Schaffhausen, made no
-difficulty to prefer this wonderful cascade to the fall of the Rhine
-at that place; and what with the fissures made in the ground by recent
-earthquakes, the sight of propt-up cottages which fright the fancy
-more than those already fallen, and the roar of dashing waters driven
-from their destined currents by what the people here emphatically term
-palpitations of the earth; one feels a thousand sensations of sublimity
-unexcited by less accidents, and soon obliterated by real danger.
-
-Why the inhabitants will have this tumbling river be _Topino_, I know
-not; but no suggestions of mine could make them name it Velino, as our
-travellers uniformly call it: for, say they, _quello è il nome del
-sorgente_[21]; and in fact Virgil’s line,
-
- Sulfureâ Nar, albus acqua fontesque Velini,
-
-says no more.
-
-The mountains after Terni grow steep and difficult; no one who wishes to
-see the Appenines in perfection must miss this road, yet are they not
-comparable to the Alps at best, which being more lofty, more craggy, and
-almost universally terminating in points of granite devoid of horizontal
-strata, give one a more majestic idea of their original and duration.
-Spoleto is on the top of one of them, and Porta della Fuga meets one at
-its gates. Here as our coach broke (and who can wonder?) we have time to
-talk over old stories, and _look for streams immortaliz’d in song_: for
-being tied together only with ropes, we cannot hurry through a country
-most delightful of all others to be detained in.
-
-The little temple to the river god Clitumnus afforded matter of
-discussion amongst our party, whether this was, or was not the very
-one mentioned by Pliny: _Adjacet templum priscum et religiosum. Stat
-Clitumnus ipse amictus ornatusque_[22].
-
-Mr. Greatheed was angry with me for admiring spiral columns, as he
-said pillars were always meant to support something, and spiral lines
-betrayed weakness. Mr. Chappelow quoted every classic author that had
-ever mentioned the white cattle; and I said that so far as they were
-whiter than other beasts of the same kind, so far were they worse; for
-that whiteness in the works of nature shewed feebleness still more than
-spirals in the works of art perhaps. So chatting on--but on no Flaminian
-way, we arrived at Foligno; where the people told us that it was the
-quality of those waters to turn the clothing of many animals white, and
-accordingly all the fowls looked like those of _Darking_. I had however
-no taste of their beauty, recollecting that when I kept poultry, some
-accident poisoned me a very beautiful black hen, the breed of Lord
-Mansfield at Caen Wood: she recovered her illness; but at the next
-moulting season, her feathers came as white as the swans. “Let us look,”
-says Mr. Sh----, “if all the women here have got grey hair.”
-
-Tolentino and Macerata we will not speak about, while Loretto courts
-description, and the richest treasures of Europe stand in the most
-delicious district of it. The number of beggars offended me, because
-I hold it next to impossibility that they should want in a country so
-luxuriantly abundant; and their prostrations as they kneel and kiss the
-ground before you, are more calculated to produce disgust from British
-travellers, than compassion. Nor can I think these vagabonds distressed
-in earnest at _this_ time above all others; when their sovereign provides
-them with employment on the beautiful new road he is making, and insists
-on their being well paid, who are found willing to work. But the town
-itself of Loretto claims my attention; so clear are its streets, so
-numerous and cheerful and industrious are its inhabitants: one would
-think they had resolved to rob passengers of the trite remark which the
-sight of dead wealth always inspires, _that the money might be better
-bestowed upon the living poor_. For here are very few poor families, and
-fewer idlers than one expects to see in a place where not business but
-devotion is the leading characteristic. So quiet too and inoffensive are
-the folks here, that scarcely any robberies or murders, or any but very
-petty infringements of the law, are ever committed among them. Yet people
-grieve to see that wealth collected, which once diffused would certainly
-make many happy; and those treasures lying dead, which well dispersed
-might keep thousands alive. This observation, not always made perhaps by
-those who feel it most, or that would soonest give their share of it
-away, if once possessed, is now, from being so often repeated, become
-neither _bright_ nor _new_. We will not however be petulantly hasty to
-censure those who first began the lamentation, remembering that our
-blessed Saviour’s earliest disciples, and those most immediately about
-him too, could not forbear grudging to see precious ointment poured
-upon his feet, whom they themselves confessed to be the Son of God. We
-should likewise recollect his mild but grave reproof of those men who
-gave so decided a preference to the poor over his sacred person, so soon
-to be sacrificed _for them_, and his testimony to the woman’s earnest
-love and zeal expressed by giving him the finest thing she had. Such
-acceptance as she met with, I suppose prompted the hopes of many who
-have been distinguished by their rich presents to Loretto; and let not
-those at least mock or molest them, who have been doing nothing better
-with their money. Upon examination of the jewels it is curious to observe
-that the intrinsic value of the presents is manifestly greater, the
-more ancient they are; but taste succeeds to solidity in every thing,
-and proofs of that position may be found every step one treads. The
-vestments, all embroidered over with picked pearl, are quite beyond my
-powers of estimation. The gold baby given at the birth of Louis Quatorze,
-of size and weight equal to the real infant, has had its value often
-computed; I forget the sum though. A rock of emeralds in their native
-bed presented by the Queen of Portugal, though of Occidental growth, is
-surely inestimable; and our sanguinary Mary’s heart of rubies is highly
-esteemed. I asked if Charles the Ninth of France had sent any thing; for
-I thought _their_ presents should have been placed together: far, far
-even from the wooden image of _her_ who was a model of meekness, and
-carried in her spotless bosom the Prince of Peace. Many very exquisite
-pieces of art too have found their way into the Virgin’s cabinet; the
-pearl however is the striking rarity, as it exhibits in the manner of
-a blot on marble, the figure of our blessed Saviour sitting on a cloud
-clasped in his mother’s arms. Princess Borghese sent an elegantly-set
-diamond necklace no longer ago than last Christmas-day; it is valued at a
-thousand pounds sterling English: but the riches of that family appear
-to me inexhaustible. Whoever sees it will say, she might have spent the
-money better; but let them reflect that one may say that of _all_ expence
-almost; and it is not from the state of Loretto these treasures are
-taken at last: they _bring_ money there; and if any person has a right
-to complain, it must be the subjects of distant princes, who yet would
-scarcely have divided among _them_ the sapphires, &c. they have sent in
-presents to Loretto.
-
-It was curious to see the devotees drag themselves round the holy house
-upon their knees; but the Santa Scala at Rome had shewn me the same
-operation performed with more difficulty; and a written injunction at
-bottom, less agreeable for Italians to comply with, than any possible
-prostration; viz. That no one should spit as he went up or down, except
-in his pocket-handkerchief. The lamps which burn night and day before the
-black image here at Loretto are of solid gold, and there is such a crowd
-of them I scarcely could see the figure for my own part; and that one may
-see still less, the attendant canons throw a veil over one’s face going
-in.
-
-The confessionals, where all may be heard in their own language, is not
-peculiar to this church; I met with it somewhere else, but have forgotten
-where, though I much esteemed the establishment. It is very entertaining
-here too, to see inscriptions in twelve different tongues, giving an
-account of the miraculous removal and arrival here of the _Santa Casa_: I
-was delighted with the Welch one; and our conductor said there came not
-unfrequently pilgrims from the vale of Llwydd, who in their turns told
-the wonders of their _holy well_. In Latin then, and Greek, and Hebrew,
-Syriac, Phœnician, Arabic, French, Spanish, German, Welch, and Tuscan,
-may you read a story, once believed of equal credit, and more revered I
-fear, than even the sacred words of God speaking by the scriptures; but
-which is now certainly upon the wane. I told a learned ecclesiastic at
-Rome, that we should return home by the way of Loretto:--“There is no
-need,” said he, “to caution a native of your island against credulity;
-but pray do not believe that we are ourselves satisfied with the tale you
-will read there; no man of learning but knows, that Adrian destroyed
-every trace and vestige of Christianity that he could find in the East;
-and he was acute, and diligent, and powerful. The empress Helena long
-after him, with piety that equalled even his profaneness, could never
-hear of this holy house; how then should it have waited till so many
-long years after Jesus Christ? Truth is, Pope Boniface the VIIIth, who
-canonized St. Louis, who instituted the jubilee, who quarrelled with
-Philippe le Bel about a new crusade, and who at last fretted himself
-to death, though he had conquered all his enemies, because he feared
-some loss of power to the church;--desired to give mankind a new object
-of attention, and encouraged an old visionary, in the year 1296, to
-propagate the tale he half-believed himself; how the blessed Virgin
-had appeared to him, and related the story you will read upon the
-walls, which was then first committed to paper. In consequence of this
-intelligence, Boniface sent men into the East that he could best depend
-upon, and they brought back just such particulars as would best please
-the Pope; and in those days you can scarce think how quick the blaze of
-superstition caught and communicated itself: no one wished to deny what
-his neighbour was willing to believe, and what he himself would then
-have gained no credit by contradicting. Positive evidence of what the
-house really was, or whence it came, it was in a few years impossible
-to obtain; nor did Boniface the VIIIth know it himself I suppose, much
-less the old visionary who first set the matter a-going. Meantime the
-house itself has _no foundation_, whatever the story may have; it is a
-very singular house as you may see; it has been venerated by the best
-and wisest among Christians now for five hundred years: even the Turks
-(who have the same method of honouring their Prophet with gifts, as we
-do the Virgin Mary) respect the very name of Loretto:--why then should
-the place be to any order of thinking beings a just object of insult or
-mockery?”--Here he ended his discourse, the recollection of which never
-left me whilst we remained at the place.
-
-What Dr. Moore says of the singing chaplains with _soprano_ voices,
-who say mass at the altars of Loretto, is true enough, and may perhaps
-have been originally borrowed from the Pagan celebration of the rites
-of Cybele. When Christianity was young, and weak, and tender, and
-unsupported by erudition, dreadful mistakes and errors easily crept in:
-the heathen converts hearing much of _Mater Dei_, confounded her idea
-with that of their _Mater Deorum_; and we were shewn, among the rarities
-of Rome, a _bronze Madonna_, with a tower on her head, exactly as Cybele
-is represented.
-
-That the jewels are taken out of this treasury and replaced with false
-stones, is a speech always said over fine things by the vulgar: I have
-heard the same thing affirmed of the diamonds at St. Denis; and can
-recollect the common people saying, when our King of England was crowned,
-that all the real precious stones were locked up, or sold for state
-expences; while the jewels shewn to _them_ were only calculated to dazzle
-for the day. As there is always infinite falsehood in the world, so there
-is always wonderful care, however ill applied, to avoid being duped; a
-terror which hangs heavily over weak minds in particular, and frights
-them as far from truth on the one side, as credulity tempts them away
-from it on the other.
-
-But we must visit the apothecary’s pots, painted by Raphael, and leave
-Loretto, to proceed along the side of this lovely sea, hearing the
-pilgrims sing most sweetly as they go along in troops towards the town,
-with now and then a female voice peculiarly distinguished from the
-rest: by this means a new image is presented to one’s mind; the sight
-of such figures too half alarm the fancy, and give an air of distance
-from England, which nothing has hitherto inspired half so strongly. This
-charming Adriatic gulph beside, though more than delicious to drive by,
-does not, like the Mediterranean, convey homeish or familiar ideas; one
-feels that it belongs exclusively to Venice; one knows that ancient
-Greece is on the opposite shore, and that with a quick sail one should
-soon see Macedonia; and descending but a little to the southward, visit
-Athens, Corinth, Sparta, Thebes--seats of philosophy, freedom, virtue;
-whence models of excellence and patterns of perfection have been drawn
-for twenty succeeding centuries!
-
-Here are plenty of nightingales, but they do not sing as well as in
-Hertfordshire: birds gain in colour as you approach the tropic, but they
-lose in song; under the torrid zone I have heard they never sing at all;
-with us in England the latest leave off by midsummer, when the work of
-incubation goes forward, and the parental duties begin: the nightingale
-too chuses the coolest hour; and though I have yet heard her in Italy
-only early in the mornings, Virgil knew she sung in the night:
-
- Flet noctem, &c.[23]
-
-To hear birds it is however indispensably necessary that there should be
-high trees; and except in these parts of Italy, and those about Genoa and
-Sienna, no timber of any good growth can I find. The _roccolo_ too, and
-other methods taken to catch small birds, which many delight in eating,
-and more in taking, lessen the quantity of natural music vexatiously
-enough; while gaudy insects ill supply their place, and sharpen their
-stings at pleasure when deprived of their greatest enemies. We are here
-less tormented than usual however, while the prospects are varied so that
-every look produces a new and beautiful landscape.
-
-Ancona is a town perfectly agreeable to strangers, from the good humour
-with which every nation is received, and every religion patiently
-endured: something of all this the scholars say may be found in the
-derivation of its name, which being Greek I have nothing to do with.
-Pliny tells us its original, and says;
-
- A Siculis condita est colonia Ancona[24].
-
-That Dalmatia should be opposite, yet to us at present inaccessible, we
-all regret; I drank sea water however, so did not leave untasted the
-waves which Lucan speaks of:
-
- Illic Dalmaticis obnoxia fluctibus Ancon[25].
-
-The fine turbots did not any of them fall to our share; but here are
-good fish, and, to say true, every thing eatable as much in perfection
-as possible: I could never since I arrived at Turin find real cause of
-complaint--_serious_ complaint I mean except at that savage-looking place
-called Radicofani; and some other petty town in Tuscany, near Sienna,
-where I eat too many eggs and grapes, because there was nothing else.
-
-Nice accommodations must not be looked for, and need not be regretted,
-where so much amusement during the day gives one good disposition to
-sleep sound at night: the worst is, men and women, servants and masters,
-must often mess together; but if one frets about such things, it is
-better stay at home. The Italians like travelling in England no better
-than the English do travelling in Italy; whilst an exorbitant expence is
-incurred by the journey, not well repaid to them by the waiters white
-chitterlins, tambour waistcoats, and independent “_No, Sir_,” echoed
-round a well-furnished inn or tavern; which puts them but in the place
-of Socrates at the fair, who cried out--“_How many things have these
-people gathered together that I do not want!_”--A noble Florentine
-complained exceedingly to me once of the English hotels, where he was
-made to help pay for those good gold watches the fellows who attended him
-drew from their pockets; so he set up his quarters comically enough at
-the waggoners full Moon upon the old bridge at Bath, to be quit of the
-_schiavitù_, as he called it, of living like a gentleman, “where,” says
-he, “I am not known to be one.” The truth is, a continental nobleman can
-have little heart of a country, where, to be treated as a man of fashion,
-he must absolutely behave as such: his rank is ascertained at _home_, and
-people’s deportment to him regulated by long-established customs; nor can
-it be supposed flattering to its prejudices, to feel himself jostled in
-the street, or driven against upon the road by a rich trader, while he
-is contriving the cheapest method of going to look over his manufactory.
-Wealth diffused makes all men comfortable, and leaves no man splendid;
-gives every body two dishes, but nobody two hundred. Objects of show are
-therefore unfrequent in England, and a foreigner who travels through our
-country in search of positive sights, will, after much money spent, go
-home but poorly entertained:--“There is neither _quaresima_,” will he
-say, “nor _carnovale_ in _any_ sense of the word, among those insipid
-islanders.”--For he who does not love our government, and taste our
-manners which result from it, can never be delighted in England; while
-the inhabitants of our nation may always be amused in theirs, without
-any esteem of it at all.
-
-I know not how Ancona produced all these tedious reflexions: it is a
-trading place, and a sea-port town. Men working in chains upon the new
-mole did not please me though, and their insensibility shocks one:--“Give
-a poor thief something, master,” says one impudent fellow;--“_Son stato
-ladro padrone_[26];”--with a grin. That such people should be corrupt
-or coarse however is no wonder; what surprised me most was, that when
-one of our company spoke of his conduct to a man of the town--“Why,
-what would you have, Sir?”--replies the person applied to--“when the
-poor creature is _castigato_, it is enough sure, no need to make him be
-melancholy too:”--and added with true Italian good-nature,--“_Siamo tutti
-peccatori_[27].”
-
-The mole is a prodigious work indeed; a warm friend to Venice can scarce
-wish its speedy conclusion, as the useful and necessary parts of the
-project are already nearly accomplished, and it would be pity to seduce
-more commerce away from Venice, which has already lost so much.
-
-The triumphal arch of Trajan, described by every traveller, and justly
-admired by all; white as his virtue, shining as his character, and
-durable as his fame; fixed our eyes a long time in admiration, and made
-us, while we examined the beautiful structure, recollect his incomparable
-qualities to whom it was dedicated,--“_Inter Cæsares optimus_[28],”--says
-one of their old writers: nor could either column or arch be so sure a
-proof that he was thought so, as the wish breathed at the inauguration of
-succeeding emperors; _Sis tu felicior Augusto, melior Trajano_[29].
-
-If these Ancona men were not proud of themselves, one should hate them;
-descended as they are from those Syracusans liberated by Timoleon, who
-freed them first from the tyranny of Dionysius; fostered afterwards by
-Trajan, as peculiarly worth _his_ notice; and patronised in succeeding
-times by the good Corsini Pope, Clement XII., whose care for them appears
-by the useful _lazaretto_ he built, “to save,” said he, “our best
-subjects, our subjects of Ancona.”
-
-But we are hastening forward as fast as our broken carriage will permit,
-to Padua, where we shall leave it: thither to arrive, we pass through
-Senegallia, built by the Gauls, and still retaining the Gaulish name,
-but now little remarkable. What struck me most was my own crossing the
-_Rubicon_ in my way back to England, and our comfortable return to
-
-
-
-
-BOLOGNA,
-
-
-After admiring the high forehead and innocent simper of Baroccio’s
-beauties at Pesaro, where the best European silk now comes from; against
-which the produce of Rimini vainly endeavours to vie. That town was once
-an Umbrian colony I think, and there is a fine memorial there where
-_Diocletianus reposuit_, resolving perhaps to end where Julius Cæsar had
-begun; he died at Salo however in Dalmatia,
-
- Quâ maris Adriaci longas ferit unda Salones.
-
-Ravenna l’Antica tired more than it pleased us; _Fano_ is a populous
-pretty little town; but I know no reason why it was originally dedicated
-to Fortune. Truth is, we are weary of these sacred _fanes_, and long to
-see once more our amiable friends at Venice and at Milan.
-
-I have missed San Marino at last, but receive kind assurances every day
-that the loss is small; being now little more than a convent seated on
-a hill, which affords refuge for robbers; and that the present Pope
-meditates its destruction as a nuisance to the neighbouring towns. There
-never was any coin struck there it seems; I thought there had: but the
-train of reflections excited by even a distant view of it are curious
-enough as opposed to its protectress Rome; which, founded by robbers and
-banditti, ends in being the seat of sanctity and priestly government;
-while San Marino, begun by a hermit, and secluded from all other states
-for the mere purposes of purer devotion, finishes by its necessary
-removal as a repository for assassins, and a refuge for those who break
-the laws with violence.
-
-Such is this variable and capricious world! and so dies away my desire to
-examine this political curiosity; the extinction of which I am half sorry
-for. Privation is still a melancholy idea, and were one to hear that the
-race of wasps were extirpated, it would grieve one.
-
-Bologna affords one time for every meditation. No inn upon the Bath road
-is more elegant than the Pellegrino; and we regretted our broken equipage
-the less as it drew us slowly through so sweet a country. The medlar
-blossoms adorn the hedges with their blanche roses; the hawthorn bushes,
-later here than with us, perfume them; and the roads, little travelled,
-do not torment one with the dust as in England, where it not only offends
-the traveller, but takes away some beauty from the country, by giving a
-brown or whitish look to the shrubs and trees. We shall repose here very
-comfortably, or at least change our mode of being busy, which refreshes
-one perhaps more than positive idleness. “But life,” says some writer,
-“is a continual fever;” and sure ours has been completely so for these
-two years. A charming lady of our country, for whom I have the highest
-esteem, protests she shall be happy to get back to London if it is only
-for the relief of sitting still, and resolving to see no more sights:
-exchanging fasto, fiera, and frittura, for a muffin, a mop, and a
-morning newspaper: three things equally unknown in Italy, as the other
-three among us.
-
-With regard to pictures however, _l’Appetit vient en mangeant_[30], as I
-experienced completely when traversing the Zampieri palace with eagerness
-that increased at every step. I once more half-worshipped the works of
-divine Guercino. Nothing shall prevent my going to his birth-place at
-Cento, whether in our way or out of it.
-
-We ran about the Specola again, and received a thousand polite attentions
-from the gentleman who shewed it. The piece of native gold here is much
-finer than that we saw among the treasures of Loretto, which being
-_du nouveau continent_ is always inferior. “But every thing does,” as
-Mons. de Buffon observes, “degenerate in the West except birds;” and
-the Brazilian plumage seems to surpass all possibility of further glow.
-The continent however shews us no specimens preserved half as well as
-those of Sir Ashton Lever. The marine rarities here at Bologna are very
-capital; but I saw them to advantage now, in company of Mr. Chappelow.
-We find this city at once hot, and loud, and pious; less empty of
-occupation though than last time; for here is a new Gonfaloniere chosen
-in to-day, and the drums beat, and the trumpets sound, and some donations
-are distributed about, much in the proportions Tom Davis describes
-Garrick’s to have been; small pieces of money, and large pieces of cake,
-with quantities of meat, bread, and birds, borne about the town in
-procession, to make display of _his_ bounty, who gives all this away at
-the time he is elected into office. Kids dressed with ribbon therefore,
-alive and carried on men’s shoulders showily adorned, lambs washed white
-as snow, and pretty red and white calves hanging their simple faces out
-of fine gilt baskets, paraded the streets all day. What struck us most
-however was an ox, handsomer and of a more silvery coat than I thought an
-ox’s hide capable of being brought to; his horns gold, and a garland of
-roses between them. This was beautiful; reminded one of all one had ever
-read and heard of victims going to sacrifice; and put in our heads again
-the old stories of Hercules, Eurystheus, &c.
-
-At Bologna though, every thing puts people in mind of their _prayers_;
-so a few good women nothing doubting but when shows were going forward,
-religious meanings must be near at hand, dropt down on their knees in
-the street, and recommended themselves, or their dead friends perhaps,
-to heaven, with fervent and innocent earnestness, while the cattle
-passed along. An English clergyman in our company, hurt and grieved, yet
-half-disposed to laugh, cried, _What are these dear creatures muttering
-about now for, as if their salvation depended upon it?_--It was absurd
-enough to be sure; but in order to check our tittering disposition,
-I recollected to him, that I had once heard an ignorant woman in
-Hertfordshire repeat the absolution herself after the priest, with
-equally ill-placed fervour: for which he reprimanded her, and afterwards
-explained to her the grossness of the impropriety. When we have added to
-our stock of connoisseurship the graceful Sampson, drinking after his
-victory, by Guido, in this town, we shall quit it, and proceed through
-empty and deserted Ferrara to
-
-
-
-
-PADUA.
-
-
-We set out then for Ferrara, in our kind friend’s post-chaise; that is,
-my maid and I did: our good-natured gentlemen creeping slowly after in
-the broken coach; and how ended this project for insuring safety? Why in
-the chaise losing its hind wheel, and in our return to the carriage we
-had quitted. But it is for ever so, I think;--the sick folks live always,
-and the well ones die.
-
-We took turn therefore and left our friends; but could not forbear a
-visit to Cento, where I wished much to see what Guercino had done for
-the ornament of his native place, and was amply repaid my pains by the
-sight of one picture, which, for its immediate power over the mind, at
-least over mine, has no equal even in Palazzo Zampieri. It is a scene
-highly touching. The appearance of our Saviour to his Mother after his
-resurrection. The dignity, the divinity of the Christ! the terror-checked
-transport visible in the parent Saint, whose expressive countenance
-and pathetic attitude display fervent adoration, maternal tenderness,
-and meek humility at once! How often have I said, _this_ is the finest
-picture we have seen yet! when looking on the Caraccis and their school.
-I will say no more, the painter’s art can go no further than _this_.
-My partial preference of Guercino to any thing and to every thing,
-shall not however bribe me to suppress my grief and indignation at his
-strange method of commemorating his own name over the altar where he was
-baptised, which shocks every protestant traveller by its profaneness,
-while the Romanists admire his invention, and applaud his piety. Guercino
-then, so called because he was the _little one-eyed man_, had a fancy
-to represent his _real_ appellation of _John Francis Barbieri_ in the
-church; and took this mode as an ingenious one, painting St. John upon
-the right hand, St. Francis on the left, as two large full-length
-figures, and God the Father in the middle with a _long beard_ for
-_Barbieri_.
-
-This is a mixture of Abel Drugger’s contrivance in the Alchymist, and
-the infantine folly of three babies I once knew in England, children
-of a nobleman, who were severely whipt by their governess for playing
-at Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, sitting upon three chairs, with
-solemn countenances, in order to impress their tender fancies with a
-representation of what the good governess innocently and laudably had
-told them about the mysterious and incomprehensible Trinity. Let me add,
-that the eldest of these babies was not six years old, and the youngest
-but four, when they were caught in the blasphemous folly. Our Italians
-seem to be got very little further at forty.
-
-Padua appears cleaner and prettier than it did last year; but so many
-things contribute to make me love it better, that it is no wonder one is
-prejudiced in its favour. It was _so_ difficult to get safe hither, the
-roads being very bad, the people were so kind when we were here last, and
-the very inn-keeper and his assistants seemed so obligingly rejoiced to
-see us again, that I felt my heart quite expand at entering the Aquila
-d’oro, where we were soon rejoined by Mr. and Mrs. Greatheed, with whom
-we had parted in the Romagna, when they took the Perugia road, instead
-of returning by Bologna, a place they had seen before. Had we come
-three days sooner we might have seen the transit of Mercury from Abate
-Toaldo’s observatory; but our own transit took up all our thoughts, and
-it is a very great mercy that we are come safe at last. I think it was as
-much as four bulls and six horses could do to drag us into Rovigo.
-
- Bologna la Grassa
- Ma Padua la passa[31],
-
-say the Venetians: and round this town where the heat is indeed
-prodigious, they get the best vipers for the Venice treacle, I am told.
-Here are quantities of curious plants to be seen blooming now in the
-botanical garden, and our kind professor told me I need not languish so
-for horse chesnuts; for they would all be in flower as we returned up the
-Brenta from Venice. “They are all in flower _now_, Sir,” said I, “in my
-own grounds, eight miles from London: but our English oaks are not half
-so forward as yours are.” He recollected the aphorism so much a favourite
-with our country folks; how a British heart ought not to dilate with the
-early sunshine of prosperity, or droop at the first blasts of adverse
-fortune, as the British oak refuses to put out his leaves at summer’s
-early felicitations, and scorns to drop them at winter’s first rude shake.
-
-Well! I have once more walked over St. Antony’s church, and examined the
-bas-reliefs that adorn his shrine; but their effect has ceased. Whoever
-has spent some time in the Musæum Clementinum is callous to the wonders
-which sculpture can perform.
-
-Has one not read in Ulloa’s travels, of a resting-place on the side of a
-Cordillera among the Andes, where the ascending traveller is regularly
-observed to put on additional clothing, while he who comes down the
-mountain feels so hot that he throws his clothes away? So it is with the
-shrine of St. Antonio di Padua, and one’s passion for the sculpture that
-adorns it: while Santa Giustina’s church regains her power over the mind,
-a power never missed by simplicity, while great effort has often small
-effect. But we are hastening to Venice, and shall leave our cares and our
-coach behind; superfluous as they both are, in a city which admits of
-neither.
-
-
-
-
-VENICE.
-
-
-Our watery journey was indeed delightful; friendship, music, poetry
-combined their charms with those of nature to enchant us, and make
-one think the passage was too short, though longing to embrace our
-much-regretted sweet companions. The scent of odoriferous plants, the
-smoothness of the water, the sweetness of the piano forte, which allured
-to its banks many of the gay inhabitants, who glad of a change in the
-variety of their amusements, came down to the shores and danced or sang,
-as we went by, seized every sense at once, and filled me with unaffected
-pleasure. I longed to see the weeping willow planted along this elegant
-stream; but the Venetians like to see nothing weep I fancy: yet the Salix
-Babylonica would have a fine effect here, and spread to a prodigious
-growth, like those on which the captive Israelites once hung their harps,
-on the banks of the river Euphrates. “Of all Europe however,” Millar
-says, “it prospers best in pensive Britain;”
-
- Nor prov’d the bliss that lulls Italia’s breast,
- When red-brow’d evening calmly sinks to rest.
-
-These lines, quoted from Merry’s Paulina, remind me of the pleasure we
-enjoyed in reading that glorious poem as we floated down the Brenta.
-I have certainly read no poetry since; that would be like looking at
-Sansovino’s sculpture, after having seen the Apollo, the Venus, and the
-Flora Farnese. The view of Venice only made us shut the book. Lovely
-Venice! wise in her councils, grave and steady in her just authority,
-splendid in her palaces, gay in her casinos, and charming in all.
-
- Fama tra noi Roma pomposa e santa,
- Venezia ricca, saggia, e signorile[32],
-
-says the Italian who celebrates all their towns by adding a well-adapted
-epithet to each. But Sannazarius, who experienced in return for it more
-than even British bounty would have bestowed, exalts it in his famous
-epigram to a decided preference even over Rome itself.
-
- Viderat Adriacis Venetam Neptunus in undis
- Stare urbem, et toti ponere jura Mari;
- Nunc mihi Tarpeias quantum vis Jupiter, arces
- Objice, et illa tui mœnia Martis ait
- Sit Pelago Tibrim præfers, urbem aspice utramque
- Illam homines dices, hanc posuisse Deos.
-
-And now really, if the subject did not bribe me to admiration of them, I
-should have much ado to think these six lines better worth fifty pounds
-a piece, the price Sannazarius was paid for them, than many lines I have
-read; as mythological allusions are always cheaply obtained, and this can
-hardly be said to run with any peculiar happiness: for if Mars built the
-Wall, and Jupiter founded the Capitol, how could Neptune justly challenge
-this last among all people, to look on both, and say, That men built
-Rome, but the Gods founded Venice. Had he said, that after all their
-pains, _this_ was the manner in which those two cities would in future
-times strike all impartial observers, it would have been _enough_; and it
-would have been _true_, and when fiction has done its best,
-
- Le vray seul est aimable[33].
-
-Here, however, is the best translation or imitation I can make, of the
-best praise ever given to this justly celebrated city. Baron Cronthal,
-the learned librarian of Brera, gave me, when at Milan, the epigram, and
-persuaded me to try at a translation, but I never could succeed till I
-had been upon the grand canal.
-
- When Neptune first with pleasure and surprise,
- Proud from her subject sea saw Venice rise;
- Let Jove, said he, vaunt his fam’d walls no more,
- Tarpeia’s rock, or Tyber’s fane-full shore;
- While human hands those glittering fabrics frame,
- By touch celestial beauteous Venice came.
-
-It is a sweet place sure enough, and the caged[34] nightingales who,
-when men are most silent, answer each other across the canals, increase
-the enchantments of Venetian moonlight; while the full gondolas skimming
-over the tide with a lanthorn in their stern, like glow-worms of a dark
-evening, dashing the cool wave too as they glide along, leave no moments
-unmarked by peculiarity of pleasure. The Doge’s wedding has however been
-less brilliant this year; his galleys have been sent to fight the Turks
-and Corsairs, and the splendor at home of course suffers some temporary
-diminution; but the corso of boats in the evening must be for ever
-charming, and the musical parties upon the water delightful. We passed
-this morning in Pinelli’s library, a collection so valuable from the
-frequence of old editions, particularly the old fourteen hundreds as we
-call them, that it is supposed they will be purchased by some crowned
-head; and here are specimens of Aldus’s printing too, very curious; but
-there are too many curiosities,
-
- I’m strangled with the waste fertility,
-
-as Milton says. Pinelli had an excellent taste for pictures likewise,
-and here at Venice there are paintings to satisfy, nay satiate
-connoisseurship herself. Tintoret’s force of colouring at St. Rocque’s,
-displayed in the crucifixion, can surely be exceeded by no disposition of
-light and shade; but the Scuola Bolognese has hardened my heart against
-merit of any other sort, so much more easy to be obtained, than that
-of character, dignity, and truth. Paul Veronese forgets too seldom his
-original trade of _orefice_, there is too much gold and silver in his
-drapery; and though Darius’s ladies are judiciously adorned with a great
-deal of it here at Palazzo Pisani, I would willingly have abated some
-brocade, for an addition of expressive majesty in the Alexander. What a
-striking difference there is too between Guercino’s prodigal returned,
-and a picture at some Venetian palace of the same story treated by
-Leandro Bassano! yet who can forbear crying out Nature, nature! when in
-the last named work one sees the faithful spaniel run out to meet and
-acknowledge his poor young master though in rags, while the cook admiring
-the uncommon fatness of the calf, seems to anticipate the pleasure of
-a jolly day: so if the old father does look a little like pantaloon,
-why one forgives him, for we are not told that the fable had to do with
-_nobiltà_, though Guercino has made _his_ master of the house a rich
-and stately oriental, who meets and consoles, near a column of Grecian
-architecture, his penitent son, whose half-uncovered form exhibits beauty
-sunk into decay, and whose graceful expression of shame and sorrow
-shew the dignity of his original birth, and little expectation of the
-ill-endured pains his poverty has caused: the elder brother, meantime,
-glowing with resentment, and turning with apparent scorn away from the
-sight of a scene so little to the honour of the family. Basta! as the
-Italians say; when we were at Rome we purchased a fine view of St. Mark’s
-Place Venice; now we are at Venice we have bought a sketch of Guido’s
-Aurora. The Doge’s dinner was magnificent, the plate older and I think
-finer than the Pope’s; I forget on what occasion it was given, I mean
-the feast, but had it been an annual ceremony our kind friends would
-have shewn it us last year. We must leave them once more, for a long
-time I fear, but I part with less regret because the heat grows almost
-insupportable; and either the stench of the small canals, or else the
-too great abundance of sardelline, a fresh anchovy with which these seas
-abound, keep me unwell and in perpetual fear of catching a putrid fever,
-should I indulge in eating once again of so rich but dangerous a dainty.
-Besides that one may be tired of exertion, and fatigued with festivity,
-purchased at the price of sleep and quiet.
-
- Non Hybla non me specifer capit Nilus,
- Nec quæ paludes delicata Pomptinus
- Ex arce clivi spectat uva Sestini.
- Quid concupiscam? quæris ergo,--_dormire_[35].
-
-
-
-
-To PADUA.
-
-
-Then we returned the twelfth of June, and surely it is too difficult to
-describe the sweet sensations excited by the enjoyment of
-
- Each rural sight, each rural sound;
-
-as the dear banks of the Brenta first saluted our return to _terra firma_
-from the watery residence of our _bella dominante_. We dined at a lovely
-villa belonging to an amiable friend upon the margin of the river, where
-the kind embraces of the Padrona di Casa, added to the fragrance of her
-garden, and the sweet breath of oxen drawing in her team, revived me once
-more to the enjoyment of cheerful conversation, by restoring my natural
-health, and proving beyond a possibility of doubt, that my late disorder
-was of the putrid kind. We dined in a grotto-like room, and partook
-the evening refreshments, cake, ice, and lemonade, under a tree by the
-river side, whilst my own feelings reminded me of the sailors delight
-described in Anson’s voyages when they landed at Juan Fernandez. Night
-was best disposed of in the barge, and I observed as we entered Padua
-early in the morning, how surprisingly quick had been the progress of
-summer; but in these countries vegetation is so rapid, that every thing
-makes haste to come and more to go. Scarce have you tasted green pease or
-strawberries, before they are out of season; and if you do _not_ swallow
-your pleasures, as Madame la Presidente said, you have a chance to miss
-of getting any pleasures at all. Here is no mediocrity in any thing, no
-moderate weather, no middle rank of life, no twilight; whatever is not
-night is day, and whatever is not love is hatred; and that the English
-should eat peaches in May, and green pease in October, sounds to Italian
-ears as a miracle; they comfort themselves, however, by saying that they
-_must_ be very insipid, while _we_ know that fruits forced by strong
-fire are at least many of them higher in flavour than those produced by
-sun; the pine-apple particularly, which West Indians confess eats better
-with us than with them. Figs and cherries, however, defy a hot-house,
-and grapes raised by art are worth little except for shew; peaches,
-nectarines, and ananas are the glory of a British gardener, and no
-country but England can shew such. Our morning, passed at the villa of
-the senator Quirini, set us on this train of thinking, for every culled
-excellence adorned it, and brought to my mind Voltaire’s description
-of Pococuranti in Candide, false only in the ostentation, and _there_
-the character fails; misled by a French idea, that pleasure is nothing
-without the delight of shewing that you are pleased, like the old adage,
-or often-quoted passage about learning:
-
- Scire tuum nihil est, nisi te scire hoc sciat alter[36].
-
-A Venetian has no such notions; by force of mind and dint of elegance
-inherent in it, he pleases himself first, and finds every body else
-delighted of course, nor would quit his own country except for paradise;
-while an English nobleman clumps his trees, and twists his river, to
-comply with his neighbour’s taste, when perhaps he has none of his own;
-feels disgusted with all he has done, and runs away to live in Italy.
-
-The evening of this day was spent at the theatre, where I was glad the
-audience were no better pleased, for the plaudits of an Italian Platea
-at an air they like, when one’s nerves are weak and the weather very
-hot, are all but totally insupportable. What then must these poor actors
-have suffered, who laboured so violently to entertain us? A tragedy in
-rhyme upon the subject of Julius Sabinus and his wife Epponina was the
-representation; and wonderfully indeed did the players struggle, and
-bounce, and sprunt, like vigorous patients resisting the influence of
-a disease called opisthotonos, or dry gripes of Jamaica; “Were their
-jaws once locked we should do better,” said Mr. Chappelow. “Che spacca
-monti mai!” exclaimed the gentle Padovani. _Spacca monte_ means just our
-English Drawcansir, a fellow that splits mountains with his bluster, a
-captain _Blowmedown_.
-
-The fair at Padua is a better place for spending one’s time than the
-theatre; it is built round a pretty area, and I much wonder the middle
-is not filled by a band of music. Our Astley is expected to shine here
-shortly, and the ladies are in haste to see _il bel Inglese a Cavallo_;
-but we must be seduced to stay no longer among those whom I must ever
-leave with grateful regret and truly affectionate regard. Our carriage is
-repaired, and the man says it will now carry us safely round the world
-if we please; our first stage however will be no farther than to pretty
-
-
-
-
-VERONA.
-
-
-The road from Padua hither is a vile one; one can scarcely make twenty
-miles a-day in any part of the Venetian state. Its senators, accustomed
-to water carriage, have little care for us who go by land. The Palanzuola
-way is worse however, and I am glad once more to see sweet Verona.
-
-Petruchio and Catharine might easily have met with all the adventures
-related by Grumio on their journey thither, but when once arrived she
-should have been contented. This city is as lovely as ever, more so than
-it was last April twelvemonth, when the spring was sullen and backward;
-every hill now glows with the gay produce of summer, and every valley
-smiles with plenty expected or pleasure possessed. The antiquities
-however look less respectable than when I left them; no amphitheatre
-will do after the Roman Colossæum, and our triumphal arch here looked
-so pitiful, I wondered what was come to it. So must it always happen to
-the performances of art, which we compare one against another, and find
-that as man made the best of them, so some man may in some moment make a
-better still: but the productions of nature are the works of God; we can
-only compare them with other things done by the same Almighty Master,
-whose power is equally discernible in all, from the fly’s antennæ to
-the elephant’s proboscis. Bozza’s collection gave birth to this last
-sentence; the farther one goes the more astonishing grows his musæum, the
-neglect of which is sure no credit to the present age. I find his cabinet
-much fuller than I left it, and adorned with many new specimens from the
-southern seas, besides flying-fish innumerable, beautifully preserved,
-and one predaceous creature caught in the very act of gorging his prey,
-a proof of their destruction being instant as that of the dwellers in
-Pompeia, who had their dinners dished when the eruption overwhelmed them.
-
-We took leave of our learned friends here with concern, but hope to
-see them again, and tread the stucco floors so prettily mottled and
-variegated, they look like the cold mock turtle soup exactly, which
-London pastry-cooks keep in their shops, ready for immediate use.
-
-What an odd thing is custom! here is weather to fry one in, yet
-after exercise, and in a state of the most violent perspiration, no
-consequences follow the use of iced beverages, except the sense of
-pleasure resulting from them at the moment. Should a Bath belle indulge
-in such luxury, after dancing down forty couple at Mr. Tyson’s ball,
-we should expect to hear next day of her surfeit at least, if not of
-her sudden death. Lying-in ladies take the same liberty with _their_
-constitutions, and _say_ that no harm comes of it; and when I tell them
-how differently we manage in England, cry, “_mi pare che dev’essere
-schiavitù grande in quel paese della benedetta libertà_[37].” Fine
-muslin linen nicely got up is however, say they, one of the things to be
-produced only in Great Britain, and much do our Italian ladies admire it,
-though they look very charmingly with much less trouble taken. I lent
-one lady at some place, I remember, my maid, to shew her, as she so much
-wished it, how the operation of clear-starching was performed; but as
-soon as it began, she laughed at the superfluous fatigue, as she called
-it; and her servants crossed themselves in every corner of the room,
-with wonder that such niceties should be required.--Well they might! for
-I caught a great tall fellow ironing his lady’s best neck-handkerchief
-with the warming-pan here at Padua very quietly; and she was a woman of
-quality too, and looked as lovely, when the toilette was once performed,
-as if much more attention had been bestowed upon it.
-
-
-
-
-PARMA.
-
-
-We passed through Mantua the 18th of June, where nothing much attracted
-my notice, except a female figure in the street, veiled from head to
-foot, and covered wholly in black; she walked backward and forward
-along the same portion of the same street, from one to three o’clock,
-in the heat of the burning sun; her hand held out; but when I, more
-from curiosity than any better motive put money in it, she threw it
-silently away, and the beggars picked it up, while she held her hand
-again as before. This conduct, in any town of England, would be deemed
-madness or mischief; the woman would be carried before a magistrate to
-give an account of herself, should the mob forbear to uncase her till
-they came; or some charitable person would seize and carry her home,
-fill her pockets with money, and coax her out of the anecdotes of her
-past life to put in the Magazine; her print would be published, and many
-engravers struggle for its profits; the name at bottom, _Annabella, or
-the Sable Matron_; while novels would be written without end, and the
-circulating libraries would lend them out all the live-long day. Things
-are differently carried on however at Mantua: I asked one shopkeeper,
-and she gravely replied, “_per divozione_,” and took no further notice:
-another (to my inquiries, which appeared to him far odder than the
-woman’s conduct) said, The lady was possibly doing a little penance;
-that he had not minded her till I spoke, but that perhaps it might be
-some woman of fashion, who having refused a poor person roughly on some
-occasion, was condemned by her confessor to try for a couple of hours
-what begging _was_, and learn humanity from experience of evil. The idea
-charmed me; while the man coolly said, all this was only his conjecture;
-but that such things were done too often to attract attention; and hoped
-such virtue was not rare enough to excite wonder. My just applause of
-such sentiments was stopt by the _laquais de place_ calling me to dinner;
-when he informed me, that he had asked about the person whose behaviour
-struck me so, and could now tell me all there was to be known; she was
-a lady of quality, he said, who had lost a dear friend on that day some
-years past, and that she wore black for two hours ever since upon its
-anniversary; but that she would now change her dress, and I should see
-her in the evening at the opera. My recollecting that if _this_ were her
-case, I ought to have been keeping her company (as no one ever lost a
-friend so dear to them as was my incomparable mother, who likewise left
-me to mourn her loss on this day thirteen years), spoiled my appetite,
-and took from me all power of meeting the lady at the theatre.
-
-We went again however to see Virgil’s field, and recollected that _tenet
-nunc Parthenope_; congratulated the giants on their superiority over
-Pietro de Cortona’s paltry creatures, in one of the Roman palaces; and
-drove forward to Parma, through bad roads enough.
-
-This Mantua is a very disagreeable town; nor was Romeo wrong in lamenting
-his banishment to it; for though I will not say with him that--
-
- There is no world without Verona’s walls;
-
-yet it must be allowed that few places do unite such various
-excellencies, and that the contrast is very striking between that city
-and this.
-
-Parma exhibits an appearance somewhat different from all the rest;
-yet we should scarcely have visited it but for the sake of the four
-surprising pictures it contains: the _Madona della Scodella_ is nature
-itself; and St. Girolamo exhibits such a proof of fancy and fervour, as
-are almost inconceivable; the general effect, and the difficulty one has
-to take one’s eye off it, afford conviction of its superior merit, and
-greatly compensate for that taste, character, and expression, which are
-found only in the Caraccis and their school. Corregio was perhaps one
-of the most powerful geniusses that has appeared on earth; destitute
-of knowledge, or of the means of acquiring it, he has left glorious
-proofs of what uninstructed man may do, and is perhaps a greater honour
-to the human species, than those who, from fermenting erudition of
-various kinds, produce performances of more complicated worth. The Fatal
-Curiosity, and Pilgrim’s Progress, will live as long as the Prince of
-Abyssinia, or _Les Avantures de Telemaque_, perhaps: and who shall dare
-say, that Lillo, Bunyan, and Antonio Corregio, were not _naturally_ equal
-to Johnson, Michael Angelo, and the Archbishop of Cambray?--Have I said
-enough, or can enough be ever said in praise of a painter, whose works
-the great Annibale Caracci delighted to study, to copy, and to praise?
-
-Piacenza we found to offer us few objects of attention: an
-_improvisatore_, and not a very bad one, amused that time which would
-otherwise have been passed in lamenting our paucity of entertainment;
-while his artful praises of England put me in good humour, spite of
-the weather, which is too hot to bear. With all our lamentations about
-the heat however, here is no _cicala_ on the trees, or _lucciola_ in
-the hedges, as at Florence; the days are a little longer too, and the
-crepuscule less abrupt in its departure. How often, upon the _Ponte
-della Trinitá_, have I secretly regretted the long-drawn evenings of an
-English summer; when the dewy night-fall refreshes the air, and silent
-dusk brings on a train of meditations uninspired by Italian skies! In
-this decided country all that is not broad day is dark night; all that
-is not loud mirth, is penitence and grief; when the rain falls, it falls
-in a torrent; when the sun shines, it glows like a burning-glass; where
-the people are rich, they stick gems in their very walls, and make their
-chimneys of amethyst; where they are poor, they clasp your knees in
-an agony of pinching want, and display diseases which cannot be a day
-survived!
-
-Talking on about Italy in which there is no mediocrity, and of England
-in which there is nothing else, we arrived at Lodi; where I began to
-rejoice in hearing the people cry _no’ cor’ altr’_ again, in reply to
-our commands; because we were now once more returned to the district and
-dialect of dear Milan, where we have cool apartments and warm friends;
-and where, after an absence of fifteen months, we shall again see
-those acquaintance with whom we lived much before; a sensation always
-delightfully soothing, even when one returns to less amiable scenes,
-and less productive of innocent pleasure than these have been to me.
-The consciousness of having, while at a distance, seen few people more
-agreeable than those one left behind; the natural thankfulness of one’s
-heart to God, for having preserved one’s life so as to see them again,
-expands philanthropy; and gives unaffected comfort in the restored
-society of companions long concealed from one by accident or distance.
-
-
-
-
-MILAN.
-
-
- 21st June 1786.
-
-After rejoicing over my house and my friends; after asking a hundred
-questions, and hearing a hundred stories of those long left; after
-reciprocating common civilities, and talking over common topics, we
-observed how much the general look of Milan was improved in these last
-fifteen months; how the town was become neater, the ordinary people
-smarter, the roads round their city mended, and the beggars cleared
-away from the streets. We did not find however that the people we
-talked to were at all charmed with these new advantages: their convents
-demolished, their processions put an end to, the number of their priests
-of course contracted, and their church plate carried by cart-loads to
-the mint; holidays forbidden, and every saint’s name erased from the
-calendar, excepting only St. Peter and St. Paul; whilst those shopkeepers
-who worked for monasteries, and those musicians who sung or played
-in oratorios, are left to find employment how they can;--cloud the
-countenances of all, and justly; as such sudden and rough reforms shock
-the feelings of the multitude; offend the delicacy of the nobles; make
-a general stagnation of business and of pleasure, in a country where
-_both_ depend upon religious functions; and terrify the clergy into no
-ill-grounded apprehensions of being found in a few years more wholly
-useless, and as such dismissed.--Well! whatever is done hastily, can
-scarcely be done quite well; and wherever much is done, a great part
-of it will doubtless be done wrong. A considerable portion of all this
-however will be confessed useful, and even necessary, when the hour
-of violence on one side, and prejudice on the other, is past away; as
-the fire of London has been found beneficial by those who live in the
-newly-restored town. Meantime I think the present precipitation indecent
-enough for my own part; a thousand little errors would burn out of
-themselves, were they suffered to die quietly away; and when the morning
-breaks in naturally, it is superfluous as awkward to put the stars out
-with one’s fingers, like the Hours in Guercino’s Aurora[38]. Whoever
-therefore will be at the pains a little to pick their principles, not
-grasp them by the bunch, will find as many unripe at one end, I believe,
-as there are rotten at the other: for could we see these hasty innovators
-erecting public schools for the instruction of the poor, or public
-work-houses for their employment; did they unlock the treasure-house
-of true religion, by publishing the Bible in every dialect of their
-dominions, and oblige their clergy to read it with the souls committed
-to their charge;--I should have a better idea of their sincerity and
-disinterested zeal for God’s glory, than they give by tearing down his
-statues, or those of his blessed Virgin Mother, which Carlo Borromæo set
-up.
-
-The folly of hanging churches with red damask would surely fade away of
-itself; among people of good sense and good taste; who could not long
-be simple enough to suppose, that concealing Greek architecture with
-such transient finery, and giving to God’s house the air of a tattered
-theatre, could in any wife promote his service, or their salvation.
-Many superstitious and many unmeaning ceremonies _do_ die off every day,
-because unsupported by reason or religion: Doctor Carpanni, a learned
-lawyer, told me but to-day, that here in Lombardy they had a custom,
-no longer ago than in his father’s time, of burying a great lord or
-possessor of lands, with a ceremony of killing on his grave the favourite
-horse, dog, &c. that he delighted in when alive; a usage borrowed from
-the Oriental Pagans, who burn even the widows of the deceased upon their
-funeral pile; and among our monuments in Westminster Abbey, set up in the
-days of darkness, I have minded now and then the hawk and greyhound of
-a nobleman lying in marble at his feet; some of our antiquarians should
-tell us if they killed them.
-
-Another odd affinity strikes me. Half a century ago there was an annual
-procession at Shrewsbury, called by way of pre-eminence _Shrewsbury
-Show_; when a handsome young girl of about twelve years old rode round
-the town, and wished prosperity to every trade assembled at the fair: I
-forget what else made the amusement interesting; but have heard my mother
-tell of the particular beauty of some wench, who was ever after called
-the _Queen_, because she had been carried in triumph as such on the day
-of _Shrewsbury Show_. Now if nobody gives a better derivation of that old
-custom, it may perhaps be found a dreg of the Romish superstition, which
-as many years ago, in various parts of Italy, prompted people to dress
-up a pretty girl, on the 25th of March, or other season dedicated to the
-Virgin, and carry her in procession about the streets, singing litanies
-to her, &c. and ending, in profaneness of admiration, a day begun in
-idleness and folly. At Rome however no such indecorous absurdities are
-encouraged: we saw a beautiful figure of the _Madonna_, dressed from a
-picture of Guido Rheni, borne about one day; but no human creature in
-the street offered to kneel, or gave one the slightest reason to say
-or suppose that she was worshipped: some sweet hymns were sung in her
-praise, as the procession moved slowly on; but no impropriety could I
-discern, who watched with great attention.
-
-It is time to have done with all this though, and go see the Ambrosian
-library; which, as far as I can judge, is perfectly respectable. The
-Prefect’s politeness kindly offered my curiosity any thing I was
-particularly anxious to see, and the learned Mr. Dugati was exceedingly
-obliging. The old Virgil preserved here with Petrarch’s marginal notes
-in his own hand-writing, interest one much; this little narration,
-evidently written for his own fancy to feed on, of the day and hour
-he first felt the impression of Laura’s charms, is the best proof of
-his genuine passion for that lady, as he certainly never meant for our
-inspection what he wrote down in his own Virgil. Here is likewise the
-valuable MS. of Flavius Josephus the Jewish historian, a curiosity
-deservedly admired and esteemed: it is kept with peculiar care I think,
-and is in high preservation: A Syriac bible too, very fine indeed, from
-which I understand they are now going to print off some copies. I have
-been taught by the scholars not to think a Syriac bible of the Samaritan
-text so very rare; but the Septuagint in that language is so exceedingly
-scarce, that many are persuaded this is the only one extant; and as our
-Lord, in his quotations from the old law, usually cites that version,
-it is justly preferred to all others. Leonardo da Vinci’s famous folio
-preserved in this library, for which James I. of England offered three
-thousand ducats, an event recorded here over the chest that contains it
-on a tablet of marble, deserves attention and reverence: nothing seems
-above, nothing below, the observation of that prodigious genius. He has
-in this, and other volumes of the same curious work, apparently put down
-every painter’s or mathematician’s thought that crossed his imagination.
-It is a _Leonardiana_[39], the common-place book of a great and wise man;
-nor did our British sovereign ever with more good sense evince his true
-love of learning, than by his princely offer of its purchase.
-
-Till now the looking at friends, and rarities, and telling old stories,
-and seeing new sights, &c. has lulled my conscience asleep, nor suffered
-me to recollect that, dazzled by the brightness of the Corregios at
-Parma, the account of their press, the finest in Europe, and infinitely
-superior to our Baskerville, escaped me. They have a glorious collection
-too of bibles in their library; their illuminations are most delicate,
-and their bindings pompous, but they possess a modern MS. of such
-singular perfection, that none of those finished when chirography was
-more cultivated than it is now, can at all pretend to compare with it.
-The characters are all gilt, the leaves vellum, the miniatures finished
-with a degree of nicety rarely found in union, as here, with the utmost
-elegance and taste. No words I can use will give a just idea of this
-little MS.: whoever is a true fancier of such things, would find his
-trouble well repaid, if he left London only to look at it. The book
-contains private devotions for the duchess with suitable ornaments--I
-will talk no more of it.
-
-The fine colossal figure of the Virgin Mary in heaven crowned by her
-Son’s hand, painted in the cieling of some church at Parma, has a bad
-light, and it is difficult to comprehend its sublimity. One approaches
-nearer to understand the merits of that singular performance when one
-looks at Caracci’s copy of it, kept in the Ambrosian library here at
-Milan. But how was I surprised to hear related as a fact happening to
-_him_, the old story told to all who go to see St. Paul’s cathedral in
-London, of our Sir James Thornhill, who, while he was intent on painting
-the cupola, walked backward to look at the effect, till, arriving at
-the very edge of the scaffold, he was in danger of dashing his brains
-out by falling from that horrible height upon the marble below, had not
-some bystander possessed readiness of mind to run suddenly forward, and
-throw a pencil daubed in white stuff which stood near him, at the figure
-Sir James’s eyes were fixed on, which provoked the painter to follow him
-threatening, and so saved his life. Could such an accident have happened
-twice? and is it likely that to either of these persons it ever happened
-at all? Would such men as Annibal Caracci and Sir James Thornhill have
-exposed themselves upon an undefended scaffold, without railing it round
-to prevent their tumbling down, when engaged in a work that would take
-them many days, nay weeks, to finish it? Impossible! in every nation
-traditionary tales shake my belief exceedingly; and what astonishes one
-more than it disgusts, if possible, is to see the same story fitted to
-more nations than one.
-
-It is now many years since a counsellor related at my house in Surrey
-the following narration, of which I had then no doubts, or idea of
-suspicion; for he said he was himself witness to the fact, and laid the
-scene at St. Edmondsbury, a town in our county of Suffolk: how a man
-accused of murder, with every corroborating circumstance, escaped by the
-steady resolution of one juryman, who could not, by any arguments or
-remonstrances of his companions, be prevailed on to pronounce the fellow
-guilty, though every possible circumstance combined to ascertain him as
-the person who took the deceased’s life; and how, after all was over,
-the juryman confessed privately to the judge, that _he himself_, by such
-and such an accident, had killed the farmer, of whose death the other
-stood accused. This event, true or false, of which I have since found the
-rudiments in a French Recueil, was told me at Venice by a gentleman as
-having happened _there_, under the immediate inspection of a friend he
-named. Quere, whether any such thing ever happened at all in any time or
-place? but laxity of narration, and contempt of all exactness, at last
-extinguish one’s best-founded confidence in the lips of mortal man. It
-is, however, clearly proved, that no duty is so difficult as to preserve
-truth in all our transactions, while no transaction is so trifling as
-to preclude temptation of infringing it: for if there is no interest
-that prompts a liar, his vanity suffices; nor will we mention the
-suggestions of cowardice, malignity, or any species of vice, when, as in
-these last-mentioned stories, many fictions are invented by well-meaning
-people, who hope to prevent mischief, inculcate the possibility of
-hanging innocence, &c. and violate truth out of regard to virtue.
-
-Well, well! our good Italians here will not condescend to live or lie,
-if now and then they scruple not to tell one. No man in this country
-pretends either to tenderness or to indifference, when he feels no
-disposition to be indifferent or tender; and so removed are they from
-all affectation of sensibility or of refinement, that when a conceited
-Englishman starts back in pretended rapture from a Raphael he has perhaps
-little taste for, it is difficult to persuade these sincerer people
-that his transports are possibly put on, only to deceive some of his
-countrymen who stand by, and who, if he took no notice of so fine a
-picture, would laugh, and say he had been throwing his time away, without
-making even the common and necessary improvements expected from every
-gentleman who travels through Italy; yet surely it is a choice delight
-to live where the everlasting scourge held over London and Bath, of
-_what will they think?_ and _what will they say?_ has no existence;
-and to reflect that I have now sojourned near two years in Italy, and
-scarcely can name one conceited man, or one affected woman, with whom, in
-any rank of life, I have been in the least connected.
-
-In Naples we see the works of nature displayed; at Rome and Florence we
-survey the performances of art; at every place in Italy there is much
-worthy one’s esteem, said the Venetian Resident one day very elegantly;
-and at Milan there is the _Abate Bossi_. Should I forbear to add _my_
-testimony to such talents and such virtue, which, expanded by nature
-to the wide range of human benevolence, he knows how to concentre
-occasionally for the service of private friendship, how great would be my
-ingratitude and neglect, while no character ever so completely resembled
-his, as that of the famous _Hough_ well known in England by the title of
-the _good_ Bishop of Worcester. His ingenuity in composing and placing
-these words on the 13th of May 1775, is perhaps one of his least valuable
-jeux d’esprit; but pretty, when one knows that on that day the empress
-was born, on that day the archduke arrived at Milan on a visit to his
-brother, and on that day the duchess was delivered of a son. The words
-may be read our way or the Chinese:
-
- Natalis Adventus Partus
- Matris Fratris Conjugis
- Felix Optatus Incolumis
- Principem Aulam Urbem
- Lectificabant.
-
-What a foolish thing it is in princes to give pain in a place like this,
-where all are disposed to derive pleasure even from praising them! There
-is a natural loyalty among the Lombards, which oppression can scarcely
-extinguish, or tyranny destroy; and, as I have said a thousand times,
-they _pretend_ to love no one; they _do_ love their rulers; and, rather
-grieve than growl at the afflictions caused by their rapacity.
-
-I was told that I should find few discriminations of character in Italy;
-but the contrary proves true, and I do not wonder at it. Among those
-people who, by being folded or driven all together in flocks as the
-French are, with one fashion to serve for the whole society, a man may
-easily contract a similarity of manners by rubbing down each asperity of
-character against his nearest neighbour, no less plastic than himself;
-but here, where there is little apprehension of ridicule, and little
-spirit of imitation, monotonous tediousness is almost sure to be escaped.
-The very word _polite_ comes from _polish_ I suppose; and at Paris the
-place where you enjoy _le veritable vernis St. Martin_ in perfection,
-the people can scarcely be termed _polished_, or even _varnished_: they
-are _glazed_; and everything slides off the _exterieur_ of course,
-leaving the heart untouched. It is the same thing with other productions
-of nature; in caverns we see petrifactions shooting out in angular and
-excentric forms, because in Castleton Hole dame Nature has fair play;
-while the broad beach at Brighthelmstone, evermore battered by the same
-ocean, exhibits only a heap of round pebbles, and those round pebbles all
-alike.
-
-But we must cease reflections, and begin describing again. We have got a
-country house for the remaining part of the hot weather upon the confines
-of the Milanese dominions, where Switzerland first begins to bow her
-bleak head, and soften gradually in the sunshine of Italian fertility.
-From every walk and villa round this delightful spot, one sees an
-assemblage of beauties rarely to be met with: and there is a resemblance
-in it to the Vale of Llwydd, which makes it still more interesting
-to _me_. But we have obtained leave to spend a week of our destined
-Villeggiatura at the Borromæan palace, situated in the middle of Lago
-Maggiore, on the island so truly termed Isola Bella; every step to which
-from our villa at Varese teems with new beauties, and only wants the sea
-to render it, in point of mere landscape, superior to any thing we have
-seen yet.
-
-Our manner of living here is positively like nothing real, and the
-fanciful description of oriental magnificence, with Seged’s retirement
-in the Rambler to his palace on the Lake Dambea, is all I ever read
-that could come in competition with it: for here is one barge full of
-friends from Milan, another carrying a complete band of thirteen of the
-best musicians in Italy, to amuse ourselves and them with concerts every
-evening upon the water by moonlight, while the inhabitants of these
-elysian regions who live upon the banks, come down in crowds to the
-shores glad to receive additional delight, where satiety of pleasure
-seems the sole evil to be dreaded.
-
-It is well known that the wild mountains of Savoy, the rich plains of
-Lombardy, the verdant pastures of Piedmont, and the pointed Alps of
-Switzerland, form the limits of Lago Maggiore: where, upon a naked rock,
-torn I trust from some surrounding hill, or happily thrown up in the
-middle of the water by a subterranean volcano, the Count Borromæo, in the
-year 1613, began to carry earth; and lay out a pretty garden, which from
-that day has been perpetually improving, till an appearance of eastern
-grandeur which it now wears, is rendered still more charming by all
-the studied elegance of art, and the conveniencies of common life. The
-palace is constructed as if to realise Johnson’s ideas in his Prince of
-Abyssinia: the garden consists of ten terraces; the walls of which are
-completely covered with orange, lemon, and cedrati trees, whose glowing
-colours and whose fragrant scent are easily discerned at a considerable
-distance, and the perfume particularly often reaches as far as to the
-opposite shore: nor are standards of the same plants wanting. I measured
-one not the largest in the grove, which had been planted one hundred
-and five years; it was a full yard and a quarter round. There were
-forty-six of them set near each other, and formed a delightful shade. The
-cedrati fruit grows as large as a late romana melon with us in England;
-and every thing one sees, and every thing one hears, and every thing
-one tastes, brings to one’s mind the fortunate islands and the golden
-age. Walks, woods, and terraces _within_ the island, and a prospect of
-unequalled variety _without_, make this a kind of fairy habitation, so
-like something one has seen represented on theatres, that my female
-companion cried out as we approached the place, “If we go any nearer
-now, I am sure it will all vanish into air.” There is solidity enough
-however: a little village consisting of eighteen fishermen’s houses, and
-a pretty church, with a dozen of well-grown poplars before it, together
-with the palace and garden, compose the territory, which commodiously
-contains two hundred and fifty souls, as the circuit is somewhat more
-than a measured mile and a half, but not two miles in all: and we have
-cannons to guard our Calypso-like dominion, for which Count Borromæo pays
-tribute to the king of Sardinia; but has himself the right of raising
-men upon the main land, and of coining money at _Macau_, a little town
-amid the hollows of these rocks, which present their irregular fronts to
-the lake in a manner surprisingly beautiful. He has three other islets on
-the same water, for change of amusement; of which that named la Superiore
-is covered with a hamlet, and l’Isola Madre with a wood full of game,
-guinea fowl, and common poultry; a summer-house beside furnished with
-chintz, and containing so many apartments, that I am told the uncle of
-the present possessor, having quarrelled with his wife, and resolving
-in a pet to leave the world, shut himself up on that little spot of
-earth, and never touched the continent, as I may call it, for the last
-seventeen years of his life. Let me add, that he had there his church
-and his chaplain, three musical professors in constant pay, and a pretty
-yatcht to row or sail, and fetch in friends, physicians, &c. from the
-main land. His nephew has not the same taste at all, seldom spending
-more than a week, and that only once a-year, among his islands, which
-are kept however quite in a princely style: the family crest, a unicorn,
-made in white marble, and of colossal greatness, proudly overlooking ten
-broad terraces which rise in a pyramidal form from the water: each wall
-richly covered with orange and lemon trees, and every parapet concealed
-under thickly-flowering shrubs of incessant variety, as if every climate
-had been culled, to adorn this tiny spot. More than a hundred beds
-are made in the palace, which has likewise a grotto floor of infinite
-ingenuity, and beautiful from being happily contrasted against the
-general splendour of the house itself. I have seen no such effort of what
-we call taste since I left England, as these apartments on a level with
-the lake exhibit, being all roofed and wainscotted with well-disposed
-shellwork, and decorated with fountains in a lively and pleasing manner.
-The library up stairs had many curious books in it--a Camden’s Britannia
-particularly, translated into Spanish; an Arabic Bible worthy of the
-Bodleian collection, and well-chosen volumes of natural history to a very
-serious degree of expence. Painting is not the first or second boast of
-Count Borromæo, but there are some tolerable landscapes by Tempesta, and
-three famous pictures of Luca Giordano, well known in London by the
-general diffusion of their prints, representing the Rape of the Sabines,
-the Judgment of Paris, and the Triumph of Galatea. These large history
-pieces adorn the walls of the vast room we dine in; where, though we
-never sit down fewer than twenty or twenty-five people to table, all seem
-lost from the greatness of its size, till the concert fills it in the
-evening.
-
-It is the garden however more than the palace which deserves description.
-He who has the care of it was born upon the island, and never strayed
-further than four miles, he tells me, from the borders of his master’s
-lake. Sure he must think the fall of man a fable: _he_ lives in Eden
-still. How much must such a fellow be confounded, could he be carried
-blind-folded in the midst of winter to London or to Paris! and set down
-in Fleet-street or Rue St. Honoré! That he understands his business so
-as to need no tuition from the inhabitants of either city, may be seen
-by a fig-tree which I found here ingrafted on a lemon; both bear fruit
-at the same moment, whilst a vine curls up the stem of the lemon-tree,
-dangling her grapes in that delicious company with apparent satisfaction
-to herself. Another inoculation of a moss-rose upon an orange, and a
-third of a carnation upon a cedrati tree, gave me new knowledge of what
-the gardener’s art, aided by a happy climate, could perform. But when
-rowing round the lake with our band of music yesterday, we touched at a
-country seat upon the side which joins the Milanese dominion, and I found
-myself presented with currants and gooseberries by a kind family, who
-having made their fortune in Amsterdam, had imbibed some Dutch ideas; my
-mind immediately felt her elastic force, and willingly confessed that
-liberty, security, and opulence alone give the true relish to productions
-either of art or nature; that freedom can make the currants of Holland
-and golden pippins of Great Britain sweeter than all the grapes of
-Italy; while to every manly understanding some share of the government
-in a well-regulated state, with the every-day comforts of common life
-made durable and certain by the laws of a prosperous country, are at
-last far preferable to splendid luxuries precariously enjoyed under the
-consciousness of their possible privation when least expected by the hand
-of despotic power.
-
-St. Carlo Borromæo’s colossal statue in bronze fixed up at the place of
-his nativity by the side of this beautiful water, fifteen miles from
-l’Isola Bella, was our next object of curiosity. It is wonderfully well
-proportioned for its prodigious magnitude, which, though often measured
-and well known, will never cease to astonish travellers, while twelve
-men can be easily contained in his head only, as some of our company had
-the curiosity to prove; but repented their frolic, as the metal heated
-by such a sun became insupportable. Abate Bianconi bid me remark that it
-was just the height of twelve men, each six feet high; that it is but
-just once and a half less than that erected by Nero, which gives name
-to the Roman Colosseo; that it is to be seen clearly at the distance
-of twelve miles, though placed to no advantage, as situation has been
-sacrificed to the greater propriety of setting it up upon the place where
-he was actually born, whose memory they hold, and justly, in such perfect
-veneration. I returned home persuaded that the cardinal’s dress, though
-an unfavourable one to pictures, is very happily adapted to a colossal
-statue, as the three cloaks or petticoats made a sort of step-ladder
-drapery which takes off exceedingly from the offence that is given by too
-long lines to the eye.
-
-We returned to our enchanted palace with music playing by our side: I
-never saw a party of pleasure carried on so happily. The weather was
-singularly bright and clear, the moon at full, the French-horns breaking
-the silence of the night, invited echo to answer them. The nine days (and
-we enjoyed seventeen or eighteen hours out of every twenty-four) seemed
-nine minutes. When we came home to our country-house in the Varesotto,
-verses and sonnets saluted our arrival, and congratulated our wedding-day.
-
-The Madonna del Monte was the next show which called us abroad; it is
-within a few miles of our present sweet habitation, is celebrated for its
-prospect, and is indeed a very astonishing spot of ground, exhibiting at
-one view the three cities of Turin, Milan, and Genoa; and leading the eye
-still forward into the South of France. The lakes, which to those who
-go o’pleasuring upon them, seem like seas, and very like the mouth of
-our river Dart, where she disgorges her elegantly-ornamented stream into
-the harbour at Kingsweare, here afford too little water in proportion,
-though five in number, and the largest fifty miles round. I scarcely
-ever saw so much land within the eye from any place. That the road
-should be adorned with chapels up the mountain is less strange: there is
-a church dedicated to the Virgin at top. We have one here in Italy in
-every district almost, as the rage of _worshipping on high places_, so
-expressly and repeatedly forbidden in scripture, has lasted surprisingly
-in the world. Every resting-place is marked, and decorated with statues
-cut in wood, and painted to imitate human life with very extraordinary
-skill. They are capital performances of their kind, and most resemble,
-but I think excel, Mrs. Wright’s finest figures in wax. A convent of
-nuns, situated on the summit of the hill, where these chapels end in
-an exceeding pretty church, entertained our large party with the most
-hospitable kindness; gave us a handsome dinner and delicious dessert. We
-diverted the ladies with a little concert in return, and passed a truly
-delightful day.
-
-All the environs of this _Varesotto_ are very charmingly varied with
-mountains, lakes, and cultivated life; the only fault in our prospect is
-the want of water. Had I told my companions of yesterday perhaps, that
-the view from _Madonna del Monte_ reminded me of Chirk Castle Hill in
-North Wales, they would have laughed; yet from that extraordinary spot
-are to be distinctly seen several fertile counties, with many great,
-and many small towns, and a most extensive landscape, watered by the
-large and navigable rivers Severn and Dee, roughened by the mountains
-of Merionethshire, and bounded by the Irish sea: I think that view has
-scarce its equal any where; and, if any where, it is here in the vicinity
-of Varese, where many gay villas interspersed contribute to variegate and
-enliven a scene highly finished by the hand of Nature, and wanting little
-addition from her attendant _Art_.
-
-Of the noblemen’s feats in the neighbourhood it may indeed be remarked,
-that however spacious the house, and however splendid the furniture
-may prove upon examination, however pompous the garden may be to the
-first glance, and the terraces however magnificent,--spiders are
-seldom excluded from the mansion, or weeds from the pleasure-ground of
-the possessor. A climate so warm would afford some excuse for this
-nastiness, could one observe the inhabitants were discomposed at such an
-effect from a good cause, or if one could flatter one’s self that they
-themselves were hurt at it; but when they gravely display an embroidered
-bed or counterpane worthy of Arachne’s fingers before her metamorphosis,
-covered over by her present labours, who can forbear laughing?--The
-gardener in two minutes arriving to assist you up slopes, all flourishing
-with cat’s-tail and poppy; while your friends cry,--“_Here, this is
-nature! is it not?_ pure nature!--_Tutto naturale si, secondo l’uso
-Inglese_[40].”
-
-Well! we have really passed a prodigiously gay _villegiatura_ here in
-this charming country, where the snowy cap of the _gros_ St. Bernard
-cools the air, though at so great a distance; and we have the pleasure
-of seeing Switzerland, without the pain of feeling its cold, or the
-fatigue of climbing its _glacieres_: the Alps of the Grisons rise up like
-a fortification behind us; the sun glows hot in our rich and fertile
-valleys, and throws up every vegetable production with all the poignant
-flavour that Summer can bestow; nor is shade wanting from the walnut
-and large chesnut trees, under which we often dine, and sing, and play
-at _tarocco_, and hear the horns and clarinets, while sipping our ice
-or swallowing our lemonade. The _cicala_ now feels the genial influence
-of that heat she requires, but her voice here is weak, compared to the
-powers she displayed so much to our disturbance in Tuscany; and the
-_lucciola_ has lost much of her scintillant beauty, but she darts up and
-down the hedges now and then. Here is an emerald-coloured butterfly,
-whose name I know not, plays over the lakes and standing pools, in a very
-pleasing abundance; the most exquisitely-tinted æphemera frolic before
-one all day long; and Antiope flutters in every parterre, and shares the
-garden sweets with a pale primrose-coloured creature of her own kind,
-whose wings are edged with brown, and, if I can remember right, bears
-the name of _hyale_. But we are not yet past the residence of scorpions,
-which certainly do commit suicide when provoked beyond all endurance; a
-story I had always heard, but never gave much credit to.
-
-But I am disturbed from writing my book by the good-humoured gaiety of
-our cheerful friends, with whom we never sit down fewer than fourteen or
-fifteen to table I think, and surely never rise from it without many a
-genuine burst of honest merriment undisguised by affectation, unfettered
-by restraint. Our gentlemen make _improviso_ rhymes, and cut comical
-faces; go out to the field after dinner, and play at a sort of blindman’s
-buff, which they call breaking the pan; nor do the low ones in company
-arrange their minds as I see in compliment to the high ones, but tell
-their opinions with a freedom I little expected to find: mixed society
-is very rare among them, almost unknown it seems; but when they _do_ mix
-at a country place like this, the great are kind, to do them justice,
-and the little not servile. They are wise indeed in making society easy
-to them, for no human being suffers solitude so ill as does an Italian.
-An English lady once made me observe, that a cat never purs when she
-is alone, let her have what meat and warmth she will; I think these
-social-spirited Milanese are like _her_, for they can hardly believe that
-there is existing a person, who would not willingly prefer any company
-to none: when we were at the islands three weeks ago,--“A charming
-place,” says one of our companions,--“_Cioè con un mondo d’amici
-cosi_[41].”--“But with one’s own family, methinks,” said I, “and a good
-library of books, and this sweet lake to bathe in:”--“O!” cried they all
-at once, “_Dio ne liberi_[42].”--This is national character.
-
-Why there are no birds of the watery kind, coots, wild ducks, cargeese,
-upon these lakes, nobody informs me: I have been often told that of
-Geneva swarms with them, and it is but a very few miles off: our people
-though have little care to ascertain such matters, and no desire at
-all to investigate effects and causes; those who study among them,
-study classic authors and learn rhetoric; poetry too is by no means
-uncultivated at Milan, where the Abate Parini’s satires are admirable,
-and so esteemed by those who themselves know very well how to write, and
-how to judge: common philosophy (_la physique_, as the French call it),
-geography, astronomy, chymistry, are oddly left behind somehow; and it
-is to their ignorance of these matters that I am apt to impute Italian
-credulity, to which every wonder is welcome.
-
-We have now passed one day in Switzerland however, rowing to the little
-town Lugano over its pretty lake. The mountains at the end are a neat
-miniature of Vesuvius, Somma, &c.; and the situation altogether looks as
-a picture of Naples would look, if painted by Brughuel; but not so full
-of figures. A fanciful traveller too might be tempted to think he could
-discern some streaks of liberty in the manners of the people, if it were
-but in the inn-keeper at whose house we dined; this may however be merely
-my own prejudice, and somebody told me it was so.
-
-We were shewn on one side the water as we went across, a small place
-called Campioni, which is _feudo Imperiale_, and governed by the Padre
-Abate of a neighbouring convent, who has power even over the lives of his
-subjects for six years; at the expiration of which term another despot of
-the day is chosen--appointed I should have said; and the last returns to
-his original state, amenable however for any _very_ shocking thing he may
-have done during the course of his dictatorship; and no complaint has
-been ever made yet of any such governor so circumstanced and appointed,
-whose conduct is commonly but too mild and clement. This I thought worth
-remarking, as consolatory to one’s feelings.
-
-Lugano meantime scorns absolute authority: our Cicerone there, in reply
-to the question asked in Italy three times a-day I believe--_Che Principe
-fà qui la sua residenza?_[43]--replied, that they were plagued with no
-Principi at all, while the thirteen Cantons protected all their subjects;
-and though, as the man expressed it, only half of them were _Christians_,
-and the other half _Protestants_; no church or convent had ever wanted
-respect; while their town regularly received a monthly governor from
-every canton, and was perfectly contented with this ambulatory dominion.
-Here was the first gallows I have seen these two years. They have
-a pretty commerce too at Lugano for the size of the place, and the
-shopkeepers shew that officiousness and attention seldom observed in
-arbitrary states, where
-
- Content, the bane of industry,
-
-soon leads people to neglect the trouble of getting, for the pleasure
-of spending their money. One therefore sees the inhabitants of Italian
-cities for the most part merry and cheerful, or else pious and penitent;
-little attentive to their shops, but easily disposed to loiter under
-their mistress’s window with a guitar, or rove about the streets at night
-with a pretty girl under their arm, singing as they go, or squeaking
-with a droll accent, if it is the time for masquerades. Fraud, avarice,
-ambition, are the vices of republican states and a cold climate;
-idleness, sensuality, and revenge, are the weeds of a warm country and
-monarchical governments. If these people are not good, they at least
-wish they were better; they do not applaud their own conduct when their
-passions carry them too far; nor rejoice, like old Moneytrap or Sir Giles
-Overreach, in their successful sins: but rather say with Racine’s hero,
-translated by Philips, that
-
- Pyrrhus will ne’er approve his own injustice,
- Or form excuses while his heart condemns him.
-
-They beat their bosoms at the feet of a crucifix in the street, with no
-more hypocrisy than they beat a tambourine there; perhaps with no more
-effect neither, if no alteration of behaviour succeeds their contrition:
-yet when an Englishman (who is probably more ashamed of repenting than of
-sinning) accuses them of false pretensions to pious fervour, he wrongs
-them, and would do well to repent himself.
-
-But a natural curiosity seen at Milan this 16th day of August 1786, leads
-my mind into another channel. I went to wait upon and thank the lady, or
-the relations of the lady, who lent us her house at Varese, and make our
-proper acknowledgments; and at that visit saw something very uncommon
-surely: though I remember Doctor Johnson once said, that nobody had ever
-seen a very strange thing; and challenged the company (about seventeen
-people, myself among them) to produce a strange thing;--but I had not
-then seen Avvocato B----, a lawyer here at Milan, and a man respected
-in his profession, who actually chews the cud like an ox; which he did
-at my request, and in my presence: he is apparently much like another
-tall stout man, but has many extraordinary properties, being eminent for
-strength, and possessing a set of ribs and sternum very surprising,
-and worthy the attention of anatomists: his body, upon the slightest
-touch, even through all his clothes, throws out electric sparks; he
-can reject his meals from his stomach at pleasure, and did absolutely
-in the course of two hours, the only two I ever passed in his company,
-go through, to oblige me, the whole operation of eating, masticating,
-swallowing, and returning by the mouth, a large piece of bread and a
-peach. With all this conviction, nothing more was wanting; but I obtained
-beside, the confirmation of common friends, who were willing likewise to
-bear testimony of this strange accidental variety. What I hear of his
-character is, that he is a low-spirited, nervous man; and I suppose his
-_ruminating_ moments are spent in lamenting the singularities of his
-frame:--be this how it will, we have now no time to think any more of
-them, as we are packing up for a trip to Bergamo, a city I have not yet
-seen.
-
-
-
-
-BERGAMO
-
-
-Is built up a steep hill, like Lansdown road at Bath; the buildings
-not so regular; the prospect not inferior, but of a different kind,
-resembling that one sees from Wrotham hill in Kent, but richer, and
-presenting a variety beyond credibility, when it is premised that scarce
-any water can be seen, and that the plains of Lombardy are low and flat:
-within the eye however one may count all the original blessings bestowed
-on humankind,--corn, wine, oil, and fruit;--the inclosures being small
-too, and the trees _touffu_, as the French call it. No parterre was ever
-more beautifully disposed than are the fields surveyed from the summit
-of the hill, where stands the Marquis’s palace elegantly sheltered by a
-still higher rising ground behind it, and commanding from every window
-of its stately front a view of prodigious extent and almost unmatched
-beauty: as the diversification of colouring reminds one of nothing but
-the fine pavement at the Roman Pantheon, so curiously intersected are the
-patches of grass and grain, flax and vines, arable and tilth, in this
-happy disposition of earth and its most valuable products; while not a
-hedge fails to afford perfume that fills the very air with fragrance,
-from the sweet jessamine that, twisting through it, lends a weak support
-to the wild grapes, which, dangling in clusters, invite ten thousand
-birds of every European species I believe below the size of a pigeon.
-Nor is the taking of these creatures by the _roccolo_ to be left out
-from among the amusements of Brescian and Bergamasc nobility; nor is the
-eating of them when taken to be despised: _beccaficos_ and _ortolans_
-are here in high perfection; and it was from these northern districts of
-Italy I trust that Vitellius, and all the classic gluttons of antiquity,
-got their curious dishes of singing-bird pye, &c. The rich scent of
-melons at every cottage door is another delicious proof of the climate’s
-fertility and opulence,--
-
- Where every sense is lost in every joy,
-
-as Hughes expresses it; and where, in the delightful villa of our highly
-accomplished acquaintance the Marquis of Aracieli, we have passed ten
-days in all the pleasures which wit could invent, money purchase, or
-friendship bestow. The last nobleman who resided here, father to the
-present lord, was _cavalier servente_ to the immortal Clelia Borromæo,
-whose virtues and varieties of excellence would fill a volume; nor can
-there be a stronger proof of her uncommon, almost unequalled merit, than
-the long-continued esteem of the famous Vallisnieri, whose writings on
-natural history, particularly insects, are valued for their learning,
-as their author was respected for his birth and talents. Letters from
-him are still preserved in the family by Marchese Aracieli, and breathe
-admiration of the conduct, beauty, and extensive knowledge possessed by
-this worthy descendant of the Borromæan house; to whose incomparable
-qualities his father’s steady attachment bore the truest testimony, while
-the son still speaks of her death with tears, and delights in nothing
-more than in paying just tribute to her memory. He shewed me this pretty
-distich in her praise, made improviso by the celebrated philosopher
-Vallisnieri:
-
- Contemptrix sexus, omniscia Clelia sexum,
- Illustrat studio, moribus, arte metro[44].
-
-The Italians are exceedingly happy in the power of making verses
-improviso, either in their _old_ or their _new_ language: we were
-speaking the other day of the famous epigram in Ausonius;
-
- Infelix Dido, nulli bene nupta marito,
- Hoc moriente fugis, hoc fugiente peris[45].
-
-Our equally noble and ingenious master of the house rendered it in
-Italian thus immediately:
-
- Misera Dido! fra i nuziali ardori,
- L’un muore e fuggi--l’altro fuggi e mori.
-
-This is more compressed and clever than that of Guarini _himself_ I think,
-
- Oh fortunata Dido!
- Mal fornita d’amante e di marito,
- Ti fu quel traditor, l’altro tradito;
- Mori l’úno e fuggisti,
- Fuggi l’altro e moristi.
-
-Though this latter has been preserved with many deserved eulogiums from
-Crescembini, and likewise by Mr. de Chevreau.
-
-Could I clear my head of prejudice for such talents as I find here, and
-my heart of partial regard, which is in reality but grateful friendship,
-justly due from me for so many favours received; could I forget that we
-are now once more in the state of Venice, where every thing assumes an
-air of cheerfulness unknown to other places, I might perhaps perceive
-that the fair at Bergamo differs little from a fair in England, except
-that these cattle are whiter and ours larger. _How a score of good ewes
-now?_ as Master Shallow says; but I really did ask the price of a pair
-of good strong oxen for work, and heard it was ten zecchines; about
-half the price given at Blackwater, but ours are stouter, and capable
-of rougher service. It is strange to me where these creatures are kept
-all the rest of the year, for except at fair time one very seldom sees
-them, unless in actual employment of carting, ploughing, &c. Nothing
-is so little animated by the sight of living creatures as an Italian
-prospect. No sheep upon their hills, no cattle grazing in their meadows,
-no water-fowl, swans, ducks, &c. upon their lakes; and when you leave
-Lombardy, no birds flying in the air, save only from time to time betwixt
-Florence and Bologna, a solitary kite soaring over the surly Appenines,
-and breaking the immense void which fatigues the eye; a ragged lad or
-wench too now and then leading a lean cow to pick among the hedges, has a
-melancholy appearance, the more so as it is always fast held by a string,
-and struggles in vain to get loose. These however are only consequences
-of luxuriant plenty, for where the farmer makes four harvests of his
-grass, and every other speck of ground is profitably covered with grain,
-vines, &c. all possibility of open pasturage is precluded. Horses too,
-so ornamental in an English landscape, will never be seen loose in an
-Italian one, as they are all _chevaux entiers_, and cannot be trusted in
-troops together as ours are, even if there was ground uninclosed for them
-to graze on, like the common lands in Great Britain. A nobleman’s park is
-another object never to be seen or expected in a country, where people
-would really be deserving much blame did they retain in their hands for
-mere amusement ten or twelve miles circuit of earth, capable to produce
-two or three thousand pounds a-year profit to their families, beside
-making many tenants rich and happy in the mean time. I will confess,
-however, that the absence of all these _agrèmens_ gives a flatness and
-uniformity to the views which we cannot complain of in England; but
-when Italians consider the cause, they will have reason to be satisfied
-with the effect, especially while vegetable nature flourishes in full
-perfection, while every step crushes out perfume from the trodden herbs,
-and those in the hedges dispense with delightful liberality a fragrance
-that enchants one. Hops and pyracanthus cover the sides of every cottage;
-and the scent of truffles attracts, and the odour of melons gratifies
-one’s nerves, when driving among the habitations of fertile Lombardy.
-
-The old church here of mingled Gothic and Grecian architecture pleased
-me exceedingly, it sends one back to old times so, and shews one the
-progress of _barbarism_, rapid and gigantic in its strides, to overturn,
-confound, and destroy what taste was left in the world at the moment of
-its _onset_. Here is a picture of the Israelites passing over the Red
-Sea, which Luca Giordano, contrary to his usual custom, seems to have
-taken pains with, a rarity of course; and here are some single figures
-of the prophets, heroes, and judges of the Old Testament, painted with
-prodigious spirit indeed, by Ciro Ferri. That which struck me as most
-capital, was Gideon wringing the dew out of the fleece, full of character
-and glowing with expression.
-
-The theatre has fallen down, but they are building it up again with a
-nicety of proportion that will ensure it from falling any more. Italians
-cannot live without a theatre; they have erected a temporary one to
-serve during the fair time, and even that is beautiful. The Terzetto of
-charming Guglielmi was sung last night; I liked it still better than
-when we heard it performed by singers of more established reputation at
-St. Carlo; but then I like every thing at Bergamo, till it comes to the
-thunder storms, which are far more innoxious here than at Naples or in
-Tuscany.
-
-We could contemplate electricity from this fine hill yesterday with
-great composure, being amused with her caprices and not endangered by
-her anger. There has however been a fierce tempest in the neighbourhood,
-which has greatly lowered the spirits of the farmer; and we have been
-told another tale, that lowers mine much more as an Englishwoman,
-because the people of this town complain of strange failure in their
-accustomed orders for silk from England, and the foreigners make
-disgraceful conjectures about our commerce, in consequence of that
-failure.
-
-Here is a report prevailing too, of King George III. being assassinated,
-which, though we all know to be false, fails not to produce much
-unpleasing talk. Were the Londoners aware of the diffusion of their
-newspapers, and the strange ideas taken up by foreigners about things
-which pass by _us_ like a day dream, I think more caution would be
-used, and characters less lightly hung up to infamy or ridicule, on
-which those very prints mean not to bestow so lasting or severe a
-punishment, as their ill word produces at a distance from home, whither
-the contradiction often misses though the report arrives, and mischief,
-originally little intended, becomes the fatal consequence of a joke. But
-it is time to return to
-
-
-
-
-MILAN,
-
-
-Whence I went for my very first airing to Casa Simonetti, in search of
-the echo so celebrated by my country-folks and fellow-travellers, but
-did not find all that has been said of it strictly true. It certainly
-does repeat a single sound more than seventy times, but has no power to
-give back by reverberation a whole sentence. I have met too with another
-petty mortification; having been taught by Cave to expect, that in our
-Ambrosian library here at Milan, there was a MS. of Boethius preserved
-relative to his condemnation, and confessing his design of subverting the
-Gothic government in Lombardy. I therefore prevailed on Canonico Palazzi,
-a learned old ecclesiastic, to go with me and beg a sight of it. The
-præfect politely promised indulgence, but referred me to a future day;
-and when we returned again at the time appointed, shewed me only Pere
-Mabillon’s book, in which we read that it is to be found no where but
-at Florence, in the library of Lorenzo de Medicis. We were however shewn
-some curiosities to compensate our trouble, particularly the skeleton of
-the lady mentioned by Dr. Moore and Lady Millar with some contempt. This
-is the copy of her inscription:
-
- ÆGROTANTIUM
- SANITATI
- MORTUORUM
- INSPECTIONE
- VIVENTES
- PROSPICERE
- POSSINT
- HUNC
- ΣΚΕΛΕΤΟΝ
- P.
-
-A MS. of the Consolations of Philosophy, very finely written in the tenth
-century, and kept in elegant preservation;--a private common-place of
-Leonardo da Vinci never shewn, full of private memoirs, caricaturas,
-hints for pictures, sketches, remarks, &c.; it is invaluable. But there
-is another treasure in this town, the præfect tells me, by the same
-inimitable master, no other than an alphabet, pater noster, &c. written
-out by himself for the use of his own little babies, and ornamented with
-vignettes, &c. to tempt them to study it. I shall not see it however, as
-Conte Trivulci is out of town, to whom it belongs. I have not neglected
-to go see the monument erected to one of his family, with the famous
-inscription,
-
- Hic quiescit qui nunquam quievit;
-
-preserved by father Bouhours. The same day shewed me the remains of a
-temple to Hercules, with many of the fine old pillars still standing.
-They are soon to be taken down we hear for the purpose of widening the
-street, as Carfax was at Oxford.
-
-My hunger after a journey to Pavia is much abated; since professor
-Villa, whose erudition is well known, and whose works do him so much
-honour, informed me that the inscription said by Pere Mabillon still
-to subsist in praise of Boethius, is long since perished by time; nor
-do they now shew the brick tower in which it is said he was confined
-while he wrote his Consolations of Philosophy: for the tower is fallen
-to the ground, and so is the report, every body being now persuaded
-that they were composed in a strong place then standing upon the spot
-called Calventianus Ager, from the name of a noble house to which it had
-belonged for ages, and which I am told Cicero mentions as a family half
-Placentian, half Milaneze. The field still goes by the name of _Il Campo
-Calvenziano_; but, as it now belongs to people careless of remote events,
-however interesting to literature, is not adorned by any obelisk, or
-other mark, to denote its past importance, in having been once the scene
-of sufferings gloriously endured by the most zealous christian, the most
-steady patriot, and the most refined philosopher of the age in which he
-lived.
-
-I have seen a fine MS. of the Consolations copied in the tenth century,
-not only legible but beautiful; and I have been assured that the hymns
-written by his first wife Elpis, who, though she brought him no children,
-as Bertius says, was yet _fida curarum, et studiorum socia_[46], are
-still sung in the Romish churches at Brescia and Bergamo, somewhat
-altered from the state we find them in at the end of Cominus’s edition of
-the Consolations.
-
-Tradition too, I find, agrees with Procopius in telling that this widow
-of Boethius, Rusticiana, daughter of Symmachus, spent all the little
-money she had left in hiring people to throw down in the night all the
-statues set up in Rome to the honour of Theodoric, who had sentenced her
-husband to a death so dreadful, that it gave occasion to many fabulous
-tales reported by Martin Rota as miraculous truths. His bones, gathered
-up as relics by Otho III., were placed in a chapel dedicated to St.
-Austin in St. Peter’s church at Pavia four hundred and seventy-two years
-after his death, with an epitaph preserved by Pere Mabillon, but now no
-longer legible.
-
-We are now cutting hay here for the last time this season, and all the
-environs smell like spring on this 15th September 1786. The autumnal
-tint, however, falls fast upon the trees, which are already rich with a
-deep yellow hue. A wintery feel upon the atmosphere early in a morning,
-heavy fogs about noon, and a hollow wind towards the approach of night,
-make it look like the very last week of October in England, and warn us
-that summer is going. The same circumstances prompt me, who am about to
-forsake this her favourite region, to provide furs, flannels, &c. for the
-passing of those Alps which look so formidable when covered with snow at
-their present distance. Our swallows are calling their clamorous council
-round me while I write; but the butterflies still flutter about in the
-middle of the day, and grapes are growing more wholesome as with us when
-the mornings begin to be frosty. Our deserts, however, do not remind us
-of Tuscany: the cherries here are not particularly fine, and the peaches
-all part from the stone--miserable things! an English gardener would not
-send them to table: the figs too were infinitely finer at Leghorn, and
-nectarines have I never seen at all.
-
-Well, here is the opera begun again; some merry wag, Abate Casti I think,
-has accommodated and adapted the old story of king Theodore to put in
-ridicule the present king of Sweden, who is hated of the emperor for some
-political reasons I forget what, and he of course patronises the jester.
-Our honest Lombards, however, take no delight in mimicry, and feel more
-disgust than pleasure when simplicity is insulted, or distress made more
-corrosive by the bitterness of a scoffing spirit. I have tried to see
-whether they would laugh at any oddity in their neighbour’s manner,
-but never could catch any, except perhaps now and then a sly Roman who
-had a liking for it. “I see nothing absurd about the man,” says one
-gentleman; “every body may have some peculiarity, and most people have;
-but such things make me no sport: let us, when we have a mind to laugh,
-go and laugh at Punchinello.”--From such critics, therefore, the king of
-Sweden is safe enough, as they have not yet acquired the taste of hunting
-down royalty, and crowing with infantine malice, when possessed of the
-mean hope that they are able to pinch a noble heart. This old-fashioned
-country, which detests the sight of suffering majesty, hisses off its
-theatre a performance calculated to divert them at the expence of a
-sovereign prince, whose character is clear from blame, and whose personal
-weaknesses are protected by his birth and merit; while it is to his open,
-free, and politely generous behaviour alone, they owe the knowledge that
-he _has_ such foibles. Paisiello, therefore, cannot drive it down by his
-best music, though the poor king of Sweden is a Lutheran too, and if any
-thing would make them hate him, _that_ would.
-
-One vice, however, sometimes prevents the commission of another, and that
-same prevailing idea which prompts these prejudiced Romanists to conclude
-him doomed to lasting torments who dares differ from them, though in
-points of no real importance, inspires them at the same time with such
-compassion for his supposed state of predestinated punishment, that they
-rather incline to defend him from further misery, and kindly forbear to
-heap ridicule in this world upon a person who is sure to suffer eternal
-damnation in the other.
-
-How melancholy that people who possess such hearts should have the head
-thus perversely turned! I can attribute it but to one cause; their
-strange neglect and forbearance to read and study God’s holy word: for
-not a very few of them have I found who seem to disbelieve the Old
-Testament entirely, yet remain steadily and strenuously attached to the
-precedence their church claims over every other; and who shall wonder
-if such a combination of bigotry with scepticism should produce an
-evaporation of what little is left of popery from the world, as emetics
-triturated with opium are said to produce a sudorific powder which no
-earthly constitution can resist?
-
-But the Spanish grandee, who not only entertained but astonished us all
-one night with his conversation at Quirini’s Casino at Venice, is arrived
-here at Milan, and plays upon the violin. He challenged acquaintance
-with us in the street, half invited himself to our private concert
-last night, and did us the honour to perform there, with the skill of
-a professor, the eager desire of a dilletante, and the tediousness of
-a solitary student; he continued to amaze, delight, and fatigue us for
-four long hours together. He is a man of prodigious talents, and replete
-with variety of knowledge. A new dance has been tried at here too, but
-was not well received, though it represents the terrible story which,
-under Madame de Genlis’ pen, had such uncommon success among the reading
-world, and is called _La sepolta viva_; but as the duchess Girafalco,
-whose misfortune it commemorates, is still alive, the pantomime will
-probably be suppressed: for she has relations at Milan it seems, and
-one lady distinguished for elegance of form, and charms of voice and
-manner, told me yesterday with equal sweetness, spirit, and propriety,
-that though the king of Naples sent his soldiers to free her aunt from
-that horrible dungeon where she had been nine years confined, yet if
-her miseries were to become the subject of stage representation, she
-could hardly be pronounced happy, or even at ease. Truth is, I would
-be loath to see the spirit of producing every one’s private affairs,
-true or false, before the public eye, spread into _this_ country: No!
-let that humour be confined to Great Britain, where the thousand real
-advantages resulting from living in a free state, richly compensate for
-the violations of delicacy annexed to it; and where the laws do protect,
-though the individuals insult one: but _here_, why the people would be
-miserable indeed, if to the oppression which may any hour be exercised
-over them by their prince, were likewise to be added the liberties
-taken perpetually in London by one’s next door neighbour, of tearing
-forth every transaction, and publishing even every conjecture to one’s
-disadvantage.
-
-With these reflections, and many others, excited by gratitude to private
-friends, and general admiration of a country so justly esteemed, we shall
-soon take our leave of Milan, famed for her truly hospitable disposition;
-a temper of mind sometimes abused by travellers perhaps, whose birth
-and pretensions are seldom or ever inquired into, whilst no people are
-more careful of keeping their rank inviolate by never conversing on equal
-terms with a countryman or woman of their own, who cannot produce a
-proper length of ancestry.
-
-I will not leave them though, without another word or two about their
-language, which, though it sounded strangely coarse and broad to be sure,
-as we returned home from Florence, Rome, and Venice, I felt sincerely
-glad to hear again; and have some notion by their way of pronouncing
-_bicchiere_, a word used here to express every thing that holds water,
-that our _pitcher_ was probably derived from it; and the Abate Divecchio,
-a polite scholar, and an uncommonly agreeable companion, seemed to think
-so too. His knowledge of the English language, joined to the singular
-power he has over his own elegant Tuscan tongue, made me torment him with
-a variety of inquiries about these confusing dialects, which leave me at
-last little chance to understand any, whilst a child is called _bambino_
-at Florence, _putto_ at Venice, _schiatto_ at Bergamo, and _creatura_ at
-Rome; and at Milan they call a wench _tosa_: an apron is _grembiule_
-at Florence I think, _traversa_ at Venice, _bigarrol_ at Brescia and
-some other parts of Lombardy, _senale_ at Rome, and at Milan _scozzà_. A
-foreigner may well be distracted by varieties so striking; but the turn
-and idiom differ ten times more still, and I love to hear our Milanese
-call an oak _robur_ rather than _quercia_ somehow, and tell a lady when
-dressed in white, that she is _tutto in albedine_.
-
-On Friday the 22d of September then we left Milan, and I dropt a tear or
-two in remembrance of the many civilities shewn by our kind and partial
-companions. The Abate Bianconi made me wild to go to Dresden, and enjoy
-the Correggios now moved from Modena to that gallery. I find he thinks
-the old Romans pronounced Cicero and Cæsar as the moderns do, and many
-English scholars are of the same mind; but here are coins dug up now out
-of the Veronese mountain with the word Carolus, spelt _Karrulus_, upon
-them quite plain; and Christus was spelt _Kristus_ in Vespasian’s time
-it is certain, because of the player’s monument at Rome.--Dr. Johnson, I
-remember, was always steady to that opinion; but it is time to leave all
-this, and rejoice in my third arrival at gay, cheerful, charming
-
-
-
-
-VERONA,
-
-
-Whither some sweet leave-taking verses have followed us, written by
-the facetious Abate Ravasi, a native of Rome, but for many years an
-inhabitant of Milan. His agreeable sonnet, every line ending with
-_tutto_, being upon a subject of general importance, would serve as a
-better specimen of his abilities than lines dictated only by partial
-friendship;--but I hear _that_ is already circulated about the world, and
-printed in one of our magazines; to them let him trust his fame, they
-will pay my just debts.
-
-We have now seen this enchanting spot in spring, summer, and autumn;
-nor could winter’s self render it undelightful, while uniting every
-charm, and gratifying every sense. Greek and Roman antiquities salute
-one at the gates; Gothic remains render each place of worship venerable:
-Nature in her holiday dress decks the environs, and society animates
-with intellectual fire the amiable inhabitants. Oh! were I to live here
-long, I should not only excuse, but applaud the Scaligers for straining
-probability, and neglecting higher praise, only to claim kindred with
-the Scalas of Verona. Improvisation at this place pleases me far better
-than it did in Tuscany. Our truly-learned Abate Lorenzi astonishes all
-who hear him, by _repeating_, not _singing_, a series of admirably just
-and well-digested thoughts, which he, and he alone, possesses the power
-of arranging suddenly as if by magic, and methodically as if by study,
-to rhymes the most melodious, and most varied; while the Abbé Bertola,
-of the university at Pavia, gives one pleasure by the same talent in
-a manner totally different, singing his unpremeditated strains to the
-accompaniment of a harpsichord, round which stand a little chorus of
-friends, who interpolate from time to time two lines of a well-known
-song, to which he pleasingly adapts his compositions, and goes on gracing
-the barren subject, and adorning it with every possible decoration of
-wit, and every desirable elegance of sentiment. Nothing can surely
-surpass the happy promptitude of his expression, unless it is the
-brilliancy of his genius.
-
-We were in a large company last night, where a beautiful woman of quality
-came in dressed according to the present taste, with a gauze head-dress,
-adjusted turbanwise, and a heron’s feather; the neck wholly bare. Abate
-Bertola bid me look at her, and, recollecting himself a moment, made this
-Epigram improviso:
-
- Volto e Crin hai di Sultana,
- Perchè mai mi vien disdetto,
- Sodducente Mussulmana
- Di gittarti il _Fazzoletto_?
-
-of which I can give no better imitation than the following:
-
- While turban’d head and plumage high
- A Sultaness proclaims my Cloe;
- Thus tempted, tho’ no Turk, I’ll try
- The handkerchief you scorn--to throw ye.
-
-This is however a weak specimen of his powers, whose charming fables
-have so completely, in my mind, surpassed all that has ever been written
-in that way since La Fontaine. I am strongly tempted to give one little
-story out of his pretty book.
-
- Una lucertoletta
- Diceva al cocodrillo,
- Oh quanto mi diletta
- Di veder finalmente
- Un della mia famiglia
- Si grande e si potente!
- Ho fatto mille miglia
- Per venirvi a vedere,
- Mentre tra noi si serba
- Di voi memoria viva;
- Benche fuggiam tra l’erba
- E il sassoso sentiero:
- In sen però non langue
- L’onor del prisco sangue.
- L’anfibio rè dormiva
- A questi complimenti,
- Pur sugli ultimi accenti
- Dal sonno se riscosse
- E dimandò chi fosse?
- La parentela antica,
- Il viaggio, la fatica,
- Quella torno a dire,
- Ed ei torne a dormire.
-
- Lascia i grandi ed i potenti,
- A sognar per parenti;
- Puoi cortesi stimarli
- Se dormon mentre parli.
-
- Walking full many a weary mile
- The lizard met the crocodile;
- And thus began--how fat, how fair,
- How finely guarded, Sir, you are!
- ’Tis really charming thus to see
- One’s kindred in prosperity.
- I’ve travell’d far to find your coast,
- But sure the labour was not lost:
- For you must think we don’t forget
- Our loving cousin now so great;
- And tho’ our humble habitations
- Are such as suit our slender stations,
- The honour of the lizard blood
- Was never better understood.
-
- Th’ amphibious prince, who slept content,
- Ne’er listening to her compliment,
- At this expression rais’d his head,
- And--Pray who are you? cooly said;
- The little creature now renew’d
- Her history of toils subdu’d,
- Her zeal to see her cousin’s face,
- The glory of her ancient race;
- But looking nearer, found my lord
- Was fast asleep again--and snor’d.
-
- Ne’er press upon a rich relation
- Rais’d to the ranks of higher station;
- Or if you will disturb your coz,
- Be happy that he does but doze.
-
-But I will not be seduced by the pleasure of praising my sweet friends at
-Verona, to lengthen this chapter with further panegyrics upon a place I
-leave with the truest tenderness, and with the sincerest regret; while
-the correspondence I hope long to maintain with the charming Contessa
-Mosconi, must compensate all it can for the loss of her agreeable
-Coterie, where my most delightful evenings have been spent; where so
-many topics of English literature have been discussed; where Lorenzi
-read Tasso to us of an afternoon, Bertola made verses, and the cavalier
-Pindemonte conversed; where the three Graces, as they are called, joined
-their sweet voices to sing when satiety of pleasure made us change our
-mode of being happy, and kept one from wishing ever to hear any thing
-else; while countess Carminati sung Bianchi’s duets with the only tenor
-fit to accompany a voice so touching, and a taste so refined. _Verona!
-qui te viderit, et non amarit_, says some old writer, I forget who,
-_protinus amor perditissimo; is credo se ipsum non amat_[47]. Indeed I
-never saw people live so pleasingly together as these do; the women
-apparently delighting in each other’s company, without mean rivalry, or
-envy of those accomplishments which are commonly bestowed by heaven with
-diversity enough for all to have their share. The world surely affords
-room for every body’s talents, would every body that possessed them but
-think so; and were malice and affectation once completely banished from
-cultivated society, _Verona_ might be found in many places perhaps; she
-is now confined, I think, to the sweet state of _Venice_.
-
-
-
-
-JOURNEY THROUGH TRENT, INSPRUCK, MUNICK, AND SALTZSBURG, TO VIENNA.
-
-
-The Tyrolese Alps are not as beautiful as those of Savoy, though the
-river that runs between them is wider too; but that very circumstance
-takes from the horror which constitutes beauty in a rocky country,
-while a navigable stream and the passage of large floats convey ideas
-of commerce and social life, leaving little room for the solitary
-fancies produced, and the strokes of sublimity indelibly impressed, by
-the mountains of La Haute Morienne. The sight of a town where all the
-theological learning of Europe was once concentred, affords however much
-ground of mental amusement; while the sight of two nations, not naturally
-congenial, living happily together, as the Germans and Italians here do,
-is pleasing to all.
-
-We saw the apartments of the Prince Bishop, but found few things worth
-remarking, except that in the pictures of Carlo Loti there is a shade of
-the Flemish school to be discerned, which was pretty as we are now hard
-upon the confines. Our sovereign here keeps his little menagerie in a
-mighty elegant style: the animals possess an insulated rock, surrounded
-by the Adige, and planted with every thing that can please them best; the
-wild, or more properly the predatory creatures, are confined, but in very
-spacious apartments; with each a handsome outlet for amusement: while
-such as are granivorous rove at pleasure over their domain, to which
-their master often comes in summer to eat ice at a banquetting house
-erected for him in the middle, whence a prospect of a peculiar nature is
-enjoyed; great beauty, much variety, and a very limited horizon, like
-some of the views about Bath.
-
-At the death of one prince another is chosen, and government carried on
-as at Rome in miniature. We staid here two nights and one day, thought
-perpetually of Matlock and Ivy Bridge, and saw some rarities belonging
-to a man who shewed us a picture of our Saviour’s circumcision, and told
-us it was _San Simeone_, a baby who having gone through many strange
-operations and torments among some Jews who stole him from his parents,
-as the story goes here at Trent, they murdered him at last, and he became
-a saint and a martyr, to whom much devotion is paid at this place, though
-I fancy he was never heard of any where else.
-
-The river soon after we left Trent contracted to a rapid and narrow
-torrent, such as dashes at the foot of the Alps in Savoy; the rocks
-grew more pointed, and the prospects gained in sublimity at every step;
-though the neatness of the culture, and quantity of vines, with the
-variegated colouring of the woods, continued to excite images more soft
-than formidable, less solemn than lovely. The barberry bushes bind
-every mountain round the middle as with a scarlet sash, and when we
-looked down upon them from a house situated as if in the place which
-the Frenchman seemed to have a notion of, when he thought the aerian
-travellers were gone _au lieu ou les vents se forment_, they looked
-wonderfully pretty. The cleanliness and comfort with which we are now
-lodged at every inn, evince our distance from France however, and even
-from Italy, where low cielings, clean windows, and warm rooms, are
-deemed pernicious to health, and destructive of true delight. Here
-however we find ourselves cruelly distressed for want of language, and
-must therefore depend on our eyes only, not our ears, for information
-concerning the golden house, or more properly the golden roof, long known
-to subsist at Inspruck. The story, as well as I can gather it, is this:
-That some man was reproached with spending more than he could afford,
-till some of his neighbours cried out, “Why he’ll roof his house with
-gold soon, but who shall pay the expence?”--“_I_ will;” quoth the piqued
-German, and actually did gild his tiles. My heart tells me however,
-though my memory will not call up the particulars, that I have heard a
-tale very like this before now; but one is always listening to the same
-stories I think: At Rome, when they shew a fine head lightly sketched by
-Michael Angelo, they inform you how he left it on Raphael’s wall, after
-the manner of Apelles and Protogenes; it is called Testa di Ciambellaro,
-because he came disguised as a seller of _ciambelle_, or little biscuits,
-while Raphael’s scholars were painting at the Farnesini. At Milan, when
-they point out to you the extraordinary architecture of the church _detto
-il Giardino_, the roof of which is supported by geometrical dependance
-of one part upon another, without columns or piers, they tell how the
-architect ran away the moment it was finished, for fear its sudden fall
-might disgrace him. This tale was very familiar to me, I had heard it
-long ago related of a Welch bridge; but it is better only say what is
-true.
-
-This is a sweetly situated town, and a rapid stream runs through it as at
-Trent; and it is no small comfort to find one’s self once more waited on
-by clean looking females, who make your bed, sweep your room, &c. while
-the pewters in the little neat kitchens, as one passes through, amaze me
-with their brightness, that I feel as if in a new world, it is _so_ long
-since I have seen any metal but gold unencrusted by nastiness, and gold
-_will_ not be dirty.
-
-The clumsy churches here are more violently crowded with ornaments than
-I have found them yet; and for one crucifix or Madonna to be met with on
-Italian roads, here are at least forty; an ill carved and worse painted
-figure of a bleeding Saviour, large as life, meets one at every turn; and
-I feel glad when the odd devotion of the inhabitants hangs a clean shirt
-or laced waistcoat over it, or both. Another custom they have wholly new
-to me, that of keeping the real skeletons of their old nobles, or saints,
-or any one for whom they have peculiar veneration, male or female, in a
-large clean glass box or crystal case, placed horizontally, and dressed
-in fine scarlet and gold robes, the poor naked skull crowned with a
-coronet, and the feet peeping out below the petticoats. These melancholy
-objects adorn all their places of worship, being set on brackets by the
-wall inside, and remind me strangely of our old ballad of Death and the
-Lady;
-
- Fair lady, lay your costly robes aside, &c.
-
-No body ever mentions that Inspruck is subject to fires, and I wonder at
-it, as the roofs are all wood cut tile-ways; and heavily pensile, like
-our barns in England, for the snow to roll off the easier.
-
-Well! we are far removed indeed from Italian architecture, Italian
-sculpture, and Italian manners; but here are twenty-eight old kings, or
-keysers, as our German friends call them, large as life, and of good
-solid bronze, curiously worked to imitate lace, embroidery, &c. standing
-in two rows, very extraordinarily, up one of their churches. I have not
-seen more frowning visages or finer dresses for a long time; and here is
-a warm feel as one passes by the houses, even in the street, from the
-heat of the stoves, which most ingeniously conceal from one’s view that
-most cheerful of all sights in cold weather, a good fire. This seems a
-very unnecessary device, and the heated porcelain is apt to make one’s
-head ache beside; all for the sake of this cunning contrivance, to make
-one enjoy the effect of fire without seeing the cause.
-
-The women that run about the town, mean time, take the nearest way to be
-warm, wrapping themselves up in cloth clothes, like so many fishermen at
-the mouth of the Humber, and wear a sort of rug cap grossly unbecoming.
-But too great an attention to convenience disgusts as surely as too
-little; and while a Venetian wench apparently seeks only to captivate the
-contrary sex, these German girls as plainly proclaim their resolution not
-to sacrifice a grain of personal comfort for the pleasure of pleasing all
-the men alive.
-
-How truly hateful are extremes of every thing each day’s experience
-convinces; from superstition and infidelity, down to the Fribble and the
-Brute, one’s heart abhors the folly of reversing wrong to look for right,
-which lives only in the middle way; and Solomon, the wisest man of any
-age or nation, places the sovereign good in mediocrity of every thing,
-moral, political, and religious.
-
-With this good axiom of _nequid nimis_[48] in our mouths and minds, we
-should not perhaps have driven so very hard; but a less effort would
-have detained us longer from the finest object I almost ever saw; the
-sun rising between six and seven o’clock upon the plains of Munich, and
-discovering to our soothed sight a lovely champain country, such as
-might be called a flat I fear, by those who were not like us accustomed
-to a hilly one; but after four-and-twenty hours passed among the Alps,
-I feel sincerely rejoiced to quit the clouds and get upon a level with
-human creatures, leaving the goats and chamois to delight as they do in
-bounding from rock to rock, with an agility that amazes one.
-
-Our weather continuing particularly fine, it was curious to watch one
-picturesque beauty changing for another as we drove along; for no sooner
-were the rich vineyards and small inclosures left behind, than large
-pasture lands filled with feeding or reposing cattle, cows, oxen, horses,
-fifty in a field perhaps, presented to our eyes an object they had not
-contemplated for two years before, and revived ideas of England, which
-had long lain buried under Italian fertility.
-
-Instead of lying down to rest, having heard we had friends at the same
-inn, we ran with them to see the picture gallery, more for the sake of
-doing again what we had once done before at Paris with the same agreeable
-company, than with any hope of entertainment, which however upon trial
-was found by no means deficient. Had there been no more than the glow of
-colouring which results from the sight of so many Flemish pictures at
-once, it must have struck one forcibly; but the murder of the Innocents
-by Rubens, a great performance, gave me an opportunity of observing the
-different ways by which that great master, Guido Rheni, and Le Brun, lay
-hold of the human heart. The difference does not however appear to me
-inspired at all by what we term national character; for the inhabitants
-of Germany are reckoned slow to anger, and of phlegmatic dispositions,
-while a Frenchman is accounted light and airy in his ideas, an Italian
-fiery and revengeful. Yet Rubens’s principal figure follows the ruffian
-who has seized her child, and with a countenance at once exciting and
-expressive of horror, endeavours, and almost arrives at tearing both his
-eyes out. One actually sees the fellow struggling between his efforts
-to hold the infant fast, and yet rid himself of the mother, while blood
-and anguish apparently follow the impression her nails are making in
-the tenderest parts of his face. Guido, on the contrary, in one of the
-churches at Bologna, exhibits a beautiful young creature of no mean
-rank, elegant in her affliction, and lovely in her distress, sitting with
-folded arms upon the fore-ground, contemplating the cold corpse of her
-murdered baby; his nurse wringing her hands beside them, while crowds of
-distracted parents fill the perspective, and the executioners themselves
-appear to pay unwilling obedience to their inhuman king, who is seen
-animating them himself from the top of a distant tower.--Le Brun mean
-time, with more imagination and sublimity than either, makes even brute
-animals seem sensible, and shudder at a scene so dreadful; while the very
-horses who should bear the cruel prince over the theatre of his crimes,
-snort and tremble, and turning away with uncontrollable fury, refuse by
-trampling in their blood to violate such injured innocence!--Enough of
-this.
-
-The patient German is seen in all they shew us, from the painting of
-Brughuel to the music of Haydn. A friend here who speaks good Italian
-shewed us a collection of rarities, among which was a picture formed of
-butterflies wings; and a set of boxes one within another, till my eyes
-were tired with trying to discern, and the patience of my companions was
-wearied with counting them, when the number passed seventy-three: this
-amusement has at least the grace of novelty to recommend it. I had not
-formed to myself an idea of such unmeaning, such tasteless, yet truly
-elaborate nicety of workmanship, as may be found in the Elector’s chapel,
-where every relic reposes in some frame, enamelled and adorned with a
-minuteness of attention and delicacy of manual operation that astonishes.
-The prodigious quantity of these gold or ivory figures, finished so as to
-require a man’s whole life to each of them, are of immense value in their
-way at least, and fill one’s mind with a sort of petty and frivolous
-wonder totally unexperienced till now, bringing to one’s recollection
-every hour Pope’s famous line--
-
- Lo! what huge heaps of littleness around!
-
-The contrast between this chapel and Cappella Borghese never left my
-fancy for a moment: but if the cost of these curious trifles caused my
-continued surprise, how was that surprise increased by observing the
-bed-chamber of the Elector; where they told us that no less than one
-hundred thousand pounds sterling were buried under loads of gold tissue,
-red velvet, and old-fashioned carved work, without the merit even of an
-attempt towards elegance or taste?
-
-Nimphenbourg palace and gardens reminded me of English gardening forty
-years ago, while--
-
- Grove nods at grove, each alley has a brother,
- And half the platform just reflects the other.
-
-I do think I can recollect going with my parents and friends to see Lord
-Royston’s seat at Wrest, when we lived in Hertfordshire, in the year
-1750; and it was just such a place as Nimphenbourg is at this day. Now
-for some just praise: every thing is kept so neat here, so clean, so
-sweet, so comfortably nice, that it is a real pleasure somehow either to
-go out in this town or stay at home: the public baths are delicious; the
-private rooms with boarded floors, all swept, and brushed, and dusted,
-that not a cobweb can be seen in Munich, except one kept for a rarity,
-with the Virgin and Child worked in it, and wrought to such an unrivalled
-pitch of delicate fineness, that till we held it up to the light no
-naked eye could discern the figures it contained, till a microscope soon
-discovered the skill and patience requisite to its production;--great
-pains indeed, and little effect! We have left the country where things
-were exactly the reverse,--great effect, and little pains! But it is the
-same in every thing.
-
-The women’s scrupulous attention to keep their persons clear from
-dirt, makes their faces look doubly fair; their complexions have quite
-a lustre upon them, like some of our wenches in the West of England,
-whose transparent skins shew, by the motion of the blood beneath, an
-illuminated countenance that stands in the place of eye-language,
-and betrays the sentiments of the innocent heart with uncontrolable
-sincerity. These girls however will not be found to attract or retain
-lovers, like an Italian, whose black eyes and white teeth (though their
-possessor thinks no more of cleaning the last-named beauty than the
-first) tell her mind clearly, and with little pains again produce certain
-and strong effect. Our stiff gold-stuff cap here too, as round, as hard,
-and as heavy as an old Japan China bason, and not very unlike one, is
-by no means favourable to the face, as it is clapped close round the
-head, the hair combed all smooth out of sight, and a plaited border of
-lace to it made firm with double-sprigged wire; giving its wearer all the
-hardness and prim look of a Quaker, without that idea of simplicity which
-in their dress compensates for the absence of every ornament.
-
-The gentlemen’s _maniere de s’ajuster_ is to me equally striking: an
-old nobleman who takes delight in shewing us the glories of his little
-court (where I have a notion he himself holds some honourable office)
-came to dine with us yesterday in a dressed coat of fine, clean, white
-broad-cloth, laced all down with gold, and lined with crimson sattin, of
-which likewise the waistcoat was made, and laced about with a narrower
-lace, but pretty broad too; so that I thought I saw the very coat my
-father went in to the old king’s birth-day five and thirty years ago.
-There is more stateliness too and ceremonious manners in the conversation
-of this gentleman, and the friends he introduced us to, than I have
-of late been accustomed to; and they fatigue one with long, dry,
-uninteresting narratives. The innkeepers are honest, but inflexible; the
-servants silent and sullen; the postillions slow and inattentive; and
-every thing exhibits the reverse of what we have left behind.
-
-The treasures of this little Elector are prodigious, his jewels superb;
-the Electress’s pearls are superior in size and regularity to those
-at Loretto, but that distinguished by the name of the “Pearl of the
-Palatinate” is surely incomparable, and, as such, always carried to the
-election of a new Emperor, when each brings his finest possession in his
-hand, like the Princess of Babylon’s wooers,--which was perhaps meant
-by Voltaire as a joke upon the custom. This pearl is about the bigness
-and shape of a very fine filberd, the upper part or cap of it jet black,
-smooth and perfectly beautiful; _it is unique in the known world_.
-
-Our Prince’s dinner here is announced by the sound of drums and trumpets,
-and he has always a concert playing while he dines: pomp is at this place
-indeed so artfully substituted instead of general consequence, that while
-one remains here one scarcely feels aware how little any one but his own
-courtiers can be thinking about the Elector of Bavaria; but ceremony is
-of most use where there is least importance, and glitter best hides the
-want of solidity.
-
-From Munich to Saltzbourg nothing can exceed the beauties of the
-country; whole woods, and we may say forests, of ever-green timber, keep
-all idea of winter kindly at a distance: the road lies through these
-elegantly-varied thickets, which sometimes are formed of cedars, often
-of foxtailed pines, while a pale larch sometimes, and gloomy cypress,
-hinder the verdure from being too monotonous; here are likewise mingled
-among them some oak and beech of a majestic size. Nor do our prospects
-want that dignity which mountains alone can bestow; those which separate
-Bavaria from Hungary are high, and of considerable extent; a long range
-they are of bulky fortifications, behind which I am informed the country
-is far coarser than here.
-
-The cathedral at Saltzbourg is modern, built upon the model of St.
-Peter’s at Rome, but on a small scale: one now sees how few the defects
-are of that astonishing pile, though brought close to one’s eye, by being
-stript of the awful magnitude that kept examination at a distance. The
-musical bells remind me of those at Bath, and every thing here seems, as
-at Bath, the work of this present century; but there is a Benedictine
-convent seated on the top of a hill above the town, of exceeding
-antiquity, founded before the conquest of England by William the Norman;
-under which lie its founder and protectors, the old Dukes of Bavaria;
-which they are happy to shew travellers, with the registered account of
-their young Prince _Adam_, who came over to our island with William, and
-gained a settlement: they were pleased when I proved to them, that his
-blood was not yet wholly extinct among us.
-
-A fever hindered us here from looking at the salt-works, from which the
-city takes its name: but the water-works at Heelbrun pleased us for a
-moment; and I never saw beavers live so happily as with the Archbishop of
-Saltzbourg, who suffers, and even encourages, his tame ones to dig, and
-build, and amuse themselves their own way: he has fish too which eat out
-of his hand, and are not carp, but I do not know what they are; my want
-of language distracts me. These German streams appear to us particularly
-pellucid, and, by what I can gather from the people, this water never
-freezes. The taste of gardening seems just what ours was in England
-before Stowe was planned, and they divert you now with puppets moved by
-concealed machinery, as I recollect their doing at places round London,
-called the Spaniard at Hampstead and Don Saltero’s at Chelsea.
-
-The Prince Archbishop’s income is from three to four hundred thousand a
-year I understand, and he spends it among his subjects, who half adore
-him. His chief delight is in brute animals they tell me, particularly
-horses, which engross so much of his attention that he keeps one hundred
-and seventeen for his own private and personal use, of various merits,
-beauties, and pedigrees; never surely was so elegant, so capital a
-stud! And he is singularly fond of a breed of fine silky-haired English
-setting-dogs, red and white, and very high upon their legs.
-
-The country which carried us forward to Vienna is eminently fine, and
-fine in a way that is now once more grown new to me; no hedges here, no
-small inclosures at all; but rich land, lying like as in Dorsetshire,
-divided into arable and pasture grounds, clumped about with woods of
-ever-green. Such is the genius of this sovereign for English manners and
-English agriculture, that no conversation is said to be more welcome at
-his court than what relates to the sports or profits of the field in
-Britain; to which accounts he listens with good-humoured earnestness, and
-talks of a fine scenting day with the true taste of an English country
-gentleman.
-
-On this day I first saw the Danube at Lintz, where, though but just
-burst from the spring, it is already so deep and strong that scarcely
-any wooden bridge is capable to resist it, and accordingly it did a few
-months ago overwhelm many cottages and fields, among which we passed.
-The inhabitants here call it _Donaw_ from its swiftness; and it deserves
-beside, any name expressive of that singular purity which distinguishes
-the German torrents.
-
-The rivers of France, Italy, and England, give one no idea of that
-elemental perfection found in the fluids here; not a pebble, not a fish
-in these translucent streams, but may be discerned to a depth of twelve
-feet. As the water in Germany, so is the atmosphere in Italy, a medium
-so little obstructed by vapour I remember, that Vesuvius looked as near
-to Naples, from our window, as does lord Lisburne’s park from the little
-town of Exmouth opposite, a distance of about five miles I believe, and
-the other is near ten. Let me add, that this peculiarity brings every
-object forward with a certain degree of hardness not wholly pleasing
-to the eye. The prospects round Naples have another fault, resulting
-from too great perfection: the sky’s brilliant uniformity, and utter
-cloudlessness for many months together, takes away those broad masses of
-light and shade, with the volant shadows that cross our British hills,
-relieving the sight, and discriminating the landscape.
-
-The scenery round Conway Castle in North Wales, with a thunder-storm
-rolling over the mountain; the sea strongly illuminated on one side, with
-the sun shining bright upon the verdure on the other; the lights dropping
-in patches about one; exhibits a variety, the which to equal will be very
-difficult, let us travel as far as we please.
-
-Magnificence of a far different kind however claims our present
-attention--a convent and church shewn us at Molcke upon our way,
-the residence of eighteen friars who inhabit a stately palace it is
-confessed, while three immense courts precede your entrance to a splendid
-structure of enormous size, on which the finery bestowed amazed even me,
-who came from Rome; nor had entertained an idea of seeing such gilding,
-and carving, and profusion of expence, lavished on a place of religious
-retirement in our road to
-
-
-
-
-VIENNA.
-
-
-We entered the capital by night; but I fancied, perhaps from having
-been told so, that I saw something like a look of London round me.
-Apartments furnished wholly in the Paris taste take off that look a
-little; so do the public walks and drives which are formed etoile-wise,
-and moving slowly up and down the avenues, you see large stags, wild
-boars, &c. grazing at liberty: this is grander than our park, and graver
-than the Corso. Whenever they lay out a piece of water in this country,
-it is covered as in ours with swans, who have completely quitted the
-odoriferous Po for the clear and rapid Danube.
-
-Vienna was not likely to strike one with its churches; yet the old
-cathedral is majestic, and by no means stript of those ornaments which,
-while one sect of Christians think it particularly pleasing in the sight
-of God to retain, is hardly warrantable in another sect, though wiser, to
-be over-hasty in tearing away. Here are however many devotional figures
-and chapels left in the streets I see, which, from the tales told in
-Austrian Lombardy, one had little reason to expect; but the emperor is
-tender even to the foibles of his Viennese subjects, while he shews
-little feeling to Italian misery. Men drawing carts along the roads
-and street afford, indeed, somewhat an awkward proof the government’s
-lenity when human creatures are levelled with the beasts of burden, and
-called _stott eisel_, or _stout asses_, as I understand, who by this
-information have learned that the frame which supports a picture is for
-the same reason called an _eisel_, as we call a thing to hang clothes on
-a _horse_. It is the genius of the German language to degrade all our
-English words somehow: they call a coach a _waggon_, and ask a lady
-if she will buy pomatum to _smear_ her hair with. Such is however the
-resemblance between their tongue and ours, that the Italians protest they
-cannot separate either the ideas or the words.
-
-I must mention our going to the post-office with a Venetian friend
-to look for letters, where, after receiving some surly replies from
-the people who attended there, our laquais de place reminded my male
-companions that they should stand _uncovered_. Finding them however
-somewhat dilatory in their obedience, a rough fellow snatched the hat
-from one of their heads, saying, “_Don’t you know, Sir, that you are
-standing before the emperor’s officers?_”--“_I know_,” replied the prompt
-Italian, “_that we are come to a country where people wear their hats
-in the church, so need not wonder we are bid to take them off in the
-post-office_.” Well, where rulers are said or supposed to be tyrannical,
-it is rational that good provision should be made for arms; otherwise
-despotism dwindles into nugatory pompousness and airy show; Prospero’s
-empire in the enchanted island of Shakespeare is not more shadowy than
-the sight of princedom united with impotence of power:--such have I
-seen, but such is not the character of Keysar’s dominion. The arsenal
-here is the finest thing in the world I suppose; it grieved me to feel
-the ideas of London and Venice fade before it so; but the enormous size
-and solidity of the quadrangle, the quantity and disposition of the
-cannon, bombs, and mortars, filled my mind with enforced respect, and
-shook my nerves with the thought of what might follow such dreadful
-preparation.
-
-Nothing can in fact be grander than the sight of the Austrian eagle,
-all made out in arms, eight ancient heroes sternly frowning round it.
-The choice has fallen on Cæsar, Pompey, Alexander, Scipio, Hannibal,
-Fabius Maximus, Cyrus, and Themistocles. I should have thought Pyrrhus
-worthier the company of all the rest than this last-named hero; but
-petty criticisms are much less worthy a place in Vienna’s arsenal, which
-impresses one with a very majestic idea of Imperial greatness.
-
-On the first of November we tried at an excursion into Hungary, where
-we meant to have surveyed the Danube in all its dignity at Presburgh,
-and have heard Hayden at Estherhazie. But my being unluckily taken
-ill, prevented us from prosecuting our journey further than a wretched
-village, where I was laid up with a fever, and disappointed my company of
-much hoped-for entertainment. It was curious however to find one’s self
-within a few posts of the places one had read so much of; and the words
-_Route de Belgrade_ upon a finger-post gave me sensations of distance
-never felt before. The comfortable sight of a protestant chapel near me
-made much amends however. The officiating priests were of the Moravian
-sect it seems, and dear Mr. Hutton’s image rushed upon my mind. A burial
-passing by my windows, struck me as very extraordinary: not one follower
-or even bearer being dressed in black, but all with green robes trimmed
-with dark brown furs, not robes neither; but like long coats down to the
-men’s heels, cut in skirts, and trimmed up those skirts as well as round
-the bottom with fur.
-
-It was a melancholy country that we passed through, very bleak and
-dismal, and I trust would not have mended upon us had we gone further.
-The few people one sees are all ignorant, and can all speak Latin--such
-as it is--very fluently. I have lived with many very knowing people who
-never could speak it with any fluency at all. Such is life!--and such
-is learning! I long to talk about the sheep and swine: they seem very
-worthy of observation; the latter large and finely shaped, of the old
-savage race; one fancies them like those Eumæus tended, and perhaps they
-are so; with tusks of singular beauty and whiteness, which the uniformly
-brown colour of the creature shews off to much advantage; amidst his
-dark curls, waving all over his high back and long sides, in the manner
-of a curl-pated baby in England, only that the last is commonly fair and
-blonde.
-
-The sheep are spotted like our pigs, but prettier; black and yellow like
-a tortoise-shell cat, with horns as long as those of any he-goat I ever
-saw, but very different; these animals carrying them straight upright
-like an antelope, and they are of a spiral shape. Our mutton meantime is
-detestable; but here are incomparable fish, carp large as small Severn
-salmon, and they bring them to table cut in pounds, and the joul for a
-handsome dish. I only wonder one has never heard of any ancient or any
-modern gluttons driving away to Presburg or Buda, for the sake of eating
-a fine Danube carp.
-
-With regard to men and women in Hungary, they are not thickly scattered,
-but their lamentations are loud; the emperor having resumed all
-the privileges granted them by Maria Theresa in the year 1740, or
-thereabouts, when distress drove her to shelter in that country, and has
-prohibited the importation of salt herrings which used to come duty free
-from Amsterdam, so that their fasts are rendered incommodious from the
-asperity of the soil, which produces very little vegetable food.
-
-Ground squirrels are frequent in the forests here; but without Pennant’s
-Synopsis I never remember the Linnæan names of quadrupeds, so can get no
-information of the animal called a glutton in English, whose skin I see
-in every fur-shop, and who, I fancy, inhabits our Hungarian woods.
-
-The Imperial collection of pictures here is really a magnificent
-repository of Italian taste, Flemish colouring, and Dutch exactness: in
-which the Baptist, by Giulio Romano, the crucifixion by Vandyke, and the
-physician holding up a bottle to the light by Gerard Douw, are great
-examples.
-
-One does not in these countries look out particularly for the works
-of Roman or Bolognese masters; but I remember a wonderful Caracci at
-Munich, worthy a first place even in the Zampieri palace; the subject,
-Venus sitting under a great tree diverting herself with seeing a scuffle
-between the two boys Cupid and Anteros.
-
-In the gallery here at Vienna, many of the pictures have been handled
-a good deal; one is dazzled with the brilliancy of these powerful
-colourists: and here is a David Teniers surprisingly natural, of Abraham
-offering up Isaac; a glorious Pordenone representing Santa Justina,
-reminded me of her fine church at Padua, and _his_ centurion at Cremona,
-which I know not who could excel; and here is Furino’s Sigismunda to be
-seen, the same or a duplicate of that sold at Sir Luke Schaub’s sale
-in London about thirty years ago, and called Correggio. I have seen it
-at Merriworth too, if not greatly mistaken. The price it went for in
-Langford’s auction-room I cannot surely forget, it was three thousand
-pounds, _or they said so_. I will only add a word of a Dutch girl
-representing Herodias, and so lively in its colouring, that I think the
-king would have denied her who resembled it nothing, had he been a native
-of Amsterdam. A Mount Calvary painted by the same hand is very striking,
-with a crowd of people gathered about the cross, and men selling cakes to
-the mob, as if at a fair or horse-race: two young peasants at fisty-cuffs
-upon the fore ground quarrelling, as it should seem, about the propriety
-of our Saviour’s execution.
-
-But I have this day heard so many and such interesting particulars
-concerning the emperor, that I should not forgive myself if I failed to
-record and relate them, the less because my authority was particularly
-good, and the anecdotes singular and pleasing.
-
-He rises then at five o’clock every morning, even at this sharp season,
-writes in private till nine, takes some refreshment then, and immediately
-after calls his ministers, and employs the time till one professedly
-in state affairs, rides out till three, returns and studies alone,
-letting the people bring his dinner at the appointed hour, chuses out
-of all the things they bring him one dish, and sets it on the stove to
-keep hot, eating it when nature calls for food, but never detaining a
-servant in the room to wait; at five he goes to the Corridor just near
-his own apartment, where poor and rich, small and great, have access to
-his person at pleasure, and often get him to arbitrate their law-suits,
-and decide their domestic differences, as nothing is more agreeable to
-him than finding himself considered by his people as their father, and
-dispenser of justice over all his extensive dominions. His attention
-to the duties he has imposed upon himself is so great, that, in order
-to maintain a pure impartiality in his mind towards every claimant, he
-suffers no man or woman to have any influence over him, and forbears even
-the slight gratification of fondling a dog, lest it should take up too
-much of his time. The emperor is a stranger upon principle to the joys
-of confidence and friendship, but cultivates the acquaintance of many
-ladies and gentlemen, at whose houses (when they see company) he drops
-in, and spends the evening cheerfully in cards or conversation, putting
-no man under the least restraint; and if he sees a new comer in look
-disconcerted, goes up to him and says kindly, “Divert yourself your own
-way, good Sir; and do not let me disturb you.” His coach is like the
-commonest gentleman’s of Vienna; his servants distinguished only by the
-plainness of their liveries; and, lest their insolence might make his
-company troublesome to the houses where he visits, he leaves the carriage
-in the street, and will not even be driven into the court-yard, where
-other equipages and footmen wait. A large dish of hot chocolate thickened
-with bread and cream is a common afternoon’s regale here, and the emperor
-often takes one, observing to the mistress of the house how acceptable
-such a meal is to him after so wretched a dinner.
-
-A few mornings ago showed his character in a strong light. Some poor
-women were coming down the Danube on a float, the planks separated, and
-they were in danger of drowning; as it was very early in the day, and
-no one awake upon the shore except a sawyer that was cutting wood; who,
-not being able to obtain from his phlegmatic neighbours that assistance
-their case immediately required, ran directly to call the emperor who
-he knew would be stirring, and who came flying to give that help which
-from some happy accident was no longer wanted: but Joseph lost no good
-humour on the occasion; on the contrary, he congratulated the women on
-their deliverance, praising at the same time and rewarding the fellow for
-having disturbed him.
-
-My informer told me likewise, that if two men dispute about any matter
-till mischief is expected, the wife of one of them will often cry out,
-“Come, have done, have done directly, or I’ll call our master, and
-he’ll make you have done.” Now is it fair not to do every thing but
-adore a sovereign like this? when we know that if such tales were told
-us of Marcus Aurelius, or Titus Vespasian, it would be our delight to
-repeat, our favourite learning to read of them. Such conduct would serve
-succeeding princes for models, nor could the weight of a dozen centuries
-smother their still rising fame. Yet is not my heart persuaded that the
-reputation of Joseph the Second will be consigned immaculate from age
-to age, like that of these immortal worthies, though dearly purchased
-by the loss of ease and pleasure; while neither the mitred prelate nor
-the blameless puritan pursue with blessings a heart unawed by splendour,
-unsoftened by simplicity; a hand stretched forth rather to dispense
-justice, than opening spontaneously to distribute charity. To speak less
-solemnly, if men were nearer than they are to perfect creatures, absolute
-monarchy would be the most perfect form of government, for the will of
-the prince could never deviate from propriety; but if one king can see
-all with his own eyes, and hear all with his own ears, no successor will
-ever be able to do the same; and it is like giving Harrison 10,000 l. for
-finding the longitude, to commend a person for having hit on the right
-way of governing a great nation, while his science is incommunicable, and
-his powers of execution must end with his life.
-
-The society here is charming; Sherlock says, that he who does not
-like Vienna is his own satirist; I shall leave others to be mine. The
-ladies here seem very highly accomplished, and speak a great variety of
-languages with facility, studying to adorn the conversation with every
-ornament that literature can bestow; nor do they appear terrified as in
-London, lest pedantry should be imputed to them, for venturing sometimes
-to use in company that knowledge they have acquired in private by
-diligent application. Here also are to be seen young unmarried women once
-again: misses, who wink at each other, and titter in corners at what is
-passing in the rooms, public or private: I had lived so long away from
-_them_, that I had half forgotten their existence.
-
-The horses here are trimmed at the heels, and led about in body clothes
-like ours in England; but their drawing is ill managed, no shafts somehow
-but a pole, which, when there is one horse only, looks awkward and badly
-contrived. Beasts of various kinds plowing together has a strange look,
-and the ox harnessed up like a hunter in a phaeton cuts a comical figure
-enough. One need no longer say, _Optat ephippia bos piger_[49]; but it is
-very silly, as no use can be thus made of that strength which lies only
-in his head and horns. Plenty of wood makes the Germans profusely elegant
-in their pales, hurdles, &c. which give an air of comfort and opulence,
-and make the best compensation a cold climate can make for the hedges of
-jessamine and medlar flowers, which I shall see no more.
-
-Our architecture here can hardly be expected to please an eye made
-fastidious from the contemplation of Michael Angelo’s works at Rome, or
-Palladio’s at Venice; nor will German music much delight those who have
-been long accustomed to more simple melody, though intrinsic merit and
-complicated excellence will always deserve the highest note of praise.
-Whoever takes upon him to under-rate that which no one can obtain without
-infinite labour and study, will ever be censured, and justly, for
-refusing the reward due to deep research; but if a man’s taste leads him
-to like _Cyprus_ wine, let him drink _that_, and content himself with
-commending the _old hock_.
-
-Apropos, we hear that _Sacchini_, the Metastasio of musical composers,
-is dead; but nobody at Vienna cares about his compositions. Our Italian
-friends are more candid; they are always talking in favour of Bach and
-Brughuel, Handel and Rubens.
-
-The cabinet of natural history is exceedingly fine, and the rooms
-singularly well disposed. There are more cameos at Bologna, and one
-superior specimen of native gold: every thing else I believe is better
-here, and such opals did I never see before, no not at Loretto: the
-petrified lemon and artichoke have no equals, and a brown diamond was new
-to me to-day. A specimen of sea-salt filled with air bubbles like the
-rings one buys at Vicenza, is worth going a long way to look at; but the
-gentleman at Munich, who shewed us the Virgin Mary in a cobweb, had a
-piece of red silver shot out into a ruby like crystal, more extraordinary
-than any mineral production I have seen. Our attention was caught by
-Maria Theresa’s bouquet, but one cannot forget the pearls belonging to
-the electress of Bavaria.
-
-What seemed, however, most to charm the people who shewed the cabinet,
-was a snuff-box consisting of various gems, none bigger than a
-barley-corn, each of prodigious value, and the workmanship of more, every
-square being inlaid so neatly, and no precious stone repeated, though
-the number is no less than one hundred and eighty-three; a false bottom
-besides of gold, opening with a spring touch, and discovering a written
-catalogue of the jewels in the finest hand-writing, and the smallest
-possible. This was to me a real curiosity, afforded a new and singular
-proof of that astonishing power of eye, and delicacy of manual operation,
-seconded by a patient and persevering attention to things frivolous
-in themselves, which will be for ever alike neglected by the fire of
-Italian genius, and disdained by the dignity of British science.
-
-We have seen other sort of things to-day however. The Hungarian and
-Bohemian robes pleased me best, and the wild unset jewels in the diadem
-of Transylvania impressed me with a valuable idea of Gothic greatness.
-The service of gold plate too is very grand from its old-fashioned
-solidity. I liked it better than I did the snuff-box; and here is a dish
-in ivory puts one in mind of nothing but Achilles’s shield, so worked is
-its broad margin with miniature representations of battles, landscapes,
-&c. three dozen different stories round the dish, one might have looked
-at it with microscopes for a week together. The porcelane plates have
-been painted to ridicule Raphael’s pots at Loretto I fancy; Julio
-Romano’s manner is comically parodied upon one of them.
-
-Prince Lichtenstein’s pictures are charming; a Salmacis in the water by
-Albano is the best work of that master I ever saw, not diffused as his
-works commonly are, but all collected somehow, and fine in a way I cannot
-express for want of more knowledge; _very, very_ fine it is however,
-and full of expression and character. The Caracci school again.--Here
-is the whole history of Decius by Rubens too, wonderfully learned; and
-an assumption of the Virgin so like Mrs. Pritchard our famous actress,
-no portrait ever represented her so well. A St. Sebastian divinely
-beautiful, by Vandyke; and a girl playing on the guitar, which you may
-run round almost, by the coarse but natural hand of Caravagio.
-
-The library is new and splendid, and they buy books for it very
-liberally. The learned and amiable Abbé Denys shewed me a thousand
-unmerited civilities, was charmed with the character of Dr. Johnson, and
-delighted with the story of his conversation at Rouen with Mons. l’Abbé
-Rossette. This gentleman seems to love England very much, and English
-literature; spoke of Humphry Prideaux with respect, and has his head
-full of Ossian’s poetry, of which he can repeat whole pages. He shewed
-me a fragment of Livy written in the fifth century, a psalter and creed
-beautifully illuminated of the year nine hundred, and a large portion
-of St. Mark’s gospel on blue paper of the year three hundred and seven.
-A Bibbia de Poveri too, as the Italians call it, curious enough; the
-figures all engraved on wood, and only a text at bottom to explain them.
-
-Winceslaus marked every book he ever possessed, it seems, with the five
-vowels on the back; and almost every one with some little miniature made
-by himself, recording his escape from confinement at Prague in Bohemia,
-where the washer-woman having assisted him to get out of prison under
-pretence of bathing, he has been very studious to register the event;
-so much so that even on the margins of his bible he has been tempted to
-paint past scenes that had better have been blotted from his memory.
-
-The Livy which learned men have hoped to find safe in the seraglio of
-Constantinople, was burned by their late sultan Amurath, our Abbé Denys
-tells me; the motive sprung from mistaken piety, but the effect is to
-be lamented. He shewed me an Alcoran in extremely small characters,
-surprisingly so indeed, taken out of a Turkish officer’s pocket when
-John Sobiesky raised the siege of this city in the year 1590, and a
-preacher took for his text the Sunday after, “_There was a man sent from
-God whose name was_ John.” I was much amused with a sight of the Mexican
-MSS and Peruvian quipos; nor are the Turkish figures of Adam and Eve,
-our Saviour and his mother, less remarkable; but Mahomet surrounded by
-a glory about his head, a veil concealing his face as too bright for
-inspection, exceeded all the rest.
-
-Here are many ladies of fashion in this town very eminent for their
-musical abilities, particularly Mesdemoiselles de Martinas, one of
-whom is member of the Academies of Berlin and Bologna: the celebrated
-Metastasio died in their house, after having lived with the family
-sixty-five years more or less. They set his poetry and sing it very
-finely, appearing to recollect his conversation and friendship, with
-infinite tenderness and delight. He was to have been presented to the
-Pope the very day he died, I understand, and in the delirium which
-immediately preceded dissolution he raved much of the supposed interview.
-Unwilling to hear of death, no one was ever permitted even to mention it
-before him; and nothing put him so certainly out of humour, as finding
-that rule transgressed even by his nearest friends. Even the small-pox
-was not to be named in his presence, and whoever _did_ name that
-disorder, though unconscious of the offence he had given, Metastasio
-would see him no more. The other peculiarities I could gather from
-Miss Martinas were these: That he had contentedly lived half a century
-at Vienna, without ever even wishing to learn its language; that he
-had never given more than five guineas English money in all that time
-to the poor; that he always sat in the same seat at church, but never
-paid for it, and that nobody dared ask him for the trifling sum; that
-he was grateful and beneficent to the friends who began by being his
-protectors, but ended much his debtors, for solid benefits as well as
-for elegant presents, which it was his delight to be perpetually making
-them, leaving to them at last all he had ever gained without the charge
-even of a single legacy; observing in his will that it was to them he
-owed it, and other conduct would in him have been injustice. Such were
-the sentiments, and such the conduct of this great poet, of whom it is
-of little consequence to tell, that he never changed the fashion of his
-wig, the cut or colour of his coat, so that his portrait taken not very
-long ago looks like those of Boileau or Moliere at the head of their
-works. His life was arranged with such methodical exactness, that he
-rose, studied, chatted, slept, and dined at the same hours for fifty
-years together, enjoying uninterrupted health, which probably gave him
-that happy sweetness of temper, or habitual gentleness of manners, which
-never suffered itself to be ruffled, but when his sole injunction was
-forgotten, and the death of any person whatever was unwittingly mentioned
-before him. No solicitation had ever prevailed on him to dine from home,
-nor had his nearest intimates ever seen him _eat_ more than a biscuit
-with his lemonade, every meal being performed with even mysterious
-privacy to the last. When his end approached by steps so very rapid,
-he did not in the least suspect that it was coming; and Mademoiselle
-Martinas has scarcely yet done rejoicing in the thought that he escaped
-the preparations he so dreaded. His early passion for a celebrated
-singer is well known upon the continent; since that affair finished,
-all his pleasures have been confined to music and conversation. He had
-the satisfaction of seeing the seventieth edition of his works I think
-they said, but am ashamed to copy out the number from my own notes, it
-seems so _very_ strange; and the delight he took in hearing the lady he
-lived with sing his songs, was visible to every one. An Italian Abate
-here said, comically enough, “Oh! he looked like a man in the state of
-beatification always when Mademoiselle de Martinas accompanied his verses
-with her fine voice and brilliant finger.” The father of Metastasio was
-a goldsmith at Rome, but his son had so devoted himself to the family he
-lived with, that he refused to hear, and took pains not to know, whether
-he had in his latter days any one relation left in the world. On a
-character so singular I leave my readers to make their own _observations
-and reflections_.
-
-_Au reste_, as the French say; I have no notion that Vienna, _sempre
-ventoso o velenoso_[50], can be a very wholesome place to live in; the
-double windows, double feather-beds, &c. in a room without a chimney,
-is surely ill contrived; and sleeping smothered up in down so, like a
-hydrophobous patient in some parts of Ireland, is not _particularly_
-agreeable, though I begin to like it better than I did. All external air
-is shut out in such a manner that I am frighted lest, after a certain
-time, the room should become like an exhausted receiver, while the wind
-whirls one about the street in such a manner that it is displeasing to
-put out one’s head; and a physician from Ragusa settled here told me,
-that wounded lungs are a common consequence of the triturated stone blown
-about here; and in fact asthmas and consumptions are their reigning
-diseases.
-
-Apropos, the plague is now raging in Transylvania; how little safe should
-we think ourselves at London, were a disorder so contagious known to be
-no farther distant than Derby? The distance is scarcely greater now from
-Vienna to the place of distress; yet I will not say we are in much danger
-to be sure, for that perpetual connection kept up between all the towns
-and counties of Great Britain is unknown in other nations, and we should
-be as many days going to Transylvania from here perhaps, as we should be
-_hours_ running from Toddenham-court road to Derby.
-
-Sheenburn is pretty, but it is no season for seeing pretty places. The
-streets of Vienna are not pretty at all, God knows; so narrow, so ill
-built, so crowded, many wares placed upon the ground where there is a
-little opening, seems a strange awkward disposition of things for sale;
-and the people cutting wood in the street makes one half wild when
-walking; it is hardly possible to pass another strange custom, borrowed
-from Italy I trust, of shutting up their shops in the middle of the
-day; it must tend, one would think, but little to the promotion of that
-commerce which the sovereign professes to encourage, and I see no excuse
-for it _here_ which can be made from heat, gaiety, or devotion. Many
-families living in the same house, and at the entrance of the apartments
-belonging to each, a strong iron gate to separate the residence of one
-set from that of another, has likewise an odd melancholy look, like that
-of a prison or a nunnery. Nunneries, however, here are none; and if the
-old women turned out of those they have long dwelt in, are not provided
-with decent pensions, it must surely distress even the Emperor’s cold
-heart to see age driven from the refuges of disappointment, and forced to
-wander through the world with inexperience for its guide, while youth is
-no longer _led_, but _thrust_ into temptation by such a sudden transition
-from utter retirement to open and busy life.
-
-We have been this morning to look over his academy of painting, &c.
-His exhibition-room is neatly kept, and I dare say will prosper: the
-students are zealous and laborious, and earnestly desire the promulgation
-of science: their collection of models is meagre, but it will mend by
-degrees. Perhaps Joseph the IId. is the first European sovereign who,
-establishing a school for painting and sculpture, has insisted on the
-artists never exercising their skill upon any subject which could hurt
-any person’s delicacy;--an example well worthy honest praise and speedy
-imitation.
-
-The very few charitable foundations established at Vienna by Imperial
-munificence are well managed; their paucity is accounted for by the
-recollection of many abuses consequent on the late Empress’s bounty;
-her son therefore took all the annuities away, which he thought her
-tenderness had been duped out of; but let it be remembered that when he
-rides or walks in a morning, he always takes with him a hundred ducats,
-out of which he never brings any home, but gives in private donations
-what he knows to be well bestowed, without the ostentation of affected
-generosity: it is not in rewards for past services perhaps, nor in
-public and stately institutions, as I am told here, that this prince’s
-liberalities are to be looked for; yet--
-
- In Mis’ry’s darkest caverns known,
- His useful care is ever nigh;
- Where hopeless Anguish pours her groan,
- And lonely Want retires to die.
-
-To-morrow (23d of November) we venture to leave Vienna and proceed
-northwards, as I long to see the Dresden gallery. Here every thing
-appears to me a caricatura of London; the language like ours, but
-coarser; the plays like ours, but duller; the streets at night lighted
-up, not like ours now, but very like what they were thirty or forty years
-ago.
-
-Among the people I have seen here, Mademoiselle Paradies, the blind
-performer on the harpsichord, interested me very much;--and she liked
-England so, and the King and Queen were so kind to her, and she was _so_
-happy, she said!--While life and its vexations seem to oppress such
-numbers of hearts, and cloud such variety of otherwise agreeable faces,
-one must go to a blind girl to hear of happiness, it seems! But she has
-wonderful talents for languages as well as music, and has learned the
-English pronunciation most surprisingly. It is a soothing sight when one
-finds the mind compensate for the body’s defects: I took great delight
-in the conversation of Mademoiselle Paradies.
-
-The collection of rarities, particularly an Alexander’s head worthy of
-Capo di Monte, now in the possession of Madame de Hesse, became daily
-more my study, as I received more and more civilities from the charming
-family at whose house it resides: there are some very fine cameos in it,
-and a great variety of miscellaneous curiosities.
-
-So different are the customs here and at Venice, that the German ladies
-offer you chocolate on the same salver with coffee, of an evening, and
-fill up both with milk; saying that you may have the latter quite black
-if you chuse it--“_Tout noir, Monsieur, à la Venetienne_;”--adding their
-best advice not to risque a practice so unwholesome. While their care
-upon that account reminds me chiefly of a friend, who lives upon the
-Grand Canal, that in reply to a long panegyric upon English delicacy,
-said she would tell a story that would prove them to be nasty enough, at
-least in some things; for that she had actually seen a handsome young
-nobleman, who came from London (_and ought to have known better_), souce
-some thick cream into the fine clear coffee she presented him with;
-which every body must confess to be _vera porcheria_! a very _piggish
-trick_!--So necessary and so pleasing is conformity, and so absurd and
-perverse is it ever to forbear such assimilation of manners, when not
-inconsistent with the virtue, honour, or necessary interest:--let us
-eat sour-crout in Germany, frittura at Milan, macaroni at Naples, and
-beef-steaks in England, if one wishes to please the inhabitants of either
-country; and all are very good, so it is a slight compliance. Poor Dr.
-Goldsmith said once--“I would advise every young fellow setting out in
-life _to love gravy_;”--and added, that he had formerly seen a glutton’s
-eldest nephew disinherited, because his uncle never could persuade him to
-say he liked gravy.
-
-
-
-
-PRAGUE.
-
-
-The inns between Vienna and this place are very bad; but we arrived here
-safe the 24th of November, when I looked for little comfort but much
-diversion; things turned out however exactly the reverse, and _aux bains
-de Prague_ in Bohemia we found beds more elegant, dinners neater dressed,
-apartments cleaner and with a less foreign aspect, than almost any where
-else. Such is not mean time the general appearance of the town out of
-doors, which is savage enough; and the celebrated bridge singularly
-ugly I think, crowded with vast groupes of ill-made statues, and heavy
-to excess, though not incommodious to drive over, and of a surprising
-extent. These German rivers are magnificent, and our Mulda here (which is
-but a branch of the Elbe neither) is respectable for its volume of water,
-useful for the fish contained in it, and lovely in the windings of its
-course.
-
-Bohemia seems no badly-cultivated country; the ground undulates like many
-parts of Hertfordshire, and the property seems divided much in the same
-manner as about Dunstable; my head ran upon Lilly-hoo, when they shewed
-me the plains of Kolin.
-
-Doctor Johnson was very angry with a gentleman at our house once, I well
-remember, for not being better company; and urged that he had travelled
-into Bohemia, and seen Prague:--“Surely,” added he, “the man who has
-seen Prague might tell us something new and something strange, and not
-sit silent for want of matter to put his lips in motion!” _Horresco
-referens_;--I have now been at Prague as well as Doctor Fitzpatrick, but
-have brought away nothing very interesting I fear; unless that the floor
-of the opera-stage there is inlaid, which so far as I have observed is
-a _new_ thing; the cathedral I am sure is an _old_ thing, and charged
-with heavy and ill-chosen ornaments, worthy of the age in which it was
-fabricated!--One would be loth to see any alteration take place, or any
-picture drive old Frank’s Three Kings, divided into three compartments,
-from its station over the high altar. St. John Neppomucene has an altar
-here all of solid silver, very bright and clean; his having been flung
-into the river Mulda in the persecuting days, holding fast his crucifix
-and his religion, gives him a rational title to veneration among the
-martyrs, and he is considered as the tutelar saint here, where his statue
-meets one at the entrance of every town.
-
-This truly Gothic edifice was very near being destroyed by the King of
-Prussia, who bombarded the city thirty-five years ago; I saw the mark
-made by one ball just at the cathedral door, and heard with horror of the
-dreadful siege, when an egg was sold for a florin, and other eatables in
-proportion: the whole town has, in consequence of that long blockade, a
-ragged and half-ruined melancholy aspect; and the roads round it, then
-broken up, have scarcely been mended since.
-
-The ladies too looked more like masquerading figures than any thing else,
-as they sat in their boxes at the opera, with rich embroidered caps, or
-bright pink and blue sattin head-dresses, with ermine or sable fronts,
-a heavy gold tassel hanging low down from the left ear, and no powder;
-which gives a girlish look, and reminded me of a fashion our lower
-tradesmen in London had about fifteen or eighteen years ago, of dressing
-their daughters, from nine to twelve years old, in puffed black sattin
-caps, with a long ear hanging down on one side. It is a becoming mode
-enough as the women wear it here, but gives no idea of cleanliness; and I
-suppose that whilst finery retains its power of striking, delicacy keeps
-her distance, nor attempts to come in play till the other has failed
-of its effect. Ladies dress here very richly, as indeed I expected to
-find them, and coloured silk stockings are worn as they were in England
-till the days of the Spectator:--“_Thrift, thrift, Horatio_;” as Hamlet
-observes; for our expences in Great Britain are infinitely increased by
-our advancement from splendor to neatness.
-
-Here every thing seems at least five centuries behind-hand, and religion
-has not purified itself the least in the world since the days of its
-early struggle; for here Huss preached, and here Jerome, known by
-the name of Jerome of Prague, first began to project the scheme of a
-future reformation. The Bohemians had indeed been long before that
-time indulged by the Popes with permission to receive the cup in the
-sacrament, a favour granted no one else; and of that no notice was ever
-taken, till further steps were made for the obtaining many alterations
-that have crept in since that time in other nations, not so hasty to do
-by violence what will one day be done of themselves without any violence
-at all.
-
-I asked to see some Protestant meeting-houses, and was introduced to
-a very pleasing-mannered Livornese, who spoke sweet Italian, and was
-minister to a little place of worship which could not have contained two
-hundred people at the most; in fact his flock were all soldiers, he said.
-Not a person who could keep a shop was to be found of _our_ persuasion,
-nor was Lutheranism half so much detested even in Italy, he said. Though
-I remember the boys hooting us at Tivoli too, and calling our English
-Gentlemen, _Monsieur Dannato_.
-
-The library does not seem ancient, but the grave person who shewed it
-spoke very indifferent French, so that I could better trust my eyes than
-my ears; this want of language is terrible!--A celestial globe moving
-by clockwork concealed within, and shewing the sun’s place upon the
-ecliptic very exactly, detained our attention agreeably; and I observed
-a polyglot Bible printed at London in Cromwell’s time, with a compliment
-to him in the preface, which they have expunged in succeeding editions.
-A missal too was curious enough from its being decorated with some
-singular illuminations upon one leaf; at the top of the page a figure of
-Wickliffe is seen, striking the flint and steel; under him, in another
-small compartment, Jerome of Prague blowing tinder to make his torch
-kindle; below him again down the same side, Martin Luther, the flambeau
-well lighted and blazing in his hand; at the bottom of the page poor
-John Huss, betrayed by the Emperor who promised him protection, and
-burning alive at a stake, to the apparent satisfaction of the charitable
-fathers assembled at the council of Constance. Another curiosity should
-be remembered; the manuscript letter from Zisca, the famous Protestant
-general who headed the revolters in 1420; I was amazed to see in how
-elegant an Italian hand it was written; the librarian said comically
-enough--“_Ay, ay, it begins all about the fear of God_, &c.; _those
-fellows_,” continued he, “_you know, are always sure to be canters!_”
-
-The reigning sovereign has made few changes in church matters here,
-except that which was become almost indispensable, the resolution to have
-mass said only at one altar, instead of many at a time; the contrary
-practice does certainly disturb devotion, and produce unavoidable
-indecorums, as no one can tell what he turns his back upon, while the
-bell rings in so many places of a large church at once, and so many
-different functions are going forward, that people’s attention must
-almost necessarily be distracted.
-
-The eating here is incomparable; I never saw such poultry even at London
-or Bath, and there is a plenty of game that amazes one; no inn so
-wretched but you have a pheasant for your supper, and often partridge
-soup. The fish is carried about the streets in so elegant a style it
-tempts one; a very large round bathing-tub, as we should call it, set
-barrow-wise on two not very low wheels, is easily pushed along by one
-man, though full of the most pellucid water, in which the carp, tench,
-and eels, are all leaping alive, to a size and perfection I am ashamed to
-relate; but the tench of four and five pounds weight have a richness and
-flavour one had no notion of till we arrived at Vienna, and they are the
-same here.
-
-How trade stands or moves in these countries I cannot tell; there is
-great rigour shewn at the custom-house; but till the shopkeepers learn to
-keep their doors open at least for the whole of the short days, not shut
-them up so and go to sleep at one or two o’clock for a couple of hours,
-I think they do not deserve to be disturbed by customers who bring ready
-money. To-morrow (30th November 1786) we set out, wrapped in good furs
-and flannels, for
-
-
-
-
-DRESDEN;
-
-
-Whither we arrive safe this 4th of December,--
-
- ----A wond’rous token
- Of Heav’n’s kind care, with bones unbroken!
-
-As the ingenious Soame Jenyns says of a less hazardous drive in a less
-barbarous country I hope: but really to English passengers in English
-carriages, the road from Prague hither is too bad to think on; while
-nothing literally impels one forward except the impossibility of going
-back. Lady Mary Wortley says, her husband and postillions slept upon the
-precipices between Lowositz and Aussig; but surely the way must have been
-much better then, as all the opium in both would scarce have stupefied
-their apprehensions now, when a fall into the Elbe must either have
-interrupted or finished their nap; because our coach was held up every
-step of the journey by men’s hands, while we walked at the bottom about
-seven miles by the river’s side, suffering nothing but a little fatigue,
-and enjoying the most cloudless beautiful weather ever seen. The Elbe is
-here as wide I think as the Severn at Gloucester, and rolls through the
-most varied and elegant landscape possible, not inferior to that which
-adorns the sides of the little Dart in Devonshire, but on a greater
-scale; every hill crowned with some wood, or ornamented by some castle.
-
-As soon as we arrived, tired and hungry, at Aussig, we put our shattered
-coach on board a bark, and floated her down to Dresden; whither we drove
-forward in the little carts of the country, called chaises, but very
-rough and with no springs, as our very old-fashioned curricles were about
-the year 1750. The brightness of the weather made even such a drive
-delightful though, and the millions of geese on and off the river gave
-animation to the views, and accounted for the frequency of those soft
-downy feather-beds, which sooth our cares and relieve our fatigue so
-comfortably every night. Hares will scarce move from near the carriage
-wheels, so little apprehensive are they of offence; and the partridges
-run before one so, it is quite amusing to look at them. The trout in
-these great rivers are neither large nor red: I have never seen trout
-worth catching since I left England; the river at Rickmansworth produces
-(one should like to know why) that fish in far higher perfection than it
-can be found in any other stream perhaps in Europe.
-
-The being served at every inn, since we came into Saxony, upon Dresden
-china, gives one an odd feel somehow; but here at the Hôtel de Pologne
-there is every thing one can wish, and served in so grand a style, that
-I question whether any English inn or tavern can compare with it; so
-elegantly fine is the linen, so beautiful the porcelaine of which every
-the meanest utensil is made; and if the waiter did not appear before
-one dressed like Abel Drugger with a green cloth apron, and did not his
-entrance always fill the room with a strong scent of tobacco, I should
-think myself at home again almost. This really does seem a very charming
-town; the streets well built and spacious; the shops full of goods, and
-the people willing to shew them; and if they _do_ cut all their wood
-before their own doors, why there is room to pass here without brawling
-and bones-breaking, which disgusts one so at Vienna; it seems lighter
-too here than there; I cannot tell why, but every thing looks clean and
-comfortable, and one feels _so much at home_. I hate prejudice; nothing
-is so stupid, nothing so sure a mark of a narrow mind: yet who can be
-sure that the sight of a Lutheran town does not afford in itself an
-honest pleasure to one who has lived so long, though very happily, under
-my Lord Peter’s protection?
-
-Here Brother Martin has all precedence paid _him_; for though the court
-are Romanists, their splendid church here is _called_ only a chapel, and
-they are not permitted to ring the bell, a privilege the Lutherans seem
-much attached to, for nothing can equal the noise of _our_ bells on a
-Sunday morning at Dresden.
-
-The architecture is truly hideous, but no ornaments are spared; and the
-church of Notre Dame here is very magnificent. The china steeples all
-over the country are the oddest things in the world; spires of blue or
-green porcelaine tiles glittering in the sun have a strange effect.
-But nothing can afford a stronger proof that crucifixes, Madonnas,
-and saints, need not be driven out of churches for fear they should be
-worshipped, than the Lutherans admission of them into _theirs_; for no
-people can be further removed from idolatry, or better instructed in the
-Christian religion, than the common people of this town; where a decent
-observation of the sabbath struck me with most consolatory feelings,
-after living at Paris, Rome, and Florence, where it is considered as
-a _merry_, not a _holy_ day at all! and though there seems nothing
-inconsistent or offensive in our rejoicing on the day of our Lord’s
-resurrection, yet if people are encouraged to _play_, they will soon find
-out that they may _work_ too, the shops will scarcely be shut, and all
-appearance of regard to the fourth commandment will be done away. The
-Lutherans really seem to observe the golden mean; they frequent their
-churches all morning with a rigorous solemnity, no carts or business of
-any sort goes forward in the streets, public and private devotion takes
-up the whole forenoon; but they do not forbear to meet and dance after
-six o’clock in the evening, or play a sober game for small sums at a
-friend’s house.
-
-The society is to me very delightful; more women than men though, and the
-women most agreeable; exceedingly sensible, well informed, and willing
-to talk on every subject of general importance, but religion or politics
-seem the favourite themes, and are I believe most studied here;--no
-wonder, the court and city being of different sects, each steadily
-and irrevocably fixed in a firm persuasion that their own is best,
-causes an investigation that comes not in the head of people of other
-countries; and it is wonderful to see even the low Romanists skilled in
-controversial points to a degree that would astonish the people nearest
-the Pope’s person, I am well persuaded.
-
-The Saxons are excessively loyal however, and have the sense to love and
-honour their sovereign no less for his difference of opinion from theirs,
-than if all were of one mind; yet knowing his principles, they watch
-with a jealous eye against encroachments, while the amiable elector and
-electress use every tender method to induce their subjects to embrace
-_their_ tenets, and weary heaven with prayers for their conversion, as
-if the people were heathens. One great advantage results from this odd
-mixture of what so steadily resists uniting; it is the earnest desire
-each has to justify and recommend their notions by their practice,
-so that the inhabitants of Dresden are among the most moral, decent,
-thinking people I have seen in my travels, or indeed in my life. The
-general air and manner both of place and people, puts one in mind of the
-pretty clean parts of our London, about Queen Square, Ormond Street,
-Lincoln’s-Inn-Fields, and Southampton Row.
-
-The bridge is beautiful, more elegant than showy; the light iron railing
-is better in some respects than a stone balustrade, and I do not dislike
-the rule they make to themselves of going on _one_ side the way always,
-and returning the other, to avoid a crowd and confusion.
-
-But it is time to talk about the picture gallery, where, cold as
-our weather is, I contrive to pass three hours every day, my feet
-well defended by _perlaches_, a sort of cloth clogs, very useful and
-commodious. And now I have seen the _Notte di Corregio_ from which almost
-all pictures of _effect_ have taken their original idea; and here are
-three other Corregios inimitable, invaluable, incomparable. Surely this
-_Notte_ might stand side by side with Raphael’s Transfiguration; and
-as Sherlock says that Shakespear and Corneille would look only on the
-Vesuvius side of the prospect at Naples, while Pope and Racine would
-turn their heads towards Posilippo; so probably, while the two first
-would fasten all their attention upon the Demoniac, the two last would
-console their eyes with the sweetness of Corregio’s Nativity. His little
-Magdalen too set round with jewels, itself more precious than any or than
-all of them, possesses wonderful powers of attraction; it is an hour
-before one can recollect that there are some glorious Titians in the same
-façade; but Caracci, who depends not on his colouring for applause, loses
-little by their vicinity, and Poussin is always equally respectable. The
-Rembrandts are beyond credibility perfect of their kind, and produce
-a most powerful effect. His portrait of his own daughter has neither
-equal nor price, I believe; though the girl has little dignity to be
-sure, and less grace about her; but if to represent nature as she _is_
-suffices, this is the first single figure in Europe as painting a _live
-woman_.--The Jupiter and Ganymede is very droll indeed, and done with
-very _un_-Italian notions; but the eagle looks as if one might pluck his
-feathers; it is very life itself.--A candle-light Rubens here is shewn
-as a prodigious rarity; a Ruysdael as much resembling nature in _his_
-country, I do believe, as Claude Lorraine ever painted in _his_.--The
-crayons Cupid of Mengs which dazzles, and the portrait of old Parr by
-Vandycke which interests one, are pictures which call one to look at them
-again and again; and the little Vanderwerfs kept in glass cases, smooth
-as ivory, and finished to perfection, are all alike to be sure; one would
-wonder that a man should never be weary of painting single figures so,
-and constantly repeating the same idea; his eyes must have had peculiar
-strength too, to endure such trials, mine have been pained enough this
-morning with only looking at his labours, and those of the indefatigable
-Denny. Let me refresh them with a Parnassus of Giacomo Tintoret, who puts
-all the colourists to flight except Corregio.
-
-But here are two pictures which display prodigious genius, by a master of
-whom I never heard any one speak, Ferdinand Bol, who unites grace and
-dignity to the clear obscure of Rembrandt, whose scholar he was. Jacob
-blessing Pharoah, painted by him, is delightful; and Joseph’s expressions
-while he presents his father, full of affectionate partiality and fond
-regard for the old man, heightens his personal beauty; while the king’s
-character is happily managed too, and gives one the highest idea of the
-artist’s skill. A Madonna reposing in her flight to Egypt with a fatigued
-look, her head supported by her hand, is elegant, and worthy of the Roman
-or Bolognese schools; the landscape is like Rembrandt. This gallery
-boasts an Egyptian Mary by Spagnolet, too terrifying to look long at; and
-a small picture by Lodovico Carracci of the Virgin clasping her Son, who
-lies asleep in her lap, while a vision of his future crucifixion shewn
-her by angels in the sky, agitates every charming feature of her face,
-and causes a shrinking in her figure which no power of art can exceed.
-
-As I suffered so much for the sake of seeing this collection, I have
-indulged myself too long in talking of it perhaps; but Garrick is dead,
-and Siddons at a distance, and some compensation must be had; can any
-thing afford it except the statues of Rome, and the pictures of Bologna?
-here are a vast many from thence in this magnificent gallery.
-
-We had a concert made on purpose for us last night by some amiable
-friends: it was a very good one. What I liked best though, was Mr.
-Tricklir’s new invention of keeping a harpsichord always in tune; and
-it seems to answer. I am no good mechanic, nor particularly fond of
-multiplying combinations; but the device of adding a thermometer to shew
-how much heat the strings will bear without relaxation seems ingenious
-enough: we had a vast many experiments made, and nobody could put the
-strings out of tune, or even break them, when his method was adopted; and
-it does not take up two minutes in the operation.
-
-We have seen the Elector’s treasures; and, as a Frenchman would express
-it, _C’est icy qu’on voit des beaux diamants!_[51] The yellow brilliant
-ring is _unique_ it seems, and valued at an enormous sum; the green one
-is larger, and set transparent; it is not green like an emerald, but pale
-and bright, and beyond conception beautiful: hyacinths were new to me
-here, their glorious colour dazzles one; and here is a white diamond from
-the Great Mogul’s empire, of unequalled perfection; besides an onyx large
-as a common dinner plate, well known to be first in the universe. What
-majestic treasures are these!--The sapphires and rubies beat those of
-Bavaria, but the Electress’s pearls at Munich are unrivalled yet. Saxony
-is a very rich country in her own bosom it seems; the agates and jaspers
-produced here are excellent, nor are good amethysts wanting; the topazes
-are pale and sickly.
-
-Nothing can be finer, or in its way more tasteful, than a chimney-piece
-made for the Elector, entirely from the manufacture and produce of
-his own dominions; that part which we should form of marble is white
-porcelane, with an exquisite bas-relief in the middle copied from
-the antique; its sides are set with Saxon gems, cameowise; and such
-carnelions much amaze one in so northern a latitude; the workmanship
-is beyond praise.--I asked the gentleman who shewed us the cabinet of
-natural history, why such richly-coloured minerals, and even precious
-stones, were found in these climates; while every animal product grows
-paler as it approaches the pole?--“Where phlogiston is frequent,”
-replied he, “there is no danger of the tint being too lightly bestowed:
-our quantity of iron here in Saxony, gives purple to the amethysts you
-admire; and see here if the rainbow-stone of Labrador yields in glowing
-hue to the productions of Mexico or Malabar.”--The specimens here however
-were not as valuable as the conversation of him who has the care of them;
-but a _plica Polonica_ took much of my attention; the size and weight of
-it was enormous, its length four yards and a half; the person who was
-killed by its growth was a Polish lady of quality well known in King
-Augustus’s court; it is a very strange and a very shocking thing!
-
-Our library here is new and not eminently well stocked; but it is
-too cold weather now to stand long looking at rarities. The first
-Reformation bible published by Luther himself, with a portrait of the
-first Protestant Elector, is however too curious and interesting to be
-neglected; in frost and snow such sights might warm a heart well disposed
-to see the word of God disseminated, which had lain too long locked up
-by ignorance and interest united. Here is a book too, which how it
-escaped Pinelli I know not, a Venetian translation of the holy scriptures
-_a Brucioli_, the date 1592. King Augustus’s maps please one from their
-costliness; the Elector has twelve volumes of them; every letter is gold,
-every city painted in miniature at the corners, while arms, trophies, &c.
-adorn the whole, to an incredible expence: they were engraved on purpose
-for his use; and that no other Prince might ever have such again, he
-ordered the plates to be broke.
-
-Sunday, December 17. I am just now returned home from the Lutheran church
-of Notre Dame; where, though the communicants do not kneel down like
-us, it is odd to say I never saw the sacrament administered with such
-solemnity and pomp. Four priests ornamented with a large cross on the
-back, a multitude of lighted tapers blazing round them, a uniformity in
-the dress of all who received, and music played in a flat third somehow
-very impressively, as they moved round in a sort of procession, making a
-profound reverence to the altar when they passed it, struck me extremely,
-who have been lately accustomed to see very little ceremony used on
-_such_ occasions; and I well remember at Pisa in particular, that while
-we were looking about the church for curiosity, one poor woman knelt down
-just by us, and a priest coming out administered the sacrament to her
-alone, the whole finishing in less than five minutes I am persuaded. I
-said to Mr. Seydelman, when we had returned home to-day, that the Saxons
-seemed to follow the first manner in reformation, our Anglicans the
-second, and the Calvinists the third: he understood my allusion to the
-cant of connoisseurship.
-
-The sedan chairs here give the town a sort of homeish look; I had not
-been carried in one since I left Genoa, and it is so comfortable this
-cold clear weather! A regular market too, though not a fine one, has
-an English air; and a saddle of mutton, or more properly a chine, was
-a sight I had not contemplated for two years and a half. The Italians
-do call a cook _teologo_, out of sport; but I think he would be the
-properest theologian in good earnest, to tell why Catholics and
-Protestants should not cut their meat alike at least, if they cannot
-agree in other points. This is the first town I have seen however, where
-the butchers divided their beasts as we do.
-
-The arsenal we have walked over delighted us but little: Saxons should
-say to their swords, like Benvolio in the play, “_God send me no need of
-thee!_”--for the Emperor is on one side of them, and the King of Prussia
-on the other. This last is always mentioned as a pacific prince though;
-and the first has so much to do and to think of, I hope he will forget
-Dresden, and suffer them to possess their fine territory and gems in
-perfect peace and quietness. One thing however was odd and pretty, and
-worth remarking, That at Rome there was an arsenal in the church--I mean
-belonging to it; and here there is a church in the arsenal.
-
-The bombardment of this pretty town by their active neighbour Frederic;
-the sweet Electress’s death in consequence of the personal mortifications
-she received during that dreadful siege; the embarkation of the treasures
-to send them safe away by water; and the various distresses suffered by
-this city in the time of that great war;--make much of our conversation,
-and that conversation is interesting. I only wonder they have so quickly
-recovered a blow struck so hard.
-
-The gaiety and good-humour of the court are much desired by the Saxons,
-who have a most lofty notion of princes, and repeat all they say, and all
-that is said of them, with a most venerating affection. I see no national
-partiality to England however, as in many other parts of Europe, though
-our religions are so nearly allied: and here is a spirit of subordination
-beyond what I have yet been witness to--an aunt kissing the hand of
-her own niece (a baby not six years old), and calling her “_ma chere
-comtesse!_”--carried it as high I think as it can be carried.
-
-The environs of Dresden are happily disposed, for though it is deep
-winter we have had scarcely any snow, and the horizon is very clear, so
-that one may be a tolerable judge of the prospects. Our river Elbe is
-truly majestic and the great islands of ice floating down it have a fine
-appearance.
-
-They do not double their sash-windows as at Vienna, but there is less
-wind to keep out. In every place people have a trick of lamenting, and
-there are two themes of lamentation universal for aught I see--the
-weather and the poor. I see no beggars here, and feel no rain,--but hear
-heavy complaints of both. Crying the hour in the night as at London
-pleased me much; why the ceremony is accompanied by the sound of a horn,
-nobody seems able to tell. The march of soldiers morning and night to
-music through the streets is likewise agreeable, and gives ideas of
-security; but driving great heavy waggons up and down, with two horses
-a-breast, like a chaise in England, and a postillion upon one of them, is
-very droll to look at. Ordinary fellows too in the Elector’s livery (blue
-and yellow) would seem strange, but that as soon as Dover is left behind
-every man seems to belong to some other man, and no man to himself. The
-Emperor’s livery is very handsome, but I do not admire _this_. A custom
-of fifteen or twenty grave-looking men, dressed like counsellors in
-Westminster Hall, with half a dozen boys in their company for _sopranos_,
-singing counterpoint under one’s window, has an odd effect; they are
-confraternities of people I am told, who live in a sort of community
-together, are maintained by contributing friends, and taught music at
-their expence; so in order to accomplish themselves, and shew how well
-they are accomplished, this curious contrivance is adopted. Every Sunday
-we hear them again in the church belonging to the parish that maintains
-them. A procession of bakers too is a droll oddity, but shews that where
-there is much leisure for the common people, some cheap amusement must
-be found: two of these bakers fight at the corner of every street for
-precedence, which by this means often changes hands; yet does not the
-conquered baker shew any signs of shame or depression, nor does the
-contest last long, or prove interesting. I suppose they have settled
-all the battles beforehand: no meaning seemed to be annexed either by
-performers or spectators to the show; we could make little diversion out
-of it, but have no doubt of its being an old superstition.
-
-On Christmas eve I went to Santa Sophia’s church, and heard a famous
-preacher; his manner was energetic, and he kept an hour-glass by him,
-finishing with strange abruptness the moment it was expired. This was in
-use among our distant provinces as late as Gay’s time; he mentions it in
-a line of his pastorals, and says--
-
- He preach’d the hour-glass in her praise quite out;
-
-speaking of dead Blouzelind as I recollect. It now seems a strange
-_grossiereté_, but refinement follows hard upon the heels of reformation.
-
-There is an agreeable fancy here, which one has always heard of, but
-never seen perhaps; the notion of calling together a dozen pretty
-children to receive presents upon Christmas eve. The custom is
-exceedingly amiable in itself, and gives beside a pleasing pretext for
-parents and relations to meet, and while away the time till supper in
-reciprocating caresses with their babies, and rejoicing in that species
-of happiness (the purest of all perhaps) which childhood alone can
-either receive or bestow. I was invited to an exhibition of this sort,
-and for some time saw little preparation for pleasure, except the sight
-of fourteen or fifteen well-dressed little creatures, all under the age
-of twelve I think, and more girls than boys: the company consisted of
-three or four and twenty people; all spoke French, and I was directed to
-observe how the young ones watched for the opening of a particular door;
-which however remained shut so long, that I forgot it again, and had
-begun to interest myself in chat with my nearest neighbour (no mother of
-course), when the door flew wide, and the master of the house announced
-the hour of felicity, shewing us an apartment gaily illuminated with
-coloured lamps; a sort of tree in grotto-work adorned the middle, and the
-presents were arranged all round; dolls innumerable, variously adjusted;
-fine new clothes, fans, trinkets, work-baskets, little escritoires,
-purses, pocket-books, toys, dancing-shoes,--every thing. The children
-skipped about, and capered with exultation;--“My own mama! my dear aunt!
-my sweet kind grandpapa!”--resounded wherever we turned our heads; I
-think it was the loveliest little show imaginable, and am sorry to know
-how description must necessarily wrong it: _les etrennes de Dresde_ shall
-however remain indelibly fixed in my memory. When the pretty dears had
-appropriated and arranged their presents, cake and lemonade were brought
-to quiet their agitated spirits, and all went home happy to bed. Their
-sparkling eyes and rosy cheeks served for our theme till supper-time;
-and I sat trying, but in vain, to find a reason why paternal affection
-appears so much warmer always in Protestant countries, and filial piety
-in those which remain firm to the church of Rome.
-
-We returned home to our inn exceedingly well amused; the supper had been
-magnificent, and the preceding fast gave it additional relish. I now
-tremble with apprehension however lest the show of yesterday was too
-splendid: for if the mothers begin once to vie with each other whose
-gifts shall be grandest, or if once the friend at whose house the treat
-is prepared produces a more costly entertainment than his neighbours
-have hitherto contented themselves with giving, this innocent and even
-praiseworthy pastime will soon swell into expensive luxury, and burst
-from having been poisoned by the corroding touch of malice and of envy.
-
-Our Saxons however seemed well-bred, airy, and agreeable in last night’s
-hour of festivity; and could I have fancied their gaiety quite natural
-like that of Venice or Verona, I might perhaps have caught the sweet
-infection, and felt disposed to merriment myself; but much of this was
-studied mirth one saw, and pleasure upon principle, as in our own island;
-which, though more elegant, is less attractive. It is difficult to catch
-the contagion of artificial hilarity, and a celebrated surgeon once told
-me, that one might live with safety at Sutton-house among the inoculated
-patients, without ever taking the disorder, unless the operation were
-regularly performed upon one’s self.
-
-Well! we must shortly quit this very comfortable resting-place, and
-leave a town more like our own than any I have yet seen; where, however,
-the dresses, of ordinary women I mean, are extraordinary enough, each
-when she is made up for show wearing a rich old-fashioned brocade cloke
-lined with green lutestring, and edged round with narrow fur. This is
-universal. Her neat black love-hood however is not so ugly as the man’s
-bright yellow brass comb, stuck regularly in all their heads of long
-straight hair who are not people of fashion; and no powder is ever used
-among the Lutherans here in Saxony I see, except by gentlemen and ladies,
-who often take all _theirs_ out when they go to church, from some
-odd principle of devotion. It is very pretty though to see the little
-clean-faced lads and wenches running to school so in a morning at every
-protestant town, with the grammar and testament under their arm, while
-every the meanest house has a folio bible in it, and all the people of
-the lowest ranks can read it.
-
-On this 1st of January 1787, I may boast of having visited lord
-Peter, Jack, and Martin, all in the course of one day. Hearing Mons.
-Dumarre preach to the French Huguenots in the morning, attending the
-established church at Notre Dame at noon, and going to the Elector’s
-truly-magnificent place of worship at night, where Hasse’s Te Deum was
-sung, and executed with prodigious regularity and pomp, over against an
-altar decorated with well-employed splendour, exhibiting zeal for God’s
-house, animated by elegant taste, and encouraged by royal presence;
-
- While from the censer clouds of fragrance roll,
- And swelling organs lift the rising soul.
-
-I studied then to keep my mind, I hope I kept it free from narrow and
-from vulgar prejudice, desirous only of seeing the three principal
-sects of Christians adoring their Redeemer, each in the way they think
-most likely to please him; nor will I mention which method had the most
-immediate effect on _me_; but this I saw, that beneath
-
- Such plain roofs as piety could raise,
- Made vocal only by our maker’s praise,
-
-Monsieur Dumarre produced from his peaceful auditors more tears of
-gratitude and tenderness in true remembrance of the sacred season,
-than were shed at either of the other churches. Indeed the sublime and
-pathetic simplicity of the place, the truly-touching rhetoric of the
-preacher, his story a sad one; while his persecuted family were forced to
-fly their native country, driven thence by the rigour of Romish severity,
-and his life exactly corresponding to the purity of that doctrine he
-teaches: his tones of voice, his tranquillity of manners,
-
- His plainness moves men more than eloquence,
- And to his flock, joy be the consequence!
-
-The established sect here--_Lutheranism_, keeps almost the exact medium
-between the other two, though their places of worship strike me as
-something more theatrical than one could wish; very stately they are
-certainly, and very imposing. As few people however are fond of a
-middle state, as here is prodigious encouragement given by the court
-to Romanists, and full toleration from the state to the disciples of
-John Calvin, I wonder more members of the national church do not quit
-her communion for that of one of these chapels, which however owe their
-very existence in Saxony to that truly christian and catholick spirit of
-toleration, possessed by Martin alone.
-
-We have recovered ourselves now from all fatigues; our coach and our
-spirits are once more repaired, and ready to set out for
-
-
-
-
-BERLIN.
-
-
-The road hither is all a heavy sand, cut through vast forests of
-ever-green timber, but not beautiful like those of Bavaria, rather
-tedious, flat, and tristful: to encrease which sensations, and make them
-more grievous to us, our servants complained bitterly of the last long
-frosty night, which we spent wholly in the carriage till it brought us
-here, where the man of the house, a bad one enough indeed, speaks as good
-English as I do, and has lived long in London. I am not much enchanted
-with this place however. Dean Swift said, that a good style was only
-proper words in proper places; and if a good city is to be judged of
-in the same way, perhaps Berlin may obtain the first place, which one
-would not on an immediate glance think it likely to deserve; as a mere
-residence however, it will be difficult to find a finer.
-
-He who sighs for the happy union of situation, climate, fertility, and
-grandeur, will think _Genoa_ transcends all that even a warm imagination
-can wish. If with a very, very little less degree of positive beauty, he
-feels himself chiefly affected by a number of Nature’s most interesting
-features, finely, and even philosophically arranged; _Naples_ is the town
-that can afford him most matter both of solemn and pleasing speculation.
-
-If ruins of pristine splendour, solid proofs of universal dominion,
-_once_, nay _twice_ enjoyed: with the view of temporal power crushed by
-its own weight, solicits his curiosity.--It will be amply gratified at
-_Rome_; where all that modern magnificence can perform, is added to all
-that ancient empire has left behind. Romantic ideas of Armida’s palace,
-fancied scenes of perennial pleasure, and magical images of ever varying
-delight, will be best realized at smiling _Venice_ of any place; but if
-a city may be called perfect in proportion to its external convenience,
-if making many houses to hold many people, keeping infection away by
-cleanliness, and ensuring security against fire by a nice separation
-of almost every building from almost every other; if uniformity of
-appearance can compensate for elegance of architecture, and space make
-amends for beauty, _Berlin_ certainly deserves to be seen, and he who
-planned it, to be highly commended. The whole looks at its worst now; all
-the churches are in mourning, so are the coaches: no theatre is open, and
-no music heard, except now and then a melancholy German organ droning
-its dull round of tunes under one’s window, without even the London
-accompaniment of a hoarse voice crying _Woolfleet oysters_. Come! Berlin
-can boast an arsenal capable of containing arms for two hundred and fifty
-thousand men. The contempt of decoration for a place destined to real
-use seemed respectable in itself, and characteristic of its founder. No
-columns of guns or capitals of pistols, neatly placed, are to be seen
-here. A vast, large, clean, cold-looking room, with swords and muskets
-laid up only that they may be taken down, is all one has to look at in
-Frederick’s preparations for attack or defence.
-
-In accumulation of ornaments one hopes to find elegance, and in
-rejection of superfluity there is dignity of sentiment; but nothing
-can excuse a sovereign prince for keeping as curiosities worthy a
-traveller’s attention, a heap of trumpery fit to furnish out the shop of
-a Westminster pawnbroker. Our cabinet of rarities here is literally no
-better than twenty old country gentlemen’s seats, situated in the distant
-provinces of England, shew to the servants of a neighbouring family upon
-a Christmas visit, when the housekeeper is in good humour, and, gently
-wiping the dust off my _late lady’s mother’s_ amber-boxes, produces forth
-the wax figures of my lord John and my lord Robert when _babies_. For
-this pitiable exhibition, ships cut in paper, and saints carved in wood,
-we paid half a guinea each; not gratuity to the person who has them in
-charge, but tax imposed by the government. Every house here is obliged
-to maintain so many soldiers, excepting such and such only who have the
-word _free_ written over their doors; here seem to be no people in the
-town almost except soldiers though; so they naturally command whatever
-is to be had. Most nations begin and end with a _military_ dominion,
-as red is commonly the first and last colour obtained by the chymist
-in his various experiments upon artificial tints. This state is yet
-young, and many things in it not quite come to their full growth, so we
-must not be rigorous in our judgments. I have seen the library, in which
-we were for the first time shewn what is confidently _said_ to be an
-Æthiopian manuscript, and such it certainly may be for aught I know. What
-interested me much more was our Tonson’s _Cæsar_, a book remarkable for
-having been written by the first hero and general in the world perhaps,
-dedicated to the second, and possessed by the third. Here is an exceeding
-perfect collection of all Hogarth’s prints.
-
-This city appears to be a very wholesome one; the houses are not high to
-confine the air between them, or drive it forward in currents upon the
-principle of Paris or Vienna; the streets are few, but long, straight,
-and wide; ground has not been spared in its construction, which seems a
-most judicious one; and with this well-earned praise I am most willing
-to quit it. It is the first place of any consequence I have felt in a
-hurry to run away from; for till now there have been _some_ attractions
-in every town; something that commanded veneration or invited fondness;
-something pleasing in its society, or instructive in its history. It
-would however be sullen enough to feel no agreeable sensation in seeing
-this child of the present century come to age so: the tomb of its author
-is the object of our present curiosity, which will be gratified to-morrow.
-
- Ou sont ils donc, ces foudres de guerre,
- Qui faisoient trembler l’univers?
- Ils ne sont plus qu’un peu de terre,
- Restes, qu’ont epargnis les vers[52].
-
-
-
-
-POTZDAM.
-
-
-And now, if Berlin wants taste and magnificence, here’s Potzdam built
-on purpose, I believe, to shew that even with both a place may be very
-dismal and very disagreeable. The commonest buildings in this city look
-like the best side of Grosvenor-square in London, or Queen’s-square at
-Bath. I have not seen a street so narrow as Oxford Road, but many here
-are much wider, with canals up the middle, and a row of trees planted
-on each side, a gravel walk near the water for foot passengers, instead
-of a _trottoir_ by the side of the houses. Every dwelling is ornamented
-to a degree of profusion; but to one’s question of, “Who lives in these
-palaces?” one hears that they are all empty space, or only occupied by
-goods never wanted, or corn there is nobody to feed with: this amazes
-one; and in fact here are no inhabitants of dignity at all proportioned
-to the residences provided for them; so that when one sees the copies of
-antique bas-reliefs, in no bad sculpture, decorating the doors whence
-dangle a shoulder of mutton, or a shoemaker’s last, it either shocks one
-or makes one laugh, like the old Bartholomew trick of putting a baby’s
-face upon an old man’s shoulders, or sticking a king’s crown upon a
-peasant’s head.
-
-The churches are very fine on the outside, but strangely plain within:
-that, however, where the royal body reposes looked solemn and stately in
-its mourning dress. Black velvet, with silver fringe and tassels very
-rich and heavy, hung over the pulpit, family seat, &c. and every thing
-struck one with an air of melancholy dignity. The king of Prussia’s
-corpse, no longer animated by ambition, rests quietly in an unornamented
-solid silver coffin, placed in a sort of closet above ground, the door to
-which opens close to the pulpit’s feet, and shews the narrow space which
-now holds his body, beside that of his father, and the great elector, as
-he is still justly called.
-
-My sepulchral tour is now nearly finished: we have in the course of
-this journey seen the last remains of many a celebrated mortal. Virgil,
-Raphael, Ariosto, Scipio, Galileo, Petrarch, Carlo Borromeo, and the king
-of Prussia. How different each from other in his life! How like each
-other now! But
-
- Tous ces morts ont vecu; toi qui lis--tu mourras:
- L’instant fatal approche, et tu n’y pense pas[53].
-
-I could have wished before my return to have paused a moment on the
-tomb of Melancthon, who might be said to have united in himself _their_
-separate perfections. Courage, genius, moderation, piety! persevering
-steadiness in the right way himself; candid acknowledgment of merit, even
-in his enemies, where he saw their intentions right, though he thought
-their tenets and their conduct wrong. But we are removed far from the
-dwelling of the _peacemaker_; let us at least look at the palace, now we
-have examined the coffin of him whose study and delight was _war_.
-
-Sans Souci is surely an elegantly chosen spot, its architecture
-excellent, its furniture rich yet delicate, the gardens very happily
-disposed, the prospect from its windows agreeable, the pictures within
-an admirable collection. A hall built in imitation of the Colonna
-gallery shews Frederick’s taste at once and liberal spirit: the front
-seems borrowed from something at St. Peter’s; all is beautiful; the
-gilding of his long-room makes a very sudden and strong effect, nor are
-marbles of immense value wanting; here is a specimen of every thing I
-think, and two agate tables of prodigious size and beauty. The Silesian
-chrysopaz, and Carolina marble of a bright scarlet colour, quite luminous
-like the feathers of a fighting cock, struck me with their singular and
-splendid appearance. Rubens’s merit was not new to me, I hope; yet here
-is a resurrection of Lazarus, in which he has been lavish of it. The
-composition of this picture seems to have been intended to surpass every
-thing put together by other artists: its colouring glows like life.
-
-The king’s town-house, however, is finer far than this his villa was
-designed to be; but I grew very tired walking over it: when one has
-dragged through twenty-four rooms variously hung with pink and silver,
-green and gold, &c. one grows cruelly weary with repeating the same
-ideas by drawling through forty-eight more. I wished to see his own
-private living apartments, and to mind with what books and pictures he
-adorned the dressing-room he always sate in: the first were chiefly
-works of Voltaire and Metastasio--the last were small landscapes of
-Albano and Watteau. At our desire they shewed us the little bed he slept,
-the chairs he sate in familiarly. Suetonius in French and Italian was
-the last author he looked into; they have made a mark at the death of
-Augustus, where he was reading when the same visitant called on him,
-quite unexpected by himself it seems, though all his attendants were well
-aware of his approach. As he expired he said, _I give you a vast deal
-of trouble_. We saw the spot he sate in at the moment; for Frederick no
-more died in his bed, than did the famous Flavius Vespasian; his servants
-wept as they repeated the particulars, caressing while they spoke his
-favourite dogs, one of which, a terrier, could hardly be prevailed upon
-to quit the body. It used to amuse the king to see them frighted when he
-would take them to a long room lined with French mirrors, which he did
-now and then to laugh at the effect.
-
-Every thing at Potzdam shews a man in haste to enjoy what he had
-laboured so hard to procure; nor did he ever refuse himself, they say,
-any gratification that could make age less wearisome, or illness less
-afflictive. He had much taste of English ingenuity--combinations of
-convenience, and improvements in mechanism: his own writing-table,
-however, was contrived by himself; it stands on four legs, one pair
-longer than the other to make it slope; the covering is green velvet,
-with a square hole for the standish to drop in and not spill the ink: I
-liked the device exceedingly, but wondered he thought any device worth
-his preference. His conversation to his servants was affable and even
-gay; they loved his person, it is plain, and half adore his memory.
-
-Such were the manners then, and such the death, of the far-famed
-philosopher of Sans Souci! And in truth, when he had so often set all
-present and future happiness to hazard, it would have been inconsistent
-not to hasten the enjoyment: nobody comes to inhabit his fine town,
-however, which has much the look of buildings in a stage perspective.
-Soldiers only, and such as sell wares necessary to soldiers, were all
-the human creatures I could see here; nor are families, or travellers of
-any sort indeed, better accommodated here than at inns of less pompous
-appearance on the outside.
-
-For accommodations, however, I care but little; I have now walked over
-the oldest and the youngest cities in all Europe, and have left each with
-sincere admiration of their contents. Both are full of buildings and
-empty of inhabitants, nor am I desirous to add to the number in either. I
-was going to step forward into some room of the palace yesterday--“Madam,
-come back this instant,” exclaimed our Cicerone; “if that chamber is
-entered, my head will be off my shoulders in three days time.” Another
-well attested anecdote may be worth relating: A gentleman with whom we
-passed an agreeable evening at Berlin, whose lady invited to meet us
-whatever was most charming in the town, told the following story of a
-soldier who, being desirous of his body’s dissolution, but fearful of
-his soul’s rushing unprepared into eternity, caught and murdered a six
-months old baby; giving this strange account of his own feelings on
-the occasion, and adding, that he did not like to kill an adult, lest
-his own impatience of life’s insupportable torment might by that means
-precipitate his neighbour to perdition; but that a baptized infant
-would be sure of heaven, and he himself should gain time to prepare for
-following it--“And, Lord!” said my informer, “what reasoners this world
-has in it!” The soldier was hanged six weeks after the dreadful crime was
-committed; he made a very decent and penitential end.
-
-On such facts what observations or reflections can result? I made none,
-but gave God thanks that I was born a subject of Great Britain.
-
-
-
-
-POTZDAM TO HANOVER.
-
-
-On the 13th of January 1787 then we quitted Potzdam, strongly impressed
-by the beauties of a town apparently fabricated by a modern Cadmus, who,
-when all the soldiers that he could _raise_ were fallen in _battle_ for
-his amusement, retired with the five that were left, and built a fine
-city!
-
-Brandenbourg was our next resting place, and seemed to me to merit
-a longer stay in it; I saw an old Runick figure in the street, its
-size colossal, and its composition seemed black basalt; but of this
-I could obtain no account for want of language, our still recurring
-torment.--This place seems fuller of inhabitants than the last; but it
-is _so_ melancholy to have no compensation for the fatigues of a tedious
-journey! and in these countries information cannot be procured for
-travellers that do not mean to reside, present letters, &c.; which task
-we have at this season little taste to renew.
-
-Magdebourg makes a respectable appearance at a distance, from the
-loftiness of its turrets; one sees them at least four long hours before
-the roads which lead to it permit one’s approach; and the towers seem to
-retire before one, like Ulysses’s fictitious country raised to deceive
-him. Never was I so weary in my life as when we entered Magdebourg,
-where, instead of going out to see sights as usual, I desired nothing so
-sincerely as a hot supper and soft bed, which the inns of Germany never
-fail to afford us in even elegant perfection.
-
-Our linen too, so beautifully, and I will add so unnecessarily fine! The
-king of Naples probably never saw such sheets and table-cloths as we have
-been comforted with here, not only at Dresden, but every post since.
-
-Magdebourg seems to have almost all its streets united by bridges; the
-Elbe divides there into so many branches, and none of them small.
-
-Helmstadt is a little place which affords few images to the mind, and
-Brunswick to mere passengers, as we were, seemed to yield none but sad
-ones. The houses all of wood, even to prince Ferdinand’s palace, and
-painted of a dull olive colour with heavy pensile roofs, giving the town
-a melancholy look; but we met with young Englishmen who commended the
-society, and said no place could be gayer than Brunswick. This is among
-the reports one wishes to be true, and we are led the more willingly to
-believe them.
-
-Another delight which I enjoyed at this city was, to find that every
-body in it, and every body passing through it, adored the duchess, whose
-partial fondness, and tender remembrance of her native country, justly
-endears her name to every subject of Great Britain. Her chapel is pretty;
-the garden, where they said she always walked two hours every day, put me
-in mind of Gray’s-Inn walks twenty or thirty years ago; they were then
-very like it.
-
-From these scenes of solitude without retirement, and of age without
-antiquity, I was willing enough to be gone; but they would shew me one
-curiosity they said, as I seemed to feel particular pleasure in speaking
-of their charming duchess. We followed, and were shewn _her coffin!_ all
-in silver, finely carved, chased, engraved, what you will. “Before she
-is dead!” exclaimed I--“Before she was even married, madam,” replied
-our Cicerone; “it is the very finest ever made in Brunswick; we had it
-ready for her against she came home to us, and you see the plate left
-vacant for her age.” I was glad to drive forward now, and slept at Peina;
-which, though in itself a miserable place, exhibits one consolatory sight
-for a Christian--the sight of toleration. Here Romanists, Lutherans,
-and Calvinists, live all affectionately and quietly together, under the
-protection of the bishop of Paderborne; and here I first saw the king
-of England’s livery upon the king of England’s servants since I left
-home--“And if they _are_ ragged youngsters who wear it,” said I, “they
-are my fellow-subjects, and glad am I to see them!”
-
-The villages and churches hereabouts resemble those of Merionethshire,
-only that not a mountain rears its head at all--one vast, wide, barren
-flat, through which roads that no weather can render better than
-barely passable brought us at length to Hanover, which stands, as all
-these cities do in the north of Germany, upon an immense plain, with a
-thick wood of noble timber trees breaking from time to time the almost
-boundless void, and relieving the eye, which is fatigued by extent
-without any object to repose upon, in a manner I can with difficulty
-comprehend, much less explain; but the sight of a passing waggon, or
-distant spire, is a felicity seldom found, though continually sought by
-me, while travelling through these wide wasted countries, where no idea
-is afforded to the imagination, no image remitted to the mind, but that
-of two armies encountering each other, to dispute the plunder of some
-place already unable to feed its few inhabitants.
-
-The horses however are exceedingly beautiful; we were offered a pair of
-very fine ones for only forty pounds. They would have run such hazards
-getting home! “There are two ways to chuse out of,” said I; “if we
-purchase them, we shall repent on it every day till we arrive in London;
-if we do not, we shall repent on it every day after we get there.” Such
-is life! we did not buy the cattle.
-
-The cleanliness of the windows, the manner of paving and lighting the
-streets at Hanover, put us in mind a little of some country towns in the
-remoter provinces of England; and there seems to be likewise a little
-glimpse of British manners, dress, &c. breaking through the common and
-natural fashions of the country. This was very pleasing to us, but I
-wished the place grander; I do not very well know why, but we had long
-counted on comforts here as at home, and I had formed expectations of
-something much more magnificent than we found; though the Duke of York’s
-residence does give the town an air of cheerfulness it scarce could shew
-without that advantage; and here are concerts and balls, and efforts
-at being gay, which may probably succeed sometime. How did all the
-talk however, and all the pamphlets, and all the lamentations made by
-old King George’s new subjects, rush into my mind, when I recollected
-the loud, illiberal, and indecent clamours made from the year 1720 to
-the year 1750, at least till the alarm given by the Rebellion began to
-operate, and open people’s eyes to the virtues of the reigning family!
-for till then, no topic had so completely engrossed both press and
-conversation, as the misfortunes accruing to _poor_ old England, from
-their King’s desire of enriching his Electoral dominions, and feeding his
-favourite Hanoverians with their good guineas, making fat the objects
-of his partial tenderness with their best treasures--in good time! Such
-groundless charges remind one of a story the famous French wit Monsieur
-de Menage tells of his mother and her maid, who, having wasted or sold a
-pound of butter, laid the theft upon the _cat_, persisting so violently
-that it had been all devoured by the rapacious favourite, that Madame de
-Menage said, “It’s very well; we will weigh the cat, poor thing! and know
-the truth:” The scales were produced, but puss could be found to weigh
-only _three quarters_, after all her depredations.
-
-
-
-
-FROM HANOVER TO BRUSSELS.
-
-
-Travelling night and day through the most dismal country I ever yet
-beheld, brought us at length to Munster, where we had a good inn again,
-and talked English. Well may all our writers agree in celebrating the
-miseries of Westphalia! well may they, while the wretched inhabitants,
-uniting poverty with pride, live on their hogs, with their hogs, and like
-their hogs, in mud-walled cottages, a dozen of which together is called
-by courtesy a village, surrounded by black heaths, and wild uncultivated
-plains, over which the unresisted wind sweeps with a velocity I never
-yet was witness to, and now and then, exasperated perhaps by solitude,
-returns upon itself in eddies terrible to look on. Well, the woes of
-mortal man are chiefly his own fault; war and ambition have depopulated
-the country, which otherwise need not I believe be poor, as here is
-capability enough, and the weather, though stormy, is not otherwise
-particularly disagreeable. January is no mild month any where; even
-Naples, so proverbially delicious, is noisy enough with thunder and
-lightning; and the torrents of rain which often fall at this season at
-Rome and Florence, make them unpleasing enough. Nor do I believe that the
-_very_ few people one finds here are of a lazy disposition at all; but it
-is so seldom that one meets with the _human face divine_ in this Western
-side of Germany, that one scarce knows what they are, but by report.
-
-The town of Munster is catholic I see; their cathedral heavily and
-clumsily adorned, like the old Lutheran church called Santa Sophia at
-Dresden. One pair of their silver candlesticks however are eight feet
-high, and exhibit more solidity than elegance. They told us something
-about the _three kings_, who must have lost their way amazingly if ever
-they wandered into Westphalia, and deserved to lose their name of _wise
-men_ too, I think. We were likewise shewn the sword worn by St. Paul,
-they told us, and a backgammon table preserved behind the high altar, I
-could not for, my life find out why; at first our interpreter told us,
-that the man said it had belonged to _John the Baptist_, but on further
-enquiry we understood him that it was once used by some Anabaptists; as
-that seemed no less wild a reason for keeping it there, than the other
-seemed as an account of its original, we came away uninformed.
-
-Of the reason why Hams are better here than in any other part of Europe,
-it was not so difficult to obtain the knowledge, and the inquiry was much
-more useful.
-
-Poor people here burn a vast quantity of very fine old oak in their
-cottages, which, having no chimney, detain the smoke a long time before
-it makes its escape out at the door. This smoke gives the peculiar
-flavour to that bacon which hangs from the roof, already fat with the
-produce of the same tree growing about these districts in a plenty not
-to be believed. Indeed the sole decoration of this devasted country is
-the large quantity of majestic timber trees, almost all oak, living to
-such an age, and spreading their broad arms with such venerable dignity,
-that it is _they_ who appear the ancient possessors of the land, who,
-in the true style of Gothic supremacy, suck all the nutriment of it to
-themselves, only shaking off a few acorns to content the immediate hunger
-of the animal race, which here seems in a state of great degeneracy
-indeed, compared to those haughty vegetables.
-
-This day I saw a fryar; the first that has crossed my sight since we
-left the town of Munich in Bavaria. On the road to Dusseldorp one sees
-the country mend at every step; but even _I_ can perceive the language
-harsher, the further one is removed from Hanover on either side: for
-Hanover, as Madame de Bianconi told me at Dresden, is the Florence of
-Germany; and the tongue spoken at that town is supposed, and justly, the
-criterion of perfect _Teutsch_.
-
-The gallery of paintings here shall delay us but two or three days; I am
-so very weary of living on the high roads of _Teuchland_ all winter long!
-Gerard Dow’s delightful mountebank ought, however, to have two of those
-days devoted to him, and here is the most capital Teniers which the world
-has to show. Jaques Jordaens never painted any thing so well as the feast
-in this gallery, where there are likewise some wonderful Sckalkens;
-besides Rembrandt’s portrait of himself much out of repair, and old
-Franck’s Seven Acts of Mercy varnished up, as well as the martyrdoms
-representing some of the persecutions in early times of Christianity;
-these might be called the Seven Acts of Cruelty--a duplicate of the
-picture may be seen at Vienna. When one has mentioned the Vanderwerfs,
-which are all sisters, and the demi-divine Carlo Dolce in the window,
-representing the infant Jesus with flowers, full of sweetness and
-innocent expression, it will be time to talk of the General Judgment,
-painted with astonishing hardihood by Rubens, and which we stopt here
-chiefly to see. The second Person of the Trinity is truly sublime, and
-formed upon an idea more worthy of him, at least more correspondent to
-the general ideas than that in Cappella Sestini; where a beholder is
-tempted to think on Julius Cæsar somehow, instead of Jesus Christ--a
-Conqueror, more than a Saviour of mankind.
-
-St. Michael’s figure is incomparable; those of Moses and St. Peter
-happily imagined; the spirit of composition, the manner of grouping and
-colouring, the general effect of the whole, prodigious! I know not why
-he has so fallen below himself in the Madonna’s character; perhaps not
-imitating Tintoret’s lovely Virgin in Paradise, he has done worse for
-fear of being servile. Tintoret’s idea of her is so _very_ poetical!
-but those who shewed it me at Venice said the drawing was borrowed from
-Guariento, I remember.
-
-Who however except Rubens would have thought so justly, so liberally,
-so wisely, about the Negro drawn up to heaven by the angels? who still
-retains the old terrestrial character, so far as to shew a disposition
-to laugh at _their_ situation who on earth tormented him. When all is
-said, every body knows very well that Michael Angelo’s picture on this
-subject is by far the finest; and that neither Rubens nor Tintoret
-ever pretended, or even hoped to be thought as great artists as he:
-but though Dante is a sublimer poet than Tasso, and Milton a writer of
-more eminence than Pope, _these_ last will have readers, reciters, and
-quoters, while the others must sit down contented with silent veneration
-and acknowledged superiority.
-
-This day we saw the Rhine--what rivers these are! and what enormous
-inhabitants they do contain! a brace of bream, and eels of a magnitude
-and flavour very uncommon except in Germany, were our supper here. But
-the manners begin I see to fade away upon the borders; our soft feather
-beds are left behind; men too, sometimes sad, nasty, ill-looked fellows,
-come in one’s room to sweep, &c. and light the fire in the stove, which
-is now always made of lead, and the fumes are very offensive; no more
-tight maids to be seen: but we shall get good roads; at Liege, down in a
-dirty coal pit, the bad ones end I think; and that town may be said to
-finish all our difficulties. After passing through our last disagreeable
-resting-place then, one finds the manners take a tint of France, and
-begins to see again what one has often seen before. The forests too are
-fairly left behind, but neat agriculture, and comfortable cottages more
-than supply their loss. Broom, juniper, every English shrub, announce
-our proximity to Great Britain, while pots of mazerion in flower at the
-windows shew that we are arrived in a country where spring is welcomed
-with ceremony, as well as received with delight. The forwardness of the
-season is indeed surprising; though it freezes at night now and then,
-the general feel of the air is very mild; willows already give signs of
-resuscitation, while flights of yellowhammers, a bird never observed in
-Italy I think, enliven the fields, and look as if they expected food and
-felicity to be near.
-
-Louvaine would have been a place well worth stopping at, they tell me;
-but we were in haste to finish our journey and arrive at
-
-
-
-
-BRUSSELS.
-
-
-Every step towards this comfortable city lies through a country too well
-known to need description, and too beautiful to be ever described as it
-deserves. _Les Vues de Flandres_ are bought by the English, admired by
-the Italians, and even esteemed by the French, who like few things out
-of their own nation; but these places once belonged to Louis Quatorze,
-and the language has taken such root it will never more be eradicated.
-Here are very fine pictures in many private hands; Mr. Danot’s collection
-does not want me to celebrate its merits; and here is a lovely park,
-and a pleasing coterie of English, and a very gay carnival as can be,
-people running about the streets in crowds; but their theatre is a vile
-one: after Italy, it will doubtless be difficult to find masques that can
-amuse, or theatres that can strike one. But never did nation possess a
-family more charming than that of _La Duchesse d’Arenberg_, who, graced
-with every accomplishment of mind and person, devotes her time and
-thoughts wholly to the amusement of her amiable consort, calling round
-them all which has any power of alleviating his distressful condemnation
-to perpetual darkness, from an accident upon a shooting party that cost
-him his sight about six or seven years ago. Mean time her arm always
-guides, her elegant conversation always soothes him; and either from
-_gaieté de cœur_, philosophical resolution to bear what heaven ordains
-without repining, or a kind desire of corresponding with the Duchess’s
-intentions, he appears to lose no pleasure himself, nor power of pleasing
-others, by his misfortune; but dances, plays at cards, chats with his
-English friends, and listens delightedly (as who does not?) when charming
-Countess Cleri sings to the harpsichord’s accompaniment, with all
-Italian taste, and all German execution. By the Duke D’Aremberg we were
-introduced to Prince Albert of Saxony, and the Princesse Gouvernante,
-whose resemblance to her Imperial brother is very striking; her hand
-however, so eminently beautiful, is to be kissed no more; the abolition
-of that ceremony has taken place in all the Emperor’s family. The palace
-belonging to these princes is so entirely in the English taste, with
-pleasure grounds, shrubbery, lawn, and laid out water, that I thought
-myself at home, not because of the polite attentions received, for those
-I have found _abroad_, where no merits of mine could possibly have
-deserved, nor no services have purchased them. Spontaneous kindness,
-and friendship resulting merely from that innate worth that loves to
-energize its own affections on an object which some circumstances had
-casually rendered interesting, are the lasting comforts I have derived
-from a journey which has shewn me much variety, and impressed me with an
-esteem of many characters I have been both the happier and the wiser for
-having known. Such were the friends I left with regret, when, crossing
-the Tyrolese Alps, I sent my last kind wishes back to the dear state
-of Venice in a sigh; such too were my emotions, when we took leave last
-night at Lady Torrington’s; and resolving to quit Brussels to-morrow for
-Antwerp, determined to exchange the brilliant conversation of a _Boyle_,
-for the glowing pencil of a _Rubens_.
-
-
-
-
-ANTWERP.
-
-
-This is a dismal heavy looking town--_so_ melancholy! the Scheld shut up!
-the grass growing in the streets! those streets so empty of inhabitants!
-and it was so famous once. _Atuatum nobile Brabantiæ opidum in ripâ
-Schaldis flu. Europæ nationibus maximè frequentatum. Sumptuosis tam
-privatis quam publicis nitet ædificiis_[54], say the not very old books
-of geography when speaking of this once stately city;
-
- But trade’s proud empire sweeps to swift decay,
- As ocean heaves the labour’d mole away.
-
- GOLDSMITH.
-
-And surely if the empire of Rome is actually fled away into air like a
-dream, the opulence of Antwerp may well crumble to earth like a clod.
-What defies time is genius; and of that, many and glorious proofs are yet
-left behind in this place. The composition of a picture painted to adorn
-the altar under which lies buried that which was mortal of its artist, is
-beyond all meaner praise. The figure of St. George might stand by that
-of Corregio, and suffer no diminution of one’s esteem. The descent from
-the cross too!--Well! if Daniel de Volterra’s is more elegantly pathetic,
-Rubens has put _his_ pathos in a properer place.--The blessed Virgin Mary
-ought to be but the second figure certainly in a scene which represents
-our almighty Saviour himself completing the redemption of all mankind.
-But here is another devotional piece, highly poetical, almost dramatic,
-representing Christ descending in anger to consume a guilty world. The
-globe at a distance low beneath his feet, his pious mother prostrate
-before him, covering part of it with her robe, and deprecating the divine
-wrath in a most touching manner. St. Sebastian shewing his wounds with an
-air of the tenderest supplication; Carlo Borromæo beseeching in heaven
-for those fellow-creatures he ceased not loving or serving while on
-earth; and St. Francis in the groupe, but surely ill-chosen; as he who
-left the world, and planned only his own salvation by retirement from its
-cares and temptations, would be unlikely enough to intreat for its longer
-continuance: his dress however, so favourable to painters, was the reason
-he was pitched upon I trust, as it affords a particularly happy contrast
-to the cardinal’s robes of St. Carlo.
-
-I will finish my reflections upon painting here, and apologize for
-their frequency only by confessing my fondness for the art; and my
-conviction, that had I said nothing of that art in a journey through
-Italy and Germany, where so much of every traveller’s attention is led
-to mention it, I should have been justly blamed for affectation; while
-being censured for impertinence disgusts me less of the two. What I have
-learned from the Italians is a maxim more valuable than all my stock of
-connoisseurship: _Che c’è in tutto il suo bene, e il suo male_--that
-_there is much of evil and of good in every thing_: and the life of a
-traveller evinces the truth of that position perhaps more than any
-other. So persuaded, we made a bold endeavour to cross the Scheld; but
-the wind was so outrageously high, no boat was willing to venture till
-towards night: at that hour “_Unus, et hic audax_[55],” as Leander says,
-offered his service to convey us; but the passage of the Rhine had been
-so rough before, that I felt by no means disposed to face danger again
-just at the close of the battle.
-
-When we find a disposition to talk over our adventures, the great ice
-islands driving down _Rhenus ferox_, as Seneca justly calls it, and
-threatening to run against and destroy our awkward ill-contrived boat,
-may divert care over a winter’s fire, some evening in England, by
-recollection of past perils. I thought it a dreadful one at the time; and
-have no taste to renew a like scene for the sake of crossing the Scheld,
-and arriving a very few moments sooner than returning through Brussels
-will bring us--_a la Place de_
-
-
-
-
-LILLE;
-
-
-Where every thing appears to me to be just like England, at least just
-by it; and in fact four and twenty hours would carry us thither with a
-fair wind: and now it really does feel as if the journey were over; and
-even in that sensation, though there is some pleasure, there is some
-pain too;--the time and the places are past;--and I have only left to
-wish, that my improvements of the one, and my accounts of the others,
-were better; for though Mr. Sherlock comforts his followers with the kind
-assertion, That if a hundred men of parts travelled over Italy, and each
-made a separate book of what _he_ saw and observed, a hundred excellent
-compositions might be made, of which no two should be alike, yet all new,
-all resembling the original, and all admirable of their kind.--One’s
-constantly-recurring fear is, lest the readers should cry out, with
-Juliet--
-
- Yea, but all this did I know before!
-
-How truly might they say so, did I mention the oddity (for oddity it
-still is) in this town of Lille, to see dogs drawing in carts as beasts
-of burden, and lying down in the market-place when their work is done,
-to gnaw the bones thrown them by their drivers: they are of mastiff race
-seemingly, crossed by the bull-dog, yet not quarrelsome at all. This is
-a very awkward and barbarous practice however, and, as far as I know,
-confined to this city; for in all others, people seem to have found out,
-that horses, asses, and oxen are the proper creatures to draw wheel
-carriages--except indeed at Vienna, where the streets are so very narrow,
-that the men resolve rather to be harnessed than run over.
-
-How fine I thought these churches thirteen years ago, comes now thirteen
-times a-day into my head; they are not fine at all; but it was the first
-time I had ever crossed the channel, and I thought every thing a wonder,
-and fancied we were arrived at the world’s end almost; so differently
-do the self-same places appear to the self-same people surrounded by
-different circumstances! I now feel as if we were at Canterbury. Was one
-to go to Egypt, the sight of Naples on the return home would probably
-afford a like sensation of proximity: and I recollect, one of the
-gentlemen who had been with Admiral Anson round the world told us, that
-when he came back as near as our East India settlements, he considered
-the voyage as finished, and all his toils at an end--so is my little
-book; and (if Italy may be considered, upon Sherlock’s principle, as
-a sort of academy-figure set up for us all to draw from) my design of
-it may have a chance to go in the portfolio with the rest, after its
-exhibition-day is over.
-
-With regard to the general effect travelling has upon the human mind,
-it is different with different people. Brydone has observed, that the
-magnetic needle loses her habits upon the heights of Ætna, nor ever more
-regains her partiality for the _north_, till again newly touched by the
-loadstone: it is so with many men who have lived long from home; they
-find, like Imogen,
-
- That there’s living out of Britain;
-
-and if they return to it after an absence of several years, bring back
-with them an alienated mind--this is not well. Others there are, who,
-being accustomed to live a considerable time in places where they have
-not the smallest intention to fix for ever, but on the contrary firmly
-resolve to leave _sometime_, learn to treat the world as a man treats
-his mistress, whom he likes well enough, but has no design to marry, and
-of course never provides for--this is not well neither. A third set gain
-the love of hurrying perpetually from place to place; living familiarly
-with all, but intimately with none; till confounding their own ideas
-(still undisclosed) of right and wrong, they learn to think virtue and
-vice ambulatory, as Browne says; profess that climate and constitution
-regulate men’s actions, till they try to persuade their companions into
-a belief most welcome to themselves, that the will of God in one place
-is by no means his will in another; and most resemble in their whirling
-fancies a boy’s top I once saw shewn by a professor who read us a lecture
-upon opticks; it was painted in regular stripes round like a narrow
-ribbon, red, blue, green, and yellow; we set it a-spinning by direction
-of our philosopher, who, whipping it merrily about, obtained as a
-general effect the total privation of all the four colours, so distinct
-at the beginning of its _tour_;--_it resembled a dirty white!_
-
-With these reflexions and recollections we drove forward to Calais, where
-I left the following lines at our inn:
-
- Over mountains, rivers, vallies,
- Here are we return’d to Calais;
- After all their taunts and malice,
- Ent’ring safe the gates of Calais;
- While, constrain’d, our captain dallies,
- Waiting for a wind at Calais,
- Muse! prepare some sprightly sallies
- To divert _ennui_ at Calais.
- Turkish ships, Venetian gallies,
- Have we seen since last at Calais;
- But tho’ Hogarth (rogue who rallies!)
- Ridicules the French at Calais,
- We, who’ve walk’d o’er many a palace,
- Quite well content return to Calais;
- For, striking honestly the tallies,
- There’s little choice ’twixt them and Calais.
-
-It would have been graceless not to give these lines a companion on the
-other side the water, like Dean Swift’s distich before and after he
-climbed Penmanmaur: these verses were therefore written, and I believe
-still remain, in an apartment of the Ship inn:
-
- He whom fair winds have wafted over,
- First hails his native land at Dover,
- And doubts not but he shall discover
- Pleasure in ev’ry path round Dover;
- Envies the happy crows which hover
- About old Shakespeare’s cliff at Dover;
- Nor once reflects that each young rover
- Feels just the same, return’d to Dover.
- From this fond dream he’ll soon recover
- When debts shall drive him back to Dover,
- Hoping, though poor, to live in clover,
- Once safely past the straits of Dover.
- But he alone’s his country’s lover,
- Who, absent long, returns to Dover,
- And can by fair experience prove her
- The best he has found since last at Dover.
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] Lord, Madam! why we came here on purpose sure to see the end of the
-world.
-
-[2]
-
- Freed from his keepers thus with broken reins
- The wanton courser prances o’er the plains.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-[3] When the mountain was in _ill-humour_.
-
-[4] More laborious than gathering up the Sibyl’s leaves.
-
-[5] I have danced in my bed so often this year.
-
-[6] Is she yet alive? Is she yet alive?
-
-[7] Be it as it may.
-
-[8] Which was once Anxur, and now is Terracina.
-
-[9] The temple sacred to the maiden Juno and un-razored Jove.
-
-[10]
-
- And the steep hills of Circe stretch around,
- Where fair Feronia boasts her stately grove,
- And Anxur glories in her guardian Jove.
-
- PITT.
-
-[11] White Anxur’s salutary waters roll.
-
-[12] Why, Madam, you have hit on it sure enough.
-
-[13] Surge, et ego ipse homo sum. VULGATE.
-
-[14] This hiding-hole received Nero after his golden house.
-
-[15]
-
- Our Alexander sells keys, altars, heaven;
- When law and right are sold, he’ll buy:--that’s even.
-
-[16] Juno too has her thunder.
-
-[17] Here’s something at last that’s truly great however! why this
-Alexander looks fit to be king of France.
-
-[18] _Paglia_ is a straw-coloured marble, wonderfully beautiful, and
-extremely rare; found only in some northern tracts of Africa, I am told
-here.
-
-[19] What you are already, that desire to be for ever.
-
-[20] Girt with the limus, and as to their temples, _they_ were crowned
-with vervain.
-
-[21] That’s the name of the spring.
-
-[22] There was an old religious temple hard by, where Clitumnus himself
-was venerated with suitable dress and ornaments.
-
-[23] Nightly lamenting, &c.
-
-[24] The colony of Ancona, founded by Sicilians.
-
-[25]
-
- The beauteous gulph which fair Ancona laves,
- Ancona wash’d by white Dalmatian waves.
-
-[26] I am a light-fingered fellow, Master.
-
-[27] We are all sinners you know.
-
-[28] The best among the Cæsars.
-
-[29] Mayst thou be happier than Augustus!--better than Trajan!
-
-[30] Eating increases one’s appetite.
-
-[31]
-
- Though fat Bologna feeds to the fill,
- Our Padua is fatter still.
-
-[32]
-
- Pompous and holy ancient Rome we call,
- Venice rich, wise, and lordly over all.
-
-[33] Truth alone is pleasing.
-
-[34]
-
- Wilt thou have music? hark, Apollo plays,
- And twenty _caged_ nightingales shall sing.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-[35]
-
- Not Hybla’s sweets, nor Naples devoloons,
- Nor grapes which hide the hill with rich festoons;
- Nor fat Bologna’s valley, have I chose;
- What is your wish then? May I speak?--_repose_.
-
-[36] Thy knowledge is nothing till other men know that thou knowest it.
-
-[37] Methinks there seems to be much slavery required from those who
-inhabit your fine free country of England.
-
-[38] In the fine cieling of Palazzo Ludovigi at Rome, the Hours which
-surround Aurora’s chariot are employed in extinguishing the Stars with
-their hands.
-
-[39] One volume of this Leonardiana is now in the private library of the
-king of England at the queen’s house in the park, preserved from Charles
-or James the First’s collection, and written with the left hand, or
-rather backwards, to be read only with the help of a mirror.
-
-[40] All so natural and pretty,--quite in the English style.
-
-[41] That is, with a heap of friends about one in this manner.
-
-[42] Oh! God keep one from that.
-
-[43] What prince makes his residence here?
-
-[44]
-
- Her studies, manners, arts, to all proclaim
- Fair Clelia’s glory, and her sex’s shame.
-
-[45]
-
- Two lords in vain unlucky Dido tries;
- One dead, she flies the land; one fled--she dies.
-
-[46] Faithful to his cares, and companionable in his studies.
-
-[47] Whoever sees thee without being smitten with extraordinary passion,
-must, I think, be incapable of loving even himself.
-
-[48] Nothing too much.
-
-[49] The lazy ox for trappings sighs.
-
-[50] Ever stormy or venemous.
-
-[51] Here’s the place to see fine diamonds.
-
-[52]
-
- What are they after all their pains,
- These thunderbolts of war?
- Mere caput mortuum that remains
- Which worms vouchsafe to spare.
-
-[53]
-
- All these have liv’d; ye too who read must die:
- Haste and be wise, the fateful minutes fly.
-
-[54] Antwerp is a noble town of Brabant, situated on the banks of the
-Scheld; frequented by most of the nations in Europe, and sumptuous in its
-buildings both public and private.
-
-[55] One--and he a bold one.
-
-
-
-
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-Years of his Life, 4th Edition, 4s. in boards.
-
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-
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-
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-[Illustration]
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Observations and Reflections Made in the
-Course of a Journey through France, Ital, by Hester Lynch Piozzi
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-
-
-
-Title: Observations and Reflections Made in the Course of a Journey through France, Italy, and Germany, Vol. II (of II)
-
-Author: Hester Lynch Piozzi
-
-Release Date: April 9, 2017 [EBook #54519]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OBSERVATIONS AND REFLECTIONS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Robert Connal and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by the
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-</pre>
-
-
-<p class="transnote">Transcriber’s Note: Mrs. Piozzi’s own manner of writing has been retained,
-including spelling and grammar that is inconsistent and perhaps unfamiliar to the modern reader.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">OBSERVATIONS <span class="smaller">AND</span> REFLECTIONS<br />
-<span class="smaller">MADE IN THE COURSE OF A</span><br />
-JOURNEY<br />
-<span class="smaller">THROUGH</span><br />
-<i>FRANCE, ITALY, <span class="smaller">AND</span> GERMANY.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/deco_line.jpg" width="300" height="20" alt="Decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">By HESTER LYNCH PIOZZI.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/deco_line.jpg" width="300" height="20" alt="Decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">IN TWO VOLUMES.<br />
-VOL. II.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/deco_line.jpg" width="300" height="20" alt="Decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">LONDON:<br />
-Printed for A. <span class="smcap">Strahan</span>; and T. <span class="smcap">Cadell</span> in the Strand.<br />
-M DCC LXXXIX.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1><span class="smcap">OBSERVATIONS and REFLECTIONS<br />
-made in a journey through</span><br />
-France, Italy, and Germany.</h1>
-
-<h2>NAPLES.</h2>
-
-<p>On the tenth day of this month we arrived
-early at Naples, for I think it was
-about two o’clock in the morning; and sure
-the providence of God preserved us, for never
-was such weather seen by me since I came into
-the world; thunder, lightning, storm at sea,
-rain and wind, contending for mastery, and
-combining to extinguish the torches bought
-to light us the last stage: Vesuvius, vomiting
-fire, and pouring torrents of red hot lava down
-its sides, was the only object visible; and
-<em>that</em> we saw plainly in the afternoon thirty
-miles off, where I asked a Franciscan friar,
-If it was the famous volcano? “Yes,” replied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-he, “that’s our mountain, which throws up
-money for us, by calling foreigners to see the
-extraordinary effects of so surprising a phænomenon.”
-The weather was quiet then,
-and we had no notion of passing such a horrible
-night; but an hour after dark, a storm
-came on, which was really dreadful to endure;
-or even look upon: the blue lightning, whose
-colour shewed the nature of the original minerals
-from which she drew her existence,
-shone round us in a broad expanse from time
-to time, and sudden darkness followed in an
-instant: no object then but the fiery river
-could be seen, till another flash discovered the
-waves tossing and breaking, at a height I
-never saw before.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing sure was ever more sublime or
-awful than our entrance into Naples at the
-dead hour we arrived, when not a whisper was
-to be heard in the streets, and not a glimpse
-of light was left to guide us, except the small
-lamp hung now and then at a high window
-before a favourite image of the Virgin.</p>
-
-<p>My poor maid had by this time nearly
-lost her wits with terror, and the French
-valet, crushed with fatigue, and covered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-with rain and sea-spray, had just life enough
-left to exclaim&mdash;“<i lang="fr">Ah, Madame! il me semble
-que nous sommes venus icy exprès pour voir la
-fin du monde</i><a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>The Ville de Londres inn was full,
-and could not accommodate our family;
-but calling up the people of the Crocelle,
-we obtained a noble apartment, the windows
-of which look full upon the celebrated
-bay which washes the wall at our
-door. Caprea lies opposite the drawing-room
-or gallery, which is magnificent; and my
-bed-chamber commands a complete view of
-the mountain, which I value more, and which
-called me the first night twenty times away
-from sleep and supper, though never so in
-want of both as at that moment surely.</p>
-
-<p>Such were my first impressions of this wonderful
-metropolis, of which I had been always
-reading summer descriptions, and had regarded
-somehow as an Hesperian garden, an earthly
-paradise, where delicacy and softness subdued
-every danger, and general sweetness captivated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-every sense;&mdash;nor have I any reason yet to
-say it will not still prove so, for though wet,
-and weary, and hungry, we wanted no fire,
-and found only inconvenience from that they
-lighted on our arrival. It was the fashion at
-Florence to struggle for a Terreno, but here
-we are all perched up one hundred and forty
-two steps from the level of the land or sea;
-large balconies, apparently well secured, give
-me every enjoyment of a prospect, which no
-repetition can render tedious: and here we
-have agreed to stay till Spring, which, I trust,
-will come out in this country as soon as the
-new year calls it.</p>
-
-<p>Our eagerness to see sights has been repressed
-at Naples only by finding every thing
-a sight; one need not stir out to look for wonders
-sure, while this amazing mountain continues
-to exhibit such various scenes of sublimity
-and beauty at exactly the distance one
-would chuse to observe it from; a distance
-which almost admits examination, and certainly
-excludes immediate fear. When in
-the silent night, however, one listens to its
-groaning; while hollow sighs, as of gigantic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-sorrow, are often heard distinctly in my apartment;
-nothing can surpass one’s sensations of
-amazement, except the consciousness that custom
-will abate their keenness: I have not,
-however, yet learned to lie quiet, when columns
-of flame, high as the mountain’s self,
-shoot from its crater into the clear atmosphere
-with a loud and violent noise; nor shall I ever
-forget the scene it presented one day to my
-astonished eyes, while a thick cloud, charged
-heavily with electric matter, passing over, met
-the fiery explosion by mere chance, and went
-off in such a manner as effectually baffles all
-verbal description, and lasted too short a time
-for a painter to seize the moment, and imitate
-its very strange effect. Monsieur de Vollaire,
-however, a native of France, long resident in
-this city, has obtained, by perpetual observation,
-a power of representing Vesuvius without
-that black shadow, which others have thought
-necessary to increase the contrast, but which
-greatly takes away all resemblance of its original.
-Upon reflection it appears to me, that
-the men most famous at London and Paris for
-performing tricks with fire have been always
-Italians in my time, and commonly Neapolitans;
-no wonder, I should think, Naples<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-would produce prodigious connoisseurs in
-this way; we have almost perpetual lightning
-of various colours, according to the
-soil from whence the vapours are exhaled;
-sometimes of a pale straw or lemon colour,
-often white like artificial flame produced by
-camphor, but oftenest blue, bright as the rays
-emitted through the coloured liquors set in
-the window of a chemist’s shop in London&mdash;and
-with such thunder!!&mdash;“For God’s sake,
-Sir,” said I to some of them, “is there no danger
-of the ships in the harbour here catching fire?
-why we should all fly up in the air directly, if
-once these flashes should communicate to the
-room where any of the vessels keep their
-powder.”&mdash;“Gunpowder, Madam!” replies
-the man, amazed; “why if St. Peter and St.
-Paul came here with gunpowder on board, we
-should soon drive them out again: don’t you
-know,” added he, “that every ship discharges
-her contents at such a place (naming it), and
-never comes into our port with a grain on
-board?”</p>
-
-<p>The palaces and churches have no share in
-one’s admiration at Naples, who scorns to depend
-on man, however mighty, however skilful,
-for <em>her</em> ornaments; while Heaven has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-bestowed on her and her <i lang="it">contorni</i> all that can
-excite astonishment, all that can impress awe.
-We have spent three or four days upon Pozzuoli
-and its environs; its cavern scooped originally
-by nature’s hand, assisted by the armies
-of Cocceius Nerva&mdash;ever tremendous, ever
-gloomy grotto!&mdash;which leads to the road that
-shews you Ischia, an old volcano, now an
-island apparently rent asunder by an earthquake,
-the division too plain to beg assistance
-from philosophy: this is commonly called the
-<i lang="it">Grotto di Posilippo</i> though; you pass through
-it to go to every place; not without flambeaux,
-if you would go safely, and avoid the
-necessity the poor are under, who, driving
-their carts through the subterranean passage,
-cry as they meet each other, to avoid jostling,
-<i lang="it">alla montagna</i>, or <i lang="it">alla marina</i>, <em>keep to the rock
-side</em>, or <em>keep to the sea side</em>. It is at the right
-hand, awhile before you enter this cavern, that
-climbing up among a heap of bushes, you find
-a hollow place, and there go down again&mdash;it is
-the tomb of Virgil; and, for other antiquities,
-I recollect nothing shewed me when at Rome
-that gave me as complete an idea how things
-were really carried on in former days, as does
-the temple of <em>Shor Apis</em> at Pozzuoli, where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-the area is exactly all it ever was; the ring
-remains where the victim was fastened to; the
-priests apartments, lavatories, &amp;c. the drains
-for carrying the beast’s blood away, all yet
-remains as perfect as it is possible. The end
-of Caligula’s bridge too, but that they say is
-not his bridge, but a mole built by some succeeding
-emperor&mdash;a madder or a wickeder it
-could not be&mdash;though here Nero bathed, and
-here he buried his mother Agrippina. Here
-are the centum camera, the prisons employed
-by that prince for the cruellest of purposes;
-and here are his country palaces reserved for
-the most odious ones: here effeminacy learned
-to subsist without delicacy or shame, hence
-honour was excluded by rapacity, and conscience
-stupefied by constant inebriation: here
-brainsick folly put nature and common sense
-upon the rack&mdash;Caligula in madness courted
-the moon to his embraces&mdash;and Sylla, satiated
-with blood, retired, and gave a premature banquet
-to those worms he had so often fed with
-the flesh of innocence: here dwelt depravity
-in various shapes, and here Pandora’s chambers
-left scarcely a <em>Hope</em> at the bottom that better
-times should come:&mdash;who can write prose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-however in such places!&mdash;let the impossibility
-of expressing my thoughts any other way excuse
-the following</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse center">VERSES.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse center">I.</div>
-<div class="verse">First of Achelous’ blood,</div>
-<div class="verse">Fairest daughter of the flood,</div>
-<div class="verse">Queen of the Sicilian sea,</div>
-<div class="verse">Beauteous, bright Parthenope!</div>
-<div class="verse">Syren sweet, whose magic force</div>
-<div class="verse">Stops the swiftest in his course;</div>
-<div class="verse">Wisdom’s self, when most severe,</div>
-<div class="verse">Longs to lend a list’ning ear,</div>
-<div class="verse">Gently dips the fearful oar,</div>
-<div class="verse">Trembling eyes the tempting shore,</div>
-<div class="verse">And sighing quits th’ enervate coast,</div>
-<div class="verse">With only half his virtue lost.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse center">II.</div>
-<div class="verse">Let thy warm, thy wond’rous clime,</div>
-<div class="verse">Animate my artless rhyme,</div>
-<div class="verse">Whilst alternate round me rise</div>
-<div class="verse">Terror, pleasure, and surprise.&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Here th’ astonish’d soul surveys</div>
-<div class="verse">Dread Vesuvius’ awful blaze,</div>
-<div class="verse">Smoke that to the sky aspires,</div>
-<div class="verse">Heavy hail of solid fires,</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-<div class="verse">Flames the fruitful fields o’erflowing,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ocean with the reflex glowing;</div>
-<div class="verse">Thunder, whose redoubled sound</div>
-<div class="verse">Echoes o’er the vaulted ground!&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Such thy glories, such the gloom</div>
-<div class="verse">That conceals thy secret tomb,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sov’reign of this enchanted sea,</div>
-<div class="verse">Where sunk thy charms, Parthenope.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse center">III.</div>
-<div class="verse">Now by the glimm’ring torch’s ray</div>
-<div class="verse">I tread Pozzuoli’s cavern’d way&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Hollow grot! that might beseem</div>
-<div class="verse">Th’ Ætnean cyclop, Polypheme:</div>
-<div class="verse">And here the bat at noonday ’bides,</div>
-<div class="verse">And here the houseless beggar hides,</div>
-<div class="verse">While the holy hermit’s voice</div>
-<div class="verse">Glads me with accustom’d noise.</div>
-<div class="verse">Now I trace, or trav’llers err,</div>
-<div class="verse">Modest Maro’s sepulchre,</div>
-<div class="verse">Where nature, sure of his intent,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Is studious to conceal</div>
-<div class="verse">That eminence he always meant</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">We should not see but feel.</div>
-<div class="verse">While Sannazarius from the steep</div>
-<div class="verse">Views, well pleas’d, the fertile deep</div>
-<div class="verse">Give life to them that seize the scaly fry,</div>
-<div class="verse">And to their poet&mdash;<em>immortality</em>.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse center">IV.</div>
-<div class="verse">Next beauteous Baia’s warm remains invite</div>
-<div class="verse">To Nero’s stoves my wond’ring sight;</div>
-<div class="verse">Where palaces and domes destroy’d</div>
-<div class="verse">Leave a flat unwholesome void:</div>
-<div class="verse">Where underneath the cooling wave,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ordain’d pollution’s fav’rite spot to lave,</div>
-<div class="verse">Now hardly heaves the stifled sigh</div>
-<div class="verse">Hot, hydropic luxury.</div>
-<div class="verse">Yet, chas’d by Heav’n’s correcting hand,</div>
-<div class="verse">Tho’ various crimes have fled the land;</div>
-<div class="verse">Tho’ brutish vice, tyrannic pow’r,</div>
-<div class="verse">No longer tread the trembling shore,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Or taint the ambient air;</div>
-<div class="verse">By destiny’s kind care arrang’d,</div>
-<div class="verse">Th’ inhabitants are scarcely chang’d;</div>
-<div class="verse">For birds obscene, and beasts of prey,</div>
-<div class="verse">That seek the night and shun the day,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Still find a dwelling there.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse center">V.</div>
-<div class="verse">If then beneath the deep profound</div>
-<div class="verse">Retires unseen the slipp’ry ground;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">If melted metals pour’d from high</div>
-<div class="verse">A verdant mountain grows by time,</div>
-<div class="verse">Where frisking kids can browze and climb,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And softer scenes supply:</div>
-<div class="verse">Let us who view the varying scene,</div>
-<div class="verse">And tread th’ instructive paths between,</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-<div class="verse">See famish’d Time his fav’rite sons devour,</div>
-<div class="verse">Fix’d for an age&mdash;then swallow’d in an hour;</div>
-<div class="verse">Let us at least be early wise,</div>
-<div class="verse">And forward walk with heav’n-fix’d eyes,</div>
-<div class="verse">Each flow’ry isle avoid, each precipice despise;</div>
-<div class="verse">Till, spite of pleasure, fear, or pain,</div>
-<div class="verse">Eternity’s firm coast we gain,</div>
-<div class="verse">Whence looking back with alter’d eye,</div>
-<div class="verse">These fleeting phantoms we’ll descry,</div>
-<div class="verse">And find alike the song and theme</div>
-<div class="verse">Was but&mdash;an empty, airy dream.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When one has exhausted all the ideas presented
-to the mind by the sight of Monte
-Nuovo, made in one night by the eruption of
-Solfa Terra, now sunk into itself and almost
-extinguished; by the lake Avernus; by the
-Phlegræan fields, where Jupiter killed the
-giants, with such thunderbolts as fell about our
-ears the other night I trust, and buried one of
-them alive under mount Ætna; when one has
-seen the Sybil’s grott, and the Elysian plains,
-and every seat of fable and of verse; when one
-has run about repeating Virgil’s verses and
-Claudian’s by turns, and handled the hot
-sand under the cool waves of Baia; when one
-has seen Cicero’s villa and Diana’s temple, and
-talked about antiquities till one is afraid of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-one’s own pedantry, and tired of every one’s
-else; it is almost time to recollect realities of
-more near interest to such of us as are not
-ashamed of being Christians, and to remember
-that it was at Pozzuoli St. Paul arrived
-after the storms he met with in these seas.
-The wind is still called here <i lang="it">Sieuroc</i>, o sia
-<i lang="it">lo vento Greco</i>; and their manner of pronouncing
-it led me to think it might possibly
-be that called in Scripture <em>Euroc</em>lydon, abbreviated
-by that grammatical figure, which lops
-off the concluding syllables. The old Pastor
-Patrobas too, who received and entertained
-the Apostle here, lies interred under the altar
-of an old church at Pozzuoli, made out of the
-remains of a temple to Jupiter, whose pillars
-are in good preservation: I was earnest to see
-the place at least, as every thing named in the
-New Testament is of true importance, but
-one meets few people of the same taste: for
-Romanists take most delight in venerating
-traditionary heroes, and Calvinists, perhaps
-too easily disgusted, desire to venerate no
-heroes at all.</p>
-
-<p>Some curious inscriptions here, to me not
-legible, shew how this poor country has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-overwhelmed by tyrants, earthquakes, Saracens!
-not to mention the Goths and Vandals,
-who however left no traces <em>but</em> desolation:
-while, as the prophet Joel says, “<cite>The ground
-was as the garden of Eden before them, and
-behind them a desolate wilderness</cite>.”</p>
-
-<p>These Mahometan invaders, less savage, but
-not less cruel, afforded at least an unwilling shelter
-in that which is now their capital, for the
-wretched remains of literature. To their
-misty envelopement of science, fatigued with
-struggling against perpetual suffocation, succeeded
-imposture, barbarism, and credulity;
-with superstition at their head, who still
-keeps her footing in this country: and inspires
-such veneration for St. Januarius, his
-name, his blood, his statue, &amp;c. that the
-Neapolitans, who are famous for blasphemous
-oaths, and a facility of taking the most sacred
-words into their mouths on every, and I may
-say, on <em>no</em> occasion, are never heard to repeat
-<em>his</em> name without pulling off their hat, or
-making some reverential sign of worship at
-the moment. And I have seen Italians from
-other states greatly shocked at the grossness of
-these their unenlightened neighbours, particularly
-the half-Indian custom of burning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-figures upon their skins with gunpowder:
-these figures, large, and oddly displayed too,
-according to the coarse notions of the wearer.</p>
-
-<p>As the weather is exceedingly warm, and
-there is little need of clothing for comfort, our
-Lazaroni have small care about appearances,
-and go with a vast deal of their persons uncovered,
-except by these strange ornaments.
-The man who rows you about this lovely
-bay, has perhaps the angel Raphael, or the
-blessed Virgin Mary, delineated on one
-brawny sun-burnt leg, the saint of the town
-upon the other: his arms represent the Glory,
-or the seven spirits of God, or some strange
-things, while a brass medal hangs from his
-neck, expressive of his favourite martyr: whom
-they confidently affirm is so madly venerated
-by these poor uninstructed mortals, that when
-the mountain burns, or any great disaster
-threatens them, they beg of our Saviour to
-speak to St. Januarius in their behalf, and
-intreat him not to refuse them his assistance.
-Now though all this was told me by friends
-of the Romish persuasion; and told me too
-with a just horror of the superstitious folly;
-I think my remarks and inferences were not
-agreeable to them, when expressing my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-notion that it was only a relick of the adoration
-originally paid to Janus in Italy, where
-the ground yielding up its frost to the soft
-breath of the new year, is not ill-typified by
-the liquefaction of the blood; a ceremony
-which has succeeded to various Pagan ones
-celebrated by Ovid in the first book of his
-Fasti. We know from history too, that perfumes
-were offered in <em>January</em> always, to
-signify the renovation of <em>sweets</em>; and this
-was so necessary, that I think Tacitus tells us
-Thrasea was first impeached for absence at
-the time of the new year, when in <em>Janus</em>’s
-presence, &amp;c. good wishes were formed for
-the Emperor’s felicity; and no word of ill
-omen was to be pronounced.&mdash;<i lang="la">Cautum erat
-apud Romanos ne quod mali ominis verbum
-calendis <em class="antiqua">Januariis</em> efferretur</i>; says Pliny:
-and the <i lang="la">strenæ</i> or new-years gifts, called
-now by the French “les <i lang="fr">etrennes</i>,” and
-practised by Lutherans as well as Romanists,
-is the self-same veneration of old <em>Janus</em>, if
-fairly traced up to Tatius King of the Sabines,
-who sought a laurel bough plucked
-from the grove of the goddess <em>Strenia</em>, or
-<em>Strenua</em>, and presented it to his favourites on
-the first of <em>January</em>, from whence the custom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-arose; and Symmachus, in his tenth book,
-twenty-eighth epistle, mentions it clearly
-when writing to the Emperors Theodosius
-and Arcadius&mdash;“<i lang="la"><em class="antiqua">Strenuarum</em> usus adolevit
-auctoritate Tatii regis, qui verbenas felicis
-arboris ex luco Strenuæ anni</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Octavius Cæsar took the name of Augustus
-on the first of January in Janus’s temple, by
-Plancus’s advice, as a lucky day; and I suppose
-our new-year’s ode, sung before the
-King of England, may be derived from the
-same source. The old Fathers of the Church
-declaimed aloud against the custom of new-years
-gifts, because they considered them as
-of Pagan original. So much for <i lang="fr">Les Etrennes</i>.</p>
-
-<p>As to <em>St. Januarius</em>, there certainly was
-a martyr of that name at Naples, and to him was
-transferred much of the veneration originally
-bestowed on the deity from whom he was
-probably named. One need not however wander
-round the world with Banks and Solander,
-or stare so at the accounts given us in Cook’s
-Voyages of <em>tattowed Indians</em>, when Naples
-will shew one the effects of a like operation,
-very <em>very</em> little better executed, on the broad
-shoulders of numberless Lazaroni; and of this
-there is no need to examine books for information,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-he who runs over the Chiaja may
-read in large characters the gross superstition
-of the Napolitani, who have no inclination
-to lose their old classical character for laziness&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Et in otia natam</div>
-<div class="verse">Parthenopen;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">says Ovid. I wonder however whether our
-people would work much surrounded by
-similar circumstances; I fancy not: Englishmen,
-poor fellows! must either work or
-starve; these folks want for nothing: a house
-would be an inconvenience to them; they
-like to sleep out of doors, and it is plain they
-have small care for clothing, as many who
-possess decent habiliments enough, I speak
-of the Lazaroni, throw almost all off till some
-holiday, or time of gala, and sit by the sea-side
-playing at moro with their fingers.</p>
-
-<p>A Florentine nobleman told me once, that
-he asked one of these fellows to carry his
-portmanteau for him, and offered him a <i lang="it">carline</i>,
-no small sum certainly to a Neapolitan,
-and rather more in proportion than an English
-shilling; he had not twenty yards to go
-with it: “<cite>Are you hungry, Master?</cite>” cries
-the fellow. “<cite>No</cite>,” replied Count Manucci,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-“<cite>but what of that?</cite>”&mdash;“<cite>Why then no more
-am I</cite>:” was the answer, “<cite>and it is too hot
-weather to carry burthens</cite>:” so turned about
-upon the other side, and lay still.</p>
-
-<p>This class of people, amounting to a number
-that terrifies one but to think on, some
-say sixty thousand souls, and experience
-confirms no less, give the city an air of
-gaiety and cheerfulness, and one cannot help
-honestly rejoicing in. The Strada del Toledo
-is one continual crowd: nothing can exceed
-the confusion to a walker, and here are little
-gigs drawn by one horse, which, without any
-bit in his mouth, but a string tied round his
-nose, tears along with inconceivable rapidity a
-small narrow gilt chair, set between the two
-wheels, and no spring to it, nor any thing
-else which can add to the weight; and this
-flying car is a kind of <i lang="it">fiacre</i> you pay so much
-for a drive in, I forget the sum.</p>
-
-<p>Horses are particularly handsome in this
-town, not so large as at Milan, but very
-beautiful and spirited; the cream-coloured
-creatures, such as draw our king’s state coach,
-are a common breed here, and shine like
-sattin: here are some too of a shining silver<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-white, wonderfully elegant; and the ladies
-upon the Corso exhibit a variety scarcely credible
-in the colour of their cattle which draw
-them: but the coaches, harness, trappings,
-&amp;c. are vastly inferior to the Milanese, whose
-liveries are often splendid; whereas the four
-or five ill-dressed strange-looking fellows that
-disgrace the Neapolitan equipages seem to be
-valued only for their number, and have very
-often much the air of Sir John Falstaff’s recruits.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday however shewed me what I
-knew not had existed&mdash;a skew-ball or pye-balled
-ass, eminently well-proportioned,
-coated like a racer in an English stud, sixteen
-hands and a half high, his colour bay and
-white in large patches, and his temper, as the
-proprietor told me, singularly docile and
-gentle. I have longed perhaps to purchase
-few things in my life more earnestly than
-this beautiful and useful animal, which I
-might have had too for two pounds fifteen
-shillings English, but dared not, lest like
-Dogberry I should have been written down
-for an ass by my merry country folks, who,
-I remember, could not let the Queen of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-England herself possess in peace a creature
-of the same kind, but handsomer still, and
-from a still hotter climate, called the Zebra.</p>
-
-<p>Apropos to quadrupeds, when Portia, in
-the Merchant of Venice, enumerates her
-lovers, she names the Neapolitan prince first;
-who, she says, does nothing, for his part, but
-talk of his horse, and makes it his greatest
-boast that he can shoe him himself. This is
-almost literally true of a nobleman here; and
-they really do not throw their pains away;
-for it is surprising to see what command they
-have their cattle in, though bits are scarcely
-used among them.</p>
-
-<p>The coat armour of Naples consists of an
-unbridled horse; and by what I can make
-out of their character, they much resemble
-him;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Qualis ubi abruptis fugit præsæpia vinclis</div>
-<div class="verse">Tandem liber æquus, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">generous and gay; headstrong and violent in
-their disposition; easy to turn, but difficult<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-to stop. No authority is respected by them
-when some strong passion animates them to
-fury: yet lazily quiet, and unwilling to stir
-till accident rouses them to terror, or rage
-urges them forward to incredible exertions of
-suddenly-bestowed strength. In the eruption
-of 1779, their fears and superstitions rose to
-such a height, that they seized the French
-ambassador upon the bridge, tore him almost
-out of his carriage as he fled from Portici,
-and was met by them upon the Ponte
-della Maddalena, where they threatened him
-with instant death if he did not get out of
-his carriage, and prostrating himself before
-the statue of St. Januarius, which stands there,
-intreat his protection for the city. All this,
-however, Mons. le Comte de Clermont D’Amboise
-did not comprehend a word of; but taking
-all the money out of his pocket, threw
-it down, happily for him, at the feet of the
-figure, and pacified them at once, gaining
-time by those means to escape their vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>It was, I think, upon some other occasion
-that Sir William Hamilton’s book relates their
-unworthy treatment of the venerable Archbishop,
-who refused them the relicks with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-which they had no doubt of saving the menaced
-town; but every time Vesuvius burns
-with danger to the city, they scruple not to
-insult their Sovereign as he flies from it;
-throwing large stones after his chariot, guards,
-&amp;c.; making the insurrection, it is sure to
-occasion, more perilous, if possible, than the
-volcano itself. And last night when <i lang="it">La Montagna
-fu cattiva</i><a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>, as their expression was,
-our Laquais de Place observed that it might
-possibly be because so many hereticks and unbelievers
-had been up it the day before.
-“Oh! let us,” as King David wisely chose,
-“fall into the hands of God&mdash;not into those of
-man.”</p>
-
-<p>I wished exceedingly to purchase here the
-genuine account of Massaniello’s far-famed
-sedition and revolt, more dreadful in a certain
-way than any of the earthquakes which have
-at different times shaken this hollow-founded
-country. But my friends here tell me it was
-suppressed, and burned by the hands of the
-common executioner, with many chastisements
-beside bestowed upon the writer, who
-tried to escape, but found it more prudent
-to submit to justice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thomas Agnello was the unluckily-adapted
-name of the mad fisherman who headed the
-mob on that truly memorable occasion: but
-it is not an unusual thing here to cut off the
-first syllable, and by the figure aphæresis alter
-the appellation entirely. By that device of
-dropping the <em>to</em>, he has been called Massaniello;
-and this is one of their methods to
-render the patois of Naples as unintelligible to
-us, as if we had never seen Italy till now;
-and one is above all things tormented with
-their way of pronouncing names. Here are
-Don and Donna again at this town as at Milan
-however, because the King of Spain, or
-<i lang="it">Ré Cattolico</i>, as these people always call him,
-has still much influence; and they seem to
-think nearly as respectfully of him as of their
-own immediate sovereign, who is however
-greatly beloved among them; and so he
-ought to be, for he is the representative of
-them all. He rides and rows, and hunts the
-wild boar, and catches fish in the bay, and
-sells it in the market, as dear as he can too;
-but gives away the money they pay him for
-it, and that directly: so that no suspicion of
-meanness, or of any thing worse than a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-rough merriment can be ever attached to his
-truly-honest, open, undesigning character.</p>
-
-<p>Stories of monarchs seldom give me pleasure, who
-seldom am persuaded to give credit to
-tales told of persons few people have any
-access to, and whose behaviour towards
-those few is circumscribed within the laws of
-insipid and dull routine; but this prince lives
-among his subjects with the old Roman
-idea of a window before his bosom I believe.
-They know the worst of him is that he shoots
-at the birds, dances with the girls, eats macaroni,
-and helps himself to it with his fingers,
-and rows against the watermen in the
-bay, till one of them burst out o’bleeding at
-the nose last week, with his uncourtly efforts to
-outdo the King, who won the trifling wager
-by this accident: conquered, laughed, and
-leaped on shore amidst the acclamations of the
-populace, who huzzaed him home to the palace,
-from whence he sent double the sum he
-had won to the waterman’s wife and children,
-with other tokens of kindness. Mean
-time, while he resolves to be happy himself,
-he is equally determined to make no man
-miserable.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the Emperor and the Grand Duke
-talked to him of their new projects for reformation
-in the church, he told them he saw
-little advantage they brought into <em>their</em> states
-by these new-fangled notions; that when he
-was at Florence and Milan, the deuce a Neapolitan
-could he find in either, while his capital
-was crowded with refugees from thence;
-that in short they might do <em>their</em> way, but he
-would do his; that he had not now an enemy
-in the world, public or private; and that he
-would not make himself any for the sake of
-propagating doctrines he did not understand,
-and would not take the trouble to study: that
-he should say his prayers as he used to do,
-and had no doubt of their being heard, while
-he only begged blessings on his beloved people.
-So if these wise brothers-in-law would
-learn of him to enjoy life, instead of shortening
-it by unnecessary cares, he invited them
-to see him the next morning play a great
-match at tennis.</p>
-
-<p>The truth is, the jolly Neapolitans lead a coarse
-life, but it is an unoppressed one. Never sure
-was there in any town a greater shew of
-abundance: no settled market in any given
-place, I think, but every third shop full of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-what the French call so properly <i lang="fr">ammunition de
-Bouche</i>, while whole boars, kids and small
-calves dangle from a sort of neat scaffolding,
-all with their skins on, and make a pretty appearance.
-Poulterers hang up their animals
-in the feathers too, not lay them on boards
-plucked, as at London or Venice.</p>
-
-<p>The Strada del Toledo is at least as long as
-Oxford Road, and straight as Bond-street,
-very wide too, the houses all of stone, and at
-least eight stories high. Over the shops live
-people of fashion I am told, but the persons
-of particularly high quality have their palaces
-in other parts of the town; which town at
-last is not a large one, but full as an egg:
-and Mr. Clarke, the antiquarian, who resides
-here always, informed me that the late distresses
-in Calabria had driven many families to
-Naples this year, beside single wanderers innumerable;
-which wonderfully increased the
-daily throng one sees passing and repassing.
-To hear the Lazaroni shout and bawl about
-the streets night and day, one would really
-fancy one’s self in a semi-barbarous nation;
-and a Milanese officer, who has lived long
-among them, protested that the manners of
-the great corresponded in every respect with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-the idea given of them by the little. His account
-of female conduct, and that even in the
-very high ranks, was such as reminded me of
-Queen Oberea’s sincerity, when Sir Joseph
-Banks joked her about Otoroo. It is however
-observable, and surely very praiseworthy,
-that if the Italians are not ashamed of
-their crimes, neither are they ashamed of their
-contrition. I saw this very morning an odd
-scene at church, which, though new to <em>me</em>,
-appeared, perhaps from its frequent repetition,
-to strike no one but myself.</p>
-
-<p>A lady with a long white dress, and veiled,
-came in her carriage, which waited for her
-at the door, with her own arms upon it, and
-three servants better dressed than is common
-here, followed and put a lighted taper in her
-hand. <i lang="fr">En cet état</i>, as the French say, she
-moved slowly up the church, looking like
-Jane Shore in the last act, but not so feeble;
-and being arrived at the steps of the high
-altar, threw herself quite upon her face before
-it, remaining prostrate there at least five minutes,
-in the face of the whole congregation,
-who, equally to my amazement, neither
-stared nor sneered, neither laughed nor lamented,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-but minded their own private devotions&mdash;no
-mass was saying&mdash;till the lady
-rose, kissed the steps, and bathed them with
-her tears, mingled with sobs of no affected
-or hypocritical penitence I am sure. Retiring
-afterwards to her own seat, where she waited
-with others the commencement of the sacred
-office, having extinguished her candle, and apparently
-lighted her heart; I felt mine quite
-penetrated by her behaviour, and fancied her
-like our first parent described by Milton in
-the same manner:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent13">To confess</div>
-<div class="verse">Humbly her faults, and pardon beg; with tears</div>
-<div class="verse">Watering the ground, and with her sighs the air</div>
-<div class="verse">Frequenting, sent from heart contrite, in sign</div>
-<div class="verse">Of sorrow unfeign’d, and humiliation meek.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Let not this story, however, mislead any
-one to think that more general decorum or
-true devotion can be found in churches of the
-Romish persuasion than in ours&mdash;quite the reverse.
-This burst of penitential piety was
-in itself an indecorous thing; but it is the
-nature and genius of the people not to mind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-small matters. Dogs are suffered to run
-about and dirty the churches all the time
-divine service is performing; while the crying
-of babies, and the most indecent methods
-taken by the women to pacify them, give one
-still juster offence. There is no treading for
-spittle and nastiness of one sort or another, in
-all the churches of Italy, whose inhabitants
-allow the filthiness of Naples, but endeavour
-to justify the disorders of other cities; though
-I do believe nothing ever equalled the Chiesa
-de Cavalieri at Pisa, in any Christian land.
-Santa Giustina at Padua, the Redentore at
-Venice, St. Peter’s at Rome, and some of the
-least frequented churches at Milan, are exceptions;
-they are kept very clean, and do not,
-by the scandalous neglect of those appointed
-to keep them, disgrace the beauty of their
-buildings.</p>
-
-<p>Here has, however, been a dreadful accident
-which puts such slight considerations out
-of one’s head. A Friar has killed a woman
-in the church just by the Crocelle inn, for
-having refused him favours he suspected she
-had granted to another. No step is taken
-though towards punishing the murderer, because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-he is <i lang="it">religioso, è di più cavaliere</i>. What
-a miracle that more such outrages are not
-daily committed in a country where profession
-of sanctity, and real high birth, are protections
-from law and justice! Surely nothing but
-perfect sobriety and great goodness of disposition
-can be alleged as a reason why worse
-is not done every day. I said so to a gentleman
-just now, who assured me the criminal
-would not escape very severe castigation; and
-that perhaps the convent would inflict such
-severities upon that gentleman as would amply
-supply the want of activity in the exertion
-of civil power.</p>
-
-<p>It is a stupid thing not to mention the
-common dress of the ordinary women here,
-which ladies likewise adopt, if they venture
-out on foot, desiring not to be known. Two
-black silk petticoats then serve entirely to conceal
-their whole figure; as when both are
-tied round their waist, one is suddenly turned
-up, and as they pull it quick over their heads,
-a loose trimming of narrow black gauze drops
-over the face, while a hook and eye fastens
-all close under the chin, and gives them an
-air not unlike our country wenches, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-throw the gown tail over their heads, to protect
-them from a summer’s shower. The holiday
-dresses mean time of the peasants round
-Naples, are very rich and cumbersome. One
-often sees a great coarse raw-boned fellow on
-a Sunday, panting for heat under a thick blue
-velvet coat comically enough; the females
-in a scarlet cloth petticoat, with a broad gold
-lace at the bottom, a jacket open before, but
-charged with heavy ornaments, and the head
-not unbecomingly dressed with an embroidered
-handkerchief from Turkey, exactly as one
-sees them represented here in prints, which
-they sell dear enough, God knows; and ask,
-as I am informed by the purchasers, not twice
-or thrice, but four or five times more than
-at last they take, as indeed for every thing
-one buys here: One portrait is better, however,
-than a thousand words, when single
-figures are to be delineated; but of the Grotta
-del Cane, description gives a completer idea
-than drawing. Both are perhaps nearly unnecessary
-indeed, when speaking of a place so
-often and so accurately described. What
-surprised me most among the ceremonies of
-this extraordinary place was, that the pent up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-vapour shut in an excavation of the rock,
-should, upon opening the door, gradually
-move forwards a few yards, but not rise up
-above a foot from the surface, nor, by what
-I could observe, ever dissipate in air; I think
-we left it hovering over the favourite spot,
-when the poor cur’s nose had been forcibly
-held in it for a minute or two, but he took
-care after his recovery to keep a very judicious
-distance. Sporting with animal life is
-always highly offensive; and the fellow’s account
-that his dog was used to the operation,
-and had already gone through it eight times,
-that it did him no harm, &amp;c. I considered as
-words used merely to quiet our impatience of
-the experiment, which is infinitely more amusing
-when tried upon a lighted flambeau, extinguishing
-it most completely in a moment.
-What connection there is between flame and
-vitality, those who know more of the matter
-than I do, must expound. Certain it is, that
-many sorts of vapour are equally fatal to both;
-and where fermentation is either going forward,
-or has lately been, people accustomed
-to such matters always try with a candle whether
-the cask is approachable by man or not;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-and I once saw a terrifying accident arise in a
-great brewhouse, from the headstrong stupidity
-of a workman who would go down into
-a vat, the contents of which had lately been
-drawn off, without sending his proper præcursor
-the candle, to enquire if all was safe.
-The consequence was half expected by his
-companions, who hearing him drop off the
-steps, and fall flat to the bottom, began instantly
-hooking him up again, but there were
-no signs of life; some ran for their master,
-others for a surgeon, but we were nearest at
-hand, and recollecting what one had read of
-the recovery of dogs at Naples, by tossing
-them suddenly into the lake Agnano, we
-made the men carry their patient to the cooler,
-and plunging him over head and ears, restored
-his life, exactly in the manner of the
-Grotta del Cane experiment, which succeeded
-so completely in this fellow’s case, I remember,
-that waking after the temporary suspension,
-we had much ado to impress so insensible a
-mortal with a due sense of the danger his
-rashness had incurred.</p>
-
-<p>But it is time to tell of Herculaneum, Pompeia,
-and Portici; of a theatre, the scene of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-gaiety and pleasure, overwhelmed by torrents
-of liquid fire! the inhabitants of a whole town
-surprised by immediate and unavoidable destruction!
-Where that very town indeed was
-built with the lava produced by former eruptions,
-one would think it scarce possible that such
-calamities could be totally unexpected;&mdash;but
-no matter, life must go on, though we all know
-death is coming;&mdash;so the bread was baking in
-their ovens, the meat was smoking on their
-dishes, some of their wine already decanted for
-use, the rest in large jars (<i lang="la">amphora</i>), now
-petrified with their contents inside, and fixed
-to the walls of the cellars in which they stand.&mdash;How
-dreadful are the thoughts which such
-a sight suggests! how <em>very</em> horrible the certainty,
-that such a scene may be all acted over
-again to-morrow; and that we, who to-day
-are spectators, may become spectacles to travellers
-of a succeeding century, who mistaking
-our bones for those of the Neapolitans, may
-carry some of them to their native country
-back again perhaps; as it came into my head
-that a French gentleman was doing, when I
-saw him put a human bone into his pocket
-this morning, and told him I hoped he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-got the jaw of a Gaulish officer, instead of a
-Roman soldier, for future reflections to energize
-upon. Of all single objects offered here
-to one’s contemplation, none are more striking
-than a woman’s foot, the <em>print</em> of her foot I
-mean, taken apparently in the very act of
-running from the river of melted minerals that
-surrounded her, and which now serves as an
-intaglio to commemorate the misery it caused.
-Another melancholy proof of what needs no
-confirmation, is the impression of a sick female,
-known to be so from the <em>stole</em> she wore,
-a drapery peculiar to the sex; her bed, converted
-into a substance like plaster of Paris,
-still retains the form and covering of her who
-perished quietly upon it, without ever making
-even an effort to escape.</p>
-
-<p>That one of these towns is crushed, or
-rather buried, under loads of heavy lava, and is
-therefore difficult to disentangle, all have
-heard; that Pompeia is only lightly covered
-with pumice-stones and ashes, is new to nobody;
-it is in the power, as a Venetian gentleman
-said angrily, of an English hen and
-chickens to scratch it open in a week, though
-these lazy Neapolitans will leave it not half<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-dislodged, before a new eruption swallows all
-again.</p>
-
-<p>Our visit to Portici was more than equally
-provoking in the same way; to see deposited
-there all the antiques which are so
-curious in themselves, so <em>very</em> valuable when
-considered as specimens of ancient art, and of
-the mode of living practised in ancient Rome,
-kept at a place where I do sincerely believe
-they will be again overwhelmed and confounded
-among the king of Naples’s furniture,
-to the great torture of future antiquarians, and
-to the disgrace of present insensibility.</p>
-
-<p>The <i lang="la">triclinia</i> and <i lang="la">stibadia</i> used at supper by
-the old Romans prove the verses which our
-critics have been working at so long, to have
-been at least well explained by them, and do
-infinite honour to those who, without the advantage
-of seeing how the utensils were constructed,
-knew perfectly well their way of carrying
-on life, from their acquaintance with a
-language long since <em>dead</em>, and I am sure <em>buried</em>
-under a heap of rubbish heavier and more
-difficult to remove than all the lava heaped on
-Herculaneum; but it is a source of perpetual
-wonder, and let me add perpetual pleasure too,
-to know that Cicero, and Virgil, and Horace,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-if alive, would find their writings as well understood,
-ay and as perfectly tasted, by the
-scholars of Paris and London, as they had ever
-been by their own old literary acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of the <i lang="la">curule</i> chair was charming,
-and one thought of old Papyrius,
-his long white beard, and ivory stick with
-which he reproved the insolence of a Gaulish
-soldier, who, when Brennus entered the city,
-seeing all those venerable senators sitting in a
-row, took them for inanimate figures, and
-stroked Papyrius’s beard, to feel whether he
-was alive or no. The <i lang="la">curule</i> chair was so
-called from <i lang="la">currus</i> a chariot, and this we examined
-had holes bored in it, where it had
-been fixed to the car: I do think there is just
-such a one in the British Musæum, but that
-did not much engage my attention, so great is
-the influence of locality upon the mind. The
-way in which they decypher the old MSS.
-here likewise is pretty and curious, and requires
-infinite patience, which as far as they
-have gone has not been well repaid; the
-operation <i lang="la">laboriosius est quam Sibyllæ folia colligere</i><a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>,
-to use the words of Politian, whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-right name I learned at Florence to be <i lang="it">Messer
-Angelo di Monte Pulciano</i>.</p>
-
-<p>May not, however, a more important consequence
-than any yet mentioned be found
-deducible from what we have seen this day?
-for if <em>Jesus Christ</em> condescended to use the
-Roman, or commonly adopted custom of supping
-on a <i lang="la">triclinium</i> (as it is plain he did by
-the recumbent posture of St. John), when
-eating the Passover for the last time with his
-disciples at Jerusalem; that sect of Christians
-called Romanists ought sure to be the <em>last</em>,
-not <em>first</em>, to exclude from salvation all such of
-their brethren as do not receive the Lord’s
-Supper precisely in <em>their way</em>; when nothing
-can be clearer, from our blessed Saviour’s example,
-than that he thought old forms, if
-laudable, not necessary or essential to the well-performing
-a devotional rite; seeing that to
-eat the Passover according to original institution,
-those who communicated were bound to
-take it <em>standing</em>, and with a staff in their hands
-beside as expressive of more haste.</p>
-
-<p>The Christmas season here at Naples is very
-pleasingly observed; the Italians are peculiarly
-ingenious in adorning their shops I think, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-setting out their wares; every grocer, fruiterer,
-&amp;c. now mingles orange, and lemon,
-and myrtle leaves, among the goods exposed
-at his door, as we do greens in the churches
-of England, but with infinitely more taste; and
-this device produces a very fine effect upon the
-whole, as one drives along <i lang="it">la Strada del Toledo</i>,
-which all morning looks showy from these
-decorations, and all evening splendid from the
-profusion of torches, flambeaux, &amp;c. that
-shine with less regularity indeed, but with
-more lustre and greater appearance of expensive
-gaiety, than our neat, clean, steady London
-lamps. Some odd, pretty, moveable coffee-houses
-too, or lemonade-shops, set on wheels,
-and adorned, according to the possessor’s taste,
-with gilding, painting, &amp;c. and covered with
-ices, orgeats, and other refreshments, as in
-emulation each of the other, and in a strange
-variety of shapes and forms too, exquisitely
-well imagined for the most part,&mdash;help forward
-the finery of Naples exceedingly: I
-have counted thirty of these <i lang="it">galante</i> shops on
-each side the street, which, with their necessary
-illuminations, make a brilliant figure by candle-light,
-till twelve o’clock, when all the show is
-over, and every body put out their lights and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-quietly lie down to rest. Till that hour, however,
-few things can exceed the tumultuous
-merriment of Naples, while <i lang="it">volantes</i>, or running
-footmen, dressed like tumblers before a
-show, precede all carriages of distinction, and
-endeavour to keep the people from being run
-over; yet whilst they are listening to Policinello’s
-jokes, or to some such street orator as
-Dr. Moore describes with equal truth and humour,
-they often get crushed and killed; yet,
-as Pope says,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">See some strange comfort ev’ry state attend:&mdash;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The <i lang="it">Lazaroni</i> who has his child run over by
-the coach of a man of quality, has a regular
-claim upon him for no less than twelve <i lang="it">carlines</i>
-(about five shillings English); if it is his wife
-that meets with the accident, he gets two
-<i lang="it">ducats</i>, live or die; and for the master of the
-family (house he has none) three is the regular
-compensation; and no words pass here about
-<em>trifles</em>. Truth is, human life is lower rated in
-all parts of Italy than with us; they think
-nothing of an individual, but see him perish
-(excepting by the hand of justice) as a cat
-or dog. A young man fell from our carriage
-at Milan one evening; he was not a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-servant of ours, but a friend which, after we were
-gone home, the coachman had picked up to go
-with him to the fireworks which were exhibited
-that night near the <i lang="it">Corso</i>: there was a
-crowd and an <i lang="it">embarras</i>, and the fellow tumbled
-off and died upon the spot, and nobody
-even spoke, or I believe <em>thought</em> about the
-matter, except one woman, who supposed that
-he had neglected to cross himself when he got
-up behind.</p>
-
-<p>The works of art here at Naples are neither
-very numerous nor very excellent: I have
-seen the vaunted present of porcelain intended
-for the king of England, in return for some
-cannon presented by him to this court; and
-think it more entertaining in its design than
-admirable as a manufacture. Every dish and
-plate, however, being the portrait as one may
-say of some famous Etruscan vase, or other
-antique, dug out of the ruins of these newly-discovered
-cities, with an account of its supposed
-story engraved neatly round the figure,
-makes it interesting and elegant, and worthy
-enough of one prince to accept, and another
-to bestow.</p>
-
-<p>There is a work of art, however, peculiar
-to this city, and attempted in no other; on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-which surprising sums of money are lavished
-by many of the inhabitants, who connect or
-associate to this amusement ideas of piety and
-devotion: the thing when finished is called a
-<i lang="it">presepio</i>, and is composed in honour of this
-sacred season, after which all is taken to
-pieces, and arranged after a different manner
-next year. In many houses a room, in some
-a whole suite of apartments, in others the terrace
-upon the house-top, is dedicated to this
-very uncommon show; consisting of a miniature
-representation in sycamore wood, properly
-coloured, of the house at Bethlehem,
-with the blessed Virgin, St. Joseph, and our
-Saviour in the manger, with attendant angels,
-&amp;c. as in pictures of the nativity; the
-figures are about six inches high, and dressed
-with the most exact propriety. This however,
-though the principal thing intended to
-attract spectators’ notice, is kept back, so that
-sometimes I scarcely saw it at all; while a general
-and excellent landscape, with figures of
-men at work, women dressing dinner, a
-long road in real gravel, with rocks, hills,
-rivers, cattle, camels, every thing that can be
-imagined, fill the other rooms, so happily disposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-too for the most part, the light introduced
-so artfully, the perspective kept so surprisingly!&mdash;one
-wonders and cries out, it is
-certainly but a baby-house at best; yet managed
-by people whose heads naturally turned
-towards architecture and design, give them
-power thus to defy a traveller not to feel delighted
-with the general effect; while if every
-single figure is not capitally executed, and
-nicely expressed beside, the proprietor is truly
-miserable, and will cut a new cow, or vary the
-horse’s attitude, against next Christmas <i lang="fr">coûte
-qui coûte</i>: and perhaps I should not have said
-so much about the matter, if there had not
-been shewn me within this last week, <i lang="it">presepios</i>
-which have cost their possessors fifteen hundred
-or two thousand English pounds; and, rather
-than relinquish or sell them, many families have
-gone to ruin: I have wrote the sums down in
-letters, not figures, for fear of the possibility of
-a mistake. One of these playthings had the
-journey of the three kings represented in it,
-and the presents were all of real gold and
-silver finely worked; nothing could be better
-or more livelily finished.&mdash;“But, Sir,” said I,
-“why do you dress up one of the Wise Men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-with a turban and <em>crescent</em>, six hundred years
-before the birth of Mahomet, who first put
-that mark in the forehead of his followers?
-The eastern Magi were not <em>Turks</em>; this is a
-breach of <em>costume</em>.” My gentleman paused,
-and thanked me; said he would enquire if
-there was nothing heretical in the objection;
-and if all was right, it should be changed
-next year without fail.</p>
-
-<p>A young lady here of English parents,
-just ten years old, asked me, very pertinently,
-“Why this pretty sight was called a <em>Presepio</em>?”
-but said she suddenly, answering
-herself, “I suppose it is because it is <em>preceptive</em>:”
-such a mistake was more valuable
-than knowledge, and gave me great esteem
-of her understanding; the little girl’s name
-was Zaffory.</p>
-
-<p>The King’s <i lang="fr">menagerie</i> is neither rich in
-animals, nor particularly well kept: I wonder
-a man of his character and disposition
-should not delight in possessing a very fine
-one. The bears however were as tame as
-lapdogs; there was a wolf too, larger than
-ever I saw a wolf, and an elephant that played
-a hundred tricks at the command of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-keeper, little less a beast than he; but as
-Pope says, after Horace,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Let bear or elephant be e’er so white,</div>
-<div class="verse">The people sure, the people are the sight.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Let us then tell about the two assemblies,
-<i lang="it">o sia conversazioni</i>, where one goes in search
-of amusement as to the rooms of Bath or
-Tunbridge exactly; only that one of these
-places is devoted to the <i lang="it">nobiltà</i>, the other is
-called <i lang="it">de’ buoni amici</i>; and such is the state of
-subordination in this country, that though
-the great people may come among the little
-ones, and be sure of the grossest adulation,
-a merchant’s wife, shining in diamonds,
-being obliged to stand up reverentially before
-the chair of a countess, who does her the
-honour to speak to her; the poor <i lang="it">amici</i> are
-totally excluded from the subscription of the
-nobles, nor dare even to return the salutation
-of a superior, should a good-natured person
-of that rank be tempted, from frequently seeing
-them at the rooms, to give them a kind
-nod in the street or elsewhere. All this seems
-comical enough to us, and I had much ado
-to look grave, while a beautiful and well-educated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-wife of a rich banker here, confessed
-herself not fit company for an ignorant mean-looking
-woman of quality. But though such
-unintelligible doctrines make one for a moment
-ashamed both of one’s sex and species,
-that lady’s knowledge of various languages,
-her numerous accomplishments in a thousand
-methods of passing time away with innocent
-elegance, and a sort of studied address never
-observed in Italy before, gave me infinite
-delight in her society, and daily increased
-my suspicion that she was a foreigner, till
-nearer intimacy discovered her a German
-Lutheran, with a singular head of thick
-blonde hair, so unlike those I see around me.
-We grew daily better acquainted, and she
-shewed me&mdash;but not indignantly at all&mdash;some
-ladies from the higher assembly sitting among
-<em>these</em>, very low dressed indeed, a knotting-bag
-and counters in their lap, to shew their
-contempt of the company; while such as
-spoke to them stood before their seat, like
-children before a governess in England, as
-long as the conversation lasted.</p>
-
-<p>I inquired if the men confined their addresses
-wholly to their own rank? She said,
-beauty often broke the barrier, and when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-a pretty woman of the second rank got a
-<i lang="it">cavalier servente</i> of the first, much happiness
-and much distinction was the consequence:
-but alas! he will not even <em>try</em> to push her up
-among the people of fashion, and when he
-meets any is sure to look ashamed of his
-mistress; so that her felicity can consist only
-in triumphing over equals, for to rival a
-superior is here an impossibility.</p>
-
-<p>Our Duke and Dutchess of Cumberland
-have made all Naples adore them though, by
-going richly dressed, and behaving with infinite
-courtesy and good-humour, at an assembly
-or ball given in the <em>lower rooms</em>, as
-the English comically call them. A young
-Palermitan prince applauded them for it exceedingly;
-so I took the liberty to express
-my wonder. “Oh,” replied he, “we are not
-ignorant how much English manners differ
-from our own: I have already, though but
-just eighteen years old, as sovereign of my
-own state, under the King of both Sicilies,
-condemned a man to death <em>because he was a
-rascal</em>, but the law and the people govern
-in England I know.” My desire of hearing
-about Sicily, which we could not contrive to
-visit, made me happy to cultivate Prince<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-Ventimiglia’s acquaintance; he was very
-studious, very learned of his age, and uncommonly
-clever: told me of the antiquities
-his island had to boast, with great intelligence,
-and a surprising knowledge of ancient
-history.</p>
-
-<p>We wished to have made a party to go in
-the same company to Pæstum, but my cowardice
-kept me at home, so bad was the account
-of the roads and accommodation; though
-Abate Bianconi of Milan, for whom I have so
-much esteem, bid me remember to look at the
-buildings there attentively; adding, that they
-were better worth our observation than all
-the boasted antiquities at Rome; “as they
-had seen (said he) the original foundation
-of her empire, and outlived its decay: that
-they had seen her second birth too, and
-power under some of her pontiffs over all
-Europe about six or seven centuries ago; and
-that they would now probably remain till all
-<em>that</em> was likewise abolished, with only slight
-traces left behind to shew that <i lang="la">fuimus</i>, &amp;c.”</p>
-
-<p>How mortifying it is to go home and never
-see this Pæstum! Prince Ventimiglia went
-there with Mr. Cox; he professes his intention
-soon to visit England, concerning the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-manners and customs of which he is very inquisitive,
-and not ill-versed in the language;
-but books drop oddly into people’s hands:
-This gentleman commended Ambrose Philips’s
-Pastorals, and I remember the Florentines
-seemed strangely impressed with the merit
-of the other Philips as a poet. Bonducci has
-translated his Cyder, and calls him <em>emulous
-of Milton</em>, in good time! but it is difficult
-to distinguish jest from earnest in a foreign
-language.</p>
-
-<p>I will not, if I can help it, lose sight of
-our Sicilian however, till I have made him
-tell me something about Dionysius’s Ear,
-about the eruptions of Ætna, and the <i lang="it">Castagno
-a cento cavalli</i>, which, he protests, is
-not magnified by Brydone.</p>
-
-<p>It is wonderfully mortifying to think how
-little information after all can be obtained of
-any thing new or any thing strange, though
-so far from one’s own country. What I
-picked up most curious and diverting from
-our conversation, was his expression of surprise,
-when at our house one day he read a
-letter from his mother, telling him that such
-a lady, naming her, remained still unmarried,
-and even unbetrothed, though now past ten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-years old. “She will,” said I, “perhaps
-break through old customs, and chuse for
-herself, as she is an orphan, and has no one
-whom she need consult.”&mdash;“Impossible,
-Madam!” was the reply.&mdash;“But tell me,
-Prince, for information’s sake, if such a lady,
-this girl for example, should venture to
-assert the rights of humanity, and make a
-choice somewhat unusual, <em>what would come
-of it?</em>”&mdash;“Why nothing in the world would
-come of it,” answered he; “the lass would be
-immediately at liberty again, for no man so
-circumstanced could be permitted to leave the
-country <em>alive</em> you know, nor would her folly
-benefit his family at all, as her estate would
-be immediately adjudged to the next heir.
-No person of inferior rank in our country
-would therefore, unless absolutely mad, set
-his life to hazard for the sake of a frolic, the
-event of which is so well known beforehand;&mdash;less
-still, because, if <em>love</em> be in the
-case, all <em>personal attachment</em> may be fully
-gratified, only let her but be once legally
-married to a man every way her equal.”
-Could one help recollecting Fielding’s song in
-the Virgin unmasked? who says,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">For now I’ve found out that as Michaelmas day</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Is still the forerunner of Lammas;</div>
-<div class="verse">So wedding another is just the right way</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">To get at my dear Mr. Thomas.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I will mention another talk I had with a
-Sicilian lady. We met at the house of the
-Swedish minister, Monsieur André, uncle to
-the lamented officer who perished in our sovereign’s
-service in America; and while the
-rest of the company were entertaining themselves
-with cards and music, I began laughing
-in myself at hearing the gentleman and lady
-who sat next <em>me</em>, called by others <em>Don Raphael</em>
-and <em>Donna Camilla</em>, because those two
-names bring Gil Blas into one’s head. Their
-agreeable and interesting conversation however
-soon gave my mind a more serious turn
-when discoursing on the liberal premiums now
-offered by the King of Naples to those who
-are willing to rebuild and repeople Messina.
-Donna Camilla politely introduced me to a
-very sick but pleasing-looking lady, who she
-said was going to return thither: at which
-<em>she</em>, starting, cried, “Oh God forbid, my
-dear friend!” in an accent that made me think
-she had already suffered something from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-concussions that overwhelmed that city in the
-year 1783. Her inviting manner, her soft
-and interesting eyes, whose languid glances
-seemed to shew beauty sunk in sorrow, and
-spirit oppressed by calamity, engaged my utmost
-attention, while Don Raphael pressed her
-to indulge the foreigner’s curiosity with some
-particulars of the distresses she had shared.
-Her own feelings were all she could relate she
-said&mdash;and those confusedly. “You see that
-girl there,” pointing to a child about seven or
-eight years old, who stood listening to the harpsichord:
-“she escaped! I cannot, for my soul,
-guess how, for we were not together at the
-time.”&mdash;“Where were <em>you</em>, madam, at the moment
-of the fatal accident?”&mdash;“Who? <em>me</em>?” and
-her eyes lighted up with recollected terror: “I
-was in the nursery with my maid, employed in
-taking stains out of some Brussels lace upon
-a brazier; two babies, neither of them four
-years old, playing in the room. The eldest
-boy, dear lad! had just left us, and was in
-his father’s country-house. The day grew
-<em>so</em> dark all on a sudden, and the brazier&mdash;Oh,
-Lord Jesus! I felt the brazier slide from me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-and saw it run down the long room on its
-three legs. The maid screamed, and I shut
-my eyes and knelt at a chair. We thought
-all over; but my husband came, and snatching
-me up, cried, <em>run, run</em>.&mdash;I know not
-how nor where, but all amongst falling
-houses it was, and people shrieked so, and
-there was <em>such</em> a noise! My poor son! he
-was fifteen years old; he tried to hold me
-fast in the crowd. I remember kissing <em>him</em>:
-Dear lad, dear lad! I said. I could speak <em>just
-then</em>: but the throng at the gate! Oh that
-gate! Thousands at once! ay, thousands!
-thousands at once: and my poor old confessor
-too! I knew him: I threw my arms
-about his aged neck. <i lang="it">Padre mio!</i> said I&mdash;<i lang="it">Padre
-mio!</i> Down he dropt, a great stone
-struck his shoulder; I saw it coming, and my
-boy pulled me: he saved my life, dear, dear
-lad! But the crash of the gate, the screams
-of the people, the heat&mdash;Oh such a heat! I
-felt no more on’t though; I saw no more on’t;
-I waked in bed, this girl by me, and her father
-giving me cordials. We were on shipboard,
-they told me, coming to Naples to my brother’s
-house here; and do you think I’ll
-ever go back <em>there</em> again? No, no; that’s a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-curst place; I lost my son in it. <em>Never, never</em>
-will I see it more! All my friends try to persuade
-me, but the sight of it would do my
-business. If my poor boy were alive indeed!
-but <em>he!</em> ah, poor dear lad! he loved his mother;
-he held <em>me</em> fast&mdash;No, no, I’ll never see
-that place again: God has cursed it <em>now</em>; I
-am sure he has.”</p>
-
-<p>A narrative so melancholy, so tender, and
-so true, could not fail of its effect. I ran for
-refuge to the harpsichord, where a lady was
-singing divinely. I could not listen though:
-<em>her</em> grateful sweetness who told the dismal
-story, followed me thither: she had seen my
-ill-suppressed tears, and followed to embrace
-me. The tale she had told saddened my heart,
-and the news we heard returning to the Crocelle
-did not contribute to lighten its weight,
-while an amiable young Englishman, who
-had long lain ill there, was now breathing
-his last, far from his friends, his country, or
-their customs; all easily dispensed with, perhaps
-derided, during the bustle of a journey,
-and in the madness of superfluous health; but
-sure to be sighed after, when life’s last twilight
-shuts in precipitately closer and closer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-round a man, and leaves him only the nearer
-objects to repose and dwell on.</p>
-
-<p>Such was Captain &mdash;&mdash;’s situation! he had
-none but a foreign servant with him. We
-thought it might sooth him to hear “<cite>Can I
-do any thing for you, Sir?</cite>” in an English
-voice: so I sent my maid: he had no commands
-he said; he could not eat the jelly she
-had made him; he wished some clergyman
-could be found that he might speak to: such
-a one was vainly enquired for, till it was discovered
-that ill-health had driven Mr. Mentze
-to Naples, who kindly administered the last
-consolation a Christian can receive; and heard
-the next day, when confined himself to bed,
-of his countryman’s being properly thrust
-by the banker into the <i lang="it">Buco Protestante</i>; so
-they contemptuously call a dirty garden one
-drives by in this town, where not less than a
-hundred people, small and great, from our
-island, annually resort, leaving fifty or sixty
-thousand pounds behind them at a moderate
-computation; though if their bodies are obliged
-to take <em>perpetual</em> apartments here, no
-better place has been hitherto provided for
-them than this kitchen ground; on which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-grow cabbages, cauliflowers, &amp;c. sold to their
-country folks for double price I trow, the remaining
-part of the season.</p>
-
-<p>Well! well! if the Neapolitans do bury
-Christians like dogs, they make some singular
-compensations we will confess, by nursing dogs
-like Christians. A very veracious man informed
-me yester morning, that his poor
-wife was half broken-hearted at hearing such
-a Countess’s dog was run over; “for,” said
-he, “having suckled the pretty creature herself,
-she loved it like one of her children.”
-I bid him repeat the circumstance, that no
-mistake might be made: he did so; but seeing
-me look shocked, or ashamed, or something
-he did not like,&mdash;“Why, madam,” said
-the fellow, “it is a common thing enough
-for ordinary men’s wives to suckle the lapdogs
-of ladies of quality:” adding, that they
-were paid for their milk, and he saw no harm
-in gratifying one’s <em>superiors</em>. As I was disposed
-to see nothing <em>but</em> harm in disputing
-with such a competitor, our conference finished
-soon; but the fact is certain.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed few things can be foolisher than to
-debate the propriety of customs one is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-bound to observe or comply with. If you
-dislike them, the remedy is easy; turn yours
-and your horses heads the other way.</p>
-
-<p class="right">20th January 1786.</p>
-
-<p>Here are the most excellent, the most incomparable
-fish I ever eat; red mullets, large
-as our maycril, and of singularly high flavour;
-besides the calamaro, or ink-fish, a
-dainty worthy of imperial luxury; almond
-and even apple trees in blossom, to delight
-those who can be paid for coarse manners and
-confined notions by the beauties of a brilliant
-climate. Here are all the hedges in blow as
-you drive towards Pozzuoli, and a snow of
-white May-flowers clustering round Virgil’s
-tomb. So strong was the sun’s heat this morning,
-even before eleven o’clock, that I carried
-an umbrella to defend me from his rays, as we
-sauntered about the walks, which are spacious
-and elegant, laid out much in the style of
-St. James’s Park, but with the sea on one side
-of you, the broad street, called Chiaja, on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-other. What trees are planted there however,
-either do not grow up so as to afford shade,
-or else they cut them, and trim them about
-to make them in pretty shapes forsooth, as we
-did in England half a century ago.</p>
-
-<p>Be this as it will, the vaunted view from the
-castle of St. Elmo, though much more deeply
-<em>interesting</em>, is in consequence of this defect less
-<em>naturally</em> pleasing than the prospect from Lomellino’s
-villa near Genoa, or Lord Clifford’s
-park, called King’s Weston, in Somersetshire;
-those two places being, in point of mere situation,
-possessed of beauties hitherto unrivalled
-by any thing I have seen. Nor does the steady
-regularity of this Mediterranean sea make me
-inclined to prefer it to our more capricious or
-rather active channel. Sea views have at best
-too little variety, and when the flux and reflux
-of the tide are taken away from one, there remains
-only rough and smooth: whereas the
-hope which its ebb and flow keep constantly
-renovating, serves to animate, and a little
-change the course of one’s ideas, just as its
-swelling and sinking is of use, to purify in
-some degree, and keep the whole from stagnation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I made inquiry after the old story of Nicola
-Pesce, told by Kircher, and sweetly
-brought back to all our memories by Goldsmith,
-who, as Dr. Johnson said of him,
-touched nothing that he did not likewise
-adorn; but I could gain no addition to what
-we have already heard. That there was such
-a man is certain, who, though become nearly
-amphibious by living constantly in the water,
-only coming sometimes on shore for sleep and
-refreshment, suffered avarice to be his ruin,
-leaping voluntarily into the Gulph of Charybdis
-to fetch out a gold cup thrown in thither to
-tempt him&mdash;what could a gold cup have done
-one would wonder for Nicola Pesce?&mdash;yet
-knowing the dangers of the place, he braved
-them all it seems for this bright reward; and
-was supposed to be devoured by one of the
-polypus fish, who, sticking close to the rocks,
-extend their arms for prey. When I expressed
-my indignation that he should so perish;
-“He forgot perhaps,” said one present,
-“to recommend himself to Santo Gennaro.”</p>
-
-<p>The castle on this hill, called the Castel St.
-Elmo, would be much my comfort did I fix
-at Naples; for here are eight thousand soldiers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-constantly kept, to secure the city from sudden
-insurrection; his majesty most wisely
-trusting their command only to Spanish or
-German officers, or some few gentlemen from
-the northern states of Italy, that no personal
-tenderness for any in the town below may intervene,
-if occasion for sudden severity should
-arise. We went to-day and saw their garrison,
-comfortably and even elegantly kept; and
-I was wicked enough to rejoice that the soldiers
-were never, but with the very utmost
-difficulty, permitted to go among the towns-men
-for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>To-morrow we mount the Volcano, whose
-present peaceful disposition has tempted us to
-inspect it more nearly. Though it appears
-little less than presumption thus to profane
-with eyes of examination the favourite alembic
-of nature, while the great work of projection
-is carrying on; guarded as all its secret
-caverns are too with every contradiction; snow
-and flame! solid bodies heated into liquefaction,
-and rolling gently down one of its sides;
-while fluids congeal and harden into ice on
-the other; nothing can exceed the curiosity
-of its appearance, now the lava is less rapid,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-and stiffens as it flows; stiffens too in ridges
-very surprisingly, and gains an odd aspect, not
-unlike the pasteboard waves representing sea
-at a theatre, but black, because this year’s
-eruption has been mingled with coal. The
-connoisseurs here know the different degrees,
-dates, and shades of lava to a perfection that amazes
-one; and Sir William Hamilton’s courage,
-learning, and perfect skill in these matters, is
-more people’s theme here than the Volcano
-itself. Bartolomeo, the Cyclop of Vesuvius as
-he is called, studies its effects and operations
-too with much attention and philosophical exactness,
-relating the adventures he has had
-with our minister on the mountain to every
-Englishman that goes up, with great success.
-The way one climbs is by tying a broad sash
-with long ends round this Bartolomeo, letting
-him walk before one, and holding it fast. As
-far as the Hermitage there is no great difficulty,
-and to that place some chuse to ride an
-ass, but I thought walking safer; and there
-you are sure of welcome and refreshment
-from the poor good old man, who sets up a
-little cross wherever the fire has stopt near his
-cell; shews you the place with a sort of polite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-solemnity that impresses, spreads his scanty
-provisions before you kindly, and tells the past
-and present state of the eruption accurately,
-inviting you to partake of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">His rushy couch, his frugal fare,</div>
-<div class="verse">His blessing and repose.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Goldsmith.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This Hermit is a Frenchman. <i lang="fr">J’ai dansé
-dans mon lit tans de fois</i><a name="FNanchor_5" id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>, said he: the expression
-was not sublime when speaking of an
-earthquake, to be sure; I looked among his
-books, however, and found Bruyere. “Would
-not the Duc de Rochefoucault have done better?”
-said I. “Did I never see you before, Madam?”
-said he; “yes, sure I have, and dressed
-you too, when I was a hair-dresser in London,
-and lived with Mons. Martinant, and I dressed
-pretty Miss Wynne too in the same street.
-<i lang="fr">Vit’elle encore? Vit’elle encore?</i><a name="FNanchor_6" id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> Ah I am old
-now,” continued he; “I remember when black
-pins first came up.” This was charming, and in
-such an unexpected way, I could hardly prevail
-upon myself ever to leave the spot; but
-Mrs. Greatheed having been quite to the crater’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-edge with her only son, a baby of four
-years old; shame rather than inclination urged
-me forward; I asked the little boy what
-he had seen; I saw the chimney, replied he,
-and it was on fire, but I liked the elephant
-better.</p>
-
-<p>That the situation of the crater changed in
-this last eruption is of little consequence; it
-will change and change again I suppose. The
-wonder is, that nobody gets killed by venturing
-so near, while red-hot stones are flying
-about them so. The Bishop of Derry did
-very near get his arm broke; and the Italians
-are always recounting the exploits of these
-rash Britons who look into the crater, and
-carry their wives and children up to the top;
-while we are, with equal justice, amazed at
-the courageous Neapolitans, who build little
-snug villages and dwell with as much confidence
-at the foot of Vesuvius, as our people
-do in Paddington or Hornsey. When I enquired
-of an inhabitant of these houses how
-she managed, and whether she was not frighted
-when the Volcano raged, lest it should
-carry away her pretty little habitation: “Let
-it go,” said she, “we don’t mind now if it goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-to-morrow, so as we can make it answer by
-raising our vines, oranges, &amp;c. against it for
-three years, our fortune is made before the
-fourth arrives; and then if the red river comes
-we can always run away, <i lang="it">scappar via</i>, ourselves,
-and hang the property. We only desire
-three years use of the mountain as a hot wall
-or forcing-house, and then we are above the
-world, thanks be to God and St. Januarius,”
-who always comes in for a large share of their
-veneration; and this morning having heard
-that the Neapolitans still present each other
-with a cake upon New-year’s day, I began to
-hug my favourite hypothesis closer, recollecting
-the old ceremony of the wheaten cake
-seasoned with salt, and called <em>Janualis</em> in the
-Heathen days. All this however must still
-end in mere conjecture; for though the weather
-here favours one’s idea of Janus, who
-loosened the furrow and liquefied the frost, to
-which the melting our martyr’s blood might,
-without much straining of the matter, be
-made to allude; yet it must be recollected
-after all, that the miracle is not performed in
-this month but that of May, and that St. Januarius
-did certainly exist and give his life as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-testimony to the truth of our religion, in the
-third century. Can one wonder, however,
-if corruptions and mistakes should have crept
-in since? And would it not have been equal
-to a miracle had no tares sprung up in the
-field of religion, when our Saviour himself informs
-us that there is an enemy ever watching
-his opportunity to plant them?</p>
-
-<p>These dear people too at Rome and Naples
-do live so in the very hulk of ship-wrecked or
-rather foundered Paganism, have their habitation
-so at the very bottom of the cask, can it fail
-to retain the scent when the lees are scarce yet
-dried up, clean or evaporated? That an odd
-jumble of past and present days, past and present
-ideas of dignity, events, and even manner
-of portioning out their time, still confuse their
-heads, may be observed in every conversation
-with them; and when a few weeks ago we
-revisited, in company of some newly-arrived
-English friends, the old baths of Baiæ, Locrine
-lake, &amp;c. Tobias, who rowed us over,
-bid us observe the Appian way under the water,
-where indeed it appears quite clearly, even
-to the tracks of wheels on its old pavement
-made of very large stones; and seeing me perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-particularly attentive, “Yes, Madam,” said
-he, “I do assure you, that <em>Don</em> Horace and
-<em>Don</em> Virgil, of whom we hear such a deal,
-used to come from Rome to their country-seats
-here in a day, over this very road, which is
-now overflowed as you see it, by repeated
-earthquakes, but which was then so good and
-so unbroken, that if they rose early in the
-morning they could easily gallop hither against
-the <cite>Ave Maria</cite>.”</p>
-
-<p>It was very observable in our second visit
-paid to the Stuffe San Germano, that they had
-increased prodigiously in heat since mount
-Vesuvius had ceased throwing out fire, though
-at least fourteen miles from it, and a vast portion
-of the sea between them; it vexed me to
-have no thermometer again, but by what one’s
-immediate feelings could inform us, there
-were many degrees of difference. I could not
-now bear my hand on any part of them for a
-moment. The same luckless dog was again
-produced, and again restored to life, like the
-lady in Dryden’s Fables, who is condemned
-to be hunted, killed, recovered, and set on foot
-again for the amusement of her tormentors;
-a story borrowed from the Italian.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Solfaterra burned my fingers as I plucked
-an incrustation off, which allured me by the
-beauty of its colours, and roared with more
-violence than when I was there before. This
-horrible volcano is by no means extinguished
-yet, but seems pregnant with wonders, principally
-combustible, and likely to break with
-one at every step, all the earth round it being
-hollow as a drum, and I should think of no
-great thickness neither; so plainly does one
-hear the sighings underneath, which some of
-the country people imagine to be tortured
-spirits howling with agony.</p>
-
-<p>It is supposed that Lake Agnano, where
-the dog is flung in, if the dewy grass do not
-suffice to recover him, with its humidity and
-freshness, as it often does; is but another
-crater of another volcano, long ago self-destroyed
-by scorpion-like suicide; and it is
-like enough it may be so. There are not
-wanting however those that think, or say at
-least, how a subterraneous or subaqueous
-city remains even now under that lake, but
-lies too deep for inspection.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="it">Sia come sia</i><a name="FNanchor_7" id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>, as the Italians express themselves,
-these environs are beyond all power<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-of comprehension, much more beyond all
-effort of words to describe; and as Sannazarius
-says of Venice, so I am sure it may be said
-of this place, “That man built Rome, but God
-created Naples:” for surely, surely he has honoured
-no other spot with such an accumulation
-of his wonders: nor can any thing more
-completely bring the description of the devoted
-cities mentioned in Genesis before one’s eyes,
-than these concealed fires, which there I trust
-burst up unexpectedly, and, attended by such
-lightning as only hot countries can exhibit,
-devoured all at once, nor spared the too incredulous
-inquirer, who turned her head
-back with contempt of expected judgments,
-but entangling her feet in the pursuing
-stream of lava, fixed her fast, a monument
-of bituminous salt.</p>
-
-<p>Though surrounded by such terrifying objects,
-the Neapolitans are not, I think, disposed
-to cowardly, though easily persuaded
-to devotional superstitions; they are not
-afraid of spectres or supernatural apparitions,
-but sleep contentedly and soundly in small
-rooms, made for the ancient dead, and now
-actually in the occupation of old Roman
-bodies, the catacombs belonging to whom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-are still very impressive to the fancy; and I
-have known many an English gentleman,
-who would not endure to have his courage
-impeached by <em>living wight</em>, whose imagination
-would notwithstanding have disturbed
-his slumbers not a little, had he been obliged
-to pass one night where these poor women
-sleep securely, wishing only for that money
-which travellers are not unwilling to bestow;
-and perhaps a walk among these hollow caves
-of death, these sad repositories of what was
-once animated by valour and illuminated by
-science, strike one much more than all the
-urns and lachrymatories of Portici.</p>
-
-<p>How judicious is Mr. Addison’s remark,
-“That <i lang="la">Siste Viator!</i> which has a striking effect
-among the Roman tombs placed by the
-road side, loses all its power over the mind
-when placed in the body of a church:” I
-think he might have said the same, had he
-lived to see funereal urns used as decorations
-of hackney-coach pannels, and <i lang="la">Caput Bovis</i>
-over the doors in New Tavistock-street.</p>
-
-<p>It is worth recollecting however, that the
-Dictator Sylla is supposed to be the first man
-of consequence who ordered his body to be
-burned at Rome, as till then, burial was apparently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-the fashion: his death, occasioned
-by the <i lang="la">morbus pedicularis</i>, made his interment
-difficult, and what necessity suggested to
-be done for him, grew up into a custom,
-and the sycophants of power, ever hasty to
-follow their superiors, now shewed their zeal
-even in <i lang="la">post obit</i> imitation. But while I am
-writing, more modern and less tyrannic
-claimants for respect agreeably disturb one’s
-meditations on the cruelty and oppression
-used by these wicked possessors of immortal
-though ill-gotten fame.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen of Naples is delivered, and
-we are all to make merry: the <i lang="it">Castello
-d’Uovo</i>, just under our windows, is to be
-illuminated: and from the Carthusian convent
-on the hill, to my poor solitary old
-acquaintance the hermit and hair-dresser,
-who inhabits a cleft in mount Vesuvius, all
-resolve to be happy, and to rejoice in the
-felicity of a prince that loves them.&mdash;Shouting,
-and candles, and torches, and
-coloured lamps, and Polinchinello above all
-the rest, did their best to drive forward the
-general joy, and make known the birth of
-the royal baby for many miles round the
-capital; and there was a splendid opera the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-next night, in this finest of all fine theatres,
-though that of Milan pleases me better; as I
-prefer the elegant curtains which festoon it
-over the boxes there, to our heavy gilt ornaments
-here at Naples; and their boasted
-looking-glasses, never cleaned, have no effect
-as I perceive towards helping forward the
-enchantment. A <i lang="it">festa di ballo</i>, or masquerade,
-given here however, was exceedingly
-gay, and the dresses surprisingly rich: <em>our</em>
-party, a very large one, all Italians, retired
-at one in the morning to quite the finest supper
-of its size I ever saw. Fish of various
-sorts, incomparable in their kinds, composed
-eight dishes of the first course; we had thirty-eight
-set on the table in that course, forty-nine
-in the second, with wines and dessert truly
-magnificent, for all which Mr. Piozzi protested
-to me that we paid only three shillings
-and sixpence a head English money; but for
-the truth of that he must answer: we sate
-down twenty-two persons to supper, and I
-observed there were numbers of these parties
-made in different taverns, or apartments
-adjoining to the theatre, whither after refreshment
-we returned, and danced till day-light.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The theatre is a vast building, even
-when not inhabited or set off by lights and
-company: all of stone too, like that of
-Milan; but particularly defended from fire by
-St. Anthony, who has an altar and chapel
-erected to his honour, and showily decorated
-at the door; and on Sunday night, January the
-twenty-second, there were fireworks exhibited
-in honour of himself and his <em>pig</em>, which was
-placed on the top, and illuminated with no
-small ingenuity: the fire catching hold of
-his tail first&mdash;<i lang="it">con rispetto</i>&mdash;as said our Cicerone.
-But <i lang="it">il Rè Lear è le sue tre Figlie</i> are
-advertised, and I am sick to-night and cannot
-go.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Oh what a time have I chose out, &amp;c.</div>
-<div class="verse">To wear a kerchief&mdash;would I were not sick!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">My loss however is somewhat compensated;
-for though I could not see our own Shakespear’s
-play acted at Naples, I went some days after to
-one of the charming theatres this town is entertained
-by every evening, and saw a play
-which struck me exceedingly: the plot was
-simply this&mdash;An Englishman appears, dressed
-precisely as a Quaker, his hat on his head,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-his hands in his pockets, and with a very
-pensive air says he will take that pistol, producing
-one, and shoot himself; “for,” says
-he, “the politics go wrong at home now,
-and I hate the ministerial party, so England
-does not please me; I tried France, but the
-people there laughed so about nothing, and
-sung so much out of tune, I could not bear
-France; so I went over to Holland; those
-Dutch dogs are so covetous and hard-hearted,
-they think of nothing but their money; I
-could not endure a place where one heard no
-sound in the whole country but frogs croaking
-and ducats chinking. <i lang="it">Maladetti!</i> so I
-went to Spain, where I narrowly escaped a
-sun-stroke for the sake of seeing those idle
-beggarly dons, that if they do condescend to
-cobble a man’s shoe, think they must do it
-with a sword by their side. I came here to
-Naples therefore, but ne’er a woman will
-afford one a chase, all are too easily caught
-to divert <em>me</em>, who like something in prospect;
-and though it is so fine a country, one can
-get no fox-hunting, only running after a
-wild pig. Yes, yes, I <em>must</em> shoot myself, the
-world is so <em>very</em> dull I am tired on’t.”&mdash;He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-then coolly prepares matters for the operation,
-when a young woman bursts into his apartment,
-bewails her fate a moment, and then
-faints away. Our countryman lays by his
-pistol, brings the lady to life, and having
-heard part of her story, sets her in a place
-of safety. More confusion follows; a gentleman
-enters storming with rage at a treacherous
-friend he hints at, and a false mistress;
-the Englishman gravely advises him to
-shoot himself: “No, no,” replies the warm
-Italian, “I will shoot <em>them</em> though, if I can
-catch them; but want of money hinders me
-from prosecuting the search.” <em>That</em> however
-is now instantly supplied by the generous
-Briton, who enters into their affairs, detects
-and punishes the rogue who had betrayed
-them all, settles the marriage and reconciliation
-of his new friends, adds himself something
-to the good girl’s fortune, and concludes
-the piece with saying that he has altered
-his intentions, and will think no more of
-shooting himself, while life may in all countries
-be rendered pleasant to him who will
-employ it in the service of his fellow-creatures;
-and finishes with these words, that
-<em>such are the sentiments of an Englishman</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Were this pretty story in the hands of one
-of our elegant dramatic writers, how charming
-an entertainment would it make us! Mr.
-Andrews shall have it certainly, for though
-very flattering in its intentions towards our
-countrymen, and the <em>ground-plot</em>, as a <em>surveyor</em>
-would call it, well imagined; the play
-itself was scarcely written I believe, and very
-little esteemed by the Italians; who made
-excuses for its grossness, and said that their
-theatre was at a very low ebb; and so I believe
-it is. Yet their genius is restless, and
-for ever fermenting; and although, like their
-volcano, of which every individual has a
-spark, it naturally throws out of its mouth
-more rubbish than marble; like that too,
-from some occasional eruptions we may gather
-gems stuck fast among substances of an inferior
-nature, which want only disentangling, and
-a new polish, to make them valued, even
-beyond those that reward the toil of an expecting
-miner.</p>
-
-<p>The word gems reminds one of <i lang="it">Capo di
-Monte</i>, where the king’s <i lang="it">cameos</i> are taken care
-of, and where the medallist may find perpetual
-entertainment; for I do believe nothing can
-exceed the riches of this collection; though it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-requires good eyes, great experience, and long
-study, to examine their merits with accurate
-skill, and praise them with intelligent rapture:
-of these three requisites I boast none, so cannot
-enjoy this regale as much as many others;
-but I have a mortal aversion to those who
-encumber the general progress of science by
-reciprocating contempt upon its various
-branches: the politician however, who weighs
-the interests of contending powers, or endeavours
-at the happiness of regulating some particular
-state; who studies to prevent the encroachments
-of prerogative, or impede advances
-to anarchy; hears with faint approbation,
-at best, of the discoveries made in the
-moon by modern astronomers&mdash;discoveries of
-a country where he can obtain no power, and
-settle no system of government&mdash;discoveries
-too, which can only be procured by peeping
-through glasses which few can purchase, at a
-place which no man can desire to approach.
-While the musical composer equally laments
-the fate of the fossilist, who literally buries his
-talent in the ground, and equally dead to all
-the charms of taste, the transports of true
-expression, and the delights of harmony,
-rises with the sun only to shun his beams,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-and seek in the dripping caverns of the
-earth the effects of his diminished influence.
-The medallist has had much of this scorn to
-contend with; yet he that makes it his study
-to register great events, is perhaps next to him
-who has contributed to their birth: and this
-palace displays a degree of riches <i lang="fr">en ce genre</i>,
-difficult to conceive.</p>
-
-<p>I was, however, better entertained by
-admiring the incomparable Schidonis, which
-are to be found only here: he was a
-scholar, or rather an imitator, of Correggio;
-and what he has done seems more
-the result of genius animated by observation,
-than of profound thought or minute nicety;
-he painted such ragged folks as he found upon
-the <em>Chiaja</em>; yet his pictures differ no less from
-the Dutch school, than do those which flow
-from the majestic pencil of the demi-divine
-Caracci and their followers, and for the same
-reason; their minds reflected dignity and grace,
-his eyes looked upon forms finely proportioned,
-though covered with tatters, or perhaps
-scarcely covered at all; no smugness, no
-plumpness, no <em>vulgar</em> character, ever crossed
-the fancy of Schidone; for a <i lang="it">Lazaroni</i> at
-Naples, like a sailor at Portsmouth, is no mean<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-character, though he is a coarse one; it is in
-the low Parisian, and the true-bred London
-blackguard, we must look for innate baseness,
-and near approaches to brutality; nor
-are the Hollanders wanting in originals I trust,
-when one has seen so many copies of the human
-form from their hands, divested of soul
-as I may say, and, like Prior’s Emma when
-she resolves to ramble with her outlawed lover,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">And mingle with the people’s wretched lee&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Oh line extreme of human infamy!&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Lest by her look or colour be exprest</div>
-<div class="verse">The mark of aught high-born, or ever better drest.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here is a beautiful performance too of the
-Venetian school&mdash;a resurrection of Lazarus, by
-Leandro Bassano, esteemed the best performance
-of that family, and full of merit&mdash;the merit of
-<em>character</em> I mean; while Mary’s eyes are wholly
-employed, and her mind apparently engrossed
-by the Saviour’s benignity, and almighty
-power; Martha thinks merely on the present
-exertion of them, and only watches the deliverance
-of her beloved brother from the tomb:
-the restored Lazarus too&mdash;an apparent corpse,
-re-awakened suddenly to a thousand sensations
-at once, wonder, gratitude, and affectionate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-delight!&mdash;How can one coldly sit to hear the
-connoisseurs <em>admire the folds of the drapery</em>?
-Lanfranc’s St. Michael too is a very noble
-picture; and though his angel is infinitely less
-angelic than that of Guido, his devil is a less
-ordinary and vulgar devil than that of his
-fellow-student, which somewhat too much resembles
-the common peeping satyr in a landscape;
-whereas Lanfranc’s Lucifer seems embued
-with more intellectual vices&mdash;rage, revenge,
-and ambition.</p>
-
-<p>But I am called from my observations and
-reflexions, to see what the Neapolitans call
-<i lang="it">il trionfo di Policinello</i>, a person for whom
-they profess peculiar value. Harlequin and
-Brighella here scarcely share the fondness of
-an audience, while at Venice, Milan, &amp;c.
-much pleasantry is always cast into <em>their</em> characters.</p>
-
-<p>The triumph was a pageant of prodigious
-size, set on four broad wheels like our waggons,
-but larger; it consisted of a pyramid of
-men, twenty-eight in number, placed with
-wonderful ingenuity all of one size, something
-like what one has seen exhibited at Sadler’s
-Wells, the Royal Circus, &amp;c.; dressed in one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-uniform, viz. the white habit and puce-coloured
-mask of <i lang="it">caro</i> Policinello; disposed
-too with that skill which tumblers alone can
-either display or describe; a single figure, still
-in the same dress, crowning the whole, and
-forming a point at the top, by standing fixed
-on the shoulders of his companions, and playing
-merrily on the fiddle; while twelve oxen
-of a beautiful white colour, and trapped with
-many shining ornaments, drew the whole
-slowly over the city, amidst the acclamations
-of innumerable spectators, that followed and
-applauded the performance with shouts.</p>
-
-<p>What I have learned from this show, and
-many others of the same kind, is of no greater
-value than the derivation of <em>his name</em> who is so
-much the favourite of Naples: but from the
-mask he appears in, cut and coloured so as
-exactly to resemble a <em>flea</em>, with hook nose and
-wrinkles, like the body of that animal; his
-employment too, being ever ready to hop,
-and skip, and jump about, with affectation
-of uncommon elasticity, giving his neighbours
-a sly pinch from time to time: all these circumstances,
-added to the very intimate acquaintance
-and connection all the Neapolitans
-have with this, the least offensive of all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-innumerable insects that infest them; and,
-last of all, <em>his name</em>, which, corrupt it how we
-please, was originally <em>Pulicinello</em>; leaves me
-persuaded that the appellation is merely <em>little
-flea</em>.</p>
-
-<p>A drive to Caserta, the king’s great palace,
-not yet quite finished, carries me away from
-this important study, and leaves me little time
-to enjoy the praises due to a discovery of so
-much consequence.</p>
-
-<p>The drive perhaps pleased us better than the
-palace, which is a prodigious mass of building
-indeed, and to my eye appears to cover more
-space than proud Versailles itself; court within
-court, and quadrangle within quadrangle; it
-is an enormous bulk to be sure&mdash;not pile&mdash;for
-it is not high in proportion to the surrounding
-objects somehow; and being composed all of
-brick, presents ideas rather of squat solidity,
-than of princely magnificence. Ostentation is
-expected always to strike, as elegance is known
-to charm, the beholder; and space seldom
-fails in its immediate effect upon the mind;
-but here the <em>valley</em> (I might say <em>hole</em>) this
-house is set in, looks too little for it; and
-offends one in the same manner as the more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-beautiful buildings do at Buxton, where from
-every hill one expects to tumble down upon
-the new Crescent below. The stair-case is
-such, however, as I am persuaded no other
-palace can shew; vastly wider than any the
-French king can boast, and infinitely more
-precious with regard to the marbles which
-compose its sides. The immensity of it, however,
-though it enhances the value, does not
-do much honour to the taste of him who contrived
-it. No apartments can answer the expectations
-raised by such an approach; and
-in fact the chapel alone is worthy an ascent so
-fit for a triumphal procession, instead of a pair
-of stairs. That chapel is I confess of exquisite
-beauty and elegance; and there is a picture,
-by Mengs, of the blessed Virgin Mary’s presentation
-when a girl, that is really <i lang="fr">paitrie des
-graces</i>; it scarcely can be admired or commended
-enough, and one can scarcely prevail
-on one’s self ever to quit it. Her marriage,
-a picture on the other side, is not so
-happily imagined; but it seems as if the
-painter thought that joke too good to part
-with, that there never was a particularly excellent
-picture of a wedding; and that Poussin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-himself failed, when having represented all the
-six other sacraments so admirably, that of marriage
-has been found fault with by the connoisseurs
-of every succeeding generation.</p>
-
-<p>Well! if the palace at Caserta must be deemed
-more heavy than handsome, I fear the gardens
-must likewise be avowed to be laid out in a
-manner one would rather term savage than
-natural: all artifice is banished however: the
-king of Naples scorns petty tricks for the
-amusement of petty minds;&mdash;he turns a
-whole river down his cascade,&mdash;<em>a real one</em>;
-and if its formation is not of the first rate for
-assuming an appearance of nature, it has the
-merit of being sincerely that which others
-only pretend to be: while I am told that
-his architects are now employed in connecting
-the great stones awkwardly disposed in two
-rows down each side the torrent, with the
-very rocks and mountains among which the
-spring rises; if they effect this, their cascade
-will, so far as ever I have read or heard, be
-single in its kind.</p>
-
-<p>Van Vittelli’s aqueduct is a prodigiously
-beautiful, magnificent, and what is more, a
-useful performance: having the finest models
-of antiquity, he is said to have surpassed them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-all. Why such superb and expensive methods
-should be still used to conduct water up and
-down Italy, any more than other nations, or
-why they are not equally necessary in France
-and England, nobody informs me. Madame
-de Bocages enquired long ago, when she was
-taken to see the fountain Trevi at Rome, why
-they had no water at Paris but the Seine? I
-think the question so natural, that one wishes
-to repeat it; and one great reason, little urged
-by others, incites me to look with envy on the
-delicious and almost innumerable gushes of
-water that cool the air of Naples and of Rome,
-and pour their pellucid tides through almost
-every street of those luxurious cities: <em>it is this</em>,
-that I consider them as a preservative against
-that dreadfullest of all maladies, canine madness;
-a distemper which, notwithstanding the
-excessive heat, has here scarcely a name. Sure
-it is the plenty of drink the dogs meet at
-every turn, that must be the sole cause of a
-blessing so desirable.</p>
-
-<p>My stay has been always much shorter than
-I wished it, in every great town of Italy; but
-<em>here!</em> where numberless wonders strike the
-sense without fatiguing it, I do feel double<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-pleasure; and among all the new ideas I have
-acquired since England lessened to my sight
-upon the sea, those gained at Naples will be
-the last to quit me. The works of art may
-be found great and lovely, but the drunken
-Faun and the dying Gladiator will fade from
-one’s remembrance, and leave the glow of
-Solfaterra and the gloom of Posilippo indelibly
-impressed. Vesuvius too! that terrified
-me so when first we drove into this amazing
-town, what future images can ever obliterate
-the thrilling sensations it at first occasioned?
-Surely the sight of old friends after a tedious
-absence can alone supply the vacancy that a
-mind must feel which quits such sublime, such
-animated scenery, and experiences a sudden
-deprivation of delight, finding the bosom all
-at once unfurnished of what has yielded it for
-three swiftly-flown months, perpetual change
-of undecaying pleasures.</p>
-
-<p>To-morrow I shall take my last look at the
-Bay, and driving forward, hope at night to
-lodge at Terracina.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span class="smcap">JOURNEY from NAPLES to ROME.</span></h2>
-
-<p>The morning of the day we left our fair
-Parthenope was passed in recollecting her various
-charms: every one who leaves her carries
-off the same sensations. I have asked
-several inhabitants of other Italian States what
-they liked best in Italy except home; it was
-Naples always, dear delightful Naples! When
-I say this, I mean always to exclude those
-whose particular pursuits lead them to cities
-which contain the prize they press for. English
-people when unprejudiced express the
-like preference. Attachments formed by love
-or friendship, though they give charms to
-every place, cannot be admitted as a reason for
-commending any one above the rest. A traveller
-without candour it is vain to read; one
-might as well hope to get a just view of nature
-by looking through a coloured glass, as
-to gain a true account of foreign countries, by
-turning over pages dictated by prejudice.</p>
-
-<p>With the nobility of Naples I had no acquaintance,
-and can of course say nothing of their
-manners. Those of the middling people seem
-to be behind-hand with their neighbours; it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-is so odd that they should never yet have arrived
-at calling their money by other names
-than those of the weights, an <em>ounce</em> and a
-<em>grain</em>; the coins however are not ugly.</p>
-
-<p>The evening of the day we left this surprising
-city was spent out of its king’s dominions,
-at Terracina, which now affords one of
-the best inns in Italy; it is kept by a Frenchman,
-whose price, though high, is regulated,
-whose behaviour is agreeable, and whose suppers
-and beds are delightful. Near the spot
-where his house now stands, there was in ancient
-Pagan days a temple, erected to the memory
-of the beardless Jupiter called Anxurus,
-of which Pausanias, and I believe Scaliger too,
-take notice; though the medal of Pansa is
-<i lang="la">imago barbata, sed intonsa</i>, they tell me; and
-Statius extends himself in describing the innocence
-of Jupiter and Juno’s conversation
-and connection in their early youth. Both
-of them had statues of particular magnificence
-venerated with very peculiar ceremonies,
-erected for them in this town, however, <i lang="la">ut Anxur
-fuit quæ nunc Terracinæ sunt</i><a name="FNanchor_8" id="FNanchor_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>. The
-tenth Thebaid too speaks much <i lang="la">de templo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-sacro et Junoni puellæ, Jovis Axuro</i><a name="FNanchor_9" id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>; and
-who knows after all whether these odd circumstances
-might not be the original reason
-of Anxur’s grammatical peculiarity, well
-known to all from the line in old <cite>Propria que
-maribus</cite>,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Et genus Anxur quod dat utrumque?</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This place was founded and colonised by
-Æmilius Mamercus and Lucius Plautus, Anno
-Mundi 3725 I think; they took the town of
-Priverna, and sent each three hundred citizens
-to settle this new city, where Jupiter Anxurus
-was worshipped, as Virgil among so many
-other writers bears testimony:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Circeumque jugum, queis Jupiter Anxuris arvis</div>
-<div class="verse">Præsidet<a name="FNanchor_10" id="FNanchor_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right">7th <span class="smcap">Æneid</span>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Æmilius Mamercus was a very pious consul,
-and when he served before with Genutius his
-colleague, made himself famous for driving
-the nail into Minerva’s temple to stop the
-progress of the plague; he was therefore likely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-enough to encourage this superstitious worship
-of the beardless Jupiter.</p>
-
-<p>Some books of geography, very old ones,
-had given me reason to make enquiry after a
-poisonous fountain in the rocks near Terracina.
-My enquiries were not vain. The
-fountain still exists, and whoever drinks it
-dies; though Martial says,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Sive salutiferis candidus Anxur acquis<a name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The place is now cruelly unwholesome however;
-so much so, that our French landlord
-protests he is obliged to leave it all the summer
-months, at least the very hot season, and retire
-with his family to Molo di Gaeta. He
-told us with rational delight enough of a visit
-the Pope had made to those places some few
-years ago; and that he had been heard to say
-to some of his attendants how there was no
-<i lang="it">mal aria</i> at all thereabouts in past days: an observation
-which had much amazed them. It
-was equally their wonder how his Holiness
-went o’walking about with a book in his
-hand or pocket, repeating verses by the sea-side.
-One of them had asked the name of the
-book, but nobody could remember it. “Was
-it <em>Virgil</em>?” said one of our company. “<i lang="fr">Eh mon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-Dieu, Madame, vous l’avez divinée</i><a name="FNanchor_12" id="FNanchor_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>,” replied
-the man. But, O dear (thought I), how
-would these poor people have stared, if their
-amiable sovereign, enlightened and elegant
-as his mind is, had happened to talk more in
-their presence of what he had been reading on
-the sea shore, <em>Virgil</em> or <em>Homer</em>; had he
-chanced to mention that <em>Molo di Gaeta</em> was in
-ancient times the seat of the Lestrygones, and
-inhabited by canibals, men who eat one another!
-and surely it is scarcely less comical
-than curious, to recollect how Ulysses expresses
-his sensations on first landing just by
-this now lovely and highly-cultivated spot,
-when he pathetically exclaims,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent6">&mdash;&mdash;Upon what coast,</div>
-<div class="verse">On what <em>new</em> region is Ulysses tost?</div>
-<div class="verse">Possest by wild barbarians fierce in arms,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or men whose bosoms tender pity warms?</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Pope’s Odyssey.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Poor Cicero might indeed have asked the
-question seven or eight centuries after, in days
-falsely said to be civilized to a state of perfection;
-when his most inhuman murder near
-this town, completed the measure of their crimes;
-who to their country’s fate added that of its
-philosopher, its orator, its acknowledged father<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-and preserver.&mdash;Cruel, ungrateful Rome! ever
-crimson with the blood of its own best citizens&mdash;theatre
-of civil discord and proscriptions,
-unheard of in any history but her’s;
-who, next to Jerusalem in sins, has been
-next in sufferings too; though twice so
-highly favoured by Heaven&mdash;from the dreadful
-moment when all her power was at once
-crushed by barbarism, and even her language
-rendered <em>dead</em> among mankind&mdash;to the present
-hour, when even her second splendours,
-like the last gleams of an <i lang="la">aurora borealis</i>, fade
-gradually from the view, and sink almost imperceptibly
-into decay. Nor can the exemplary
-virtues and admirable conduct of <em>this</em>,
-and of her four last princes, redeem her from
-ruin long threatened to her past tyrannical
-offences; any more than could the merits of
-Marcus Aurelius and Antoninus Pius compensate
-for the crimes of Tiberius, Caligula,
-and Nero.&mdash;Let the death of Cicero, which inspired
-this rhapsody, contribute to excuse it; and
-let me turn my eyes to the bewitching spot&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Where Circe dwelt, the daughter of the day.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">That such enchantresses should inhabit such
-regions could have been scarce a wonder in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-Homer’s time I trow; the same country still
-retains the same power of producing singers,
-to whom our English may with propriety
-enough cry out;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent6">&mdash;&mdash;Hail, <em>foreign</em> wonder!</div>
-<div class="verse">Whom certes our rough shades did never breed.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Milton.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">That she should be the offspring of Phœbus
-too, in a place where the sun’s rays have so
-much power, was a well-imagined fable one
-may <em>feel</em>; and her instructions to Ulysses for
-his succeeding voyage, just, apt, and proper:
-enjoining him a prayer to Crateis the mother
-of Scylla, to pacify her rapacious daughter’s
-fury, is the least intelligible of all Circe’s advice,
-to me. But when I saw the nasty trick
-they had at Naples, of spreading out the ox-hides
-to dry upon the sea shore, as one drives
-to Portici; the Sicilian herds, mentioned in
-the Odyssey, and their crawling skins, came
-into my head in a moment.</p>
-
-<p>We have left these scenes of fabulous wonder
-and real pleasure however; left the warm
-vestiges of classic story, and places which have
-produced the noblest efforts of the human
-mind; places which have served as no ignoble
-themes for truly immortal song; all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-quitted now! all left for recollection to muse
-on, and for fancy to combine: but these eyes
-I fear will never more survey them. Well!
-no matter&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">When like the baseless fabric of a vision,</div>
-<div class="verse">The cloud-capt tow’rs, the gorgeous palaces,</div>
-<div class="verse">The solemn temples, the great globe itself,</div>
-<div class="verse">Yea all which it inherit, shall dissolve;</div>
-<div class="verse">And like some unsubstantial pageant faded</div>
-<div class="verse">Leave not a wreck behind.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>ROME.</h2>
-
-<p>We are come here just in time to see the
-three last days of the carnival, and very droll
-it is to walk or drive, and see the people run
-about the streets, all in some gay disguise or
-other, and masked, and patched, and painted to
-make sport. The Corso is now quite a scene
-of distraction; the coachmen on the boxes
-pretending to be drunk, and throwing sugar-plumbs
-at the women, which it grows hard to
-find out in the crowd and confusion, as the
-evening, which shuts in early, is the festive
-hour: and there is some little hazard in parading
-the streets, lest an accident might happen;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-though a temporary rail and <i lang="fr">trottoir</i> are
-erected, to keep the carriages off. Our high
-joke, however, seems to consist in the men
-putting on girls clothes: a woman is somewhat
-a rarity at Rome, and strangely superfluous
-as it should appear by the extraordinary
-substitutes found for them on the stage: it is
-more than wonderful to see great strong fellows
-dancing the women’s parts in these fashionable
-dramas, pastoral and heroic ballets
-as they call them. <i lang="it">Soprano</i> singers did not so
-surprise me with their feminine appearance in
-the Opera; but these clumsy <i lang="it">figurantes</i>! all
-stout, coarse-looking men, kicking about in
-hooped petticoats, were to me irresistibly ridiculous:
-the gentlemen with me however,
-both Italians and English, were too much
-disgusted to laugh, while <i lang="fr">la premiere danseuse</i>
-acted the coquet beauty, or distracted mother,
-with a black beard which no art could subdue,
-and destroyed every illusion of the pantomime
-at a glance. All this struck nobody but us
-foreigners after all; tumultuous and often
-<em>tender</em> applauses from the pit convinced us of
-<em>their heart-felt</em> approbation! and in the parterre
-fat gentlemen much celebrated at Rome
-for their taste and refinement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As their exhibition did not please our
-party, notwithstanding its singularity, we went
-but once to the theatre, except when a Festa
-di Ballo was advertised to begin at eleven
-o’clock one night, but detained the company
-waiting on its stairs for two hours
-at least beyond the time: for my own part
-I was better amused <em>outside</em> the doors, than
-<em>in</em>. Masquerades can of themselves give very
-little pleasure except when they are new things.
-What was most my delight and wonder to observe,
-was the sight of perhaps two hundred
-people of different ranks, all in my mind
-strangely ill-treated by a nobleman; who having
-a private supper in the room, prevented their
-entrance who paid for admission; all mortified,
-all crowded together in an inconvenient place;
-all suffering much from heat, and more from
-disappointment; yet all in perfect good humour
-with each other, and with the gentleman who
-detained in longing and ardent, but not impatiently-expressed
-expectation, such a number
-of <em>Romans</em>: who, as I could not avoid remarking,
-certainly deserve to rule over all the
-world once more, if, as we often read in history,
-<em>command</em> is to be best learned from the
-practice of <em>obedience</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The masquerade was carried on when we
-had once begun it, with more taste and elegance
-here, than either at Naples or Milan;
-so it was at Florence, I remember; more dresses
-of contrivance and fancy being produced.
-We had a very pretty device last night, of a man
-who pretended to carry statues about as if for sale:
-the gentlemen and ladies who personated the
-figures were incomparable from the choice of
-attitudes, and skill in colouring; but <i lang="it">il carnovale
-è morto</i>, as the women of quality told
-us last night from their coaches, in which they
-carried little transparent lanthorns of a round
-form, red, blue, green, &amp;c. to help forward
-the shine; and these they throw at each other
-as they did sugar plums in the other towns,
-while the millions of small thin bougie candles
-held in every hand, and stuck up at every balcony,
-make the <i lang="it">Strada del Popolo</i> as light as
-day, and produce a wonderfully pretty effect,
-gay, natural, and pleasing.</p>
-
-<p>The unstudied hilarity of Italians is very rejoicing
-to the heart, from one’s consciousness that it
-is the result of cheerfulness really felt, not a mere
-incentive to happiness hoped for. The death
-of Carnovale, who was carried to his grave
-with so many candles suddenly extinguished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-at twelve o’clock last night, has restored us to a
-tranquil possession of ourselves, and to an opportunity
-of examining the beauties of nature
-and art that surround one.</p>
-
-<p>St. Peter’s church is incontestably the first
-object in this city, so crowded with single
-figures: That this church should be built in the
-form of a Latin cross instead of a Greek one
-may be wrong for ought I know; that columns
-would have done better than piers inside,
-I do not think; but that whatever has
-been done by man might have been done
-better, if that is all the critics want, I readily
-allow. This church is, after all their objections,
-nearer to perfect than any other building
-in the world; and when Michael Angelo,
-looking at the Pantheon, said, “Is this the best
-our vaunted ancestors could do? If so, I will shew
-the advancement of the art, in suspending a
-dome of equal size to this up in the air.” he
-made a glorious boast, and was perhaps the
-only person ever existing who could have
-performed his promise.</p>
-
-<p>The figures of angels, or rather cherubims,
-eight feet high, which support the vases holding
-holy water, as they are made after the
-form of babies, do perfectly and closely represent
-infants of eighteen or twenty months<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-old; nor till one comes quite close to them
-indeed, is it possible to discern that they are
-colossal. This is brought by some as a proof
-of the exact proportions kept, and of the
-prodigious space occupied, by the area of this
-immense edifice; and urged by others, as a
-peculiarity of the <em>human</em> body to deceive so
-at a distance, most unjustly; for one is surprised
-exactly in the same manner by the
-doves, which ornament the church in various
-parts of it. <em>They</em> likewise appear of the
-natural size, and completely within one’s
-reach upon entering the door, but soon as
-approached, recede to a considerable height,
-and prove their magnitude nicely proportioned
-to that of the angels and other decorations.</p>
-
-<p>The canopied altar, and its appurtenances,
-are likewise all colossal I think, when
-they tell me of four hundred and fifty thousand
-pounds weight of bronze brought from
-the Pantheon, and used to form the wreathed
-pillars which support, and the torses that
-adorn it. Yet airy lightness and exquisite
-elegance are the characteristics of the fabric,
-not gloomy greatness, or heavy solidity.
-How immense then must be the space it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-stands on! four hundred and sixty-seven of
-my steps carried me from the door to the
-end. Warwick castle would be contained in
-its middle <em>aisle</em>. Here are one hundred and
-twenty silver lamps, each larger than I could
-lift, constantly burning round the altar; and
-one never sees either them, or the light they
-dispense, till forced upon the observation of
-them, so completely are they lost in the general
-grandeur of the whole. In short, with
-a profusion of wealth that astonishes, and of
-splendour that dazzles, as soon as you enter
-on an examination of its secondary parts,
-every man’s <em>first</em> impression at entering St.
-Peter’s church, must be surprise at seeing it
-so clear of superfluous ornament. This is the
-true character of innate excellence, the <i lang="la">simplex
-munditiis</i>, or <em>freedom from decoration</em>; the
-noble simplicity to which no embellishment
-can add dignity, but seems a mere appendage.
-Getting on the top of this stupendous
-edifice, is however the readiest way to
-fill one’s mind with a deserving notion of its
-extent, capacity, and beauty; nor is any
-operation easier, so happily contrived is the
-ascent. Contrivance here is an ill-chosen
-word too, so luminous so convenient is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-walk, so spacious the galleries beside, that all
-idea of danger is removed, when you perceive
-that even round the undefended cornice,
-our king’s state coach might be most
-safely driven.</p>
-
-<p>The monuments, although incomparable,
-scarcely obtain a share of your admiration
-for the first ten times of your surveying the
-place; Guglielmo della Porta’s famous figure,
-supporting that dedicated to the memory of
-Paul the Third, was found so happy an imitation
-of female beauty by some madman
-here however, that it is said he was inflamed
-with a Pigmalion-like passion for it, of which
-the Pontiff hearing, commanded the statue
-to be draped. The steps at almost the end
-of this church we have all heard were porphyry,
-and so they are; how many hundred
-feet long I have now forgotten:&mdash;no matter;
-what I have not forgotten is, that I thought as
-I looked at them&mdash;why so they <em>should</em> be porphyry&mdash;and
-that was all. While the vases
-and cisterns of the same beautiful substance at
-Villa Borghese attracted my wonder; and
-Clement X.’s urn at St. John de Lateran,
-appeared to me an urn fitter for the ashes of
-an Egyptian monarch, Busiris or Sesostris,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-than for a Christian priest or sovereign, since
-universal dominion has been abolished. Nothing,
-however, <em>can</em> look very grand in St.
-Peter’s church; and though I saw the general
-benediction given (I hope partook it)
-upon Easter day, my constant impression was,
-that the people were below the place; no
-pomp, no glare, no dove and glory on the
-chair of state, but what looked too little for
-the area that contained them. Sublimity disdains
-to catch the vulgar eye, she elevates the
-soul; nor can long-drawn processions, or
-splendid ceremonies, suffice to content those
-travellers who seek for images that never tarnish,
-and for truths that never can decay.
-Pius Sextus, in his morning dress, paying his
-private devotions at the altar, without any
-pageantry, and with very few attendants,
-struck me more a thousand and a thousand
-times, than when arrayed in gold, in colours,
-and diamonds, he was carried to the front of
-a balcony big enough to have contained the
-conclave; and there, shaded by two white
-fans, which, though really enormous, looked
-no larger than that a girl carries in her pocket,
-pronounced words which on account of the
-height they came from were difficult to hear.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All this is known and felt by the managers
-of these theatrical exhibitions so certainly, that
-they judiciously confine great part of them to
-the <i lang="it">Capella Sestini</i>, which being large enough
-to impress the mind with its solemnity, and
-not spacious enough for the priests, congregation,
-and all, to be lost in it, is well adapted
-for those various functions that really make
-Rome a scene of perpetual gala during the
-holy week; which an English friend here
-protested to me he had never spent with so
-little devotion in his life before. The <i lang="la">miserere</i>
-has, however, a strong power over one’s
-mind&mdash;the absence of all instrumental music,
-the steadiness of so many human voices, the
-gloom of the place, the picture of Michael
-Angelo’s last judgment covering its walls,
-united with the mourning dress of the spectators&mdash;is
-altogether calculated with great ingenuity
-to give a sudden stroke to the imagination,
-and kindle that temporary blaze of
-devotion it is wisely enough intended to excite:
-but even this has much of its effect destroyed,
-from the admission of too many
-people: crowd and bustle, and struggle for
-places, leave no room for any ideas to range<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-themselves, and least of all, serious ones: nor
-would the opening of our sacred music in
-Westminster Abbey, when nine hundred performers
-join to celebrate <em>Messiah</em>’s praises,
-make that impression which it does upon the
-mind, were not the king, and court, and all
-the audience, as still as death, when the first
-note is taken.</p>
-
-<p>The ceremony of washing the pilgrims feet
-is a pleasing one: it is seen in high perfection
-here at Rome; where all that the pope personally
-performs is done with infinite grace,
-and with an air of mingled majesty and sweetness,
-difficult to hit, but singularly becoming
-in him, who is both priest of God, and sovereign
-of his people.</p>
-
-<p>But how, said Cyrus, shall I make men
-think me more excellent than themselves? <em>By
-being really so</em>, replies Xenophon, putting his
-words into the mouth of Cambyses. Pius
-Sextus takes no deeper method I believe, yet
-all acknowledge his superiour merit: No
-prince can less affect state, nor no clergyman
-can less adopt hypocritical behaviour. The
-Pope powders his hair like any other of the
-Cardinals, and is, it seems, the first who has
-ever done so. When he takes the air it is in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-a fashionable carriage, with a few, a very few
-guards on horseback, and is by no means desirous
-of making himself a shew. Now and
-then an old woman begs his blessing as he
-passes; but I almost remember the time when
-our bishops of Bangor and St. Asaph were
-followed by the country people in North
-Wales full as much or more, and with just
-the same feelings. One man in particular
-we used to talk of, who came from a distant
-part of our mountainous province, with much
-expence in proportion to his abilities, poor
-fellow, and terrible fatigue; he was a tenant
-of my father’s, who asked him how he ventured
-to undertake so troublesome a journey?
-It was to get my good Lord’s blessing, replied
-the farmer, <em>I hope it will cure my rheumatism</em>.
-Kissing the slipper at Rome will probably, in
-a hundred years more, be a thing to be thus
-faintly recollected by a few very old people;
-and it is strange to me it should have lasted so
-long. No man better knows than the present
-learned and pious successor of St. Peter, that
-St. Peter himself would permit no act of adoration
-to his own person; and that he severely
-reproved Cornelius for kneeling to him, charging
-him to rise and stand upon his feet, adding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-these remarkable words, <em>seeing I also am a
-man</em><a name="FNanchor_13" id="FNanchor_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>. Surely it will at last be found out
-among them that such a ceremony is inconsistent
-with the Pope’s character as a Christian
-priest, however it may suit state matters
-to continue it in the character of a sovereign.
-The road he is now making on every side his
-capital to facilitate foreigners approach, the
-money he has laid out on the conveniencies
-of the Vatican, the desire he feels of reforming
-a police much in want of reformation, joined
-to an immaculate character for private virtue
-and an elegant taste for the fine arts, must
-make every one wish for a long continuance
-of his health and dignity; though the wits
-and jokers, when they see his arms up, as they
-are often placed in galleries, &amp;c. about the
-palace, and consist of a zephyr blowing on a
-flower, a pair of eagle’s wings, and a few stars,
-have invented this Epigram, to say that when
-the Emperor has got his eagle back, the King of
-France his fleurs de lys, and the stars are gone
-to heaven, Braschi will have nothing left him
-but the <em>wind</em>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Redde aquilam Cæsari, Francorum lilia regi,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sydera redde polo, cætera Brasche tibi.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">These verses were given me by an agreeable
-Benedictine Friar, member of a convent belonging
-to St. Paul’s <i lang="it">fuor delle mura</i>; he was
-a learned man, a native of Ragusa, had been
-particularly intimate with Wortley Montague,
-whose variety of acquirements had impressed
-him exceedingly.</p>
-
-<p>He shewed us the curiosities of his church,
-the finest in Rome next to St. Peter’s, and had
-silver gates; but the plating is worn off and
-only the brass remains. There is an old Egyptian
-candlestick above five feet high preserved
-here, and many other singularities adorn the
-church. The Pillars are 136 in number, all
-marble, and each consisting of one unjoined
-and undivided piece; 40 of these are fluted,
-and two which did belong to a temple of Mars
-are seven feet and a half each in diameter.
-Here is likewise the place where Nero ran for
-refuge to the house of his freed-man, and in
-the cloister a stone, with this inscription on it,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i lang="la">Hoc specus accepit post aurea tecta Neronem</i><a name="FNanchor_14" id="FNanchor_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Here is an altar supported by four pillars of
-red porphyry, and here are the pictures of all
-the popes; St. Peter first, and our present Braschi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-last. It has given much occasion for chat
-that there should now be no room left to hang
-a successor’s portrait, and that he who now
-occupies the chair is painted in powdered hair
-and a white head-dress, such as he wears every
-day, to the great affliction of his courtiers, who
-recommended the usual state diadem; but “No,
-no,” said he, “there have been <em>red cap Popes</em>
-enough, mine shall be only white,” and <em>white it is</em>.</p>
-
-<p>This beautiful edifice was built by the
-Emperor Theodosius, and there is an old
-picture at the top, of our Saviour giving the
-benediction in the form that all the Greek
-priests give it now. Apropos, there have
-been many sects of Oriental Christians dropt
-into the Church of Rome within these late
-years; a very venerable old Armenian says
-Greek mass regularly in St. Peter’s church
-every day before one particular altar; his long
-black dress and white beard attracted much of
-my notice; he saw it did, and now whenever
-we meet in the street by chance he kindly
-stands still to bless me. But the Syriac or
-Maronites have a church to themselves just
-by the <i lang="it">Bocca della Verita</i>; and extremely curious
-we thought it to see their ceremonies upon
-Palm Sunday, when their aged patriarch, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-less than ninety-three years old, and richly attired
-with an inconvenient weight of drapery, and
-a mitre shaped like that of Aaron in our Bibles
-exactly, was supported by two olive coloured
-orientals, while he pronounced a benediction on
-the tree that stood near the altar, and was at least
-ten feet high. The attendant clergy, habited
-after their own eastern taste, and very superbly,
-had broad phylacteries bound on their foreheads
-after the fashion of the Jews, and carried long
-strips of parchment up and down the church,
-with the law written on them in Syriac characters,
-while they formed themselves into a
-procession and led their truly reverend principal
-back to his place. An exhibition so
-striking, with the view of many monuments
-round the walls, sacred to the memory of
-such, and such a bishop of Damascus, gave so
-strong an impression of Asiatic manners to the
-mind, that one felt glad to find Europe round
-one at going out again. One of the treasures
-much renowned in it we have seen to-day,
-the transfiguration painted by Rafaelle; it was
-the <em>first</em> thing the Emperor <em>did</em> visit when he
-came to Rome, and so a Franciscan Friar who
-shews it, told us. He saw a gentleman walk
-into church it seems, and leaving his friends<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-at dinner, went out to converse with him.
-“<em>Pull aside the curtain, Sir</em>,” said the stranger,
-“<em>for I am in haste to see this master-piece of
-your immortal Raphael</em>.” I was as willing to be
-in a hurry as he, says the Friar, and observed
-how fortunate it was for us that it could not
-be moved, otherwise we had lost it long ago;
-for, Sir, said I, they would have carried it away
-from poor <i lang="it">Monte Citoria</i> to some finer
-temple long ago; though, let me tell you, this
-is an elegant Doric building too, and one of
-Bramante’s best works, much admired by the
-English in particular. I hope, if it please God
-now that I should live but a very little longer,
-I may have the honour of shewing it <em>the Emperor</em>.
-“Is he expected?” enquired the
-gentleman. “Every day, Sir,” replies the Friar.
-“And <em>well now</em>,” cries the foreigner, “what
-sort of a man do you expect to see?” “Why,
-Sir, you seem a traveller, did <em>you</em> ever see him?”
-quoth the Franciscan. “Yes, sure, my good
-friend, very often indeed, he is as plain a man
-as myself, has good intentions, and an honest
-heart; and I think you would like him if you
-knew him, because he puts nobody out of
-their way.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This dialogue, natural and simple, had taken
-such hold of our good <i lang="fr">religieux</i>’s fancy, that
-not a word would he say about the picture,
-while his imagination was so full of the prince,
-and of his own amazement at the salutation
-of his companions, when returning to the refectory;&mdash;“Why,
-Gaetano,” cried they, “thou
-hast been conversing with <em>Cæsar</em>:”&mdash;I too
-liked the tale, because it was artless, and because
-it was true. But the picture surpasses
-all praise; the woman kneeling on the fore-ground,
-her back to the spectators, seems a
-repetition of the figure in Raphael’s famous
-picture of the Vatican on fire, that is shewn in
-the chambers called particularly by his name;
-where the personifications of Justice and Meekness,
-engraved by Strange, seize one’s attention
-very forcibly; it is observable, that the
-first is every body’s favourite in the painting,
-the last in the engraving.</p>
-
-<p>Raphael’s Bible, as one of the long galleries
-is comically called by the connoisseurs,
-breaks one’s neck to look at it. The stories,
-beginning with Adam and Eve, are painted in
-small compartments; the colouring as vivid
-now as if it were done last week; and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-<i lang="fr">arabesques</i> so gay and pretty, they are very
-often represented on fans; and we have fine
-engravings in England of all, yet, though exquisitely
-done, they give one somehow a false
-notion of the whole: so did Piranesi’s prints
-too, though invaluable, when considered by
-themselves as proofs of the artist’s merit. His
-judicious manner, however, of keeping all
-coarse objects from interfering with the grand
-ones, though it mightily increases the dignity,
-and adds to the spirit of his performance, is
-apt to lead him who wishes for information,
-into a style of thinking that will at last produce
-disappointment as to general appearances,
-which here at Rome is really disproportionate
-to the astonishing productions of
-art contained within its walls.</p>
-
-<p>But I must leave this glorious Vatican, with
-the perpetual regret of having seen scarcely
-any thing of its invaluable library, except the
-prodigious size and judicious ornaments of it:
-neither book nor MS. could I prevail on the
-librarian to shew me, except some love-letters
-from Henry the Eighth of England to Anne
-Boleyn, which he said were most likely to interest
-<em>me</em>: they were very gross and indecent
-ones to be sure; so I felt offended, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-went away, in a very ill humour, to see Castle
-St. Angelo; where the emperor Adrian intended
-perpetually to repose; but the urn
-containing his ashes is now kept in a garden
-belonging to one of the courts in the palace,
-near the Apollo and other Greek statues of peculiar
-excellence. From his tomb too, some
-of the pillars of St. Paul’s were taken, and this
-splendid mausolæum converted into a sort of
-citadel, where Sixtus Quintus deposited three
-millions of gold, it is said; and Alexander the
-Sixth retired to shield himself from Charles
-the Eighth of France, who entered Rome by
-torch-light in 1494, and forced the Pope to
-give him what the French historians call
-<i lang="fr">l’investiture du royaume de Naples</i>; after which
-he took Capua, and made his conquering
-entry into Naples the February following,
-1495; Ferdinand, son of Alphonso, flying
-before him. This Pope was the father of the
-famous Cæsar Borgia; and it was on this occasion,
-I believe, that the French wits made
-the well-known distich on his notorious avarice
-and rapacity:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Vendit Alexander claves, altaria, Christum,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Vendere jure potest, emerat ille prius<a name="FNanchor_15" id="FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
-<p>This Castle St. Angelo went once, I believe,
-under the name of the Ælian Bridge,
-when the emperor Adrian first fixed his mind
-on making a monument for himself there.
-The soldiers of Belisarius are said to have destroyed
-numberless statues which then adorned
-it, by their odd manner of defending the place
-from the Gothic assaulters. It is now a sort
-of tower for the confinement of state prisoners;
-and decorated with many well-painted,
-but ill-kept pictures of Polydore and Julio
-Romano.</p>
-
-<p>The fireworks exhibited here on Easter-day
-are the completest things of their kind in
-the world; three thousand rockets, all sent up
-into the air at once, make a wonderful burst
-indeed, and serve as a pretty imitation of Vesuvius:
-the lighting up of the building too
-on a sudden with fire-pots, had a new and
-beautiful effect; we all liked the entertainment
-vastly.</p>
-
-<p>I looked here for what some French <i lang="fr">recueil</i>,
-<em>Menagiana</em> if I remember rightly, had taught
-me to expect; this was some brass cannon belonging
-to Christina queen of Sweden, who
-had caused them to be cast, and added an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-engraving on them with these remarkable
-words;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Habet sua fulmina Juno<a name="FNanchor_16" id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">No such thing, however, could be found or
-heard of. Indeed a search after truth requires
-such patience, such penetration, and such
-learning, that it is no wonder she is so seldom
-got a glimpse of; whoever is diligently desirous
-to find her, is so perplexed by ignorance,
-so retarded by caution, so confounded
-by different explications of the same thing recurring
-at every turn, so sickened with silly
-credulity on the one hand, and so offended
-with pertness and pyrrhonism on the other,
-that it is fairly rendered impossible for one to
-keep clear of prejudices, while the steady resolution
-to do so becomes itself a prejudice.&mdash;But
-with regard to little follies, it is better to
-laugh at than lament them.</p>
-
-<p>We were shewn one morning lately the
-spot where it is supposed St. Paul suffered
-decapitation; and our <i lang="it">Cicerone</i> pointed out to
-us three fountains, about the warmth of Buxton,
-Matlock, or Bristol water, which were
-said to have burst from the ground at the
-moment of his martyrization. A Dutch gentleman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-in company, and a steady Calvinist,
-loudly ridiculed the tradition, called it an idle
-tale, and triumphantly expressed his <em>certain
-conviction</em>, that such an event <em>could not possibly</em>
-have ever taken place. To this assertion no
-reply was made; and as we drove home all
-together, the conversation having taken a
-wide range and a different turn, he related in
-the course of it a long Rousseau-like tale of a
-lady he once knew, who having the strongest
-possible attachment to one lover, married another
-upon principles of filial obedience, still
-retaining inviolate her passion for the object
-of her choice, who, adorned with every excellence
-and every grace, continued a correspondence
-with her across the Atlantic ocean;
-having instantly changed his hemisphere, not
-to give the husband disturbance; who on his
-part admired their letters, many of which were
-written in <em>his</em> praise, who had so cruelly interrupted
-their felicity. Seeing some marks
-of disbelief in my countenance, he begun observing,
-in an altered tone of voice, that <em>common</em>
-and <em>vulgar</em> minds might hold such events
-to be out of possibility, and such sentiments
-to be out of nature, but it was only because
-they were <em>above</em> the <em>comprehension</em> and beyond<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-the reach of people educated in large and corrupt
-capitals, Paris, Rome, or London, to think
-true. Now was not some share of good
-breeding (best learned in great capitals perhaps)
-necessary to prevent one from retorting
-upon such an orator&mdash;that it was more likely
-nature should have been permitted to deviate
-in favour of Paul the apostle of Jesus Christ,
-than of a fat inhabitant of North Zealand, no
-way distinguished from the mass of mankind?</p>
-
-<p>But we have been called to pass some moments
-on the Cælian hill; and see the <i lang="it">Chiesa
-di San Gregorio</i>, interesting above all others
-to travellers who delight in the vestiges of
-Pagan Rome: as, having been built upon a
-Patrician’s house, it still to a great degree retains
-the form of one; while to the scholar who
-is pleased with anecdotes of ecclesiastical history,
-the days recur when the stone chair
-they shew us, contented the meek and venerable
-bishop of Rome who sate in it, while
-his gentle spirit sought the welfare of every
-Christian, and refused to persecute even the
-benighted and unbelieving Jews; opposing
-only the arms of piety and prayer, to the few
-enemies his transcendent excellence had raised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-him. His picture here is considered as a
-master-piece of Annibale Caracci; and it is
-strange to think that the trial-pieces, as they
-are called, should be erroneously treated of in
-the Carpenteriana: when speaking of the
-contention between the two scholars, to decide
-which the master sent for an old woman,
-Monsieur de Carpentier tells us the dispute lay
-between Domenichino and Albano&mdash;a gross
-mistake; as it was Guido, not Albano, who
-ventured to paint something in rivalry with
-Domenichino, relative to St. Andrew and his
-martyrdom; and these trial-pieces produced
-from her the same preference given by every
-spectator who has seen them since; for when
-Caracci (unwilling to offend either of his scholars,
-as both were men of the highest rank
-and talents) enquired of <em>her</em> what <em>she</em> thought
-of Guido’s performance?&mdash;“Indeed,” replied
-the old woman, “I have never yet looked at
-it, so fully has my mind been occupied by the
-powers shewn in that of Domenichino.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i lang="it">vecchia</i> is here at Rome the common
-phrase when speaking of your only female servant,
-a person not unlike an Oxford or Cambridge
-bed-maker in appearance; and much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-amazed was I two days ago at the answer of
-<em>our</em> <i lang="it">vecchia</i>, when curiosity prompted me to
-ask her age:&mdash;“<em>O, Madam, I am a very aged
-woman</em>,” was the reply, “<em>and have two
-grandchildren married; I am forty-two years
-old, <span class="antiqua" lang="it">poveretta me!</span></em>” I told an Italian gentleman
-who dined with us what Caterina had
-said, and begged him to ask the <i lang="fr">laquais de
-place</i>, who waited on us at table, a similar
-question. He appeared a large, well-looking,
-sturdy fellow, about thirty-eight years old;
-but said he was scarce twenty-two; that he
-had been married six years, and had five children.
-How old was your wife when you
-met?&mdash;“Thirteen, Sir,” answered Carlo: so
-all is kept even at least; for if they end life
-sooner than in colder climates, they begin it
-earlier it is plain.</p>
-
-<p>Yet such things seem strange to <em>us</em>; so do
-a thousand which occur in these warm countries
-in the commonest life. Brick floors, for
-example, with hangings of a dirty printed
-cotton, affording no bad shelter for spiders,
-bugs, &amp;c.; a table in the same room, encrusted
-with <i lang="fr">verd antique</i>, very fine and worthy of
-Wilton house; with some exceeding good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-copies of the finest pictures here at Rome;
-form the furniture of our present lodging:
-and now we have got the little casement windows
-clean to look at it, I pass whole hours
-admiring, even in the copy, our glorious descent
-from the cross, by Daniel de Volterra;
-which to say truth loses less than many a great
-performance of the same kind, because its
-merits consist in composition and design; and
-as sentiment, not style, is translatable, so
-grouping and putting figures finely together
-can be easier transmitted by a copy, than the
-meaner excellencies of colouring and finishing.
-Homer and Cervantes may be enjoyed
-by those who never learned their language, at
-least to a great degree; while a true taste of
-Gray’s Odes or Martial’s Epigrams has been
-hitherto found exceedingly difficult to communicate.
-It would, however, be cruel to
-deny the merit of colouring to Daniel de Volterra’s
-descent from the cross, only because
-being painted in fresco it has suffered so terribly
-by time and want of care, but it is now
-kept covered, and they remove the curtain
-when any body desires to contemplate its various
-beauties.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The church of Santa Maria Maggiore has
-been too long unspoken of, rich as it is with
-the first gold torn from the unfortunate aborigines
-of America; a present from Ferdinand
-and Isabella of Spain to the Pope, in return
-for that permission he had given them to
-exert and establish their sanguinary sway over
-those luckless nations. One pillar from the
-temple of Peace is an ill-adapted ornament to
-this edifice, built nearly in the form of an
-ancient <i lang="it">basilica</i>; and with so expensive a
-quantity of gilding, that it is said two hundred
-and fifty thousand pounds were expended
-on one chapel only, which is at last inferior
-in fame and beauty to <i lang="it">cappella Corsini</i>; in
-riches and magnificence to <i lang="it">cappella Borghese</i>,
-where an amethyst frame of immense value
-surrounds the names, in gold cypher, of our
-blessed Saviour and his Mother, the ground
-of which is of transparent jasper, and cannot
-be matched for elegance or perfection, being
-at least four feet high (the tablets I mean),
-and three feet wide. But to this Borghese
-family, I am well persuaded, it would be a
-real fatigue to count the wealth which they
-enjoy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Villa Pamphili is a lovely place, or might
-be made so; but laying out pleasure grounds
-is not the forte of Italian taste. I never saw
-one of them, except Lomellino of Genoa, who
-had higher notions of a garden than what an
-opera scene affords; and that is merely a range
-of trees in great pots with gilded handles, and
-rows of tall cypresses planted one between
-every two pots, all straight over against each
-other in long lines; with an octangular marble
-bason to hold water in the middle, covered
-for the most part with a thick green scum.</p>
-
-<p>At Villa Pamphili is a picture of Sanctorius,
-who made the weighing balance spoken of by
-Addison in the Spectator; it was originally
-contrived for the Pamphili Pope. And here is
-an old statue of Clodius profaning the mysteries
-of the Bona Dea, as we read in the Roman
-history. And here are camels working in the
-park like horses: we found them playing
-about at their leisure when we were at Pisa,
-and at Milan they were shewed for a show;
-so little does one state of Italy connect with
-another. These three cities cannot possibly
-be much further from each other than London,
-York, and Exeter; yet the manners differ<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-entirely, and what is done in one place is not
-known at all in the other. It must be remembered
-that they are all separate states.</p>
-
-<p>At the Farnesini palace our amusements were
-of a nature very contrary to this; but every
-place produces amusement when one is willing
-to be pleased. After looking over the
-various and inestimable productions of art
-contained there, we came at last to the celebrated
-marriage of Alexander’s Roxana;
-where, say some of the books of description,
-the world’s greatest hero is represented by
-Europe’s greatest painter. Some French gentlemen
-were in our company, and looking
-steadily at the picture for a while, one of them
-exclaimed, “<i lang="fr">A la fin voila ce qui est vrayment
-noble; cet Alexandre là; il paroit effectivement
-le roy de France même</i><a name="FNanchor_17" id="FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>The Spada palace boasts Guercino’s Dido,
-so disliked by the critics, who say she looks
-spitted; but extremely esteemed by those that
-understand its merit in other respects. There
-is also the very statue kept at this palace, at
-the feet of which Cæsar fell when he was
-assassinated at the capitol: those who shew it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-never fail to relate his care to die gracefully;
-which was likewise the last desire that
-occupied Lucretia’s mind: Augustus too,
-justly considering his life as scenical, desired
-the <i lang="la">plaudits</i> of his friends at its conclusion:
-and even Flavius Vespasian, a plain man as
-one should think during a pretty large portion
-of his existence, wished at last to <em>die like
-an emperor</em>. That this statue of Pompey
-should have been accidentally found with the
-head lying in one man’s ground and the body
-in another, is curious enough: a rage for appropriation
-gets the better of all the love of
-arts; so the contending parties (like the sisters
-in David Simple, with their fine-worked carpet)
-fairly severed the statue, and took home
-each his half; the proprietor of this palace
-meanwhile purchased the two pieces, stuck
-them once more together, and here they are.&mdash;Pity
-but the sovereign had carried both off
-for himself.&mdash;Pius Sextus however is not so
-disposed: he has had a legacy left him within
-these last years, to the prejudice of some nobleman’s
-heirs; who loudly lamented <em>their
-fate</em>, and <em>his tyranny</em> who could take advantage,
-as they expressed it, of their relation’s caprice.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-The Pope did not give it them back,
-because they behaved so ill, he said; but neither
-did he seize what was left him, by dint
-of despotic authority; <em>he went to law</em> with
-the family for it, which I thought a very
-strange thing; <em>and lost his cause</em>, which I
-thought a still stranger.</p>
-
-<p>We have just been to see his gardens; they
-are poor things enough; and the device of
-representing Vulcan’s cave with the Cyclops,
-in <em>water</em>-works, was more worthy of Ireland
-than Rome! Monte Cavallo is however a
-palace of prodigious dignity; the pictures
-beyond measure excellent; his collection of
-china-ware valuable and tasteful, and there
-are two Mexican jars that can never be
-equalled.</p>
-
-<p>Villa Albani is the most dazzling of any
-place yet however; and the caryatid pillars
-the finest things in it, though replete with
-wonders, and distracting with objects each
-worthy a whole day’s attention. Here is an
-antique list of Euripides’s plays in marble, as
-those tell me who can read the Greek inscriptions;
-I lose infinite pleasure every day, for
-want of deeper learning. Pillars not only of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-<i lang="it">giall’ antique</i>, but of <i lang="it">paglia</i><a name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>, which no house
-but this possesses, amaze and delight <i lang="la">indocti
-doctique</i> though; the Vatican itself cannot
-shew such: a red marble mask here, three
-feet and a half in diameter, is unrivalled;
-they tell you it is worth its own weight in
-louis d’ors: a canopus in basalt too; and cameos
-by the thousand.</p>
-
-<p>Mengs should have painted a more elegant
-Apollo for the centre of such a gallery; but
-his muses make amends; the Viaggiana says
-they are all portraits, but I could get nobody
-to tell me whose. The Abbé Winckelman,
-who if I recollect aright lost his life by his
-passion for <i lang="it">virtù</i>, arranged this stupendous
-collection, in conjunction with the cardinal,
-whose taste was by all his contemporaries
-acknowledged the best in Rome.</p>
-
-<p>We were carried this morning to a cabinet
-of natural history belonging to another cardinal,
-but it did not answer the account given
-of it by our conductors.</p>
-
-<p>What has most struck me here as a real
-improvement upon social and civil life, was
-the school of Abate Sylvester, who, upon the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-plan of Monsieur L’Epée at Paris, teaches the
-deaf and dumb people to speak, read, write,
-and cast accounts; he likewise teaches them
-the principles of logic, and instructs them in
-the sacred mysteries of our holy religion. I
-am not naturally credulous, nor apt to take
-payment in words for meanings; much of
-my <em>life</em> has been spent, and all my <em>youth</em>, in
-the tuition of babies; I was of course less
-likely to be deceived; and I can safely say,
-that they did appear to have learned all he
-taught them: that appearance too, if it were
-no more, is so difficult to obtain, the patience
-required from the master is so very great, and
-the good he is doing to mankind so extensive,
-that I did not like offensively to detect the difference
-between <em>knowing</em> a syllogism and <em>appearing</em>
-to know it. With regard to morality,
-the pupils have certainly gained many præcognita.
-While the capital scholars were shewing
-off to another party, I addressed a girl
-who sat working in the window, and perceived
-that she could explain the meaning of the
-commandments competently well. To prove the
-truth, I pretended to pick a gentleman’s pocket
-who stood near me; <i lang="it">peccato!</i> said the wench
-distinctly; she was about ten years old perhaps:
-but a little boy of seven was deservedly the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-master’s favourite; he really possessed the most
-intelligent and interesting countenance I ever
-saw, and when to explain the major, minor, and
-consequence, he put the two first together into
-his hat with an air of triumph, we were enchanted
-with him. Some one to teize him
-said he had red hair; he instantly led them to
-a picture of our Saviour which hung in the
-room, said it was the same colour of his, and
-ought to be respected.</p>
-
-<p>Surely it is little to the credit of us English,
-that this worthy Abbé Sylvester should
-have a stipend from government; that Monsieur
-L’Epée de Paris should be encouraged
-in the same good work; that Mr. Braidwood’s
-Scotch pupils should justly engage every one’s
-notice&mdash;while <em>we sleep!</em> A friend in company
-seeing me fret at this, asked me if I, or any
-one else, had ever seen or heard of a person
-really qualified for the common duties of society
-by any of these professors;&mdash;“That a
-deaf and dumb man should understand how
-to discourse about the hypostatic union,”
-added he, “I will not desire; but was there
-ever known in Paris, Edinburgh, or Rome,
-a deaf and dumb shoemaker, carpenter, or taylor?
-Or did ever any watchmaker, fishmonger,
-or wheelwright, ever keep and willingly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-employ a deaf and dumb journeyman?”&mdash;Nobody
-replied; and we went on our way
-to see what was easier decided upon and understood&mdash;the
-tomb of Raphael at the Pantheon.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many tours that have been
-written, a musical tour, an astronomical tour,
-&amp;c. I wonder we have never had a sepulchral
-tour, making the tombs of famous men its object
-of attention. That Raphael, Caracci, with
-many more people of eminence, sleep at the
-Pantheon, is however but a secondary consideration;
-few can think of the monuments in
-this church, till they have often contemplated
-its architecture, which is so finely proportioned
-that on first entering you think it
-smaller than it really is: the pillars are enormous,
-the shafts all of one piece, the composition
-Egyptian granite; these are the sixteen
-which support the portico built by Agrippa;
-whose car, adorned with trophies and drawn
-by brazen horses, once decorated the pediment,
-where the holes formed by the cramps
-which fastened it are still visible. Genseric
-changed the gate, and connoisseurs know not
-where he placed that which Agrippa made:
-the present gate is magnificent, but does not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-fit the place; much of the brass plating was
-removed by Urban the Eighth, and carried to
-St. Peter’s: he was the Barberini pope; and
-of him the people said&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Barbarini faciunt barbara, &amp;c.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">He was a poet however, and could make epigrams
-himself; there is a very fine edition of
-his poems printed at Paris under the title of
-<cite>Maffei Barberini Poemata</cite>; and such was his
-knowledge of Greek literature, that he was
-called the Attic bee. The drunken faun asleep
-at Palazzo Barberini, by some accounted the
-first statue in Rome, we owe wholly to his
-care in its preservation.</p>
-
-<p>But the Pantheon must not be quitted
-till we have mentioned its pavement, where
-the precious stones are not disposed, as in
-many churches, without taste or care, apparently
-by chance; here all is inlaid, so as
-to enchant the eye with its elegance, while
-it dazzles one with its riches: the black
-porphyry, in small squares, disposed in
-compartments, and inscribed as one may
-call it in pavonazzino perhaps; the red,
-bounded by serpentine; the granites, in giall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-antique, have an undescribable effect; no
-Florence table was ever so beautiful: nor can
-we here regret the caryatid pillars said by
-Pliny to have graced this temple in his time;
-while the four prodigious columns, two of
-Egyptian granite, two of porphyry, still remain,
-and replace them so very well. Montiosius,
-who sought for the pillars said by
-Pliny to have been placed by Diogenes, an
-Athenian architect, as supporters of this
-temple, relates however, that in the year
-1580 he saw four of them buried in the
-ground as high as their shoulders: but it does
-not seem a tale much attended to; though I
-confess my own desire of digging, as he points
-out the place so exactly, on the right hand
-side of the portico. The best modern caryatids
-are in the old Louvre at Paris, done by
-Goujon; but those of Villa Albani are true
-antiques, perfect in beauty, inestimable in
-value.</p>
-
-<p>The church that now stands where a temple
-to Bacchus was built, <i lang="it">fuori delle mura</i>, engaged
-our attention this morning. Nothing can be
-fresher than the old decorations in honour of
-this jocund deity; the figures of men and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-women carrying grapes, oxen drawing barrels,
-&amp;c. all the progress of a gay and plenteous
-vintage; a sacrifice at the end. I forget
-to whom the church is now dedicated, but <em>it is</em>
-a church; and from under it has been dug
-up a sarcophagus, all of one piece of red porphyry,
-which represents on its sides a Bacchanalian
-triumph; the coffin is nine feet
-long, and the Pope intends removing it to the
-Vatican, as a companion to that of Scipio
-Æmilianus, found a few months ago; his name
-engraven on it, and his bones inside. Before
-the proper precautions could be taken however,
-<em>they</em> were flung away by mistaken zeal
-and prejudice; but an Englishman, say they,
-who loves an unbeliever, got possession of a
-<em>tooth</em>: meantime the ashes of the emperor
-Adrian, who, as Eusebius tells us, set up the
-figure of a swine on the gates of Bethlehem,
-built a temple in honour of Venus, on Mount
-Calvary; another to Jupiter, upon the hill
-whence our Saviour ascended into heaven in
-sight of his disciples;&mdash;<em>his</em> ashes are kept in
-a gilt pine-apple, brought from Castle St.
-Angelo, and preserved among other rarities
-in the Pope’s musæum. So poor Scipio’s remains
-needed not to have been treated worse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-than <em>his</em>, as we know not how good a Christian
-he might have made, had he lived but
-150 years later: we are sure that he was a
-wise and a warlike man; that he fulfilled the
-scriptures unwittingly by burning Carthage;
-and that he protected Polybius, whom he
-would scarcely suffer out of his sight.</p>
-
-<p>After looking often at the pictures of St.
-Sebastian, I have now seen his church founded
-by Constantine: he lies here in white marble,
-done by Bernini; and here are more marvellous
-columns.&mdash;I am tired of looking out
-words to express their various merits.</p>
-
-<p>The catacombs attract me more strongly;
-here, and here alone, can one obtain a just
-idea of the melancholy lives, and dismal
-deaths, endured by those who first dared at
-Rome to profess a religion inoffensive and
-beneficial to all mankind. San Filippo Neri
-has his body somewhat distinguished from the
-rest of these old pious Christians, among
-whom he lived to a surprising age, making a
-cave his residence. Relics are now dug up
-every day from these retreats, and venerated
-as having once belonged to martyrs murdered
-for their early attachment to a belief now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-happily displayed over one quarter of the
-world, and making daily progress in another
-not discovered when those heroic mortals died
-to attest its truth. There is however great
-danger of deception in digging out the relics,
-these catacombs having been in Trajan’s time
-made a burial-place for slaves; and such it
-continued to be during the reign of those
-Roman emperors who despised rather than
-persecuted the new religion in its infancy.
-The consciousness of this fact should cure the
-passion many here shew for relics, the authenticity
-of which can never be ascertained.
-Those shewn to the people in St. Peter’s
-church one evening in the holy week, all
-came from here it seems; and loudly do our
-Protestant travellers exclaim at their idolatry
-who kneel during the exposure; though for
-my life I cannot see how the custom is <em>idolatrous</em>.
-He who at the moment a dead martyr’s
-robe is shewn him, begs grace of God to follow
-that great example, is certainly doing no
-harm, or in any wise contradicting the rules
-of our Anglican church, whose collects for
-every saint’s day express a like supplication
-for power to imitate that saint’s good example;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-if once they worship the relics indeed, it
-were better they were burned; and to say
-true, they should not be exposed without a
-sermon explaining their use, lest vulgar minds
-might be unhappily misled to mistake the real
-end of their exposure, and profanely substitute
-the creature for the Creator. Meanwhile no
-one has a right to ridicule the love of what
-once belonged to a favourite character, who
-has ever felt attachment to a dead friend’s
-snuff-box, or desire of possessing Scipio Æmilianus’s
-tooth.</p>
-
-<p>But the best effort to excite temporary devotion,
-and commemorate sacred seasons, was
-the illuminated cross upon Good Friday night,
-depending from the high dome of St. Peter’s
-church; where its effect upon the architecture
-is strangely powerful, so large are the masses
-both of light and shade; whilst the sublime
-images raised in one’s mind by its noble simplicity
-and solitary light, hover before the
-fancy, and lead recollection round through a
-thousand gloomy and mysterious passages,
-with no unsteady pace however, while she follows
-the rays which beam from the Redeemer’s
-cross. Being obliged indeed to go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-with company to these solemnities, takes off
-from their effect, and turns imagination into
-another channel, disagreeably enough, but it
-must be so; where there is a thing to be seen
-every one will go to see it, and that which was
-intended to produce sensations of gladness,
-gratitude, or wonder, ends <em>in being a show</em>.
-The consciousness of this fact only kept me
-from wishing to see the Duomo di Milano, or
-the cathedral of Canterbury illuminated just
-so, with lamps placed in rows upon a plain
-wooden cross; which surely would have, upon
-those old Gothic structures, an unequalled
-effect as to the forming of light and shadow.</p>
-
-<p>But let us wish for any thing now rather
-than a <em>fine sight</em>. I am tired with the very
-word <em>a sight</em>; while the Jesuits church here
-at Rome, with the figure of St. Ignatius all
-covered with precious stones, with bronze
-angels by Bernini, and every decoration that
-money can purchase and industry collect, rather
-dazzles than delights one, I think.</p>
-
-<p>The Italians seem to find out, I know not
-why, that it is a good thing the Jesuits are gone;
-though they steadily endeavour to retain those
-principles of despotism which it was their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-peculiar province to inspire and confirm, and
-whilst all men must see that the work of education
-goes on worse in other hands. Indeed
-nothing can be wilder than committing youth
-to the tuition of monks and nuns, unless, like
-them, they were intended for the cloister.
-Young people are but too ready to find fault
-with their teachers, and these are given into
-the hands of those teachers who have a fault
-<em>ready found</em>. Every christian, every moral
-instruction driven into their tender minds,
-weakens with the experience that he or she
-who inculcated it was a recluse; and that they
-who are to live in the world forsooth, must
-have more enlarged notions: whereas, to a
-Jesuit tutor, no such objection could be made;
-they were themselves men of the world, their
-institution not only permitted but obliged them
-to mingle with mankind, to study characters,
-to attend to the various transactions passing
-round them, and take an active part. It was
-indeed this spirit pushed too far, which undid
-and destroyed their order, so useful to the
-church of Rome. Connections with various
-nations they found best obtained by commerce,
-and the sweets of commerce once tasted, what
-body of men has been yet able to relinquish?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-But the principles of trade are formed in direct
-opposition to that spirit of subordination by
-which alone <em>their</em> existence could continue; and
-it is unjust to charge any single event or person
-with the dissolution of a body, incompatible
-with that state of openness and freedom to
-which Europe is hastening. Incorporated
-societies too carry, like individuals, the seeds
-of their own destruction in their bosoms;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">As man perhaps the moment of his breath</div>
-<div class="verse">Receives the lurking principle of death;</div>
-<div class="verse">The young disease, which must subdue at length,</div>
-<div class="verse">Grows with his growth, and strengthens with his strength.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Every warehouse opened in every part of
-Europe, every settlement obtained abroad, facilitated
-their undoing, by loosening the band
-which tied them close together. Extremes
-can never keep their distance from each other,
-while human affairs trot but in a circle; and
-surely no stronger proof of that position can
-be found, than the sight of Quakers in Pensylvania,
-and Jesuits in Paraguay, who lived
-with their converted Indian neighbours, alike
-in harmony, and peace, and love.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We have been led to reflections of this sort
-by a view of girls portioned here at Rome once
-a year, some for marriage and others for a
-nunnery; the last set were handsomest and
-fewest, and the people I converse with say that
-every day makes almost visible diminution in
-the number of monks and nuns. I know not,
-however, whether Italy will go on much the
-better for having so few convents; some
-should surely be left, nay some <em>must</em> be left in
-a country where it is not possible for every
-man to obtain a decent livelihood by labour
-as in England: no army, no navy, very little
-commerce possible to the inland states, and
-very little need of it in any; little study of the
-law too, where the prince or baron’s lips pronounce
-on the decision of property; what
-must people do where so few professions are
-open? Can they <em>all</em> be physicians, priests, or
-shopkeepers, where little physic is taken, and
-few goods bought? There are already more
-clergy than can live, and I saw an <i lang="it">abate</i> with
-the <i lang="fr">petit collet</i> at Lucca, playing in the orchestra
-at the opera for eighteen pence pay. Let us
-be all contented with the benefits received from
-heaven, and let us learn better than to set up
-<em>self</em>, whether nation or individual, as a standard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-to which all others must be reduced; while
-imitation is at last but meanness, and each
-may in his own sphere serve God and love
-his neighbours, while variety renders life more
-pleasing. <i lang="la">Quod sis esse velis</i><a name="FNanchor_19" id="FNanchor_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>, is an admirable
-maxim, and surely no self-denial is necessary to
-its practice; while God has kindly given to
-Italians a bright sky, a penetrating intellect, a
-genius for the polite and liberal arts, and a soil
-which produces literally, as well as figuratively,
-almost spontaneous fruits. He has bestowed
-on Englishmen a mild and wholesome
-climate, a spirit of application and improvement,
-a judicious manner of thinking to
-increase, and commerce to procure, those few
-comforts their own island fails to produce.
-The mind of an Italian is commonly like
-his country, extensive, warm, and beautiful
-from the irregular diversification of its ideas;
-an ardent character, a glowing landscape.
-That of an Englishman is cultivated, rich, and
-regularly disposed; a steady character, a delicious
-landscape.</p>
-
-<p>I must not quit Rome however without a
-word of Angelica Kauffman, who, though
-neither English nor Italian, has contrived to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-charm both nations, and shew her superior
-talents both here and there. Beside her paintings,
-of which the world has been the judge,
-her conversation attracts all people of taste to
-her house, which none can bear to leave without
-difficulty and regret. But a sight of the
-Santa Croce palace, with its disgusting <em>Job</em>,
-and the man in armour so visibly horror-striken,
-puts all painters but Salvator Rosa for
-a while out of one’s head. This master’s works
-are not frequent, though he painted with facility.
-I suppose he is difficult to imitate or
-copy, so what we have of him is <em>original</em>.
-There are too many living objects here in
-Job’s condition, not to render walking in the
-streets extremely disagreeable; and though we
-are told there are seventeen markets in Rome,
-I can find none, the <i lang="la">forum boarium</i> being kept
-alike in all parts of the city for ought I see;
-butchers standing at their shop doors, which
-are not shut nor the shop cleaned even on
-Sundays, while blood is suffered to run along
-the kennels in a manner very shocking to
-humanity. Mr. Greatheed made me remark
-that the knife they use now, is the same employed
-by the old Romans in cutting up the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-sacrificed victim; and there are in fact ancient
-figures in many bas-reliefs of this town, which
-represent the inferior officers, or <i lang="la">popæ</i>, with a
-priest’s albe reaching from their arms and
-tucked up tight, with the sacrificing knife fastened
-to it, exactly as the modern butcher
-wears his dress. The apron was called <i lang="la">limus</i>,
-and there was a purple welt sewed on it in
-such a manner as to represent a serpent:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Velati limo, et verbenâ tempora vincti<a name="FNanchor_20" id="FNanchor_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">which Servius explains at length, but gives no
-reason for the serpentine form, by some people
-exalted, particularly Mr. Hogarth, as nearly
-allied to the perfection of all possible grace.
-This looks hypothetical, but when the map of
-both hemispheres displayed before one, shews
-that the Sun’s path forms the same line, called
-by pre-eminence Ecliptic, we will pardon their
-predilection in its favour.</p>
-
-<p>But it is time to take leave of this <i lang="la">Roma
-triumphans</i>, as she is represented in one statue
-with a weeping province at her foot, <em>so</em> beautiful!
-it reminded me of Queen Eleanor and fair
-Rosamond. The Viaggiana sent me to look
-for many things I should not have found without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-that instructive guide, particularly the singular
-inscription on Gaudentius the actor’s
-tomb, importing that Vespasian rewarded him
-with death, but that <em>Kristus</em>, for so Christ is
-spelt, will reward him with a finer theatre in
-heaven. He was one of our early martyrs
-it appears, and an altar to <em>him</em> would surely
-be now more judiciously placed at a play-house
-door than one to good St. Anthony,
-under whose protection the theatre at Naples
-is built; with no great propriety it must
-be confessed, when that Saint, disgusted by
-the levities of life, retired to finish his existence,
-far from the haunts of man, among the
-horrors of an unfrequented desert. So has it
-chanced however, that by many sects of
-Christians, the player and his profession have
-been severely reprobated; Calvinists forbid
-them their walls as destructive to morality,
-while Romanists, considering them as justly
-excommunicated, refuse them the common
-rites of sepulture. Scripture affords no ground
-for such severity. Dr. Johnson once told me
-that St. Paul quoted in his epistles a comedy
-of Menander; and I got the librarian at Venice
-to shew me the passage marked as a quotation
-in one of the old editions: it is then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-a fair inference enough that the apostle could
-never have prohibited to his followers the
-sight of plays, when he cited them himself;
-they were indeed more innocent than any
-other show of the days he lived in, and if well
-managed may be always made subservient to
-the great causes of religion and virtue. The
-passage cited was this:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Evil communication corrupts good manners.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And now with regard to the present state
-of morals at Rome, one must not judge from
-staring stories told one; it is like Heliogabalus’s
-method of computing the number of his
-citizens from the weight of their cobwebs. It
-is wonderful to me the people are no worse,
-where no methods are taken to keep them
-from being bad.</p>
-
-<p>As to the society, I speak not from myself,
-for I saw nothing of it; some English liked
-it, but more complained. Wanting amusement,
-however, can be no complaint, even
-without society, in a city so pregnant with
-wonders, so productive of reflections; and if
-the Roman nobles are haughty, who can wonder;
-when one sees doors of agate, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-chimney-pieces of amethyst, one can scarcely be surprised
-at the possessors pride, should they in
-contempt turn their backs upon a foreigner,
-whom they are early taught to consider as the
-Turks consider women, creatures formed for
-their <em>use</em> only, or at best <em>amusement</em>, and devoted
-to certain destruction at the hour of
-death. With such principles, the hatred and
-scorn they naturally feel for a protestant will
-easily swell into superciliousness, or burst out
-into arrogance, the moment it is unrestrained
-by the necessity of forms among the rich, and
-the desire of pillage in the poor.</p>
-
-<p>But I shall be glad <em>now</em> to exchange lapis
-lazuli for violets, and verd antique for green
-fields. Here are more amethysts about Rome
-than lilacs; and the laburnum which at this
-gay season adorns the environs of London, I
-look for in vain about the Porta del Popolo.
-The proud purple tulip which decorates the
-ground hereabouts, opposed to the British
-harebell, is <em>Italy</em> and <em>England</em> again; but the
-<em>harebell</em> by cultivation becomes a <em>hyacinth</em>, the
-<em>tulip</em> remains where it began. We are now
-at the 16th of April, yet I know not how or
-why it is, although the oaks, young, small,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-and straggling as they are, have the leaves come
-out all broad and full already, though the fig is
-bursting out every day and hour, and the mulberry
-tree, so tardy in our climate, that I have
-often been unable to see scarcely a bud upon
-them even in May, is here completely furnished.
-Apple trees are yet in blossom round this
-city, and the few elms that can be found, are
-but just unfolding. Common shrubs continue
-their wintry appearance, and in the general
-look of spring little is gained. The hedges
-now of Kent and Surrey are filled with fragrance
-I am sure, and primroses in the remoter
-provinces torment the sportsmen with spoiling
-the drag on a soft scenting morning; while
-limes, horse-chesnuts, &amp;c. contribute to produce
-an effect not so inferior to that fostered
-by Italian sunshine, as I expected to find it.</p>
-
-<p>Why the first breath of far-distant summer
-should thus affect the oak and fig, yet leave
-the elm and apple as with us, the botanists
-must tell; few advances have been made in
-vegetation since we left Naples, that is certain;
-the hedges were as forward near Pozzuoli two
-full months ago. And here are no China
-oranges to be bought; no, nor a cherry or
-strawberry to be seen, while every man of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-fashion’s table in London is covered with
-them; and all the shops of Covent-garden and
-St. James’s-street hang out their luxurious
-temptations of fruit, to prove the proximity of
-summer, and the advantages of industrious
-cultivation. Our eating pleased me more at
-every town than this; where however a man
-might live very well I believe for sixpence a-day,
-and lodge for twenty pounds a-year; and whoever
-has no attachment to religion, friends, or
-country, no prejudices to plague his neighbours
-with, and no dislike to take the world
-as it goes, for six or seven years of his life,
-may spend them profitably at Rome, if either
-his business or his pleasure be made out of the
-works of art; as an income of two, or indeed
-one hundred pounds <i lang="la">per annum</i>, will purchase
-a man more refined delights of that kind here,
-than as many thousands in England: nor need
-he want society at the first houses, palaces one
-ought to call them, as Italians measure no
-man’s merit by the weight of his purse; they
-know how to reverence even poverty, and
-soften all its sorrows with an appearance of
-respect, when they find it unfortunately connected
-with noble birth. His own country
-folk’s neglect, as they pass through, would indeed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-be likely enough to disturb his felicity,
-and lessen the kindness of his Roman friends,
-who having no idea of a person’s being shunned
-for <em>any</em> other <em>possible reason</em> except the
-want of a pedigree, would conclude that <em>his</em>
-must be essentially deficient, and lament
-their having laid out so many caresses on an
-impostor.</p>
-
-<p>The air of this city is unwholesome to foreigners,
-but if they pass the first year, the
-remainder goes well enough; many English
-seem very healthy, who are established here
-without even the smallest intention of returning
-home to Great Britain, for which place we
-are setting out to-morrow, 19th April 1786, and
-quit a town that still retains so many just pretences
-to be styled the first among the cities of the
-earth; to which almost as many strangers are now
-attracted by curiosity, as were dragged thither
-by violence in the first stage of its dominion,
-impelled by superstitious zeal in the second.
-The rage for antiquities now seems to have
-spread its contagion of connoisseurship over
-all those people whose predecessors tore down,
-levelled, and destroyed, or buried under ground
-their statues, pictures, every work of art;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-Poles, Russians, Swedes, and Germans innumerable,
-flock daily hither in this age, to admire
-with rapture the remains of those very
-fabrics which their own barbarous ancestors
-pulled down ten centuries ago; and give for
-the head of a <em>Livia</em>, a <em>Probus</em>, or <em>Gallienus</em>,
-what emperors and queens could not then use
-with any efficacy, for the preservation of their
-own persons, now grown sacred by rust, and
-valuable from their difficulty to be decyphered.
-The English were wont to be the only travellers
-of Europe, the only dupes too in this way;
-but desire of distinction is diffused among
-all the northern nations, and our Romans
-here have it more in their power, with
-that prudence to assist them which it is said
-they do not want, if not to <em>conquer</em> their neighbours
-once again, at least to <em>ruin</em> them, by
-dint of digging up their dead heroes, and calling
-in the assistance of their old Pagan deities,
-<em>now</em> useful to them in a <em>new</em> manner, and ever
-propitious to this city, although</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Enlighten’d Europe with disdain</div>
-<div class="verse">Beholds the reverenc’d heathen train,</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor names them more in this her clearer day,</div>
-<div class="verse">Unless with fabled force to aid the poet’s lay.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">R. Merry.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>FROM ROME TO ANCONA.</h2>
-
-<p>In our road hither we passed through what
-remains of Veia, once so esteemed and liked
-by the Romans, that they had a good mind,
-after they had driven Brennus back, to change
-the seat of empire and remove it there; but a
-belief in augury prevented it, and that event
-was put off till Constantine, seduced by beauties
-of situation, made the fatal change, and broke
-the last thread which had so long bound tight
-together the fasces of Roman sway. We did
-not taste the <i lang="la">Vinum Veientanum</i> mentioned
-by Martial and Horace, but trotted on to Civita
-Castellana, where Camillus rejected the
-base offer of the schoolmaster of Fescennium;
-a good picture of his well-judged punishment
-is still preserved in the Capitol.</p>
-
-<p>The first night of our journey was spent at
-Otricoli, where I heard the cuckoo sing in a
-shriller sharper note than he does in England.
-I had never listened to him before since I left
-my own country, and his song alone would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-have convinced me I was no longer in it.
-Porta di Fuga at Spoleta gates, commemorating
-poor Hannibal’s precipitate retreat after the
-battle of Thrasymene, may perhaps detain us
-a while upon this Flaminian way; it was not
-Titus Flaminius though, whose negotiations
-ruined Hannibal for ever, that gave name to the
-road, but Caius of the same family; they had
-been Flamens formerly, and were therefore
-called Flaminius, when drawn up by accident
-or merit into notice; the same custom still
-obtains with us: we have <em>Dr. Priestley</em> and <em>Mr.
-Parsons</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Narni Bridge cost us some trouble in clambering,
-and more in disputing whether it was
-originally an aqueduct or a bridge&mdash;or both.
-It is a magnificent structure, irregularly built,
-the arches of majestic height, but all unequal.
-There was water enough under it when I was
-there to take off the impropriety apparent to
-many of turning so large an arch over so small
-a stream. Yet notwithstanding that the river
-was much swelled by long continuance of
-the violent rains which lately so overflowed the
-city of Rome, assisted by the Tyber, that people
-went about the streets in boats, notwithstanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-the snows tumbled down from the
-surrounding mountains, must have much increased
-the quantity, and lowered the colour
-of the river:&mdash;We found it even <em>now</em> yellow
-with brimstone, and well deserving the epithet
-of <em>sulphureous Nar</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The next day’s drive carried us forward to
-Terni, where a severe concussion of the earth
-suffered only three nights since, kept all the
-little town in terrible alarm; the houses were
-deserted, the churches crowded, supplications
-and processions in every street, and people
-singing all night to the Virgin under our window.</p>
-
-<p>Well! the next morning we hired horses
-for our gentlemen; a little cart, not inconvenient
-at all, for my maid and me; and
-scrambled over many rocks to view the far-famed
-waterfall, through a sweet country, pleasingly
-intersected with hedges and planted
-with vines; the ground finely undulated,
-and rising by gradations of hill till the eye
-loses itself among the lofty Appenines; surly
-as they seem, and one would think impervious;
-but against human art and human
-ambition, the boundary of rocks and roaring
-seas lift their proud heads in vain. Man renders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-them subservient to his imperial will, and
-forces them to facilitate, not impede his dominion;
-while ocean’s self supports his ships,
-and the mountain yields marble to decorate
-his palace.</p>
-
-<p>This is however no moment and no place to
-begin a panegyric upon the power of man,
-and of his skill to subjugate the works of nature,
-where the people are trembling at its
-past, and dreading its future effects.</p>
-
-<p>The cascade we came to see is formed by
-the fall of a whole river, which here abruptly
-drops into the Nar, from a height so prodigious,
-and by a course so unbroken, that it is difficult
-to communicate, so as to receive the idea:
-for no eye can measure the depth of the precipice,
-such is the tossing up of foam from its
-bottom; and the terrible noise heard long before
-one arrives so stunned and confounded
-all my wits at once, that many minutes
-passed before I observed the horror in our conductors,
-who coming with us, then first perceived
-how the late earthquake had twisted
-the torrent out of its proper channel, and
-thrown it down another neighbouring rock,
-leaving the original bed black and deserted,
-as a dismal proof of the concussion’s force.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One of our English friends who had visited
-Schaffhausen, made no difficulty to prefer
-this wonderful cascade to the fall of the Rhine
-at that place; and what with the fissures made
-in the ground by recent earthquakes, the sight
-of propt-up cottages which fright the fancy
-more than those already fallen, and the roar
-of dashing waters driven from their destined
-currents by what the people here emphatically
-term palpitations of the earth; one feels a
-thousand sensations of sublimity unexcited by
-less accidents, and soon obliterated by real
-danger.</p>
-
-<p>Why the inhabitants will have this tumbling
-river be <em>Topino</em>, I know not; but no
-suggestions of mine could make them name it
-Velino, as our travellers uniformly call it:
-for, say they, <i lang="it">quello è il nome del sorgente</i><a name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>; and
-in fact Virgil’s line,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Sulfureâ Nar, albus acqua fontesque Velini,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">says no more.</p>
-
-<p>The mountains after Terni grow steep and
-difficult; no one who wishes to see the Appenines
-in perfection must miss this road, yet
-are they not comparable to the Alps at best,
-which being more lofty, more craggy, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-almost universally terminating in points of
-granite devoid of horizontal strata, give one
-a more majestic idea of their original and duration.
-Spoleto is on the top of one of them,
-and Porta della Fuga meets one at its gates.
-Here as our coach broke (and who can wonder?)
-we have time to talk over old stories, and
-<em>look for streams immortaliz’d in song</em>: for being
-tied together only with ropes, we cannot hurry
-through a country most delightful of all others
-to be detained in.</p>
-
-<p>The little temple to the river god Clitumnus
-afforded matter of discussion amongst our party,
-whether this was, or was not the very one
-mentioned by Pliny: <i lang="la">Adjacet templum priscum
-et religiosum. Stat Clitumnus ipse amictus ornatusque</i><a name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Greatheed was angry with me for admiring
-spiral columns, as he said pillars were
-always meant to support something, and spiral
-lines betrayed weakness. Mr. Chappelow
-quoted every classic author that had ever mentioned
-the white cattle; and I said that so far
-as they were whiter than other beasts of the
-same kind, so far were they worse; for that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-whiteness in the works of nature shewed feebleness
-still more than spirals in the works of
-art perhaps. So chatting on&mdash;but on no Flaminian
-way, we arrived at Foligno; where
-the people told us that it was the quality of
-those waters to turn the clothing of many
-animals white, and accordingly all the fowls
-looked like those of <em>Darking</em>. I had however
-no taste of their beauty, recollecting that when
-I kept poultry, some accident poisoned me
-a very beautiful black hen, the breed of Lord
-Mansfield at Caen Wood: she recovered her
-illness; but at the next moulting season, her
-feathers came as white as the swans. “Let
-us look,” says Mr. Sh&mdash;&mdash;, “if all the women
-here have got grey hair.”</p>
-
-<p>Tolentino and Macerata we will not speak
-about, while Loretto courts description, and the
-richest treasures of Europe stand in the most
-delicious district of it. The number of beggars
-offended me, because I hold it next to impossibility
-that they should want in a country so
-luxuriantly abundant; and their prostrations
-as they kneel and kiss the ground before you,
-are more calculated to produce disgust from
-British travellers, than compassion. Nor can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-I think these vagabonds distressed in earnest at
-<em>this</em> time above all others; when their sovereign
-provides them with employment on the
-beautiful new road he is making, and insists
-on their being well paid, who are found
-willing to work. But the town itself of Loretto
-claims my attention; so clear are its
-streets, so numerous and cheerful and industrious
-are its inhabitants: one would think
-they had resolved to rob passengers of the trite
-remark which the sight of dead wealth always
-inspires, <em>that the money might be better bestowed
-upon the living poor</em>. For here are very few
-poor families, and fewer idlers than one expects
-to see in a place where not business but
-devotion is the leading characteristic. So
-quiet too and inoffensive are the folks here,
-that scarcely any robberies or murders, or any
-but very petty infringements of the law, are
-ever committed among them. Yet people
-grieve to see that wealth collected, which once
-diffused would certainly make many happy;
-and those treasures lying dead, which well dispersed
-might keep thousands alive. This observation,
-not always made perhaps by those
-who feel it most, or that would soonest give<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-their share of it away, if once possessed, is now,
-from being so often repeated, become neither
-<em>bright</em> nor <em>new</em>. We will not however be petulantly
-hasty to censure those who first began
-the lamentation, remembering that our blessed
-Saviour’s earliest disciples, and those most immediately
-about him too, could not forbear
-grudging to see precious ointment poured upon
-his feet, whom they themselves confessed to
-be the Son of God. We should likewise recollect
-his mild but grave reproof of those men
-who gave so decided a preference to the poor
-over his sacred person, so soon to be sacrificed
-<em>for them</em>, and his testimony to the woman’s
-earnest love and zeal expressed by giving
-him the finest thing she had. Such acceptance
-as she met with, I suppose prompted
-the hopes of many who have been distinguished
-by their rich presents to Loretto; and let
-not those at least mock or molest them, who
-have been doing nothing better with their
-money. Upon examination of the jewels it
-is curious to observe that the intrinsic value
-of the presents is manifestly greater, the more
-ancient they are; but taste succeeds to solidity
-in every thing, and proofs of that position may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-be found every step one treads. The vestments,
-all embroidered over with picked pearl, are
-quite beyond my powers of estimation.
-The gold baby given at the birth of Louis Quatorze,
-of size and weight equal to the real infant,
-has had its value often computed; I forget
-the sum though. A rock of emeralds in
-their native bed presented by the Queen of
-Portugal, though of Occidental growth, is
-surely inestimable; and our sanguinary Mary’s
-heart of rubies is highly esteemed. I asked
-if Charles the Ninth of France had sent
-any thing; for I thought <em>their</em> presents should
-have been placed together: far, far even from
-the wooden image of <em>her</em> who was a model
-of meekness, and carried in her spotless bosom
-the Prince of Peace. Many very exquisite
-pieces of art too have found their way into
-the Virgin’s cabinet; the pearl however is the
-striking rarity, as it exhibits in the manner
-of a blot on marble, the figure of our blessed
-Saviour sitting on a cloud clasped in his mother’s
-arms. Princess Borghese sent an elegantly-set
-diamond necklace no longer ago
-than last Christmas-day; it is valued at a
-thousand pounds sterling English: but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-riches of that family appear to me inexhaustible.
-Whoever sees it will say, she might have
-spent the money better; but let them reflect
-that one may say that of <em>all</em> expence almost;
-and it is not from the state of Loretto these
-treasures are taken at last: they <em>bring</em> money
-there; and if any person has a right to complain,
-it must be the subjects of distant
-princes, who yet would scarcely have divided
-among <em>them</em> the sapphires, &amp;c. they have sent
-in presents to Loretto.</p>
-
-<p>It was curious to see the devotees drag themselves
-round the holy house upon their knees;
-but the Santa Scala at Rome had shewn me
-the same operation performed with more difficulty;
-and a written injunction at bottom,
-less agreeable for Italians to comply with, than
-any possible prostration; viz. That no one
-should spit as he went up or down, except in
-his pocket-handkerchief. The lamps which
-burn night and day before the black image
-here at Loretto are of solid gold, and there
-is such a crowd of them I scarcely could see the
-figure for my own part; and that one may
-see still less, the attendant canons throw a
-veil over one’s face going in.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The confessionals, where all may be heard
-in their own language, is not peculiar to this
-church; I met with it somewhere else, but
-have forgotten where, though I much esteemed
-the establishment. It is very entertaining
-here too, to see inscriptions in twelve different
-tongues, giving an account of the miraculous
-removal and arrival here of the <i lang="it">Santa Casa</i>:
-I was delighted with the Welch one; and our
-conductor said there came not unfrequently
-pilgrims from the vale of Llwydd, who in
-their turns told the wonders of their <em>holy well</em>.
-In Latin then, and Greek, and Hebrew,
-Syriac, Phœnician, Arabic, French, Spanish,
-German, Welch, and Tuscan, may you read
-a story, once believed of equal credit, and
-more revered I fear, than even the sacred
-words of God speaking by the scriptures;
-but which is now certainly upon the wane.
-I told a learned ecclesiastic at Rome, that we
-should return home by the way of Loretto:&mdash;“There
-is no need,” said he, “to caution a
-native of your island against credulity; but
-pray do not believe that we are ourselves
-satisfied with the tale you will read there; no
-man of learning but knows, that Adrian destroyed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-every trace and vestige of Christianity
-that he could find in the East; and he was
-acute, and diligent, and powerful. The empress
-Helena long after him, with piety that
-equalled even his profaneness, could never
-hear of this holy house; how then should it
-have waited till so many long years after Jesus
-Christ? Truth is, Pope Boniface the VIIIth,
-who canonized St. Louis, who instituted the
-jubilee, who quarrelled with Philippe le Bel
-about a new crusade, and who at last fretted
-himself to death, though he had conquered
-all his enemies, because he feared some loss
-of power to the church;&mdash;desired to give
-mankind a new object of attention, and encouraged
-an old visionary, in the year 1296,
-to propagate the tale he half-believed himself;
-how the blessed Virgin had appeared to him,
-and related the story you will read upon the
-walls, which was then first committed to
-paper. In consequence of this intelligence,
-Boniface sent men into the East that he could
-best depend upon, and they brought back
-just such particulars as would best please the
-Pope; and in those days you can scarce think
-how quick the blaze of superstition caught and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-communicated itself: no one wished to deny
-what his neighbour was willing to believe,
-and what he himself would then have gained
-no credit by contradicting. Positive evidence
-of what the house really was, or whence it came,
-it was in a few years impossible to obtain;
-nor did Boniface the VIIIth know it himself
-I suppose, much less the old visionary who
-first set the matter a-going. Meantime the
-house itself has <em>no foundation</em>, whatever the
-story may have; it is a very singular house as
-you may see; it has been venerated by the
-best and wisest among Christians now for five
-hundred years: even the Turks (who have
-the same method of honouring their Prophet
-with gifts, as we do the Virgin Mary) respect
-the very name of Loretto:&mdash;why then should
-the place be to any order of thinking beings a
-just object of insult or mockery?”&mdash;Here
-he ended his discourse, the recollection of
-which never left me whilst we remained at
-the place.</p>
-
-<p>What Dr. Moore says of the singing chaplains
-with <i lang="it">soprano</i> voices, who say mass at the
-altars of Loretto, is true enough, and may
-perhaps have been originally borrowed from
-the Pagan celebration of the rites of Cybele.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-When Christianity was young, and weak, and
-tender, and unsupported by erudition, dreadful
-mistakes and errors easily crept in: the heathen
-converts hearing much of <cite>Mater Dei</cite>, confounded
-her idea with that of their <cite>Mater Deorum</cite>;
-and we were shewn, among the rarities
-of Rome, a <em>bronze Madonna</em>, with a tower
-on her head, exactly as Cybele is represented.</p>
-
-<p>That the jewels are taken out of this treasury
-and replaced with false stones, is a speech
-always said over fine things by the vulgar:
-I have heard the same thing affirmed of the
-diamonds at St. Denis; and can recollect the
-common people saying, when our King of
-England was crowned, that all the real precious
-stones were locked up, or sold for state
-expences; while the jewels shewn to <em>them</em>
-were only calculated to dazzle for the day.
-As there is always infinite falsehood in the
-world, so there is always wonderful care,
-however ill applied, to avoid being duped;
-a terror which hangs heavily over weak minds
-in particular, and frights them as far from
-truth on the one side, as credulity tempts
-them away from it on the other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But we must visit the apothecary’s pots,
-painted by Raphael, and leave Loretto, to proceed
-along the side of this lovely sea, hearing the
-pilgrims sing most sweetly as they go along in
-troops towards the town, with now and then a
-female voice peculiarly distinguished from the
-rest: by this means a new image is presented to
-one’s mind; the sight of such figures too half
-alarm the fancy, and give an air of distance
-from England, which nothing has hitherto
-inspired half so strongly. This charming
-Adriatic gulph beside, though more than delicious
-to drive by, does not, like the Mediterranean,
-convey homeish or familiar ideas;
-one feels that it belongs exclusively to Venice;
-one knows that ancient Greece is on the
-opposite shore, and that with a quick sail one
-should soon see Macedonia; and descending
-but a little to the southward, visit Athens,
-Corinth, Sparta, Thebes&mdash;seats of philosophy,
-freedom, virtue; whence models of excellence
-and patterns of perfection have been drawn
-for twenty succeeding centuries!</p>
-
-<p>Here are plenty of nightingales, but they
-do not sing as well as in Hertfordshire: birds
-gain in colour as you approach the tropic, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-they lose in song; under the torrid zone I
-have heard they never sing at all; with us in
-England the latest leave off by midsummer,
-when the work of incubation goes forward,
-and the parental duties begin: the nightingale
-too chuses the coolest hour; and though I
-have yet heard her in Italy only early in the
-mornings, Virgil knew she sung in the night:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Flet noctem, &amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_23" id="FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">To hear birds it is however indispensably
-necessary that there should be high trees; and
-except in these parts of Italy, and those about
-Genoa and Sienna, no timber of any good
-growth can I find. The <i lang="it">roccolo</i> too, and other
-methods taken to catch small birds, which
-many delight in eating, and more in taking,
-lessen the quantity of natural music vexatiously
-enough; while gaudy insects ill supply
-their place, and sharpen their stings at
-pleasure when deprived of their greatest enemies.
-We are here less tormented than usual
-however, while the prospects are varied so
-that every look produces a new and beautiful
-landscape.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Ancona is a town perfectly agreeable to
-strangers, from the good humour with which
-every nation is received, and every religion
-patiently endured: something of all this the
-scholars say may be found in the derivation of
-its name, which being Greek I have nothing
-to do with. Pliny tells us its original, and
-says;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">A Siculis condita est colonia Ancona<a name="FNanchor_24" id="FNanchor_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>That Dalmatia should be opposite, yet to
-us at present inaccessible, we all regret; I
-drank sea water however, so did not leave
-untasted the waves which Lucan speaks of:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Illic Dalmaticis obnoxia fluctibus Ancon<a name="FNanchor_25" id="FNanchor_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The fine turbots did not any of them fall to
-our share; but here are good fish, and, to say
-true, every thing eatable as much in perfection
-as possible: I could never since I arrived
-at Turin find real cause of complaint&mdash;<em>serious</em>
-complaint I mean except at that savage-looking
-place called Radicofani; and
-some other petty town in Tuscany, near<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-Sienna, where I eat too many eggs and
-grapes, because there was nothing else.</p>
-
-<p>Nice accommodations must not be looked
-for, and need not be regretted, where so much
-amusement during the day gives one good
-disposition to sleep sound at night: the worst
-is, men and women, servants and masters,
-must often mess together; but if one frets
-about such things, it is better stay at home.
-The Italians like travelling in England no
-better than the English do travelling in Italy;
-whilst an exorbitant expence is incurred by
-the journey, not well repaid to them by the
-waiters white chitterlins, tambour waistcoats,
-and independent “<em>No, Sir</em>,” echoed round a
-well-furnished inn or tavern; which puts
-them but in the place of Socrates at the fair,
-who cried out&mdash;“<em>How many things have these
-people gathered together that I do not want!</em>”&mdash;A
-noble Florentine complained exceedingly to
-me once of the English hotels, where he
-was made to help pay for those good gold
-watches the fellows who attended him drew
-from their pockets; so he set up his quarters
-comically enough at the waggoners full Moon
-upon the old bridge at Bath, to be quit of the
-<i lang="it">schiavitù</i>, as he called it, of living like a gentleman,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-“where,” says he, “I am not known
-to be one.” The truth is, a continental nobleman
-can have little heart of a country,
-where, to be treated as a man of fashion, he
-must absolutely behave as such: his rank is
-ascertained at <em>home</em>, and people’s deportment
-to him regulated by long-established customs;
-nor can it be supposed flattering to its prejudices,
-to feel himself jostled in the street, or
-driven against upon the road by a rich trader,
-while he is contriving the cheapest method of
-going to look over his manufactory. Wealth
-diffused makes all men comfortable, and leaves
-no man splendid; gives every body two
-dishes, but nobody two hundred. Objects of
-show are therefore unfrequent in England,
-and a foreigner who travels through our
-country in search of positive sights, will, after
-much money spent, go home but poorly
-entertained:&mdash;“There is neither <i lang="it">quaresima</i>,”
-will he say, “nor <i lang="it">carnovale</i> in <em>any</em> sense of
-the word, among those insipid islanders.”&mdash;For
-he who does not love our government,
-and taste our manners which result from it,
-can never be delighted in England; while
-the inhabitants of our nation may always be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-amused in theirs, without any esteem of it
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>I know not how Ancona produced all these
-tedious reflexions: it is a trading place, and
-a sea-port town. Men working in chains
-upon the new mole did not please me though,
-and their insensibility shocks one:&mdash;“Give a
-poor thief something, master,” says one impudent
-fellow;&mdash;“<i lang="it">Son stato ladro padrone</i><a name="FNanchor_26" id="FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>;”&mdash;with
-a grin. That such people should be
-corrupt or coarse however is no wonder;
-what surprised me most was, that when one
-of our company spoke of his conduct to a
-man of the town&mdash;“Why, what would you
-have, Sir?”&mdash;replies the person applied to&mdash;“when
-the poor creature is <i lang="it">castigato</i>, it is
-enough sure, no need to make him be melancholy
-too:”&mdash;and added with true Italian
-good-nature,&mdash;“<i lang="it">Siamo tutti peccatori</i><a name="FNanchor_27" id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>The mole is a prodigious work indeed; a
-warm friend to Venice can scarce wish its
-speedy conclusion, as the useful and necessary
-parts of the project are already nearly accomplished,
-and it would be pity to seduce more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-commerce away from Venice, which has
-already lost so much.</p>
-
-<p>The triumphal arch of Trajan, described
-by every traveller, and justly admired by all;
-white as his virtue, shining as his character,
-and durable as his fame; fixed our eyes a
-long time in admiration, and made us, while we
-examined the beautiful structure, recollect his
-incomparable qualities to whom it was
-dedicated,&mdash;“<i lang="la">Inter Cæsares optimus</i><a name="FNanchor_28" id="FNanchor_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>,”&mdash;says one
-of their old writers: nor could either column or
-arch be so sure a proof that he was thought
-so, as the wish breathed at the inauguration
-of succeeding emperors; <i lang="la">Sis tu felicior Augusto,
-melior Trajano</i><a name="FNanchor_29" id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>If these Ancona men were not proud of
-themselves, one should hate them; descended
-as they are from those Syracusans liberated by
-Timoleon, who freed them first from the
-tyranny of Dionysius; fostered afterwards by
-Trajan, as peculiarly worth <em>his</em> notice; and
-patronised in succeeding times by the good
-Corsini Pope, Clement XII., whose care for
-them appears by the useful <i lang="it">lazaretto</i> he built,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-“to save,” said he, “our best subjects, our
-subjects of Ancona.”</p>
-
-<p>But we are hastening forward as fast as our
-broken carriage will permit, to Padua, where
-we shall leave it: thither to arrive, we pass
-through Senegallia, built by the Gauls, and
-still retaining the Gaulish name, but now
-little remarkable. What struck me most was
-my own crossing the <em>Rubicon</em> in my way back
-to England, and our comfortable return to</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>BOLOGNA,</h2>
-
-<p>After admiring the high forehead and innocent
-simper of Baroccio’s beauties at Pesaro,
-where the best European silk now comes from;
-against which the produce of Rimini vainly endeavours
-to vie. That town was once an Umbrian
-colony I think, and there is a fine memorial
-there where <i lang="la">Diocletianus reposuit</i>, resolving
-perhaps to end where Julius Cæsar had begun;
-he died at Salo however in Dalmatia,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Quâ maris Adriaci longas ferit unda Salones.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Ravenna l’Antica tired more than it pleased
-us; <em>Fano</em> is a populous pretty little town;
-but I know no reason why it was originally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-dedicated to Fortune. Truth is, we are weary
-of these sacred <em>fanes</em>, and long to see once
-more our amiable friends at Venice and at
-Milan.</p>
-
-<p>I have missed San Marino at last, but receive
-kind assurances every day that the loss
-is small; being now little more than a convent
-seated on a hill, which affords refuge for
-robbers; and that the present Pope meditates
-its destruction as a nuisance to the neighbouring
-towns. There never was any coin struck
-there it seems; I thought there had: but the
-train of reflections excited by even a distant
-view of it are curious enough as opposed to
-its protectress Rome; which, founded by
-robbers and banditti, ends in being the seat of
-sanctity and priestly government; while San
-Marino, begun by a hermit, and secluded
-from all other states for the mere purposes of
-purer devotion, finishes by its necessary removal
-as a repository for assassins, and a refuge
-for those who break the laws with violence.</p>
-
-<p>Such is this variable and capricious world!
-and so dies away my desire to examine this
-political curiosity; the extinction of which
-I am half sorry for. Privation is still a melancholy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-idea, and were one to hear that the
-race of wasps were extirpated, it would grieve
-one.</p>
-
-<p>Bologna affords one time for every meditation.
-No inn upon the Bath road is more
-elegant than the Pellegrino; and we regretted
-our broken equipage the less as it drew us
-slowly through so sweet a country. The
-medlar blossoms adorn the hedges with their
-blanche roses; the hawthorn bushes, later here
-than with us, perfume them; and the roads,
-little travelled, do not torment one with the
-dust as in England, where it not only offends
-the traveller, but takes away some beauty
-from the country, by giving a brown or
-whitish look to the shrubs and trees. We
-shall repose here very comfortably, or at least
-change our mode of being busy, which refreshes
-one perhaps more than positive idleness.
-“But life,” says some writer, “is a
-continual fever;” and sure ours has been completely
-so for these two years. A charming
-lady of our country, for whom I have the
-highest esteem, protests she shall be happy to
-get back to London if it is only for the relief
-of sitting still, and resolving to see no more
-sights: exchanging fasto, fiera, and frittura,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-for a muffin, a mop, and a morning newspaper:
-three things equally unknown in Italy,
-as the other three among us.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to pictures however, <i lang="fr">l’Appetit
-vient en mangeant</i><a name="FNanchor_30" id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a>, as I experienced completely
-when traversing the Zampieri palace
-with eagerness that increased at every step.
-I once more half-worshipped the works of divine
-Guercino. Nothing shall prevent my
-going to his birth-place at Cento, whether in
-our way or out of it.</p>
-
-<p>We ran about the Specola again, and received
-a thousand polite attentions from the
-gentleman who shewed it. The piece of native
-gold here is much finer than that we saw
-among the treasures of Loretto, which being
-<i lang="fr">du nouveau continent</i> is always inferior.
-“But every thing does,” as Mons. de Buffon
-observes, “degenerate in the West
-except birds;” and the Brazilian plumage
-seems to surpass all possibility of further glow.
-The continent however shews us no specimens
-preserved half as well as those of Sir Ashton
-Lever. The marine rarities here at Bologna
-are very capital; but I saw them to advantage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-now, in company of Mr. Chappelow. We
-find this city at once hot, and loud, and pious;
-less empty of occupation though than last
-time; for here is a new Gonfaloniere chosen
-in to-day, and the drums beat, and
-the trumpets sound, and some donations
-are distributed about, much in the proportions
-Tom Davis describes Garrick’s to
-have been; small pieces of money, and large
-pieces of cake, with quantities of meat, bread,
-and birds, borne about the town in procession,
-to make display of <em>his</em> bounty, who gives all
-this away at the time he is elected into office.
-Kids dressed with ribbon therefore, alive and
-carried on men’s shoulders showily adorned,
-lambs washed white as snow, and pretty red
-and white calves hanging their simple faces
-out of fine gilt baskets, paraded the streets all
-day. What struck us most however was an
-ox, handsomer and of a more silvery coat
-than I thought an ox’s hide capable of being
-brought to; his horns gold, and a garland of
-roses between them. This was beautiful; reminded
-one of all one had ever read and heard
-of victims going to sacrifice; and put in our
-heads again the old stories of Hercules, Eurystheus,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At Bologna though, every thing puts people
-in mind of their <em>prayers</em>; so a few good
-women nothing doubting but when shows
-were going forward, religious meanings must
-be near at hand, dropt down on their knees
-in the street, and recommended themselves, or
-their dead friends perhaps, to heaven, with
-fervent and innocent earnestness, while the
-cattle passed along. An English clergyman
-in our company, hurt and grieved, yet half-disposed
-to laugh, cried, <em>What are these
-dear creatures muttering about now for, as if
-their salvation depended upon it?</em>&mdash;It was absurd
-enough to be sure; but in order to check
-our tittering disposition, I recollected to him,
-that I had once heard an ignorant woman in
-Hertfordshire repeat the absolution herself after
-the priest, with equally ill-placed fervour:
-for which he reprimanded her, and afterwards
-explained to her the grossness of the impropriety.
-When we have added to our stock of
-connoisseurship the graceful Sampson, drinking
-after his victory, by Guido, in this town,
-we shall quit it, and proceed through empty
-and deserted Ferrara to</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>PADUA.</h2>
-
-<p>We set out then for Ferrara, in our kind
-friend’s post-chaise; that is, my maid and I
-did: our good-natured gentlemen creeping
-slowly after in the broken coach; and how
-ended this project for insuring safety? Why
-in the chaise losing its hind wheel, and in our
-return to the carriage we had quitted. But it
-is for ever so, I think;&mdash;the sick folks live always,
-and the well ones die.</p>
-
-<p>We took turn therefore and left our friends;
-but could not forbear a visit to Cento, where
-I wished much to see what Guercino had done
-for the ornament of his native place, and was
-amply repaid my pains by the sight of one
-picture, which, for its immediate power over the
-mind, at least over mine, has no equal even
-in Palazzo Zampieri. It is a scene highly
-touching. The appearance of our Saviour to
-his Mother after his resurrection. The dignity,
-the divinity of the Christ! the terror-checked
-transport visible in the parent Saint,
-whose expressive countenance and pathetic attitude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-display fervent adoration, maternal tenderness,
-and meek humility at once! How
-often have I said, <em>this</em> is the finest picture we
-have seen yet! when looking on the Caraccis
-and their school. I will say no more, the
-painter’s art can go no further than <em>this</em>. My
-partial preference of Guercino to any thing
-and to every thing, shall not however bribe me
-to suppress my grief and indignation at his
-strange method of commemorating his own
-name over the altar where he was baptised,
-which shocks every protestant traveller by its
-profaneness, while the Romanists admire his
-invention, and applaud his piety. Guercino
-then, so called because he was the <em>little one-eyed
-man</em>, had a fancy to represent his <em>real</em>
-appellation of <em>John Francis Barbieri</em> in the
-church; and took this mode as an ingenious
-one, painting St. John upon the right hand,
-St. Francis on the left, as two large full-length
-figures, and God the Father in the middle
-with a <em>long beard</em> for <em>Barbieri</em>.</p>
-
-<p>This is a mixture of Abel Drugger’s contrivance
-in the Alchymist, and the infantine
-folly of three babies I once knew in England,
-children of a nobleman, who were severely
-whipt by their governess for playing at Father,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-Son, and Holy Ghost, sitting upon three
-chairs, with solemn countenances, in order to
-impress their tender fancies with a representation
-of what the good governess innocently
-and laudably had told them about the mysterious
-and incomprehensible Trinity. Let
-me add, that the eldest of these babies was
-not six years old, and the youngest but four,
-when they were caught in the blasphemous
-folly. Our Italians seem to be got very little
-further at forty.</p>
-
-<p>Padua appears cleaner and prettier than it
-did last year; but so many things contribute
-to make me love it better, that it is no wonder
-one is prejudiced in its favour. It was <em>so</em>
-difficult to get safe hither, the roads being very
-bad, the people were so kind when we were
-here last, and the very inn-keeper and his assistants
-seemed so obligingly rejoiced to see
-us again, that I felt my heart quite expand at
-entering the Aquila d’oro, where we were soon
-rejoined by Mr. and Mrs. Greatheed, with
-whom we had parted in the Romagna, when
-they took the Perugia road, instead of returning
-by Bologna, a place they had seen before.
-Had we come three days sooner we might have
-seen the transit of Mercury from Abate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-Toaldo’s observatory; but our own transit took
-up all our thoughts, and it is a very great
-mercy that we are come safe at last. I think
-it was as much as four bulls and six horses
-could do to drag us into Rovigo.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="it">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Bologna la Grassa</div>
-<div class="verse">Ma Padua la passa<a name="FNanchor_31" id="FNanchor_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">say the Venetians: and round this town
-where the heat is indeed prodigious, they get
-the best vipers for the Venice treacle, I am
-told. Here are quantities of curious plants
-to be seen blooming now in the botanical
-garden, and our kind professor told me I need
-not languish so for horse chesnuts; for they
-would all be in flower as we returned up the
-Brenta from Venice. “They are all in flower
-<em>now</em>, Sir,” said I, “in my own grounds, eight
-miles from London: but our English oaks are
-not half so forward as yours are.” He recollected
-the aphorism so much a favourite with our country
-folks; how a British heart ought not to dilate
-with the early sunshine of prosperity, or
-droop at the first blasts of adverse fortune, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-the British oak refuses to put out his leaves at
-summer’s early felicitations, and scorns to
-drop them at winter’s first rude shake.</p>
-
-<p>Well! I have once more walked over St.
-Antony’s church, and examined the bas-reliefs
-that adorn his shrine; but their effect has
-ceased. Whoever has spent some time in the
-Musæum Clementinum is callous to the wonders
-which sculpture can perform.</p>
-
-<p>Has one not read in Ulloa’s travels, of a
-resting-place on the side of a Cordillera among
-the Andes, where the ascending traveller is regularly
-observed to put on additional clothing,
-while he who comes down the mountain
-feels so hot that he throws his clothes away?
-So it is with the shrine of St. Antonio di Padua,
-and one’s passion for the sculpture that
-adorns it: while Santa Giustina’s church regains
-her power over the mind, a power never
-missed by simplicity, while great effort
-has often small effect. But we are hastening
-to Venice, and shall leave our cares and our
-coach behind; superfluous as they both are,
-in a city which admits of neither.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>VENICE.</h2>
-
-<p>Our watery journey was indeed delightful;
-friendship, music, poetry combined their charms
-with those of nature to enchant us, and make one
-think the passage was too short, though longing
-to embrace our much-regretted sweet
-companions. The scent of odoriferous plants,
-the smoothness of the water, the sweetness of
-the piano forte, which allured to its banks many
-of the gay inhabitants, who glad of a change
-in the variety of their amusements, came
-down to the shores and danced or sang, as we
-went by, seized every sense at once, and filled
-me with unaffected pleasure. I longed to see
-the weeping willow planted along this elegant
-stream; but the Venetians like to see nothing
-weep I fancy: yet the Salix Babylonica would
-have a fine effect here, and spread to a prodigious
-growth, like those on which the captive
-Israelites once hung their harps, on the
-banks of the river Euphrates. “Of all Europe
-however,” Millar says, “it prospers
-best in pensive Britain;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Nor prov’d the bliss that lulls Italia’s breast,</div>
-<div class="verse">When red-brow’d evening calmly sinks to rest.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>These lines, quoted from Merry’s Paulina,
-remind me of the pleasure we enjoyed in
-reading that glorious poem as we floated down
-the Brenta. I have certainly read no poetry
-since; that would be like looking at Sansovino’s
-sculpture, after having seen the Apollo,
-the Venus, and the Flora Farnese. The view
-of Venice only made us shut the book. Lovely
-Venice! wise in her councils, grave and
-steady in her just authority, splendid in her
-palaces, gay in her casinos, and charming in all.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="it">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Fama tra noi Roma pomposa e santa,</div>
-<div class="verse">Venezia ricca, saggia, e signorile<a name="FNanchor_32" id="FNanchor_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">says the Italian who celebrates all their towns
-by adding a well-adapted epithet to each. But
-Sannazarius, who experienced in return for
-it more than even British bounty would have
-bestowed, exalts it in his famous epigram to a
-decided preference even over Rome itself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Viderat Adriacis Venetam Neptunus in undis</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Stare urbem, et toti ponere jura Mari;</div>
-<div class="verse">Nunc mihi Tarpeias quantum vis Jupiter, arces</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Objice, et illa tui mœnia Martis ait</div>
-<div class="verse">Sit Pelago Tibrim præfers, urbem aspice utramque</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Illam homines dices, hanc posuisse Deos.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And now really, if the subject did not bribe
-me to admiration of them, I should have
-much ado to think these six lines better worth
-fifty pounds a piece, the price Sannazarius
-was paid for them, than many lines I have
-read; as mythological allusions are always
-cheaply obtained, and this can hardly be said
-to run with any peculiar happiness: for if
-Mars built the Wall, and Jupiter founded the
-Capitol, how could Neptune justly challenge
-this last among all people, to look on both, and
-say, That men built Rome, but the Gods
-founded Venice. Had he said, that after all
-their pains, <em>this</em> was the manner in which
-those two cities would in future times strike
-all impartial observers, it would have been
-<em>enough</em>; and it would have been <em>true</em>, and
-when fiction has done its best,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="fr">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Le vray seul est aimable<a name="FNanchor_33" id="FNanchor_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Here, however, is the best translation or imitation
-I can make, of the best praise ever given
-to this justly celebrated city. Baron Cronthal,
-the learned librarian of Brera, gave me, when
-at Milan, the epigram, and persuaded me to
-try at a translation, but I never could succeed
-till I had been upon the grand canal.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">When Neptune first with pleasure and surprise,</div>
-<div class="verse">Proud from her subject sea saw Venice rise;</div>
-<div class="verse">Let Jove, said he, vaunt his fam’d walls no more,</div>
-<div class="verse">Tarpeia’s rock, or Tyber’s fane-full shore;</div>
-<div class="verse">While human hands those glittering fabrics frame,</div>
-<div class="verse">By touch celestial beauteous Venice came.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">It is a sweet place sure enough, and the caged<a name="FNanchor_34" id="FNanchor_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
-nightingales who, when men are most silent,
-answer each other across the canals, increase
-the enchantments of Venetian moonlight;
-while the full gondolas skimming over the
-tide with a lanthorn in their stern, like glow-worms
-of a dark evening, dashing the cool
-wave too as they glide along, leave no moments
-unmarked by peculiarity of pleasure.
-The Doge’s wedding has however been less
-brilliant this year; his galleys have been sent
-to fight the Turks and Corsairs, and the
-splendor at home of course suffers some temporary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-diminution; but the corso of boats in
-the evening must be for ever charming, and
-the musical parties upon the water delightful.
-We passed this morning in Pinelli’s library, a
-collection so valuable from the frequence of
-old editions, particularly the old fourteen
-hundreds as we call them, that it is supposed
-they will be purchased by some crowned head;
-and here are specimens of Aldus’s printing too,
-very curious; but there are too many curiosities,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">I’m strangled with the waste fertility,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">as Milton says. Pinelli had an excellent taste
-for pictures likewise, and here at Venice there
-are paintings to satisfy, nay satiate connoisseurship
-herself. Tintoret’s force of colouring at
-St. Rocque’s, displayed in the crucifixion, can
-surely be exceeded by no disposition of light
-and shade; but the Scuola Bolognese has hardened
-my heart against merit of any other sort,
-so much more easy to be obtained, than that
-of character, dignity, and truth. Paul Veronese
-forgets too seldom his original trade of
-<i lang="it">orefice</i>, there is too much gold and silver in his
-drapery; and though Darius’s ladies are judiciously
-adorned with a great deal of it here
-at Palazzo Pisani, I would willingly have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-abated some brocade, for an addition of expressive
-majesty in the Alexander. What a
-striking difference there is too between Guercino’s
-prodigal returned, and a picture at some
-Venetian palace of the same story treated by
-Leandro Bassano! yet who can forbear crying
-out Nature, nature! when in the last named
-work one sees the faithful spaniel run out to
-meet and acknowledge his poor young master
-though in rags, while the cook admiring the
-uncommon fatness of the calf, seems to anticipate
-the pleasure of a jolly day: so if the
-old father does look a little like pantaloon,
-why one forgives him, for we are not told
-that the fable had to do with <i lang="it">nobiltà</i>, though
-Guercino has made <em>his</em> master of the house a
-rich and stately oriental, who meets and consoles,
-near a column of Grecian architecture,
-his penitent son, whose half-uncovered form
-exhibits beauty sunk into decay, and whose
-graceful expression of shame and sorrow shew
-the dignity of his original birth, and little expectation
-of the ill-endured pains his poverty
-has caused: the elder brother, meantime,
-glowing with resentment, and turning with
-apparent scorn away from the sight of a scene
-so little to the honour of the family. Basta!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-as the Italians say; when we were at Rome
-we purchased a fine view of St. Mark’s Place
-Venice; now we are at Venice we have
-bought a sketch of Guido’s Aurora. The
-Doge’s dinner was magnificent, the plate older
-and I think finer than the Pope’s; I forget
-on what occasion it was given, I mean the
-feast, but had it been an annual ceremony our
-kind friends would have shewn it us last year.
-We must leave them once more, for a long
-time I fear, but I part with less regret because
-the heat grows almost insupportable; and
-either the stench of the small canals, or else
-the too great abundance of sardelline, a fresh
-anchovy with which these seas abound, keep
-me unwell and in perpetual fear of catching
-a putrid fever, should I indulge in eating once
-again of so rich but dangerous a dainty. Besides
-that one may be tired of exertion, and
-fatigued with festivity, purchased at the price
-of sleep and quiet.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Non Hybla non me specifer capit Nilus,</div>
-<div class="verse">Nec quæ paludes delicata Pomptinus</div>
-<div class="verse">Ex arce clivi spectat uva Sestini.</div>
-<div class="verse">Quid concupiscam? quæris ergo,&mdash;<em>dormire</em><a name="FNanchor_35" id="FNanchor_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>To PADUA.</h2>
-
-<p>Then we returned the twelfth of June, and
-surely it is too difficult to describe the sweet
-sensations excited by the enjoyment of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Each rural sight, each rural sound;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">as the dear banks of the Brenta first saluted our
-return to <i lang="la">terra firma</i> from the watery residence
-of our <i lang="it">bella dominante</i>. We dined at a lovely
-villa belonging to an amiable friend upon the
-margin of the river, where the kind embraces
-of the Padrona di Casa, added to the fragrance
-of her garden, and the sweet breath of oxen
-drawing in her team, revived me once more to
-the enjoyment of cheerful conversation, by
-restoring my natural health, and proving beyond
-a possibility of doubt, that my late disorder
-was of the putrid kind. We dined in a
-grotto-like room, and partook the evening refreshments,
-cake, ice, and lemonade, under a
-tree by the river side, whilst my own feelings
-reminded me of the sailors delight described
-in Anson’s voyages when they landed at Juan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-Fernandez. Night was best disposed of in the
-barge, and I observed as we entered Padua
-early in the morning, how surprisingly quick
-had been the progress of summer; but in
-these countries vegetation is so rapid, that
-every thing makes haste to come and more to
-go. Scarce have you tasted green pease or
-strawberries, before they are out of season; and
-if you do <em>not</em> swallow your pleasures, as Madame
-la Presidente said, you have a chance to
-miss of getting any pleasures at all. Here is
-no mediocrity in any thing, no moderate
-weather, no middle rank of life, no twilight;
-whatever is not night is day, and whatever is
-not love is hatred; and that the English
-should eat peaches in May, and green pease
-in October, sounds to Italian ears as a miracle;
-they comfort themselves, however, by saying
-that they <em>must</em> be very insipid, while <em>we</em> know
-that fruits forced by strong fire are at least
-many of them higher in flavour than those
-produced by sun; the pine-apple particularly,
-which West Indians confess eats better with us
-than with them. Figs and cherries, however,
-defy a hot-house, and grapes raised by art are
-worth little except for shew; peaches, nectarines,
-and ananas are the glory of a British gardener,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-and no country but England can shew such.
-Our morning, passed at the villa of the senator
-Quirini, set us on this train of thinking, for
-every culled excellence adorned it, and brought
-to my mind Voltaire’s description of Pococuranti
-in Candide, false only in the ostentation,
-and <em>there</em> the character fails; misled by a French
-idea, that pleasure is nothing without the delight
-of shewing that you are pleased, like the
-old adage, or often-quoted passage about learning:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Scire tuum nihil est, nisi te scire hoc sciat alter<a name="FNanchor_36" id="FNanchor_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">A Venetian has no such notions; by force of
-mind and dint of elegance inherent in it, he
-pleases himself first, and finds every body else
-delighted of course, nor would quit his own
-country except for paradise; while an English
-nobleman clumps his trees, and twists his river,
-to comply with his neighbour’s taste, when perhaps
-he has none of his own; feels disgusted
-with all he has done, and runs away to live
-in Italy.</p>
-
-<p>The evening of this day was spent at the
-theatre, where I was glad the audience were
-no better pleased, for the plaudits of an Italian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-Platea at an air they like, when one’s nerves
-are weak and the weather very hot, are all
-but totally insupportable. What then must
-these poor actors have suffered, who laboured
-so violently to entertain us? A tragedy in
-rhyme upon the subject of Julius Sabinus and
-his wife Epponina was the representation; and
-wonderfully indeed did the players struggle,
-and bounce, and sprunt, like vigorous patients
-resisting the influence of a disease called opisthotonos,
-or dry gripes of Jamaica; “Were
-their jaws once locked we should do better,”
-said Mr. Chappelow. “Che spacca monti
-mai!” exclaimed the gentle Padovani. <i lang="it">Spacca
-monte</i> means just our English Drawcansir, a
-fellow that splits mountains with his bluster,
-a captain <em>Blowmedown</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The fair at Padua is a better place for
-spending one’s time than the theatre; it is
-built round a pretty area, and I much wonder
-the middle is not filled by a band of music.
-Our Astley is expected to shine here shortly,
-and the ladies are in haste to see <i lang="it">il bel Inglese
-a Cavallo</i>; but we must be seduced to stay no
-longer among those whom I must ever leave
-with grateful regret and truly affectionate
-regard. Our carriage is repaired, and the man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-says it will now carry us safely round the world
-if we please; our first stage however will be
-no farther than to pretty</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>VERONA.</h2>
-
-<p>The road from Padua hither is a vile one;
-one can scarcely make twenty miles a-day in
-any part of the Venetian state. Its senators,
-accustomed to water carriage, have little care
-for us who go by land. The Palanzuola
-way is worse however, and I am glad once
-more to see sweet Verona.</p>
-
-<p>Petruchio and Catharine might easily have
-met with all the adventures related by Grumio
-on their journey thither, but when once arrived
-she should have been contented. This
-city is as lovely as ever, more so than it was
-last April twelvemonth, when the spring was
-sullen and backward; every hill now glows
-with the gay produce of summer, and every
-valley smiles with plenty expected or pleasure
-possessed. The antiquities however look less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-respectable than when I left them; no amphitheatre
-will do after the Roman Colossæum,
-and our triumphal arch here looked so pitiful,
-I wondered what was come to it. So must it
-always happen to the performances of art, which
-we compare one against another, and find
-that as man made the best of them, so some
-man may in some moment make a better still:
-but the productions of nature are the works
-of God; we can only compare them with
-other things done by the same Almighty Master,
-whose power is equally discernible in all,
-from the fly’s antennæ to the elephant’s proboscis.
-Bozza’s collection gave birth to this
-last sentence; the farther one goes the more
-astonishing grows his musæum, the neglect of
-which is sure no credit to the present age. I
-find his cabinet much fuller than I left it, and
-adorned with many new specimens from the
-southern seas, besides flying-fish innumerable,
-beautifully preserved, and one predaceous
-creature caught in the very act of gorging his
-prey, a proof of their destruction being instant
-as that of the dwellers in Pompeia, who had
-their dinners dished when the eruption overwhelmed
-them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We took leave of our learned friends here
-with concern, but hope to see them again, and
-tread the stucco floors so prettily mottled and
-variegated, they look like the cold mock turtle
-soup exactly, which London pastry-cooks keep
-in their shops, ready for immediate use.</p>
-
-<p>What an odd thing is custom! here is weather
-to fry one in, yet after exercise, and in a state
-of the most violent perspiration, no consequences
-follow the use of iced beverages, except
-the sense of pleasure resulting from them
-at the moment. Should a Bath belle indulge
-in such luxury, after dancing down forty
-couple at Mr. Tyson’s ball, we should expect
-to hear next day of her surfeit at least, if not
-of her sudden death. Lying-in ladies take
-the same liberty with <em>their</em> constitutions, and
-<em>say</em> that no harm comes of it; and when I tell
-them how differently we manage in England,
-cry, “<i lang="it">mi pare che dev’essere schiavitù grande
-in quel paese della benedetta libertà</i><a name="FNanchor_37" id="FNanchor_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>.” Fine
-muslin linen nicely got up is however, say
-they, one of the things to be produced only in
-Great Britain, and much do our Italian ladies
-admire it, though they look very charmingly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-with much less trouble taken. I lent one lady
-at some place, I remember, my maid, to shew
-her, as she so much wished it, how the operation
-of clear-starching was performed; but
-as soon as it began, she laughed at the superfluous
-fatigue, as she called it; and her servants
-crossed themselves in every corner of
-the room, with wonder that such niceties
-should be required.&mdash;Well they might! for
-I caught a great tall fellow ironing his lady’s
-best neck-handkerchief with the warming-pan
-here at Padua very quietly; and she was
-a woman of quality too, and looked as lovely,
-when the toilette was once performed, as if
-much more attention had been bestowed
-upon it.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>PARMA.</h2>
-
-<p>We passed through Mantua the 18th of
-June, where nothing much attracted my notice,
-except a female figure in the street, veiled
-from head to foot, and covered wholly in
-black; she walked backward and forward
-along the same portion of the same street, from
-one to three o’clock, in the heat of the burning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-sun; her hand held out; but when I,
-more from curiosity than any better motive
-put money in it, she threw it silently away, and
-the beggars picked it up, while she held her hand
-again as before. This conduct, in any town of
-England, would be deemed madness or mischief;
-the woman would be carried before a
-magistrate to give an account of herself, should
-the mob forbear to uncase her till they came;
-or some charitable person would seize and
-carry her home, fill her pockets with money,
-and coax her out of the anecdotes of her past
-life to put in the Magazine; her print would
-be published, and many engravers struggle
-for its profits; the name at bottom, <em>Annabella,
-or the Sable Matron</em>; while novels would be
-written without end, and the circulating libraries
-would lend them out all the live-long
-day. Things are differently carried on however
-at Mantua: I asked one shopkeeper, and
-she gravely replied, “<i lang="it">per divozione</i>,” and took
-no further notice: another (to my inquiries,
-which appeared to him far odder than the woman’s
-conduct) said, The lady was possibly doing
-a little penance; that he had not minded her
-till I spoke, but that perhaps it might be some
-woman of fashion, who having refused a poor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-person roughly on some occasion, was condemned
-by her confessor to try for a couple
-of hours what begging <em>was</em>, and learn humanity
-from experience of evil. The idea
-charmed me; while the man coolly said, all
-this was only his conjecture; but that such
-things were done too often to attract attention;
-and hoped such virtue was not rare
-enough to excite wonder. My just applause
-of such sentiments was stopt by the <i lang="fr">laquais
-de place</i> calling me to dinner; when
-he informed me, that he had asked about the
-person whose behaviour struck me so, and
-could now tell me all there was to be known;
-she was a lady of quality, he said, who had
-lost a dear friend on that day some years past,
-and that she wore black for two hours ever
-since upon its anniversary; but that she
-would now change her dress, and I should
-see her in the evening at the opera. My recollecting
-that if <em>this</em> were her case, I ought to
-have been keeping her company (as no one
-ever lost a friend so dear to them as was my
-incomparable mother, who likewise left me to
-mourn her loss on this day thirteen years),
-spoiled my appetite, and took from me all
-power of meeting the lady at the theatre.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We went again however to see Virgil’s
-field, and recollected that <i lang="la">tenet nunc Parthenope</i>;
-congratulated the giants on their superiority
-over Pietro de Cortona’s paltry
-creatures, in one of the Roman palaces; and
-drove forward to Parma, through bad roads
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>This Mantua is a very disagreeable town;
-nor was Romeo wrong in lamenting his banishment
-to it; for though I will not say with
-him that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">There is no world without Verona’s walls;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">yet it must be allowed that few places do
-unite such various excellencies, and that the
-contrast is very striking between that city and
-this.</p>
-
-<p>Parma exhibits an appearance somewhat
-different from all the rest; yet we should
-scarcely have visited it but for the sake of the
-four surprising pictures it contains: the <i lang="it">Madona
-della Scodella</i> is nature itself; and St.
-Girolamo exhibits such a proof of fancy and
-fervour, as are almost inconceivable; the general
-effect, and the difficulty one has to take
-one’s eye off it, afford conviction of its superior<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-merit, and greatly compensate for that
-taste, character, and expression, which are
-found only in the Caraccis and their school.
-Corregio was perhaps one of the most powerful
-geniusses that has appeared on earth;
-destitute of knowledge, or of the means of acquiring
-it, he has left glorious proofs of what
-uninstructed man may do, and is perhaps a
-greater honour to the human species, than
-those who, from fermenting erudition of various
-kinds, produce performances of more
-complicated worth. The Fatal Curiosity, and
-Pilgrim’s Progress, will live as long as the
-Prince of Abyssinia, or <i lang="fr">Les Avantures de Telemaque</i>,
-perhaps: and who shall dare say, that
-Lillo, Bunyan, and Antonio Corregio, were
-not <em>naturally</em> equal to Johnson, Michael Angelo,
-and the Archbishop of Cambray?&mdash;Have
-I said enough, or can enough be ever
-said in praise of a painter, whose works the
-great Annibale Caracci delighted to study, to
-copy, and to praise?</p>
-
-<p>Piacenza we found to offer us few objects
-of attention: an <i lang="it">improvisatore</i>, and not a very
-bad one, amused that time which would
-otherwise have been passed in lamenting our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-paucity of entertainment; while his artful
-praises of England put me in good humour,
-spite of the weather, which is too hot to bear.
-With all our lamentations about the heat
-however, here is no <i lang="it">cicala</i> on the trees, or
-<i lang="it">lucciola</i> in the hedges, as at Florence; the days
-are a little longer too, and the crepuscule less
-abrupt in its departure. How often, upon
-the <i lang="it">Ponte della Trinitá</i>, have I secretly regretted
-the long-drawn evenings of an English
-summer; when the dewy night-fall refreshes
-the air, and silent dusk brings on a
-train of meditations uninspired by Italian
-skies! In this decided country all that is not
-broad day is dark night; all that is not loud
-mirth, is penitence and grief; when the rain
-falls, it falls in a torrent; when the sun shines,
-it glows like a burning-glass; where the
-people are rich, they stick gems in their very
-walls, and make their chimneys of amethyst;
-where they are poor, they clasp your knees
-in an agony of pinching want, and display
-diseases which cannot be a day survived!</p>
-
-<p>Talking on about Italy in which there is no
-mediocrity, and of England in which there is
-nothing else, we arrived at Lodi; where I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-began to rejoice in hearing the people cry
-<i lang="it">no’ cor’ altr’</i> again, in reply to our commands;
-because we were now once more returned
-to the district and dialect of dear
-Milan, where we have cool apartments and
-warm friends; and where, after an absence
-of fifteen months, we shall again see those
-acquaintance with whom we lived much
-before; a sensation always delightfully soothing,
-even when one returns to less amiable
-scenes, and less productive of innocent pleasure
-than these have been to me. The consciousness
-of having, while at a distance, seen
-few people more agreeable than those one left
-behind; the natural thankfulness of one’s
-heart to God, for having preserved one’s life
-so as to see them again, expands philanthropy;
-and gives unaffected comfort in the
-restored society of companions long concealed
-from one by accident or distance.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>MILAN.</h2>
-
-<p class="right">21st June 1786.</p>
-
-<p>After rejoicing over my house and my
-friends; after asking a hundred questions,
-and hearing a hundred stories of those long
-left; after reciprocating common civilities,
-and talking over common topics, we observed
-how much the general look of Milan
-was improved in these last fifteen months;
-how the town was become neater, the ordinary
-people smarter, the roads round their
-city mended, and the beggars cleared away
-from the streets. We did not find however
-that the people we talked to were at all
-charmed with these new advantages: their
-convents demolished, their processions put an
-end to, the number of their priests of course
-contracted, and their church plate carried by
-cart-loads to the mint; holidays forbidden,
-and every saint’s name erased from the calendar,
-excepting only St. Peter and St. Paul;
-whilst those shopkeepers who worked for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-monasteries, and those musicians who sung or
-played in oratorios, are left to find employment
-how they can;&mdash;cloud the countenances
-of all, and justly; as such sudden and
-rough reforms shock the feelings of the multitude;
-offend the delicacy of the nobles;
-make a general stagnation of business and of
-pleasure, in a country where <em>both</em> depend upon
-religious functions; and terrify the clergy
-into no ill-grounded apprehensions of being
-found in a few years more wholly useless, and
-as such dismissed.&mdash;Well! whatever is done
-hastily, can scarcely be done quite well; and
-wherever much is done, a great part of it will
-doubtless be done wrong. A considerable
-portion of all this however will be confessed
-useful, and even necessary, when the hour
-of violence on one side, and prejudice on the
-other, is past away; as the fire of London has
-been found beneficial by those who live in the
-newly-restored town. Meantime I think the
-present precipitation indecent enough for my
-own part; a thousand little errors would burn
-out of themselves, were they suffered to die
-quietly away; and when the morning breaks
-in naturally, it is superfluous as awkward to
-put the stars out with one’s fingers, like the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-Hours in Guercino’s Aurora<a name="FNanchor_38" id="FNanchor_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>. Whoever therefore
-will be at the pains a little to pick their
-principles, not grasp them by the bunch, will
-find as many unripe at one end, I believe, as
-there are rotten at the other: for could we
-see these hasty innovators erecting public
-schools for the instruction of the poor, or
-public work-houses for their employment;
-did they unlock the treasure-house of true religion,
-by publishing the Bible in every dialect
-of their dominions, and oblige their clergy to
-read it with the souls committed to their
-charge;&mdash;I should have a better idea of their
-sincerity and disinterested zeal for God’s
-glory, than they give by tearing down his
-statues, or those of his blessed Virgin Mother,
-which Carlo Borromæo set up.</p>
-
-<p>The folly of hanging churches with red
-damask would surely fade away of itself;
-among people of good sense and good taste;
-who could not long be simple enough to suppose,
-that concealing Greek architecture with
-such transient finery, and giving to God’s
-house the air of a tattered theatre, could in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-any wife promote his service, or their salvation.
-Many superstitious and many unmeaning
-ceremonies <em>do</em> die off every day, because
-unsupported by reason or religion: Doctor
-Carpanni, a learned lawyer, told me but to-day,
-that here in Lombardy they had a custom,
-no longer ago than in his father’s time,
-of burying a great lord or possessor of lands,
-with a ceremony of killing on his grave the
-favourite horse, dog, &amp;c. that he delighted in
-when alive; a usage borrowed from the Oriental
-Pagans, who burn even the widows of the
-deceased upon their funeral pile; and among
-our monuments in Westminster Abbey, set up
-in the days of darkness, I have minded now
-and then the hawk and greyhound of a nobleman
-lying in marble at his feet; some of our
-antiquarians should tell us if they killed
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Another odd affinity strikes me. Half a
-century ago there was an annual procession at
-Shrewsbury, called by way of pre-eminence
-<em>Shrewsbury Show</em>; when a handsome young
-girl of about twelve years old rode round the
-town, and wished prosperity to every trade
-assembled at the fair: I forget what else
-made the amusement interesting; but have
-heard my mother tell of the particular beauty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-of some wench, who was ever after called the
-<em>Queen</em>, because she had been carried in triumph
-as such on the day of <em>Shrewsbury Show</em>. Now
-if nobody gives a better derivation of that
-old custom, it may perhaps be found a dreg
-of the Romish superstition, which as many
-years ago, in various parts of Italy, prompted
-people to dress up a pretty girl, on the 25th
-of March, or other season dedicated to the
-Virgin, and carry her in procession about the
-streets, singing litanies to her, &amp;c. and ending,
-in profaneness of admiration, a day begun
-in idleness and folly. At Rome however no
-such indecorous absurdities are encouraged:
-we saw a beautiful figure of the <em>Madonna</em>,
-dressed from a picture of Guido Rheni, borne
-about one day; but no human creature in
-the street offered to kneel, or gave one the
-slightest reason to say or suppose that she was
-worshipped: some sweet hymns were sung in
-her praise, as the procession moved slowly on;
-but no impropriety could I discern, who
-watched with great attention.</p>
-
-<p>It is time to have done with all this though,
-and go see the Ambrosian library; which, as
-far as I can judge, is perfectly respectable.
-The Prefect’s politeness kindly offered my
-curiosity any thing I was particularly anxious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-to see, and the learned Mr. Dugati was exceedingly
-obliging. The old Virgil preserved
-here with Petrarch’s marginal notes in his
-own hand-writing, interest one much; this
-little narration, evidently written for his own
-fancy to feed on, of the day and hour he first
-felt the impression of Laura’s charms, is the
-best proof of his genuine passion for that lady,
-as he certainly never meant for our inspection
-what he wrote down in his own Virgil.
-Here is likewise the valuable MS. of Flavius
-Josephus the Jewish historian, a curiosity deservedly
-admired and esteemed: it is kept
-with peculiar care I think, and is in high
-preservation: A Syriac bible too, very fine
-indeed, from which I understand they are
-now going to print off some copies. I have
-been taught by the scholars not to think a
-Syriac bible of the Samaritan text so very
-rare; but the Septuagint in that language is so
-exceedingly scarce, that many are persuaded
-this is the only one extant; and as our Lord,
-in his quotations from the old law, usually
-cites that version, it is justly preferred to all
-others. Leonardo da Vinci’s famous folio
-preserved in this library, for which James I.
-of England offered three thousand ducats, an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-event recorded here over the chest that contains
-it on a tablet of marble, deserves attention
-and reverence: nothing seems above,
-nothing below, the observation of that prodigious
-genius. He has in this, and other volumes
-of the same curious work, apparently put down
-every painter’s or mathematician’s thought that
-crossed his imagination. It is a <em>Leonardiana</em><a name="FNanchor_39" id="FNanchor_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>,
-the common-place book of a great and wise
-man; nor did our British sovereign ever with
-more good sense evince his true love of learning,
-than by his princely offer of its purchase.</p>
-
-<p>Till now the looking at friends, and
-rarities, and telling old stories, and seeing
-new sights, &amp;c. has lulled my conscience
-asleep, nor suffered me to recollect that,
-dazzled by the brightness of the Corregios at
-Parma, the account of their press, the finest
-in Europe, and infinitely superior to our
-Baskerville, escaped me. They have a glorious
-collection too of bibles in their library;
-their illuminations are most delicate, and their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-bindings pompous, but they possess a modern
-MS. of such singular perfection, that none of
-those finished when chirography was more
-cultivated than it is now, can at all pretend to
-compare with it. The characters are all gilt,
-the leaves vellum, the miniatures finished
-with a degree of nicety rarely found in union,
-as here, with the utmost elegance and taste.
-No words I can use will give a just idea of
-this little MS.: whoever is a true fancier of
-such things, would find his trouble well repaid,
-if he left London only to look at it. The book
-contains private devotions for the duchess with
-suitable ornaments&mdash;I will talk no more of it.</p>
-
-<p>The fine colossal figure of the Virgin
-Mary in heaven crowned by her Son’s
-hand, painted in the cieling of some church
-at Parma, has a bad light, and it is difficult
-to comprehend its sublimity. One approaches
-nearer to understand the merits of
-that singular performance when one looks at
-Caracci’s copy of it, kept in the Ambrosian
-library here at Milan. But how was I surprised
-to hear related as a fact happening to
-<em>him</em>, the old story told to all who go to see
-St. Paul’s cathedral in London, of our Sir
-James Thornhill, who, while he was intent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-on painting the cupola, walked backward to
-look at the effect, till, arriving at the very
-edge of the scaffold, he was in danger of dashing
-his brains out by falling from that horrible
-height upon the marble below, had not
-some bystander possessed readiness of mind to
-run suddenly forward, and throw a pencil
-daubed in white stuff which stood near him,
-at the figure Sir James’s eyes were fixed on,
-which provoked the painter to follow him
-threatening, and so saved his life. Could
-such an accident have happened twice? and
-is it likely that to either of these persons it
-ever happened at all? Would such men as
-Annibal Caracci and Sir James Thornhill
-have exposed themselves upon an undefended
-scaffold, without railing it round to prevent
-their tumbling down, when engaged in a
-work that would take them many days, nay
-weeks, to finish it? Impossible! in every
-nation traditionary tales shake my belief exceedingly;
-and what astonishes one more
-than it disgusts, if possible, is to see the same
-story fitted to more nations than one.</p>
-
-<p>It is now many years since a counsellor related
-at my house in Surrey the following narration,
-of which I had then no doubts, or idea<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-of suspicion; for he said he was himself witness
-to the fact, and laid the scene at St. Edmondsbury,
-a town in our county of Suffolk:
-how a man accused of murder, with every
-corroborating circumstance, escaped by the
-steady resolution of one juryman, who could
-not, by any arguments or remonstrances of
-his companions, be prevailed on to pronounce
-the fellow guilty, though every possible circumstance
-combined to ascertain him as the
-person who took the deceased’s life; and how,
-after all was over, the juryman confessed privately
-to the judge, that <em>he himself</em>, by such
-and such an accident, had killed the farmer,
-of whose death the other stood accused.
-This event, true or false, of which I have
-since found the rudiments in a French Recueil,
-was told me at Venice by a gentleman as
-having happened <em>there</em>, under the immediate
-inspection of a friend he named. Quere,
-whether any such thing ever happened at all
-in any time or place? but laxity of narration,
-and contempt of all exactness, at
-last extinguish one’s best-founded confidence
-in the lips of mortal man. It is, however,
-clearly proved, that no duty is so difficult
-as to preserve truth in all our transactions,
-while no transaction is so trifling as to preclude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-temptation of infringing it: for if there
-is no interest that prompts a liar, his vanity
-suffices; nor will we mention the suggestions
-of cowardice, malignity, or any species of
-vice, when, as in these last-mentioned stories,
-many fictions are invented by well-meaning
-people, who hope to prevent mischief, inculcate
-the possibility of hanging innocence, &amp;c.
-and violate truth out of regard to virtue.</p>
-
-<p>Well, well! our good Italians here will not
-condescend to live or lie, if now and then they
-scruple not to tell one. No man in this
-country pretends either to tenderness or to indifference,
-when he feels no disposition to be
-indifferent or tender; and so removed are
-they from all affectation of sensibility or of refinement,
-that when a conceited Englishman
-starts back in pretended rapture from a Raphael
-he has perhaps little taste for, it is difficult
-to persuade these sincerer people that his
-transports are possibly put on, only to deceive
-some of his countrymen who stand by, and
-who, if he took no notice of so fine a picture,
-would laugh, and say he had been throwing
-his time away, without making even the common
-and necessary improvements expected
-from every gentleman who travels through
-Italy; yet surely it is a choice delight to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-live where the everlasting scourge held over
-London and Bath, of <em>what will they think?</em>
-and <em>what will they say?</em> has no existence;
-and to reflect that I have now sojourned
-near two years in Italy, and scarcely can name
-one conceited man, or one affected woman,
-with whom, in any rank of life, I have been
-in the least connected.</p>
-
-<p>In Naples we see the works of nature displayed;
-at Rome and Florence we survey
-the performances of art; at every place in
-Italy there is much worthy one’s esteem, said
-the Venetian Resident one day very elegantly;
-and at Milan there is the <em>Abate Bossi</em>. Should
-I forbear to add <em>my</em> testimony to such talents
-and such virtue, which, expanded by nature
-to the wide range of human benevolence, he
-knows how to concentre occasionally for the
-service of private friendship, how great would
-be my ingratitude and neglect, while no
-character ever so completely resembled his, as
-that of the famous <em>Hough</em> well known in
-England by the title of the <em>good</em> Bishop of
-Worcester. His ingenuity in composing and
-placing these words on the 13th of May
-1775, is perhaps one of his least valuable
-jeux d’esprit; but pretty, when one knows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-that on that day the empress was born, on
-that day the archduke arrived at Milan on
-a visit to his brother, and on that day the
-duchess was delivered of a son. The words
-may be read our way or the Chinese:</p>
-
-<table summary="Words that can be read either along the rows or the columns to make a sentence">
- <tr>
- <td>Natalis</td>
- <td>Adventus</td>
- <td>Partus</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Matris</td>
- <td>Fratris</td>
- <td>Conjugis</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Felix</td>
- <td>Optatus</td>
- <td>Incolumis</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Principem</td>
- <td>Aulam</td>
- <td>Urbem</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="center">Lectificabant.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>What a foolish thing it is in princes to give
-pain in a place like this, where all are disposed
-to derive pleasure even from praising them!
-There is a natural loyalty among the Lombards,
-which oppression can scarcely extinguish,
-or tyranny destroy; and, as I have said a
-thousand times, they <em>pretend</em> to love no one;
-they <em>do</em> love their rulers; and, rather grieve
-than growl at the afflictions caused by their
-rapacity.</p>
-
-<p>I was told that I should find few discriminations
-of character in Italy; but the contrary
-proves true, and I do not wonder at it. Among
-those people who, by being folded or driven
-all together in flocks as the French are, with
-one fashion to serve for the whole society, a
-man may easily contract a similarity of manners<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-by rubbing down each asperity of character
-against his nearest neighbour, no less
-plastic than himself; but here, where there
-is little apprehension of ridicule, and little spirit
-of imitation, monotonous tediousness is almost
-sure to be escaped. The very word <em>polite</em>
-comes from <em>polish</em> I suppose; and at Paris
-the place where you enjoy <i lang="fr">le veritable vernis
-St. Martin</i> in perfection, the people can
-scarcely be termed <em>polished</em>, or even <em>varnished</em>:
-they are <em>glazed</em>; and everything slides off
-the <i lang="fr">exterieur</i> of course, leaving the heart untouched.
-It is the same thing with other productions
-of nature; in caverns we see petrifactions
-shooting out in angular and excentric
-forms, because in Castleton Hole dame Nature
-has fair play; while the broad beach at
-Brighthelmstone, evermore battered by the same
-ocean, exhibits only a heap of round pebbles,
-and those round pebbles all alike.</p>
-
-<p>But we must cease reflections, and begin
-describing again. We have got a country
-house for the remaining part of the hot weather
-upon the confines of the Milanese dominions,
-where Switzerland first begins to
-bow her bleak head, and soften gradually in
-the sunshine of Italian fertility. From every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-walk and villa round this delightful spot, one
-sees an assemblage of beauties rarely to be met
-with: and there is a resemblance in it to the
-Vale of Llwydd, which makes it still more interesting
-to <em>me</em>. But we have obtained leave
-to spend a week of our destined Villeggiatura
-at the Borromæan palace, situated in the middle
-of Lago Maggiore, on the island so truly
-termed Isola Bella; every step to which from
-our villa at Varese teems with new beauties,
-and only wants the sea to render it, in point of
-mere landscape, superior to any thing we have
-seen yet.</p>
-
-<p>Our manner of living here is positively
-like nothing real, and the fanciful description
-of oriental magnificence, with Seged’s retirement
-in the Rambler to his palace on the Lake
-Dambea, is all I ever read that could come
-in competition with it: for here is one barge
-full of friends from Milan, another carrying
-a complete band of thirteen of the best musicians
-in Italy, to amuse ourselves and them
-with concerts every evening upon the water
-by moonlight, while the inhabitants of these
-elysian regions who live upon the banks, come
-down in crowds to the shores glad to receive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-additional delight, where satiety of pleasure
-seems the sole evil to be dreaded.</p>
-
-<p>It is well known that the wild mountains of
-Savoy, the rich plains of Lombardy, the verdant
-pastures of Piedmont, and the pointed Alps
-of Switzerland, form the limits of Lago Maggiore:
-where, upon a naked rock, torn I
-trust from some surrounding hill, or happily
-thrown up in the middle of the water by a subterranean
-volcano, the Count Borromæo, in the
-year 1613, began to carry earth; and lay out a
-pretty garden, which from that day has been perpetually
-improving, till an appearance of eastern
-grandeur which it now wears, is rendered still
-more charming by all the studied elegance of
-art, and the conveniencies of common life.
-The palace is constructed as if to realise Johnson’s
-ideas in his Prince of Abyssinia: the
-garden consists of ten terraces; the walls of
-which are completely covered with orange,
-lemon, and cedrati trees, whose glowing colours
-and whose fragrant scent are easily discerned
-at a considerable distance, and the perfume
-particularly often reaches as far as to the
-opposite shore: nor are standards of the same
-plants wanting. I measured one not the
-largest in the grove, which had been planted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-one hundred and five years; it was a full yard
-and a quarter round. There were forty-six
-of them set near each other, and formed a delightful
-shade. The cedrati fruit grows as
-large as a late romana melon with us in England;
-and every thing one sees, and every
-thing one hears, and every thing one tastes,
-brings to one’s mind the fortunate islands and
-the golden age. Walks, woods, and terraces
-<em>within</em> the island, and a prospect of unequalled
-variety <em>without</em>, make this a kind of
-fairy habitation, so like something one has
-seen represented on theatres, that my female
-companion cried out as we approached the
-place, “If we go any nearer now, I am sure
-it will all vanish into air.” There is solidity
-enough however: a little village consisting of
-eighteen fishermen’s houses, and a pretty
-church, with a dozen of well-grown poplars
-before it, together with the palace and garden,
-compose the territory, which commodiously
-contains two hundred and fifty souls,
-as the circuit is somewhat more than a measured
-mile and a half, but not two miles in
-all: and we have cannons to guard our Calypso-like
-dominion, for which Count Borromæo
-pays tribute to the king of Sardinia; but has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-himself the right of raising men upon the
-main land, and of coining money at <em>Macau</em>,
-a little town amid the hollows of these rocks,
-which present their irregular fronts to the
-lake in a manner surprisingly beautiful. He
-has three other islets on the same water, for
-change of amusement; of which that named
-la Superiore is covered with a hamlet, and
-l’Isola Madre with a wood full of game, guinea
-fowl, and common poultry; a summer-house
-beside furnished with chintz, and containing
-so many apartments, that I am told
-the uncle of the present possessor, having quarrelled
-with his wife, and resolving in a
-pet to leave the world, shut himself up on
-that little spot of earth, and never touched
-the continent, as I may call it, for the last
-seventeen years of his life. Let me add, that
-he had there his church and his chaplain,
-three musical professors in constant pay, and
-a pretty yatcht to row or sail, and fetch in
-friends, physicians, &amp;c. from the main land.
-His nephew has not the same taste at all,
-seldom spending more than a week, and that
-only once a-year, among his islands, which are
-kept however quite in a princely style: the
-family crest, a unicorn, made in white marble,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-and of colossal greatness, proudly overlooking
-ten broad terraces which rise in a pyramidal
-form from the water: each wall
-richly covered with orange and lemon trees,
-and every parapet concealed under thickly-flowering
-shrubs of incessant variety, as if
-every climate had been culled, to adorn this
-tiny spot. More than a hundred beds are
-made in the palace, which has likewise a grotto
-floor of infinite ingenuity, and beautiful from
-being happily contrasted against the general
-splendour of the house itself. I have seen
-no such effort of what we call taste since I left
-England, as these apartments on a level with
-the lake exhibit, being all roofed and wainscotted
-with well-disposed shellwork, and decorated
-with fountains in a lively and pleasing
-manner. The library up stairs had many
-curious books in it&mdash;a Camden’s Britannia
-particularly, translated into Spanish; an Arabic
-Bible worthy of the Bodleian collection,
-and well-chosen volumes of natural history to
-a very serious degree of expence. Painting
-is not the first or second boast of Count Borromæo,
-but there are some tolerable landscapes
-by Tempesta, and three famous pictures
-of Luca Giordano, well known in London<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-by the general diffusion of their prints,
-representing the Rape of the Sabines, the
-Judgment of Paris, and the Triumph of Galatea.
-These large history pieces adorn the
-walls of the vast room we dine in; where,
-though we never sit down fewer than twenty
-or twenty-five people to table, all seem lost
-from the greatness of its size, till the concert
-fills it in the evening.</p>
-
-<p>It is the garden however more than the palace
-which deserves description. He who has
-the care of it was born upon the island, and
-never strayed further than four miles, he tells
-me, from the borders of his master’s lake.
-Sure he must think the fall of man a fable:
-<em>he</em> lives in Eden still. How much must such
-a fellow be confounded, could he be carried
-blind-folded in the midst of winter to London
-or to Paris! and set down in Fleet-street or
-Rue St. Honoré! That he understands his
-business so as to need no tuition from the inhabitants
-of either city, may be seen by a fig-tree
-which I found here ingrafted on a lemon;
-both bear fruit at the same moment, whilst a
-vine curls up the stem of the lemon-tree,
-dangling her grapes in that delicious company
-with apparent satisfaction to herself.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-Another inoculation of a moss-rose upon an
-orange, and a third of a carnation upon a cedrati
-tree, gave me new knowledge of what
-the gardener’s art, aided by a happy climate,
-could perform. But when rowing round the
-lake with our band of music yesterday, we
-touched at a country seat upon the side which
-joins the Milanese dominion, and I found
-myself presented with currants and gooseberries
-by a kind family, who having made their
-fortune in Amsterdam, had imbibed some
-Dutch ideas; my mind immediately felt her
-elastic force, and willingly confessed that liberty,
-security, and opulence alone give the
-true relish to productions either of art or nature;
-that freedom can make the currants of
-Holland and golden pippins of Great Britain
-sweeter than all the grapes of Italy; while to
-every manly understanding some share of the
-government in a well-regulated state, with the
-every-day comforts of common life made durable
-and certain by the laws of a prosperous
-country, are at last far preferable to splendid
-luxuries precariously enjoyed under the consciousness
-of their possible privation when least
-expected by the hand of despotic power.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>St. Carlo Borromæo’s colossal statue in bronze
-fixed up at the place of his nativity by the
-side of this beautiful water, fifteen miles from
-l’Isola Bella, was our next object of curiosity.
-It is wonderfully well proportioned for its
-prodigious magnitude, which, though often
-measured and well known, will never cease
-to astonish travellers, while twelve men can
-be easily contained in his head only, as some
-of our company had the curiosity to prove;
-but repented their frolic, as the metal heated
-by such a sun became insupportable. Abate
-Bianconi bid me remark that it was just the
-height of twelve men, each six feet high;
-that it is but just once and a half less than
-that erected by Nero, which gives name to
-the Roman Colosseo; that it is to be seen
-clearly at the distance of twelve miles, though
-placed to no advantage, as situation has been
-sacrificed to the greater propriety of setting it
-up upon the place where he was actually
-born, whose memory they hold, and justly, in
-such perfect veneration. I returned home persuaded
-that the cardinal’s dress, though an unfavourable
-one to pictures, is very happily adapted
-to a colossal statue, as the three cloaks or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-petticoats made a sort of step-ladder drapery
-which takes off exceedingly from the offence
-that is given by too long lines to the eye.</p>
-
-<p>We returned to our enchanted palace with
-music playing by our side: I never saw a
-party of pleasure carried on so happily. The
-weather was singularly bright and clear, the
-moon at full, the French-horns breaking the
-silence of the night, invited echo to answer
-them. The nine days (and we enjoyed seventeen
-or eighteen hours out of every twenty-four)
-seemed nine minutes. When we came
-home to our country-house in the Varesotto,
-verses and sonnets saluted our arrival, and
-congratulated our wedding-day.</p>
-
-<p>The Madonna del Monte was the next
-show which called us abroad; it is within a
-few miles of our present sweet habitation, is
-celebrated for its prospect, and is indeed a
-very astonishing spot of ground, exhibiting at
-one view the three cities of Turin, Milan, and
-Genoa; and leading the eye still forward into
-the South of France. The lakes, which to
-those who go o’pleasuring upon them, seem
-like seas, and very like the mouth of our river
-Dart, where she disgorges her elegantly-ornamented
-stream into the harbour at Kingsweare,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-here afford too little water in proportion,
-though five in number, and the largest
-fifty miles round. I scarcely ever saw so much
-land within the eye from any place. That
-the road should be adorned with chapels up
-the mountain is less strange: there is a church
-dedicated to the Virgin at top. We have
-one here in Italy in every district almost, as
-the rage of <em>worshipping on high places</em>, so expressly
-and repeatedly forbidden in scripture,
-has lasted surprisingly in the world. Every
-resting-place is marked, and decorated with
-statues cut in wood, and painted to imitate
-human life with very extraordinary skill.
-They are capital performances of their kind,
-and most resemble, but I think excel, Mrs.
-Wright’s finest figures in wax. A convent
-of nuns, situated on the summit of the hill,
-where these chapels end in an exceeding pretty
-church, entertained our large party with the
-most hospitable kindness; gave us a handsome
-dinner and delicious dessert. We diverted
-the ladies with a little concert in return,
-and passed a truly delightful day.</p>
-
-<p>All the environs of this <i lang="it">Varesotto</i> are very
-charmingly varied with mountains, lakes, and
-cultivated life; the only fault in our prospect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-is the want of water. Had I told my companions
-of yesterday perhaps, that the view
-from <i lang="it">Madonna del Monte</i> reminded me of
-Chirk Castle Hill in North Wales, they would
-have laughed; yet from that extraordinary spot
-are to be distinctly seen several fertile counties,
-with many great, and many small towns, and
-a most extensive landscape, watered by the
-large and navigable rivers Severn and Dee,
-roughened by the mountains of Merionethshire,
-and bounded by the Irish sea: I think
-that view has scarce its equal any where; and,
-if any where, it is here in the vicinity of Varese,
-where many gay villas interspersed contribute
-to variegate and enliven a scene highly
-finished by the hand of Nature, and wanting
-little addition from her attendant <em>Art</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Of the noblemen’s feats in the neighbourhood
-it may indeed be remarked, that however
-spacious the house, and however splendid
-the furniture may prove upon examination,
-however pompous the garden may be to the
-first glance, and the terraces however magnificent,&mdash;spiders
-are seldom excluded from the
-mansion, or weeds from the pleasure-ground
-of the possessor. A climate so warm would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-afford some excuse for this nastiness, could
-one observe the inhabitants were discomposed
-at such an effect from a good cause, or if one
-could flatter one’s self that they themselves
-were hurt at it; but when they gravely display
-an embroidered bed or counterpane worthy
-of Arachne’s fingers before her metamorphosis,
-covered over by her present labours,
-who can forbear laughing?&mdash;The gardener in
-two minutes arriving to assist you up slopes,
-all flourishing with cat’s-tail and poppy;
-while your friends cry,&mdash;“<em>Here, this is nature!
-is it not?</em> pure nature!&mdash;<i lang="it">Tutto naturale si,
-secondo l’uso Inglese</i><a name="FNanchor_40" id="FNanchor_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>Well! we have really passed a prodigiously
-gay <i lang="it">villegiatura</i> here in this charming country,
-where the snowy cap of the <i lang="fr">gros</i> St. Bernard
-cools the air, though at so great a distance;
-and we have the pleasure of seeing
-Switzerland, without the pain of feeling its
-cold, or the fatigue of climbing its <i lang="fr">glacieres</i>:
-the Alps of the Grisons rise up like a fortification
-behind us; the sun glows hot in our
-rich and fertile valleys, and throws up every
-vegetable production with all the poignant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-flavour that Summer can bestow; nor is shade
-wanting from the walnut and large chesnut
-trees, under which we often dine, and sing,
-and play at <i lang="it">tarocco</i>, and hear the horns and
-clarinets, while sipping our ice or swallowing
-our lemonade. The <i lang="it">cicala</i> now feels the
-genial influence of that heat she requires, but
-her voice here is weak, compared to the
-powers she displayed so much to our disturbance
-in Tuscany; and the <i lang="it">lucciola</i> has lost
-much of her scintillant beauty, but she darts
-up and down the hedges now and then.
-Here is an emerald-coloured butterfly, whose
-name I know not, plays over the lakes and
-standing pools, in a very pleasing abundance;
-the most exquisitely-tinted æphemera frolic
-before one all day long; and Antiope flutters
-in every parterre, and shares the garden sweets
-with a pale primrose-coloured creature of her
-own kind, whose wings are edged with
-brown, and, if I can remember right, bears
-the name of <em>hyale</em>. But we are not yet past
-the residence of scorpions, which certainly
-do commit suicide when provoked beyond all
-endurance; a story I had always heard, but
-never gave much credit to.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But I am disturbed from writing my book
-by the good-humoured gaiety of our cheerful
-friends, with whom we never sit down fewer
-than fourteen or fifteen to table I think, and
-surely never rise from it without many a genuine
-burst of honest merriment undisguised
-by affectation, unfettered by restraint. Our
-gentlemen make <i lang="it">improviso</i> rhymes, and cut
-comical faces; go out to the field after dinner,
-and play at a sort of blindman’s buff, which
-they call breaking the pan; nor do the low
-ones in company arrange their minds as I see
-in compliment to the high ones, but tell their
-opinions with a freedom I little expected to
-find: mixed society is very rare among them,
-almost unknown it seems; but when they <em>do</em>
-mix at a country place like this, the great are
-kind, to do them justice, and the little not servile.
-They are wise indeed in making society
-easy to them, for no human being suffers solitude
-so ill as does an Italian. An English lady
-once made me observe, that a cat never purs
-when she is alone, let her have what meat and
-warmth she will; I think these social-spirited
-Milanese are like <em>her</em>, for they can hardly
-believe that there is existing a person, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-would not willingly prefer any company to
-none: when we were at the islands three
-weeks ago,&mdash;“A charming place,” says one
-of our companions,&mdash;“<i lang="it">Cioè con un mondo
-d’amici cosi</i><a name="FNanchor_41" id="FNanchor_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a>.”&mdash;“But with one’s own family,
-methinks,” said I, “and a good library of
-books, and this sweet lake to bathe in:”&mdash;“O!”
-cried they all at once, “<i lang="it">Dio ne liberi</i><a name="FNanchor_42" id="FNanchor_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>.”&mdash;This
-is national character.</p>
-
-<p>Why there are no birds of the watery kind,
-coots, wild ducks, cargeese, upon these lakes,
-nobody informs me: I have been often told
-that of Geneva swarms with them, and it is
-but a very few miles off: our people though
-have little care to ascertain such matters, and
-no desire at all to investigate effects and causes;
-those who study among them, study classic
-authors and learn rhetoric; poetry too is by
-no means uncultivated at Milan, where the
-Abate Parini’s satires are admirable, and so
-esteemed by those who themselves know very
-well how to write, and how to judge: common
-philosophy (<i lang="fr">la physique</i>, as the French
-call it), geography, astronomy, chymistry, are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-oddly left behind somehow; and it is to their
-ignorance of these matters that I am apt to
-impute Italian credulity, to which every
-wonder is welcome.</p>
-
-<p>We have now passed one day in Switzerland
-however, rowing to the little town Lugano
-over its pretty lake. The mountains at
-the end are a neat miniature of Vesuvius,
-Somma, &amp;c.; and the situation altogether
-looks as a picture of Naples would look, if
-painted by Brughuel; but not so full of figures.
-A fanciful traveller too might be tempted to think
-he could discern some streaks of liberty in the
-manners of the people, if it were but in the
-inn-keeper at whose house we dined; this
-may however be merely my own prejudice,
-and somebody told me it was so.</p>
-
-<p>We were shewn on one side the water as
-we went across, a small place called Campioni,
-which is <i lang="it">feudo Imperiale</i>, and governed by the
-Padre Abate of a neighbouring convent, who
-has power even over the lives of his subjects
-for six years; at the expiration of which term
-another despot of the day is chosen&mdash;appointed
-I should have said; and the last returns to his
-original state, amenable however for any <em>very</em>
-shocking thing he may have done during the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-course of his dictatorship; and no complaint
-has been ever made yet of any such governor
-so circumstanced and appointed, whose conduct
-is commonly but too mild and clement.
-This I thought worth remarking, as consolatory
-to one’s feelings.</p>
-
-<p>Lugano meantime scorns absolute authority:
-our Cicerone there, in reply to the
-question asked in Italy three times a-day I
-believe&mdash;<i lang="it">Che Principe fà qui la sua residenza?</i><a name="FNanchor_43" id="FNanchor_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>&mdash;replied,
-that they were plagued with no
-Principi at all, while the thirteen Cantons
-protected all their subjects; and though, as
-the man expressed it, only half of them were
-<em>Christians</em>, and the other half <em>Protestants</em>; no
-church or convent had ever wanted respect;
-while their town regularly received a monthly
-governor from every canton, and was perfectly
-contented with this ambulatory dominion.
-Here was the first gallows I have seen
-these two years. They have a pretty commerce
-too at Lugano for the size of the place,
-and the shopkeepers shew that officiousness
-and attention seldom observed in arbitrary
-states, where</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Content, the bane of industry,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">soon leads people to neglect the trouble of
-getting, for the pleasure of spending their
-money. One therefore sees the inhabitants of
-Italian cities for the most part merry and
-cheerful, or else pious and penitent; little attentive
-to their shops, but easily disposed to
-loiter under their mistress’s window with a
-guitar, or rove about the streets at night with
-a pretty girl under their arm, singing as they
-go, or squeaking with a droll accent, if it is
-the time for masquerades. Fraud, avarice,
-ambition, are the vices of republican states
-and a cold climate; idleness, sensuality, and
-revenge, are the weeds of a warm country
-and monarchical governments. If these people
-are not good, they at least wish they were
-better; they do not applaud their own conduct
-when their passions carry them too far; nor
-rejoice, like old Moneytrap or Sir Giles Overreach,
-in their successful sins: but rather say
-with Racine’s hero, translated by Philips, that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Pyrrhus will ne’er approve his own injustice,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or form excuses while his heart condemns him.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">They beat their bosoms at the feet of a crucifix in
-the street, with no more hypocrisy than they beat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-a tambourine there; perhaps with no more
-effect neither, if no alteration of behaviour succeeds
-their contrition: yet when an Englishman
-(who is probably more ashamed of repenting
-than of sinning) accuses them of false
-pretensions to pious fervour, he wrongs them,
-and would do well to repent himself.</p>
-
-<p>But a natural curiosity seen at Milan this
-16th day of August 1786, leads my mind
-into another channel. I went to wait upon
-and thank the lady, or the relations of the
-lady, who lent us her house at Varese, and
-make our proper acknowledgments; and at
-that visit saw something very uncommon
-surely: though I remember Doctor Johnson
-once said, that nobody had ever seen a very
-strange thing; and challenged the company
-(about seventeen people, myself among them)
-to produce a strange thing;&mdash;but I had not
-then seen Avvocato B&mdash;&mdash;, a lawyer here at
-Milan, and a man respected in his profession,
-who actually chews the cud like an ox;
-which he did at my request, and in my presence:
-he is apparently much like another tall
-stout man, but has many extraordinary properties,
-being eminent for strength, and possessing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-a set of ribs and sternum very surprising,
-and worthy the attention of anatomists:
-his body, upon the slightest touch, even
-through all his clothes, throws out electric
-sparks; he can reject his meals from his stomach
-at pleasure, and did absolutely in the
-course of two hours, the only two I ever passed
-in his company, go through, to oblige me,
-the whole operation of eating, masticating,
-swallowing, and returning by the mouth, a
-large piece of bread and a peach. With all
-this conviction, nothing more was wanting;
-but I obtained beside, the confirmation of common
-friends, who were willing likewise to
-bear testimony of this strange accidental variety.
-What I hear of his character is, that
-he is a low-spirited, nervous man; and I suppose
-his <em>ruminating</em> moments are spent in
-lamenting the singularities of his frame:&mdash;be
-this how it will, we have now no time to
-think any more of them, as we are packing
-up for a trip to Bergamo, a city I have not
-yet seen.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>BERGAMO</h2>
-
-<p>Is built up a steep hill, like Lansdown
-road at Bath; the buildings not so regular;
-the prospect not inferior, but of a different
-kind, resembling that one sees from Wrotham
-hill in Kent, but richer, and presenting a
-variety beyond credibility, when it is premised
-that scarce any water can be seen, and
-that the plains of Lombardy are low and flat:
-within the eye however one may count all
-the original blessings bestowed on humankind,&mdash;corn,
-wine, oil, and fruit;&mdash;the inclosures
-being small too, and the trees <i lang="fr">touffu</i>,
-as the French call it. No parterre was ever
-more beautifully disposed than are the fields
-surveyed from the summit of the hill, where
-stands the Marquis’s palace elegantly sheltered
-by a still higher rising ground behind
-it, and commanding from every window of
-its stately front a view of prodigious extent
-and almost unmatched beauty: as the diversification
-of colouring reminds one of nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-but the fine pavement at the Roman Pantheon,
-so curiously intersected are the patches
-of grass and grain, flax and vines, arable and
-tilth, in this happy disposition of earth and
-its most valuable products; while not a hedge
-fails to afford perfume that fills the very air
-with fragrance, from the sweet jessamine that,
-twisting through it, lends a weak support to
-the wild grapes, which, dangling in clusters,
-invite ten thousand birds of every European
-species I believe below the size of a pigeon.
-Nor is the taking of these creatures by the
-<i lang="it">roccolo</i> to be left out from among the amusements
-of Brescian and Bergamasc nobility;
-nor is the eating of them when taken to be
-despised: <i lang="it">beccaficos</i> and <i lang="it">ortolans</i> are here in
-high perfection; and it was from these
-northern districts of Italy I trust that Vitellius,
-and all the classic gluttons of antiquity, got
-their curious dishes of singing-bird pye, &amp;c.
-The rich scent of melons at every cottage door
-is another delicious proof of the climate’s fertility
-and opulence,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Where every sense is lost in every joy,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">as Hughes expresses it; and where, in the delightful
-villa of our highly accomplished acquaintance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-the Marquis of Aracieli, we have passed
-ten days in all the pleasures which wit could
-invent, money purchase, or friendship bestow.
-The last nobleman who resided here, father to
-the present lord, was <i lang="it">cavalier servente</i> to the immortal
-Clelia Borromæo, whose virtues and
-varieties of excellence would fill a volume;
-nor can there be a stronger proof of her uncommon,
-almost unequalled merit, than the
-long-continued esteem of the famous Vallisnieri,
-whose writings on natural history, particularly
-insects, are valued for their learning,
-as their author was respected for his birth and
-talents. Letters from him are still preserved
-in the family by Marchese Aracieli, and breathe
-admiration of the conduct, beauty, and extensive
-knowledge possessed by this worthy descendant
-of the Borromæan house; to whose
-incomparable qualities his father’s steady attachment
-bore the truest testimony, while the
-son still speaks of her death with tears, and
-delights in nothing more than in paying just
-tribute to her memory. He shewed me this
-pretty distich in her praise, made improviso
-by the celebrated philosopher Vallisnieri:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Contemptrix sexus, omniscia Clelia sexum,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Illustrat studio, moribus, arte metro<a name="FNanchor_44" id="FNanchor_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The Italians are exceedingly happy in the
-power of making verses improviso, either in
-their <em>old</em> or their <em>new</em> language: we were
-speaking the other day of the famous epigram
-in Ausonius;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Infelix Dido, nulli bene nupta marito,</div>
-<div class="verse">Hoc moriente fugis, hoc fugiente peris<a name="FNanchor_45" id="FNanchor_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Our equally noble and ingenious master of the
-house rendered it in Italian thus immediately:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="it">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Misera Dido! fra i nuziali ardori,</div>
-<div class="verse">L’un muore e fuggi&mdash;l’altro fuggi e mori.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This is more compressed and clever than that
-of Guarini <em>himself</em> I think,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="it">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Oh fortunata Dido!</div>
-<div class="verse">Mal fornita d’amante e di marito,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ti fu quel traditor, l’altro tradito;</div>
-<div class="verse">Mori l’úno e fuggisti,</div>
-<div class="verse">Fuggi l’altro e moristi.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Though this latter has been preserved with
-many deserved eulogiums from Crescembini,
-and likewise by Mr. de Chevreau.</p>
-
-<p>Could I clear my head of prejudice for such
-talents as I find here, and my heart of partial
-regard, which is in reality but grateful friendship,
-justly due from me for so many favours
-received; could I forget that we are now once
-more in the state of Venice, where every thing
-assumes an air of cheerfulness unknown to
-other places, I might perhaps perceive that the
-fair at Bergamo differs little from a fair in
-England, except that these cattle are whiter
-and ours larger. <cite>How a score of good ewes
-now?</cite> as Master Shallow says; but I really
-did ask the price of a pair of good strong
-oxen for work, and heard it was ten zecchines;
-about half the price given at Blackwater, but
-ours are stouter, and capable of rougher service.
-It is strange to me where these creatures are
-kept all the rest of the year, for except at fair
-time one very seldom sees them, unless in
-actual employment of carting, ploughing, &amp;c.
-Nothing is so little animated by the sight of
-living creatures as an Italian prospect. No
-sheep upon their hills, no cattle grazing in their
-meadows, no water-fowl, swans, ducks, &amp;c.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-upon their lakes; and when you leave Lombardy,
-no birds flying in the air, save only from
-time to time betwixt Florence and Bologna, a
-solitary kite soaring over the surly Appenines,
-and breaking the immense void which fatigues
-the eye; a ragged lad or wench too now and
-then leading a lean cow to pick among the
-hedges, has a melancholy appearance, the more
-so as it is always fast held by a string, and
-struggles in vain to get loose. These however
-are only consequences of luxuriant plenty, for
-where the farmer makes four harvests of his
-grass, and every other speck of ground is profitably
-covered with grain, vines, &amp;c. all possibility
-of open pasturage is precluded. Horses
-too, so ornamental in an English landscape,
-will never be seen loose in an Italian one, as
-they are all <i lang="fr">chevaux entiers</i>, and cannot be
-trusted in troops together as ours are, even
-if there was ground uninclosed for them
-to graze on, like the common lands in Great
-Britain. A nobleman’s park is another object
-never to be seen or expected in a country,
-where people would really be deserving much
-blame did they retain in their hands for mere
-amusement ten or twelve miles circuit of earth,
-capable to produce two or three thousand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-pounds a-year profit to their families, beside
-making many tenants rich and happy in the
-mean time. I will confess, however, that the
-absence of all these <i lang="fr">agrèmens</i> gives a flatness
-and uniformity to the views which we cannot
-complain of in England; but when Italians
-consider the cause, they will have reason to be
-satisfied with the effect, especially while vegetable
-nature flourishes in full perfection, while
-every step crushes out perfume from the trodden
-herbs, and those in the hedges dispense with
-delightful liberality a fragrance that enchants
-one. Hops and pyracanthus cover the sides
-of every cottage; and the scent of truffles attracts,
-and the odour of melons gratifies one’s
-nerves, when driving among the habitations
-of fertile Lombardy.</p>
-
-<p>The old church here of mingled Gothic
-and Grecian architecture pleased me exceedingly,
-it sends one back to old times so, and
-shews one the progress of <em>barbarism</em>, rapid and
-gigantic in its strides, to overturn, confound,
-and destroy what taste was left in the world
-at the moment of its <em>onset</em>. Here is a picture
-of the Israelites passing over the Red Sea,
-which Luca Giordano, contrary to his usual
-custom, seems to have taken pains with, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-rarity of course; and here are some single
-figures of the prophets, heroes, and judges of
-the Old Testament, painted with prodigious
-spirit indeed, by Ciro Ferri. That which
-struck me as most capital, was Gideon wringing
-the dew out of the fleece, full of character
-and glowing with expression.</p>
-
-<p>The theatre has fallen down, but they are
-building it up again with a nicety of proportion
-that will ensure it from falling any more.
-Italians cannot live without a theatre; they
-have erected a temporary one to serve during
-the fair time, and even that is beautiful. The
-Terzetto of charming Guglielmi was sung last
-night; I liked it still better than when we
-heard it performed by singers of more established
-reputation at St. Carlo; but then I
-like every thing at Bergamo, till it comes to
-the thunder storms, which are far more innoxious
-here than at Naples or in Tuscany.</p>
-
-<p>We could contemplate electricity from this
-fine hill yesterday with great composure, being
-amused with her caprices and not endangered
-by her anger. There has however been a
-fierce tempest in the neighbourhood, which
-has greatly lowered the spirits of the farmer;
-and we have been told another tale, that lowers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-mine much more as an Englishwoman, because
-the people of this town complain of strange
-failure in their accustomed orders for silk from
-England, and the foreigners make disgraceful
-conjectures about our commerce, in consequence
-of that failure.</p>
-
-<p>Here is a report prevailing too, of King
-George III. being assassinated, which, though
-we all know to be false, fails not to produce
-much unpleasing talk. Were the Londoners
-aware of the diffusion of their newspapers, and
-the strange ideas taken up by foreigners about
-things which pass by <em>us</em> like a day dream, I
-think more caution would be used, and characters
-less lightly hung up to infamy or ridicule,
-on which those very prints mean not to
-bestow so lasting or severe a punishment, as
-their ill word produces at a distance from
-home, whither the contradiction often misses
-though the report arrives, and mischief, originally
-little intended, becomes the fatal consequence
-of a joke. But it is time to return to</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>MILAN,</h2>
-
-<p>Whence I went for my very first airing
-to Casa Simonetti, in search of the echo so
-celebrated by my country-folks and fellow-travellers,
-but did not find all that has been
-said of it strictly true. It certainly does repeat
-a single sound more than seventy times,
-but has no power to give back by reverberation
-a whole sentence. I have met too with
-another petty mortification; having been
-taught by Cave to expect, that in our Ambrosian
-library here at Milan, there was a
-MS. of Boethius preserved relative to his condemnation,
-and confessing his design of subverting
-the Gothic government in Lombardy.
-I therefore prevailed on Canonico Palazzi, a
-learned old ecclesiastic, to go with me and beg
-a sight of it. The præfect politely promised
-indulgence, but referred me to a future day;
-and when we returned again at the time appointed,
-shewed me only Pere Mabillon’s book,
-in which we read that it is to be found no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-where but at Florence, in the library of Lorenzo
-de Medicis. We were however shewn
-some curiosities to compensate our trouble, particularly
-the skeleton of the lady mentioned by
-Dr. Moore and Lady Millar with some contempt.
-This is the copy of her inscription:</p>
-
-<p class="center">ÆGROTANTIUM<br />
-SANITATI<br />
-MORTUORUM<br />
-INSPECTIONE<br />
-VIVENTES<br />
-PROSPICERE<br />
-POSSINT<br />
-HUNC<br />
-ΣΚΕΛΕΤΟΝ<br />
-P.</p>
-
-<p>A MS. of the Consolations of Philosophy,
-very finely written in the tenth century, and
-kept in elegant preservation;&mdash;a private common-place
-of Leonardo da Vinci never shewn,
-full of private memoirs, caricaturas, hints for
-pictures, sketches, remarks, &amp;c.; it is invaluable.
-But there is another treasure in this
-town, the præfect tells me, by the same inimitable
-master, no other than an alphabet,
-pater noster, &amp;c. written out by himself for
-the use of his own little babies, and ornamented<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-with vignettes, &amp;c. to tempt them to study
-it. I shall not see it however, as Conte Trivulci
-is out of town, to whom it belongs. I
-have not neglected to go see the monument
-erected to one of his family, with the famous
-inscription,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="la">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Hic quiescit qui nunquam quievit;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">preserved by father Bouhours. The same
-day shewed me the remains of a temple to
-Hercules, with many of the fine old pillars
-still standing. They are soon to be taken
-down we hear for the purpose of widening
-the street, as Carfax was at Oxford.</p>
-
-<p>My hunger after a journey to Pavia is much
-abated; since professor Villa, whose erudition
-is well known, and whose works do him so
-much honour, informed me that the inscription
-said by Pere Mabillon still to subsist in
-praise of Boethius, is long since perished by
-time; nor do they now shew the brick tower
-in which it is said he was confined while he
-wrote his Consolations of Philosophy: for the
-tower is fallen to the ground, and so is the
-report, every body being now persuaded that
-they were composed in a strong place then
-standing upon the spot called Calventianus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-Ager, from the name of a noble house to
-which it had belonged for ages, and which I
-am told Cicero mentions as a family half
-Placentian, half Milaneze. The field still
-goes by the name of <i lang="it">Il Campo Calvenziano</i>;
-but, as it now belongs to people careless of
-remote events, however interesting to literature,
-is not adorned by any obelisk, or other
-mark, to denote its past importance, in having
-been once the scene of sufferings gloriously
-endured by the most zealous christian,
-the most steady patriot, and the most
-refined philosopher of the age in which he
-lived.</p>
-
-<p>I have seen a fine MS. of the Consolations
-copied in the tenth century, not only legible
-but beautiful; and I have been assured that
-the hymns written by his first wife Elpis,
-who, though she brought him no children,
-as Bertius says, was yet <i lang="la">fida curarum, et studiorum
-socia</i><a name="FNanchor_46" id="FNanchor_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>, are still sung in the Romish
-churches at Brescia and Bergamo, somewhat
-altered from the state we find them in at the
-end of Cominus’s edition of the Consolations.</p>
-
-<p>Tradition too, I find, agrees with Procopius
-in telling that this widow of Boethius,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-Rusticiana, daughter of Symmachus, spent all
-the little money she had left in hiring people
-to throw down in the night all the statues set up
-in Rome to the honour of Theodoric, who had
-sentenced her husband to a death so dreadful,
-that it gave occasion to many fabulous tales
-reported by Martin Rota as miraculous
-truths. His bones, gathered up as relics by
-Otho III., were placed in a chapel dedicated
-to St. Austin in St. Peter’s church at Pavia
-four hundred and seventy-two years after his
-death, with an epitaph preserved by Pere
-Mabillon, but now no longer legible.</p>
-
-<p>We are now cutting hay here for the last
-time this season, and all the environs smell
-like spring on this 15th September 1786.
-The autumnal tint, however, falls fast upon
-the trees, which are already rich with a deep
-yellow hue. A wintery feel upon the atmosphere
-early in a morning, heavy fogs about
-noon, and a hollow wind towards the approach
-of night, make it look like the very
-last week of October in England, and warn
-us that summer is going. The same circumstances
-prompt me, who am about to forsake
-this her favourite region, to provide furs,
-flannels, &amp;c. for the passing of those Alps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-which look so formidable when covered with
-snow at their present distance. Our
-swallows are calling their clamorous council
-round me while I write; but the butterflies
-still flutter about in the middle of the day,
-and grapes are growing more wholesome as
-with us when the mornings begin to be
-frosty. Our deserts, however, do not remind
-us of Tuscany: the cherries here are not
-particularly fine, and the peaches all part
-from the stone&mdash;miserable things! an English
-gardener would not send them to table: the
-figs too were infinitely finer at Leghorn, and
-nectarines have I never seen at all.</p>
-
-<p>Well, here is the opera begun again;
-some merry wag, Abate Casti I think, has
-accommodated and adapted the old story of
-king Theodore to put in ridicule the present
-king of Sweden, who is hated of the emperor
-for some political reasons I forget what, and
-he of course patronises the jester. Our honest
-Lombards, however, take no delight in
-mimicry, and feel more disgust than pleasure
-when simplicity is insulted, or distress
-made more corrosive by the bitterness of a
-scoffing spirit. I have tried to see whether
-they would laugh at any oddity in their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-neighbour’s manner, but never could catch
-any, except perhaps now and then a sly Roman
-who had a liking for it. “I see nothing
-absurd about the man,” says one gentleman;
-“every body may have some peculiarity, and
-most people have; but such things make me
-no sport: let us, when we have a mind to
-laugh, go and laugh at Punchinello.”&mdash;From
-such critics, therefore, the king of Sweden is
-safe enough, as they have not yet acquired the
-taste of hunting down royalty, and crowing
-with infantine malice, when possessed of the
-mean hope that they are able to pinch a noble
-heart. This old-fashioned country, which
-detests the sight of suffering majesty, hisses off
-its theatre a performance calculated to divert
-them at the expence of a sovereign prince,
-whose character is clear from blame, and
-whose personal weaknesses are protected by
-his birth and merit; while it is to his open,
-free, and politely generous behaviour alone, they
-owe the knowledge that he <em>has</em> such foibles.
-Paisiello, therefore, cannot drive it down
-by his best music, though the poor king of
-Sweden is a Lutheran too, and if any thing
-would make them hate him, <em>that</em> would.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One vice, however, sometimes prevents the
-commission of another, and that same prevailing
-idea which prompts these prejudiced
-Romanists to conclude him doomed to lasting
-torments who dares differ from them, though
-in points of no real importance, inspires them
-at the same time with such compassion for his
-supposed state of predestinated punishment, that
-they rather incline to defend him from further
-misery, and kindly forbear to heap ridicule in
-this world upon a person who is sure to suffer
-eternal damnation in the other.</p>
-
-<p>How melancholy that people who possess
-such hearts should have the head thus perversely
-turned! I can attribute it but to one
-cause; their strange neglect and forbearance
-to read and study God’s holy word: for not a
-very few of them have I found who seem to
-disbelieve the Old Testament entirely, yet remain
-steadily and strenuously attached to the
-precedence their church claims over every
-other; and who shall wonder if such a combination
-of bigotry with scepticism should
-produce an evaporation of what little is left of
-popery from the world, as emetics triturated
-with opium are said to produce a sudorific
-powder which no earthly constitution can resist?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the Spanish grandee, who not only entertained
-but astonished us all one night with
-his conversation at Quirini’s Casino at Venice,
-is arrived here at Milan, and plays upon the
-violin. He challenged acquaintance with us
-in the street, half invited himself to our private
-concert last night, and did us the honour
-to perform there, with the skill of a professor,
-the eager desire of a dilletante, and the tediousness
-of a solitary student; he continued to
-amaze, delight, and fatigue us for four long
-hours together. He is a man of prodigious
-talents, and replete with variety of knowledge.
-A new dance has been tried at here too, but
-was not well received, though it represents
-the terrible story which, under Madame de
-Genlis’ pen, had such uncommon success
-among the reading world, and is called
-<i lang="it">La sepolta viva</i>; but as the duchess Girafalco,
-whose misfortune it commemorates, is
-still alive, the pantomime will probably be
-suppressed: for she has relations at Milan it
-seems, and one lady distinguished for elegance
-of form, and charms of voice and manner,
-told me yesterday with equal sweetness, spirit,
-and propriety, that though the king of Naples
-sent his soldiers to free her aunt from that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-horrible dungeon where she had been nine
-years confined, yet if her miseries were to
-become the subject of stage representation, she
-could hardly be pronounced happy, or
-even at ease. Truth is, I would be loath to
-see the spirit of producing every one’s private
-affairs, true or false, before the public eye, spread
-into <em>this</em> country: No! let that humour be
-confined to Great Britain, where the thousand
-real advantages resulting from living in a free
-state, richly compensate for the violations of
-delicacy annexed to it; and where the laws
-do protect, though the individuals insult one:
-but <em>here</em>, why the people would be miserable
-indeed, if to the oppression which may any
-hour be exercised over them by their prince,
-were likewise to be added the liberties taken
-perpetually in London by one’s next door
-neighbour, of tearing forth every transaction,
-and publishing even every conjecture to
-one’s disadvantage.</p>
-
-<p>With these reflections, and many others,
-excited by gratitude to private friends, and
-general admiration of a country so justly
-esteemed, we shall soon take our leave of
-Milan, famed for her truly hospitable disposition;
-a temper of mind sometimes abused by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-travellers perhaps, whose birth and pretensions
-are seldom or ever inquired into, whilst
-no people are more careful of keeping their
-rank inviolate by never conversing on equal
-terms with a countryman or woman of their
-own, who cannot produce a proper length of
-ancestry.</p>
-
-<p>I will not leave them though, without
-another word or two about their language,
-which, though it sounded strangely coarse
-and broad to be sure, as we returned home
-from Florence, Rome, and Venice, I felt
-sincerely glad to hear again; and have some
-notion by their way of pronouncing <i lang="it">bicchiere</i>,
-a word used here to express every thing that
-holds water, that our <em>pitcher</em> was probably
-derived from it; and the Abate Divecchio, a
-polite scholar, and an uncommonly agreeable
-companion, seemed to think so too. His
-knowledge of the English language, joined to
-the singular power he has over his own elegant
-Tuscan tongue, made me torment him
-with a variety of inquiries about these confusing
-dialects, which leave me at last little
-chance to understand any, whilst a child is
-called <i lang="it">bambino</i> at Florence, <i lang="it">putto</i> at Venice,
-<i lang="it">schiatto</i> at Bergamo, and <i lang="it">creatura</i> at Rome;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-and at Milan they call a wench <i lang="it">tosa</i>: an
-apron is <i lang="it">grembiule</i> at Florence I think, <i lang="it">traversa</i>
-at Venice, <i lang="it">bigarrol</i> at Brescia and some
-other parts of Lombardy, <i lang="it">senale</i> at Rome,
-and at Milan <i lang="it">scozzà</i>. A foreigner may well
-be distracted by varieties so striking; but the
-turn and idiom differ ten times more still, and
-I love to hear our Milanese call an oak <i lang="it">robur</i>
-rather than <i lang="it">quercia</i> somehow, and tell a lady
-when dressed in white, that she is <i lang="it">tutto in
-albedine</i>.</p>
-
-<p>On Friday the 22d of September then we left
-Milan, and I dropt a tear or two in remembrance
-of the many civilities shewn by our
-kind and partial companions. The Abate Bianconi
-made me wild to go to Dresden, and
-enjoy the Correggios now moved from Modena
-to that gallery. I find he thinks the
-old Romans pronounced Cicero and Cæsar as
-the moderns do, and many English scholars
-are of the same mind; but here are coins
-dug up now out of the Veronese mountain
-with the word Carolus, spelt <em>Karrulus</em>, upon
-them quite plain; and Christus was spelt
-<em>Kristus</em> in Vespasian’s time it is certain, because
-of the player’s monument at Rome.&mdash;Dr.
-Johnson, I remember, was always steady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-to that opinion; but it is time to leave all
-this, and rejoice in my third arrival at gay,
-cheerful, charming</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>VERONA,</h2>
-
-<p>Whither some sweet leave-taking verses
-have followed us, written by the facetious
-Abate Ravasi, a native of Rome, but for
-many years an inhabitant of Milan. His
-agreeable sonnet, every line ending with
-<i lang="it">tutto</i>, being upon a subject of general importance,
-would serve as a better specimen of his
-abilities than lines dictated only by partial
-friendship;&mdash;but I hear <em>that</em> is already circulated
-about the world, and printed in one of
-our magazines; to them let him trust his
-fame, they will pay my just debts.</p>
-
-<p>We have now seen this enchanting spot in
-spring, summer, and autumn; nor could
-winter’s self render it undelightful, while
-uniting every charm, and gratifying every
-sense. Greek and Roman antiquities salute one
-at the gates; Gothic remains render each
-place of worship venerable: Nature in her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-holiday dress decks the environs, and society
-animates with intellectual fire the amiable
-inhabitants. Oh! were I to live here long, I
-should not only excuse, but applaud the Scaligers
-for straining probability, and neglecting
-higher praise, only to claim kindred with
-the Scalas of Verona. Improvisation at this
-place pleases me far better than it did in Tuscany.
-Our truly-learned Abate Lorenzi astonishes
-all who hear him, by <em>repeating</em>, not
-<em>singing</em>, a series of admirably just and well-digested
-thoughts, which he, and he alone,
-possesses the power of arranging suddenly as
-if by magic, and methodically as if by study, to
-rhymes the most melodious, and most varied;
-while the Abbé Bertola, of the university at
-Pavia, gives one pleasure by the same talent
-in a manner totally different, singing his unpremeditated
-strains to the accompaniment of
-a harpsichord, round which stand a little chorus
-of friends, who interpolate from time to
-time two lines of a well-known song, to which
-he pleasingly adapts his compositions, and
-goes on gracing the barren subject, and adorning
-it with every possible decoration of wit,
-and every desirable elegance of sentiment.
-Nothing can surely surpass the happy promptitude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-of his expression, unless it is the brilliancy
-of his genius.</p>
-
-<p>We were in a large company last night, where
-a beautiful woman of quality came in dressed
-according to the present taste, with a gauze
-head-dress, adjusted turbanwise, and a heron’s
-feather; the neck wholly bare. Abate Bertola
-bid me look at her, and, recollecting himself
-a moment, made this Epigram improviso:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="it">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Volto e Crin hai di Sultana,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Perchè mai mi vien disdetto,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sodducente Mussulmana</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Di gittarti il <em>Fazzoletto</em>?</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">of which I can give no better imitation than
-the following:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">While turban’d head and plumage high</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">A Sultaness proclaims my Cloe;</div>
-<div class="verse">Thus tempted, tho’ no Turk, I’ll try</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The handkerchief you scorn&mdash;to throw ye.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This is however a weak specimen of his
-powers, whose charming fables have so completely,
-in my mind, surpassed all that has
-ever been written in that way since La Fontaine.
-I am strongly tempted to give one
-little story out of his pretty book.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="it">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Una lucertoletta</div>
-<div class="verse">Diceva al cocodrillo,</div>
-<div class="verse">Oh quanto mi diletta</div>
-<div class="verse">Di veder finalmente</div>
-<div class="verse">Un della mia famiglia</div>
-<div class="verse">Si grande e si potente!</div>
-<div class="verse">Ho fatto mille miglia</div>
-<div class="verse">Per venirvi a vedere,</div>
-<div class="verse">Mentre tra noi si serba</div>
-<div class="verse">Di voi memoria viva;</div>
-<div class="verse">Benche fuggiam tra l’erba</div>
-<div class="verse">E il sassoso sentiero:</div>
-<div class="verse">In sen però non langue</div>
-<div class="verse">L’onor del prisco sangue.</div>
-<div class="verse">L’anfibio rè dormiva</div>
-<div class="verse">A questi complimenti,</div>
-<div class="verse">Pur sugli ultimi accenti</div>
-<div class="verse">Dal sonno se riscosse</div>
-<div class="verse">E dimandò chi fosse?</div>
-<div class="verse">La parentela antica,</div>
-<div class="verse">Il viaggio, la fatica,</div>
-<div class="verse">Quella torno a dire,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ed ei torne a dormire.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Lascia i grandi ed i potenti,</div>
-<div class="verse">A sognar per parenti;</div>
-<div class="verse">Puoi cortesi stimarli</div>
-<div class="verse">Se dormon mentre parli.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Walking full many a weary mile</div>
-<div class="verse">The lizard met the crocodile;</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-<div class="verse">And thus began&mdash;how fat, how fair,</div>
-<div class="verse">How finely guarded, Sir, you are!</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis really charming thus to see</div>
-<div class="verse">One’s kindred in prosperity.</div>
-<div class="verse">I’ve travell’d far to find your coast,</div>
-<div class="verse">But sure the labour was not lost:</div>
-<div class="verse">For you must think we don’t forget</div>
-<div class="verse">Our loving cousin now so great;</div>
-<div class="verse">And tho’ our humble habitations</div>
-<div class="verse">Are such as suit our slender stations,</div>
-<div class="verse">The honour of the lizard blood</div>
-<div class="verse">Was never better understood.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Th’ amphibious prince, who slept content,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ne’er listening to her compliment,</div>
-<div class="verse">At this expression rais’d his head,</div>
-<div class="verse">And&mdash;Pray who are you? cooly said;</div>
-<div class="verse">The little creature now renew’d</div>
-<div class="verse">Her history of toils subdu’d,</div>
-<div class="verse">Her zeal to see her cousin’s face,</div>
-<div class="verse">The glory of her ancient race;</div>
-<div class="verse">But looking nearer, found my lord</div>
-<div class="verse">Was fast asleep again&mdash;and snor’d.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Ne’er press upon a rich relation</div>
-<div class="verse">Rais’d to the ranks of higher station;</div>
-<div class="verse">Or if you will disturb your coz,</div>
-<div class="verse">Be happy that he does but doze.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But I will not be seduced by the pleasure of
-praising my sweet friends at Verona, to
-lengthen this chapter with further panegyrics<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-upon a place I leave with the truest tenderness,
-and with the sincerest regret; while the
-correspondence I hope long to maintain with
-the charming Contessa Mosconi, must compensate
-all it can for the loss of her agreeable
-Coterie, where my most delightful evenings
-have been spent; where so many topics of
-English literature have been discussed; where
-Lorenzi read Tasso to us of an afternoon, Bertola
-made verses, and the cavalier Pindemonte
-conversed; where the three Graces, as they
-are called, joined their sweet voices to sing
-when satiety of pleasure made us change our
-mode of being happy, and kept one from
-wishing ever to hear any thing else; while
-countess Carminati sung Bianchi’s duets with
-the only tenor fit to accompany a voice so
-touching, and a taste so refined. <i lang="la">Verona! qui
-te viderit, et non amarit</i>, says some old
-writer, I forget who, <i lang="la">protinus amor perditissimo;
-is credo se ipsum non amat</i><a name="FNanchor_47" id="FNanchor_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a>. Indeed
-I never saw people live so pleasingly together
-as these do; the women apparently delighting
-in each other’s company, without mean rivalry,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-or envy of those accomplishments which are
-commonly bestowed by heaven with diversity
-enough for all to have their share. The
-world surely affords room for every body’s
-talents, would every body that possessed them
-but think so; and were malice and affectation
-once completely banished from cultivated society,
-<em>Verona</em> might be found in many places
-perhaps; she is now confined, I think, to
-the sweet state of <em>Venice</em>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span class="smcap">JOURNEY<br />
-through<br />
-TRENT, INSPRUCK, MUNICK, and<br />
-SALTZSBURG, to VIENNA.</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Tyrolese Alps are not as beautiful
-as those of Savoy, though the river
-that runs between them is wider too; but
-that very circumstance takes from the horror
-which constitutes beauty in a rocky country,
-while a navigable stream and the passage of
-large floats convey ideas of commerce and social
-life, leaving little room for the solitary
-fancies produced, and the strokes of sublimity
-indelibly impressed, by the mountains of La
-Haute Morienne. The sight of a town where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-all the theological learning of Europe was
-once concentred, affords however much ground
-of mental amusement; while the sight of two
-nations, not naturally congenial, living happily
-together, as the Germans and Italians here
-do, is pleasing to all.</p>
-
-<p>We saw the apartments of the Prince Bishop,
-but found few things worth remarking,
-except that in the pictures of Carlo Loti there
-is a shade of the Flemish school to be discerned,
-which was pretty as we are now hard upon
-the confines. Our sovereign here keeps his
-little menagerie in a mighty elegant style: the
-animals possess an insulated rock, surrounded
-by the Adige, and planted with every thing
-that can please them best; the wild, or more
-properly the predatory creatures, are confined,
-but in very spacious apartments; with
-each a handsome outlet for amusement:
-while such as are granivorous rove at pleasure
-over their domain, to which their master
-often comes in summer to eat ice at a banquetting
-house erected for him in the middle,
-whence a prospect of a peculiar nature is enjoyed;
-great beauty, much variety, and a very
-limited horizon, like some of the views about
-Bath.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the death of one prince another is chosen,
-and government carried on as at Rome in miniature.
-We staid here two nights and one
-day, thought perpetually of Matlock and Ivy
-Bridge, and saw some rarities belonging to a
-man who shewed us a picture of our Saviour’s
-circumcision, and told us it was <em>San Simeone</em>,
-a baby who having gone through many
-strange operations and torments among some
-Jews who stole him from his parents, as the
-story goes here at Trent, they murdered him at
-last, and he became a saint and a martyr, to
-whom much devotion is paid at this place,
-though I fancy he was never heard of any
-where else.</p>
-
-<p>The river soon after we left Trent
-contracted to a rapid and narrow torrent, such as
-dashes at the foot of the Alps in Savoy; the
-rocks grew more pointed, and the prospects
-gained in sublimity at every step; though the
-neatness of the culture, and quantity of vines,
-with the variegated colouring of the woods,
-continued to excite images more soft than
-formidable, less solemn than lovely. The
-barberry bushes bind every mountain round
-the middle as with a scarlet sash, and when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-we looked down upon them from a house
-situated as if in the place which the Frenchman
-seemed to have a notion of, when he thought
-the aerian travellers were gone <i lang="fr">au lieu ou les
-vents se forment</i>, they looked wonderfully
-pretty. The cleanliness and comfort with
-which we are now lodged at every inn, evince
-our distance from France however, and even
-from Italy, where low cielings, clean windows,
-and warm rooms, are deemed pernicious to
-health, and destructive of true delight. Here
-however we find ourselves cruelly distressed
-for want of language, and must therefore
-depend on our eyes only, not our ears, for
-information concerning the golden house, or
-more properly the golden roof, long known
-to subsist at Inspruck. The story, as well as
-I can gather it, is this: That some man was
-reproached with spending more than he could
-afford, till some of his neighbours cried out,
-“Why he’ll roof his house with gold soon,
-but who shall pay the expence?”&mdash;“<em>I</em> will;”
-quoth the piqued German, and actually did
-gild his tiles. My heart tells me however,
-though my memory will not call up the particulars,
-that I have heard a tale very like this
-before now; but one is always listening to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-same stories I think: At Rome, when they
-shew a fine head lightly sketched by Michael
-Angelo, they inform you how he left it on
-Raphael’s wall, after the manner of Apelles
-and Protogenes; it is called Testa di Ciambellaro,
-because he came disguised as a seller
-of <i lang="it">ciambelle</i>, or little biscuits, while Raphael’s
-scholars were painting at the Farnesini. At
-Milan, when they point out to you the extraordinary
-architecture of the church <i lang="it">detto il
-Giardino</i>, the roof of which is supported by
-geometrical dependance of one part upon
-another, without columns or piers, they tell
-how the architect ran away the moment it
-was finished, for fear its sudden fall might
-disgrace him. This tale was very familiar to
-me, I had heard it long ago related of a
-Welch bridge; but it is better only say what
-is true.</p>
-
-<p>This is a sweetly situated town, and a rapid
-stream runs through it as at Trent; and it is
-no small comfort to find one’s self once more
-waited on by clean looking females, who
-make your bed, sweep your room, &amp;c. while
-the pewters in the little neat kitchens, as one
-passes through, amaze me with their brightness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-that I feel as if in a new world, it is <em>so</em>
-long since I have seen any metal but gold unencrusted
-by nastiness, and gold <em>will</em> not be
-dirty.</p>
-
-<p>The clumsy churches here are more violently
-crowded with ornaments than I have
-found them yet; and for one crucifix or
-Madonna to be met with on Italian roads,
-here are at least forty; an ill carved and worse
-painted figure of a bleeding Saviour, large as
-life, meets one at every turn; and I feel glad
-when the odd devotion of the inhabitants hangs
-a clean shirt or laced waistcoat over it, or both.
-Another custom they have wholly new to me,
-that of keeping the real skeletons of their old
-nobles, or saints, or any one for whom they have
-peculiar veneration, male or female, in a large
-clean glass box or crystal case, placed horizontally,
-and dressed in fine scarlet and gold robes,
-the poor naked skull crowned with a coronet,
-and the feet peeping out below the petticoats.
-These melancholy objects adorn all their places
-of worship, being set on brackets by the wall
-inside, and remind me strangely of our old
-ballad of Death and the Lady;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Fair lady, lay your costly robes aside, &amp;c.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>No body ever mentions that Inspruck is
-subject to fires, and I wonder at it, as the roofs
-are all wood cut tile-ways; and heavily pensile,
-like our barns in England, for the snow to
-roll off the easier.</p>
-
-<p>Well! we are far removed indeed from
-Italian architecture, Italian sculpture, and Italian
-manners; but here are twenty-eight old
-kings, or keysers, as our German friends call
-them, large as life, and of good solid bronze,
-curiously worked to imitate lace, embroidery,
-&amp;c. standing in two rows, very extraordinarily,
-up one of their churches. I have not seen
-more frowning visages or finer dresses for a
-long time; and here is a warm feel as one
-passes by the houses, even in the street, from
-the heat of the stoves, which most ingeniously
-conceal from one’s view that most cheerful of
-all sights in cold weather, a good fire. This
-seems a very unnecessary device, and the heated
-porcelain is apt to make one’s head ache beside;
-all for the sake of this cunning contrivance,
-to make one enjoy the effect of fire
-without seeing the cause.</p>
-
-<p>The women that run about the town, mean
-time, take the nearest way to be warm, wrapping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-themselves up in cloth clothes, like so
-many fishermen at the mouth of the Humber,
-and wear a sort of rug cap grossly unbecoming.
-But too great an attention to convenience
-disgusts as surely as too little; and while a
-Venetian wench apparently seeks only to captivate
-the contrary sex, these German girls
-as plainly proclaim their resolution not to
-sacrifice a grain of personal comfort for the
-pleasure of pleasing all the men alive.</p>
-
-<p>How truly hateful are extremes of every
-thing each day’s experience convinces; from
-superstition and infidelity, down to the Fribble
-and the Brute, one’s heart abhors the folly of
-reversing wrong to look for right, which lives
-only in the middle way; and Solomon, the
-wisest man of any age or nation, places the
-sovereign good in mediocrity of every thing,
-moral, political, and religious.</p>
-
-<p>With this good axiom of <i lang="la">nequid nimis</i><a name="FNanchor_48" id="FNanchor_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> in
-our mouths and minds, we should not perhaps
-have driven so very hard; but a less
-effort would have detained us longer from the
-finest object I almost ever saw; the sun rising
-between six and seven o’clock upon the plains
-of Munich, and discovering to our soothed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-sight a lovely champain country, such as might
-be called a flat I fear, by those who were not
-like us accustomed to a hilly one; but after
-four-and-twenty hours passed among the Alps,
-I feel sincerely rejoiced to quit the clouds and
-get upon a level with human creatures, leaving
-the goats and chamois to delight as they do
-in bounding from rock to rock, with an agility
-that amazes one.</p>
-
-<p>Our weather continuing particularly fine, it
-was curious to watch one picturesque beauty
-changing for another as we drove along; for no
-sooner were the rich vineyards and small inclosures
-left behind, than large pasture lands filled
-with feeding or reposing cattle, cows, oxen,
-horses, fifty in a field perhaps, presented to
-our eyes an object they had not contemplated
-for two years before, and revived ideas of
-England, which had long lain buried under
-Italian fertility.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of lying down to rest, having heard
-we had friends at the same inn, we ran with
-them to see the picture gallery, more for the
-sake of doing again what we had once done
-before at Paris with the same agreeable company,
-than with any hope of entertainment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-which however upon trial was found by no
-means deficient. Had there been no more
-than the glow of colouring which results from
-the sight of so many Flemish pictures at once,
-it must have struck one forcibly; but the
-murder of the Innocents by Rubens, a great
-performance, gave me an opportunity of observing
-the different ways by which that great
-master, Guido Rheni, and Le Brun, lay hold
-of the human heart. The difference does not
-however appear to me inspired at all by what
-we term national character; for the inhabitants
-of Germany are reckoned slow to anger,
-and of phlegmatic dispositions, while a Frenchman
-is accounted light and airy in his ideas,
-an Italian fiery and revengeful. Yet Rubens’s
-principal figure follows the ruffian who has
-seized her child, and with a countenance at
-once exciting and expressive of horror, endeavours,
-and almost arrives at tearing both
-his eyes out. One actually sees the fellow
-struggling between his efforts to hold the infant
-fast, and yet rid himself of the mother,
-while blood and anguish apparently follow the
-impression her nails are making in the tenderest
-parts of his face. Guido, on the contrary,
-in one of the churches at Bologna, exhibits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-a beautiful young creature of no mean
-rank, elegant in her affliction, and lovely in
-her distress, sitting with folded arms upon the
-fore-ground, contemplating the cold corpse
-of her murdered baby; his nurse wringing
-her hands beside them, while crowds of distracted
-parents fill the perspective, and the
-executioners themselves appear to pay unwilling
-obedience to their inhuman king, who is
-seen animating them himself from the top of
-a distant tower.&mdash;Le Brun mean time, with
-more imagination and sublimity than either,
-makes even brute animals seem sensible, and
-shudder at a scene so dreadful; while the very
-horses who should bear the cruel prince over
-the theatre of his crimes, snort and tremble,
-and turning away with uncontrollable fury,
-refuse by trampling in their blood to violate
-such injured innocence!&mdash;Enough of this.</p>
-
-<p>The patient German is seen in all they
-shew us, from the painting of Brughuel to the
-music of Haydn. A friend here who speaks
-good Italian shewed us a collection of rarities,
-among which was a picture formed of butterflies
-wings; and a set of boxes one within
-another, till my eyes were tired with trying to
-discern, and the patience of my companions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-was wearied with counting them, when the
-number passed seventy-three: this amusement
-has at least the grace of novelty to recommend
-it. I had not formed to myself an idea of
-such unmeaning, such tasteless, yet truly elaborate
-nicety of workmanship, as may be
-found in the Elector’s chapel, where every
-relic reposes in some frame, enamelled and
-adorned with a minuteness of attention and
-delicacy of manual operation that astonishes.
-The prodigious quantity of these gold or
-ivory figures, finished so as to require a man’s
-whole life to each of them, are of immense
-value in their way at least, and fill one’s mind
-with a sort of petty and frivolous wonder totally
-unexperienced till now, bringing to one’s
-recollection every hour Pope’s famous line&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Lo! what huge heaps of littleness around!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The contrast between this chapel and Cappella
-Borghese never left my fancy for a moment:
-but if the cost of these curious trifles
-caused my continued surprise, how was that
-surprise increased by observing the bed-chamber
-of the Elector; where they told us
-that no less than one hundred thousand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-pounds sterling were buried under loads of
-gold tissue, red velvet, and old-fashioned
-carved work, without the merit even of an
-attempt towards elegance or taste?</p>
-
-<p>Nimphenbourg palace and gardens reminded
-me of English gardening forty years ago,
-while&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Grove nods at grove, each alley has a brother,</div>
-<div class="verse">And half the platform just reflects the other.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">I do think I can recollect going with my parents
-and friends to see Lord Royston’s seat at
-Wrest, when we lived in Hertfordshire, in
-the year 1750; and it was just such a place
-as Nimphenbourg is at this day. Now for
-some just praise: every thing is kept so neat
-here, so clean, so sweet, so comfortably nice,
-that it is a real pleasure somehow either to
-go out in this town or stay at home: the
-public baths are delicious; the private rooms
-with boarded floors, all swept, and brushed,
-and dusted, that not a cobweb can be seen in
-Munich, except one kept for a rarity, with the
-Virgin and Child worked in it, and wrought
-to such an unrivalled pitch of delicate fineness,
-that till we held it up to the light no naked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-eye could discern the figures it contained, till
-a microscope soon discovered the skill and
-patience requisite to its production;&mdash;great
-pains indeed, and little effect! We have left
-the country where things were exactly the
-reverse,&mdash;great effect, and little pains! But
-it is the same in every thing.</p>
-
-<p>The women’s scrupulous attention to keep
-their persons clear from dirt, makes their faces
-look doubly fair; their complexions have
-quite a lustre upon them, like some of our
-wenches in the West of England, whose
-transparent skins shew, by the motion of the
-blood beneath, an illuminated countenance
-that stands in the place of eye-language, and
-betrays the sentiments of the innocent heart
-with uncontrolable sincerity. These girls
-however will not be found to attract or retain
-lovers, like an Italian, whose black eyes and
-white teeth (though their possessor thinks no
-more of cleaning the last-named beauty than
-the first) tell her mind clearly, and with little
-pains again produce certain and strong effect.
-Our stiff gold-stuff cap here too, as round, as
-hard, and as heavy as an old Japan China
-bason, and not very unlike one, is by no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-means favourable to the face, as it is clapped
-close round the head, the hair combed all
-smooth out of sight, and a plaited border of
-lace to it made firm with double-sprigged
-wire; giving its wearer all the hardness and
-prim look of a Quaker, without that idea of
-simplicity which in their dress compensates for
-the absence of every ornament.</p>
-
-<p>The gentlemen’s <i lang="fr">maniere de s’ajuster</i> is to
-me equally striking: an old nobleman who
-takes delight in shewing us the glories of his
-little court (where I have a notion he himself
-holds some honourable office) came to dine
-with us yesterday in a dressed coat of fine,
-clean, white broad-cloth, laced all down with
-gold, and lined with crimson sattin, of which
-likewise the waistcoat was made, and laced
-about with a narrower lace, but pretty broad
-too; so that I thought I saw the very coat my
-father went in to the old king’s birth-day
-five and thirty years ago. There is more
-stateliness too and ceremonious manners in the
-conversation of this gentleman, and the friends
-he introduced us to, than I have of late been
-accustomed to; and they fatigue one with
-long, dry, uninteresting narratives. The innkeepers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-are honest, but inflexible; the servants
-silent and sullen; the postillions slow
-and inattentive; and every thing exhibits the
-reverse of what we have left behind.</p>
-
-<p>The treasures of this little Elector are prodigious,
-his jewels superb; the Electress’s
-pearls are superior in size and regularity to
-those at Loretto, but that distinguished by the
-name of the “Pearl of the Palatinate” is surely
-incomparable, and, as such, always carried to
-the election of a new Emperor, when each
-brings his finest possession in his hand, like
-the Princess of Babylon’s wooers,&mdash;which was
-perhaps meant by Voltaire as a joke upon the
-custom. This pearl is about the bigness and
-shape of a very fine filberd, the upper part or
-cap of it jet black, smooth and perfectly beautiful;
-<em>it is unique in the known world</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Our Prince’s dinner here is announced by
-the sound of drums and trumpets, and he has
-always a concert playing while he dines:
-pomp is at this place indeed so artfully substituted
-instead of general consequence, that
-while one remains here one scarcely feels
-aware how little any one but his own courtiers
-can be thinking about the Elector of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-Bavaria; but ceremony is of most use where
-there is least importance, and glitter best hides
-the want of solidity.</p>
-
-<p>From Munich to Saltzbourg nothing can
-exceed the beauties of the country; whole
-woods, and we may say forests, of ever-green
-timber, keep all idea of winter kindly at a
-distance: the road lies through these elegantly-varied
-thickets, which sometimes are
-formed of cedars, often of foxtailed pines,
-while a pale larch sometimes, and
-gloomy cypress, hinder the verdure from
-being too monotonous; here are likewise
-mingled among them some oak and beech of
-a majestic size. Nor do our prospects want
-that dignity which mountains alone can bestow;
-those which separate Bavaria from Hungary
-are high, and of considerable extent; a
-long range they are of bulky fortifications,
-behind which I am informed the country is
-far coarser than here.</p>
-
-<p>The cathedral at Saltzbourg is modern,
-built upon the model of St. Peter’s at Rome,
-but on a small scale: one now sees how few
-the defects are of that astonishing pile, though
-brought close to one’s eye, by being stript of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-the awful magnitude that kept examination at
-a distance. The musical bells remind me of
-those at Bath, and every thing here seems, as
-at Bath, the work of this present century;
-but there is a Benedictine convent seated on
-the top of a hill above the town, of exceeding
-antiquity, founded before the conquest of
-England by William the Norman; under
-which lie its founder and protectors, the old
-Dukes of Bavaria; which they are happy to
-shew travellers, with the registered account
-of their young Prince <em>Adam</em>, who came over
-to our island with William, and gained a settlement:
-they were pleased when I proved to
-them, that his blood was not yet wholly extinct
-among us.</p>
-
-<p>A fever hindered us here from looking at
-the salt-works, from which the city takes its
-name: but the water-works at Heelbrun
-pleased us for a moment; and I never saw
-beavers live so happily as with the Archbishop
-of Saltzbourg, who suffers, and even encourages,
-his tame ones to dig, and build,
-and amuse themselves their own way: he has
-fish too which eat out of his hand, and are
-not carp, but I do not know what they are;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-my want of language distracts me. These
-German streams appear to us particularly pellucid,
-and, by what I can gather from the
-people, this water never freezes. The taste of
-gardening seems just what ours was in England
-before Stowe was planned, and they divert
-you now with puppets moved by concealed
-machinery, as I recollect their doing at places
-round London, called the Spaniard at Hampstead
-and Don Saltero’s at Chelsea.</p>
-
-<p>The Prince Archbishop’s income is from
-three to four hundred thousand a year I understand,
-and he spends it among his subjects,
-who half adore him. His chief delight is in
-brute animals they tell me, particularly horses,
-which engross so much of his attention that he
-keeps one hundred and seventeen for his own
-private and personal use, of various merits,
-beauties, and pedigrees; never surely was so
-elegant, so capital a stud! And he is singularly
-fond of a breed of fine silky-haired English
-setting-dogs, red and white, and very
-high upon their legs.</p>
-
-<p>The country which carried us forward to
-Vienna is eminently fine, and fine in a way
-that is now once more grown new to me; no
-hedges here, no small inclosures at all; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-rich land, lying like as in Dorsetshire, divided
-into arable and pasture grounds, clumped
-about with woods of ever-green. Such is the
-genius of this sovereign for English manners
-and English agriculture, that no conversation
-is said to be more welcome at his court than
-what relates to the sports or profits of the field
-in Britain; to which accounts he listens with
-good-humoured earnestness, and talks of a
-fine scenting day with the true taste of an
-English country gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>On this day I first saw the Danube at Lintz,
-where, though but just burst from the spring,
-it is already so deep and strong that scarcely
-any wooden bridge is capable to resist it, and
-accordingly it did a few months ago overwhelm
-many cottages and fields, among
-which we passed. The inhabitants here call it
-<em>Donaw</em> from its swiftness; and it deserves beside,
-any name expressive of that singular purity
-which distinguishes the German torrents.</p>
-
-<p>The rivers of France, Italy, and England,
-give one no idea of that elemental perfection
-found in the fluids here; not a pebble, not a
-fish in these translucent streams, but may be
-discerned to a depth of twelve feet. As the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-water in Germany, so is the atmosphere in
-Italy, a medium so little obstructed by vapour
-I remember, that Vesuvius looked as near to
-Naples, from our window, as does lord Lisburne’s
-park from the little town of Exmouth
-opposite, a distance of about five miles I believe,
-and the other is near ten. Let me add,
-that this peculiarity brings every object forward
-with a certain degree of hardness not
-wholly pleasing to the eye. The prospects
-round Naples have another fault, resulting from
-too great perfection: the sky’s brilliant uniformity,
-and utter cloudlessness for many months
-together, takes away those broad masses of
-light and shade, with the volant shadows that
-cross our British hills, relieving the sight, and
-discriminating the landscape.</p>
-
-<p>The scenery round Conway Castle in North
-Wales, with a thunder-storm rolling over the
-mountain; the sea strongly illuminated on
-one side, with the sun shining bright upon
-the verdure on the other; the lights dropping
-in patches about one; exhibits a variety, the
-which to equal will be very difficult, let us travel
-as far as we please.</p>
-
-<p>Magnificence of a far different kind however
-claims our present attention&mdash;a convent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-and church shewn us at Molcke upon our
-way, the residence of eighteen friars who inhabit
-a stately palace it is confessed, while three
-immense courts precede your entrance to a
-splendid structure of enormous size, on which
-the finery bestowed amazed even me, who
-came from Rome; nor had entertained an
-idea of seeing such gilding, and carving, and
-profusion of expence, lavished on a place of
-religious retirement in our road to</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>VIENNA.</h2>
-
-<p>We entered the capital by night; but I
-fancied, perhaps from having been told so,
-that I saw something like a look of London
-round me. Apartments furnished wholly in
-the Paris taste take off that look a little; so
-do the public walks and drives which are formed
-etoile-wise, and moving slowly up and
-down the avenues, you see large stags, wild
-boars, &amp;c. grazing at liberty: this is grander
-than our park, and graver than the Corso.
-Whenever they lay out a piece of water in this
-country, it is covered as in ours with swans,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-who have completely quitted the odoriferous
-Po for the clear and rapid Danube.</p>
-
-<p>Vienna was not likely to strike one with
-its churches; yet the old cathedral is majestic,
-and by no means stript of those ornaments
-which, while one sect of Christians think it particularly
-pleasing in the sight of God to retain,
-is hardly warrantable in another sect,
-though wiser, to be over-hasty in tearing
-away. Here are however many devotional
-figures and chapels left in the streets I see,
-which, from the tales told in Austrian Lombardy,
-one had little reason to expect; but the
-emperor is tender even to the foibles of his
-Viennese subjects, while he shews little feeling
-to Italian misery. Men drawing carts
-along the roads and street afford, indeed, somewhat
-an awkward proof the government’s lenity
-when human creatures are levelled with
-the beasts of burden, and called <i lang="de">stott eisel</i>, or
-<em>stout asses</em>, as I understand, who by this information
-have learned that the frame which
-supports a picture is for the same reason called
-an <i lang="de">eisel</i>, as we call a thing to hang clothes on
-a <em>horse</em>. It is the genius of the German language
-to degrade all our English words somehow:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-they call a coach a <em>waggon</em>, and ask
-a lady if she will buy pomatum to <em>smear</em> her
-hair with. Such is however the resemblance
-between their tongue and ours, that the Italians
-protest they cannot separate either the
-ideas or the words.</p>
-
-<p>I must mention our going to the post-office
-with a Venetian friend to look for letters,
-where, after receiving some surly replies from
-the people who attended there, our laquais
-de place reminded my male companions that
-they should stand <em>uncovered</em>. Finding them
-however somewhat dilatory in their obedience,
-a rough fellow snatched the hat from
-one of their heads, saying, “<cite>Don’t you
-know, Sir, that you are standing before the
-emperor’s officers?</cite>”&mdash;“<cite>I know</cite>,” replied the
-prompt Italian, “<cite>that we are come to a country
-where people wear their hats in the church,
-so need not wonder we are bid to take them
-off in the post-office</cite>.” Well, where rulers are
-said or supposed to be tyrannical, it is rational
-that good provision should be made for arms;
-otherwise despotism dwindles into nugatory
-pompousness and airy show; Prospero’s empire
-in the enchanted island of Shakespeare is
-not more shadowy than the sight of princedom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-united with impotence of power:&mdash;such
-have I seen, but such is not the character of
-Keysar’s dominion. The arsenal here is the
-finest thing in the world I suppose; it grieved
-me to feel the ideas of London and Venice
-fade before it so; but the enormous size and
-solidity of the quadrangle, the quantity and
-disposition of the cannon, bombs, and mortars,
-filled my mind with enforced respect, and
-shook my nerves with the thought of what
-might follow such dreadful preparation.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can in fact be grander than the
-sight of the Austrian eagle, all made out in
-arms, eight ancient heroes sternly frowning
-round it. The choice has fallen on Cæsar,
-Pompey, Alexander, Scipio, Hannibal, Fabius
-Maximus, Cyrus, and Themistocles. I
-should have thought Pyrrhus worthier the
-company of all the rest than this last-named
-hero; but petty criticisms are much less worthy
-a place in Vienna’s arsenal, which impresses
-one with a very majestic idea of Imperial
-greatness.</p>
-
-<p>On the first of November we tried at an
-excursion into Hungary, where we meant to
-have surveyed the Danube in all its dignity at
-Presburgh, and have heard Hayden at Estherhazie.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-But my being unluckily taken ill, prevented
-us from prosecuting our journey further
-than a wretched village, where I was
-laid up with a fever, and disappointed my
-company of much hoped-for entertainment.
-It was curious however to find one’s self within
-a few posts of the places one had read so much
-of; and the words <i lang="fr">Route de Belgrade</i> upon
-a finger-post gave me sensations of distance
-never felt before. The comfortable sight of a
-protestant chapel near me made much amends
-however. The officiating priests were of the
-Moravian sect it seems, and dear Mr. Hutton’s
-image rushed upon my mind. A burial
-passing by my windows, struck me as very
-extraordinary: not one follower or even bearer
-being dressed in black, but all with green
-robes trimmed with dark brown furs, not
-robes neither; but like long coats down to the
-men’s heels, cut in skirts, and trimmed up
-those skirts as well as round the bottom with
-fur.</p>
-
-<p>It was a melancholy country that we
-passed through, very bleak and dismal, and I
-trust would not have mended upon us had we
-gone further. The few people one sees are all
-ignorant, and can all speak Latin&mdash;such as it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-is&mdash;very fluently. I have lived with many
-very knowing people who never could speak
-it with any fluency at all. Such is life!&mdash;and
-such is learning! I long to talk about the
-sheep and swine: they seem very worthy of
-observation; the latter large and finely shaped,
-of the old savage race; one fancies them like
-those Eumæus tended, and perhaps they are
-so; with tusks of singular beauty and whiteness,
-which the uniformly brown colour of the
-creature shews off to much advantage; amidst
-his dark curls, waving all over his high back
-and long sides, in the manner of a curl-pated
-baby in England, only that the last is commonly
-fair and blonde.</p>
-
-<p>The sheep are spotted like our pigs, but
-prettier; black and yellow like a tortoise-shell
-cat, with horns as long as those of any he-goat
-I ever saw, but very different; these
-animals carrying them straight upright like an
-antelope, and they are of a spiral shape. Our
-mutton meantime is detestable; but here are
-incomparable fish, carp large as small Severn
-salmon, and they bring them to table cut in
-pounds, and the joul for a handsome dish. I
-only wonder one has never heard of any ancient
-or any modern gluttons driving away to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-Presburg or Buda, for the sake of eating a
-fine Danube carp.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to men and women in Hungary,
-they are not thickly scattered, but their
-lamentations are loud; the emperor having
-resumed all the privileges granted them by
-Maria Theresa in the year 1740, or thereabouts,
-when distress drove her to shelter in
-that country, and has prohibited the importation
-of salt herrings which used to come duty
-free from Amsterdam, so that their fasts are
-rendered incommodious from the asperity of
-the soil, which produces very little vegetable
-food.</p>
-
-<p>Ground squirrels are frequent in the forests
-here; but without Pennant’s Synopsis I never
-remember the Linnæan names of quadrupeds,
-so can get no information of the animal called
-a glutton in English, whose skin I see in every
-fur-shop, and who, I fancy, inhabits our
-Hungarian woods.</p>
-
-<p>The Imperial collection of pictures here is
-really a magnificent repository of Italian taste,
-Flemish colouring, and Dutch exactness: in
-which the Baptist, by Giulio Romano, the
-crucifixion by Vandyke, and the physician<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-holding up a bottle to the light by Gerard
-Douw, are great examples.</p>
-
-<p>One does not in these countries look out particularly
-for the works of Roman or Bolognese
-masters; but I remember a wonderful Caracci
-at Munich, worthy a first place even in the
-Zampieri palace; the subject, Venus sitting
-under a great tree diverting herself with seeing
-a scuffle between the two boys Cupid and
-Anteros.</p>
-
-<p>In the gallery here at Vienna, many of the
-pictures have been handled a good deal; one
-is dazzled with the brilliancy of these powerful
-colourists: and here is a David Teniers
-surprisingly natural, of Abraham offering up
-Isaac; a glorious Pordenone representing
-Santa Justina, reminded me of her fine church
-at Padua, and <em>his</em> centurion at Cremona,
-which I know not who could excel; and here
-is Furino’s Sigismunda to be seen, the same
-or a duplicate of that sold at Sir Luke
-Schaub’s sale in London about thirty years
-ago, and called Correggio. I have seen
-it at Merriworth too, if not greatly mistaken.
-The price it went for in Langford’s
-auction-room I cannot surely forget,
-it was three thousand pounds, <em>or they said so</em>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-I will only add a word of a Dutch girl representing
-Herodias, and so lively in its colouring,
-that I think the king would have
-denied her who resembled it nothing, had he
-been a native of Amsterdam. A Mount
-Calvary painted by the same hand is very
-striking, with a crowd of people gathered
-about the cross, and men selling cakes to the
-mob, as if at a fair or horse-race: two
-young peasants at fisty-cuffs upon the fore
-ground quarrelling, as it should seem, about
-the propriety of our Saviour’s execution.</p>
-
-<p>But I have this day heard so many and such
-interesting particulars concerning the emperor,
-that I should not forgive myself if I failed
-to record and relate them, the less because
-my authority was particularly good, and the
-anecdotes singular and pleasing.</p>
-
-<p>He rises then at five o’clock every morning,
-even at this sharp season, writes in private till
-nine, takes some refreshment then, and immediately
-after calls his ministers, and employs
-the time till one professedly in state
-affairs, rides out till three, returns and studies
-alone, letting the people bring his dinner at
-the appointed hour, chuses out of all the
-things they bring him one dish, and sets it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-on the stove to keep hot, eating it when
-nature calls for food, but never detaining a
-servant in the room to wait; at five he goes
-to the Corridor just near his own apartment,
-where poor and rich, small and great, have
-access to his person at pleasure, and often get
-him to arbitrate their law-suits, and decide
-their domestic differences, as nothing is more
-agreeable to him than finding himself considered
-by his people as their father, and dispenser
-of justice over all his extensive dominions.
-His attention to the duties he has imposed
-upon himself is so great, that, in order
-to maintain a pure impartiality in his mind
-towards every claimant, he suffers no man or
-woman to have any influence over him, and
-forbears even the slight gratification of fondling
-a dog, lest it should take up too much of
-his time. The emperor is a stranger upon
-principle to the joys of confidence and friendship,
-but cultivates the acquaintance of many
-ladies and gentlemen, at whose houses (when
-they see company) he drops in, and spends
-the evening cheerfully in cards or conversation,
-putting no man under the least restraint;
-and if he sees a new comer in look disconcerted,
-goes up to him and says kindly, “Divert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-yourself your own way, good Sir; and do
-not let me disturb you.” His coach is like the
-commonest gentleman’s of Vienna; his servants
-distinguished only by the plainness of
-their liveries; and, lest their insolence might
-make his company troublesome to the houses
-where he visits, he leaves the carriage in the
-street, and will not even be driven into the
-court-yard, where other equipages and footmen
-wait. A large dish of hot chocolate thickened
-with bread and cream is a common
-afternoon’s regale here, and the emperor often
-takes one, observing to the mistress of the
-house how acceptable such a meal is to him
-after so wretched a dinner.</p>
-
-<p>A few mornings ago showed his character in
-a strong light. Some poor women were coming
-down the Danube on a float, the planks separated,
-and they were in danger of drowning;
-as it was very early in the day, and no one awake
-upon the shore except a sawyer that was cutting
-wood; who, not being able to obtain
-from his phlegmatic neighbours that assistance
-their case immediately required, ran directly
-to call the emperor who he knew would be
-stirring, and who came flying to give that
-help which from some happy accident was no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-longer wanted: but Joseph lost no good humour
-on the occasion; on the contrary, he congratulated
-the women on their deliverance,
-praising at the same time and rewarding the
-fellow for having disturbed him.</p>
-
-<p>My informer told me likewise, that if two
-men dispute about any matter till mischief is
-expected, the wife of one of them will often
-cry out, “Come, have done, have done directly,
-or I’ll call our master, and he’ll make you have
-done.” Now is it fair not to do every thing but
-adore a sovereign like this? when we know that
-if such tales were told us of Marcus Aurelius, or
-Titus Vespasian, it would be our delight to repeat,
-our favourite learning to read of them. Such
-conduct would serve succeeding princes for
-models, nor could the weight of a dozen
-centuries smother their still rising fame. Yet
-is not my heart persuaded that the reputation
-of Joseph the Second will be consigned immaculate
-from age to age, like that of these
-immortal worthies, though dearly purchased
-by the loss of ease and pleasure; while neither
-the mitred prelate nor the blameless puritan
-pursue with blessings a heart unawed by splendour,
-unsoftened by simplicity; a hand
-stretched forth rather to dispense justice, than
-opening spontaneously to distribute charity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-To speak less solemnly, if men were nearer
-than they are to perfect creatures, absolute
-monarchy would be the most perfect form of
-government, for the will of the prince could
-never deviate from propriety; but if one king
-can see all with his own eyes, and hear all
-with his own ears, no successor will ever be
-able to do the same; and it is like giving
-Harrison 10,000 l. for finding the longitude,
-to commend a person for having hit on the
-right way of governing a great nation, while
-his science is incommunicable, and his powers
-of execution must end with his life.</p>
-
-<p>The society here is charming; Sherlock
-says, that he who does not like Vienna is his
-own satirist; I shall leave others to be mine.
-The ladies here seem very highly accomplished,
-and speak a great variety of languages with
-facility, studying to adorn the conversation
-with every ornament that literature can bestow;
-nor do they appear terrified as in London,
-lest pedantry should be imputed to them,
-for venturing sometimes to use in company
-that knowledge they have acquired in private
-by diligent application. Here also are
-to be seen young unmarried women once
-again: misses, who wink at each other, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-titter in corners at what is passing in the
-rooms, public or private: I had lived so long
-away from <em>them</em>, that I had half forgotten
-their existence.</p>
-
-<p>The horses here are trimmed at the heels,
-and led about in body clothes like ours in
-England; but their drawing is ill managed, no
-shafts somehow but a pole, which, when there
-is one horse only, looks awkward and badly
-contrived. Beasts of various kinds plowing together
-has a strange look, and the ox harnessed
-up like a hunter in a phaeton cuts a
-comical figure enough. One need no longer say,
-<i lang="la">Optat ephippia bos piger</i><a name="FNanchor_49" id="FNanchor_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>; but it is very silly,
-as no use can be thus made of that strength
-which lies only in his head and horns.
-Plenty of wood makes the Germans profusely
-elegant in their pales, hurdles, &amp;c. which
-give an air of comfort and opulence, and
-make the best compensation a cold climate can
-make for the hedges of jessamine and medlar
-flowers, which I shall see no more.</p>
-
-<p>Our architecture here can hardly be expected
-to please an eye made fastidious from the
-contemplation of Michael Angelo’s works at
-Rome, or Palladio’s at Venice; nor will German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-music much delight those who have been
-long accustomed to more simple melody,
-though intrinsic merit and complicated excellence
-will always deserve the highest note of
-praise. Whoever takes upon him to under-rate
-that which no one can obtain without infinite
-labour and study, will ever be censured, and
-justly, for refusing the reward due to deep
-research; but if a man’s taste leads him to like
-<em>Cyprus</em> wine, let him drink <em>that</em>, and content
-himself with commending the <em>old hock</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Apropos, we hear that <em>Sacchini</em>, the Metastasio
-of musical composers, is dead; but nobody at
-Vienna cares about his compositions. Our
-Italian friends are more candid; they are
-always talking in favour of Bach and Brughuel,
-Handel and Rubens.</p>
-
-<p>The cabinet of natural history is exceedingly
-fine, and the rooms singularly well disposed.
-There are more cameos at Bologna,
-and one superior specimen of native gold:
-every thing else I believe is better here, and
-such opals did I never see before, no not at
-Loretto: the petrified lemon and artichoke
-have no equals, and a brown diamond
-was new to me to-day. A specimen of sea-salt
-filled with air bubbles like the rings one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-buys at Vicenza, is worth going a long way
-to look at; but the gentleman at Munich,
-who shewed us the Virgin Mary in a cobweb,
-had a piece of red silver shot out into a ruby
-like crystal, more extraordinary than any mineral
-production I have seen. Our attention
-was caught by Maria Theresa’s bouquet, but
-one cannot forget the pearls belonging to the
-electress of Bavaria.</p>
-
-<p>What seemed, however, most to charm the
-people who shewed the cabinet, was a snuff-box
-consisting of various gems, none bigger
-than a barley-corn, each of prodigious value,
-and the workmanship of more, every square
-being inlaid so neatly, and no precious stone
-repeated, though the number is no less than
-one hundred and eighty-three; a false bottom
-besides of gold, opening with a spring touch,
-and discovering a written catalogue of the
-jewels in the finest hand-writing, and the smallest
-possible. This was to me a real curiosity,
-afforded a new and singular proof of that
-astonishing power of eye, and delicacy of
-manual operation, seconded by a patient and
-persevering attention to things frivolous in
-themselves, which will be for ever alike neglected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-by the fire of Italian genius, and disdained
-by the dignity of British science.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen other sort of things to-day
-however. The Hungarian and Bohemian
-robes pleased me best, and the wild unset
-jewels in the diadem of Transylvania impressed
-me with a valuable idea of Gothic
-greatness. The service of gold plate too is
-very grand from its old-fashioned solidity. I
-liked it better than I did the snuff-box; and
-here is a dish in ivory puts one in mind of nothing
-but Achilles’s shield, so worked is its broad
-margin with miniature representations of battles,
-landscapes, &amp;c. three dozen different stories
-round the dish, one might have looked at it
-with microscopes for a week together. The
-porcelane plates have been painted to ridicule
-Raphael’s pots at Loretto I fancy; Julio Romano’s
-manner is comically parodied upon
-one of them.</p>
-
-<p>Prince Lichtenstein’s pictures are charming;
-a Salmacis in the water by Albano is
-the best work of that master I ever saw,
-not diffused as his works commonly are, but
-all collected somehow, and fine in a way I
-cannot express for want of more knowledge;
-<em>very, very</em> fine it is however, and full of expression
-and character. The Caracci school<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-again.&mdash;Here is the whole history of Decius
-by Rubens too, wonderfully learned; and an
-assumption of the Virgin so like Mrs. Pritchard
-our famous actress, no portrait ever represented
-her so well. A St. Sebastian divinely
-beautiful, by Vandyke; and a girl playing on
-the guitar, which you may run round almost,
-by the coarse but natural hand of Caravagio.</p>
-
-<p>The library is new and splendid, and they
-buy books for it very liberally. The learned
-and amiable Abbé Denys shewed me a thousand
-unmerited civilities, was charmed with
-the character of Dr. Johnson, and delighted
-with the story of his conversation at Rouen
-with Mons. l’Abbé Rossette. This gentleman
-seems to love England very much, and
-English literature; spoke of Humphry Prideaux
-with respect, and has his head full of
-Ossian’s poetry, of which he can repeat whole
-pages. He shewed me a fragment of Livy
-written in the fifth century, a psalter and
-creed beautifully illuminated of the year
-nine hundred, and a large portion of St.
-Mark’s gospel on blue paper of the year three
-hundred and seven. A Bibbia de Poveri too,
-as the Italians call it, curious enough; the
-figures all engraved on wood, and only a text
-at bottom to explain them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Winceslaus marked every book he ever possessed,
-it seems, with the five vowels on the back;
-and almost every one with some little miniature
-made by himself, recording his escape from
-confinement at Prague in Bohemia, where the
-washer-woman having assisted him to get out
-of prison under pretence of bathing, he has been
-very studious to register the event; so much
-so that even on the margins of his bible he
-has been tempted to paint past scenes that
-had better have been blotted from his memory.</p>
-
-<p>The Livy which learned men have hoped
-to find safe in the seraglio of Constantinople,
-was burned by their late sultan Amurath, our
-Abbé Denys tells me; the motive sprung from
-mistaken piety, but the effect is to be lamented.
-He shewed me an Alcoran in extremely small
-characters, surprisingly so indeed, taken out
-of a Turkish officer’s pocket when John Sobiesky
-raised the siege of this city in the year
-1590, and a preacher took for his text the
-Sunday after, “<cite>There was a man sent from
-God whose name was <em class="antiqua">John</em>.</cite>” I was much
-amused with a sight of the Mexican MSS and
-Peruvian quipos; nor are the Turkish figures<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-of Adam and Eve, our Saviour and his mother,
-less remarkable; but Mahomet surrounded
-by a glory about his head, a veil concealing
-his face as too bright for inspection, exceeded
-all the rest.</p>
-
-<p>Here are many ladies of fashion in this
-town very eminent for their musical abilities,
-particularly Mesdemoiselles de Martinas, one of
-whom is member of the Academies of Berlin
-and Bologna: the celebrated Metastasio died in
-their house, after having lived with the family
-sixty-five years more or less. They set his poetry
-and sing it very finely, appearing to recollect
-his conversation and friendship, with infinite
-tenderness and delight. He was to have been
-presented to the Pope the very day he died,
-I understand, and in the delirium which immediately
-preceded dissolution he raved much
-of the supposed interview. Unwilling to hear
-of death, no one was ever permitted even to
-mention it before him; and nothing put him
-so certainly out of humour, as finding that
-rule transgressed even by his nearest friends.
-Even the small-pox was not to be named in
-his presence, and whoever <em>did</em> name that disorder,
-though unconscious of the offence he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-had given, Metastasio would see him no more.
-The other peculiarities I could gather from
-Miss Martinas were these: That he had contentedly
-lived half a century at Vienna, without
-ever even wishing to learn its language; that he
-had never given more than five guineas English
-money in all that time to the poor; that he
-always sat in the same seat at church, but never
-paid for it, and that nobody dared ask
-him for the trifling sum; that he was grateful
-and beneficent to the friends who began
-by being his protectors, but ended much his
-debtors, for solid benefits as well as for elegant
-presents, which it was his delight to be perpetually
-making them, leaving to them at last
-all he had ever gained without the charge
-even of a single legacy; observing in his will
-that it was to them he owed it, and other
-conduct would in him have been injustice.
-Such were the sentiments, and such the conduct
-of this great poet, of whom it is of little
-consequence to tell, that he never changed the
-fashion of his wig, the cut or colour of his
-coat, so that his portrait taken not very long
-ago looks like those of Boileau or Moliere
-at the head of their works. His life was
-arranged with such methodical exactness, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-he rose, studied, chatted, slept, and dined at the
-same hours for fifty years together, enjoying
-uninterrupted health, which probably gave him
-that happy sweetness of temper, or habitual gentleness
-of manners, which never suffered itself
-to be ruffled, but when his sole injunction was
-forgotten, and the death of any person whatever
-was unwittingly mentioned before him. No
-solicitation had ever prevailed on him to dine
-from home, nor had his nearest intimates ever
-seen him <em>eat</em> more than a biscuit with his lemonade,
-every meal being performed with
-even mysterious privacy to the last. When
-his end approached by steps so very rapid, he
-did not in the least suspect that it was coming;
-and Mademoiselle Martinas has scarcely yet
-done rejoicing in the thought that he escaped
-the preparations he so dreaded. His early
-passion for a celebrated singer is well known
-upon the continent; since that affair finished,
-all his pleasures have been confined to music
-and conversation. He had the satisfaction of
-seeing the seventieth edition of his works I
-think they said, but am ashamed to copy out
-the number from my own notes, it seems so
-<em>very</em> strange; and the delight he took in
-hearing the lady he lived with sing his songs,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-was visible to every one. An Italian Abate
-here said, comically enough, “Oh! he looked
-like a man in the state of beatification always
-when Mademoiselle de Martinas accompanied
-his verses with her fine voice and brilliant
-finger.” The father of Metastasio was a goldsmith
-at Rome, but his son had so devoted
-himself to the family he lived with, that he
-refused to hear, and took pains not to know,
-whether he had in his latter days any one
-relation left in the world. On a character so
-singular I leave my readers to make their own
-<em>observations and reflections</em>.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="fr">Au reste</i>, as the French say; I have no notion
-that Vienna, <i lang="it">sempre ventoso o velenoso</i><a name="FNanchor_50" id="FNanchor_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>,
-can be a very wholesome place to live in; the
-double windows, double feather-beds, &amp;c. in
-a room without a chimney, is surely ill contrived;
-and sleeping smothered up in down so,
-like a hydrophobous patient in some parts of
-Ireland, is not <em>particularly</em> agreeable, though
-I begin to like it better than I did. All external
-air is shut out in such a manner that I
-am frighted lest, after a certain time, the room
-should become like an exhausted receiver,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-while the wind whirls one about the street in
-such a manner that it is displeasing to put out
-one’s head; and a physician from Ragusa
-settled here told me, that wounded lungs are
-a common consequence of the triturated stone
-blown about here; and in fact asthmas and
-consumptions are their reigning diseases.</p>
-
-<p>Apropos, the plague is now raging in Transylvania;
-how little safe should we think ourselves
-at London, were a disorder so contagious
-known to be no farther distant than Derby?
-The distance is scarcely greater now from Vienna
-to the place of distress; yet I will not say we
-are in much danger to be sure, for that perpetual
-connection kept up between all the
-towns and counties of Great Britain is unknown
-in other nations, and we should be as
-many days going to Transylvania from here
-perhaps, as we should be <em>hours</em> running from
-Toddenham-court road to Derby.</p>
-
-<p>Sheenburn is pretty, but it is no season for seeing
-pretty places. The streets of Vienna are not
-pretty at all, God knows; so narrow, so ill built,
-so crowded, many wares placed upon the ground
-where there is a little opening, seems a strange
-awkward disposition of things for sale; and the
-people cutting wood in the street makes one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-half wild when walking; it is hardly possible
-to pass another strange custom, borrowed from
-Italy I trust, of shutting up their shops in the
-middle of the day; it must tend, one would
-think, but little to the promotion of that commerce
-which the sovereign professes to encourage,
-and I see no excuse for it <em>here</em> which
-can be made from heat, gaiety, or devotion.
-Many families living in the same house, and
-at the entrance of the apartments belonging
-to each, a strong iron gate to separate the
-residence of one set from that of another, has
-likewise an odd melancholy look, like that of
-a prison or a nunnery. Nunneries, however,
-here are none; and if the old women turned
-out of those they have long dwelt in, are not
-provided with decent pensions, it must surely
-distress even the Emperor’s cold heart to see age
-driven from the refuges of disappointment,
-and forced to wander through the world with
-inexperience for its guide, while youth is no
-longer <em>led</em>, but <em>thrust</em> into temptation by such
-a sudden transition from utter retirement to
-open and busy life.</p>
-
-<p>We have been this morning to look over
-his academy of painting, &amp;c. His exhibition-room
-is neatly kept, and I dare say will prosper:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-the students are zealous and laborious,
-and earnestly desire the promulgation of
-science: their collection of models is meagre,
-but it will mend by degrees. Perhaps Joseph
-the IId. is the first European sovereign who,
-establishing a school for painting and sculpture,
-has insisted on the artists never exercising
-their skill upon any subject which could
-hurt any person’s delicacy;&mdash;an example well
-worthy honest praise and speedy imitation.</p>
-
-<p>The very few charitable foundations established
-at Vienna by Imperial munificence are
-well managed; their paucity is accounted for
-by the recollection of many abuses consequent
-on the late Empress’s bounty; her son therefore
-took all the annuities away, which he
-thought her tenderness had been duped out
-of; but let it be remembered that when he
-rides or walks in a morning, he always takes
-with him a hundred ducats, out of which he
-never brings any home, but gives in private
-donations what he knows to be well bestowed,
-without the ostentation of affected generosity:
-it is not in rewards for past services
-perhaps, nor in public and stately institutions,
-as I am told here, that this prince’s liberalities
-are to be looked for; yet&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">In Mis’ry’s darkest caverns known,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">His useful care is ever nigh;</div>
-<div class="verse">Where hopeless Anguish pours her groan,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And lonely Want retires to die.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To-morrow (23d of November) we venture
-to leave Vienna and proceed northwards, as
-I long to see the Dresden gallery. Here
-every thing appears to me a caricatura of
-London; the language like ours, but coarser;
-the plays like ours, but duller; the streets at
-night lighted up, not like ours now, but very
-like what they were thirty or forty years
-ago.</p>
-
-<p>Among the people I have seen here, Mademoiselle
-Paradies, the blind performer on
-the harpsichord, interested me very much;&mdash;and
-she liked England so, and the King
-and Queen were so kind to her, and she was
-<em>so</em> happy, she said!&mdash;While life and its vexations
-seem to oppress such numbers of hearts,
-and cloud such variety of otherwise agreeable
-faces, one must go to a blind girl to hear of
-happiness, it seems! But she has wonderful
-talents for languages as well as music, and has
-learned the English pronunciation most surprisingly.
-It is a soothing sight when one
-finds the mind compensate for the body’s defects:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-I took great delight in the conversation
-of Mademoiselle Paradies.</p>
-
-<p>The collection of rarities, particularly an
-Alexander’s head worthy of Capo di Monte,
-now in the possession of Madame de Hesse, became
-daily more my study, as I received more
-and more civilities from the charming family
-at whose house it resides: there are some very
-fine cameos in it, and a great variety of miscellaneous
-curiosities.</p>
-
-<p>So different are the customs here and at
-Venice, that the German ladies offer you
-chocolate on the same salver with coffee, of an
-evening, and fill up both with milk; saying
-that you may have the latter quite black if
-you chuse it&mdash;“<i lang="fr">Tout noir, Monsieur, à la Venetienne</i>;”&mdash;adding
-their best advice not to risque
-a practice so unwholesome. While their care
-upon that account reminds me chiefly of a
-friend, who lives upon the Grand Canal, that
-in reply to a long panegyric upon English delicacy,
-said she would tell a story that would
-prove them to be nasty enough, at least in
-some things; for that she had actually seen a
-handsome young nobleman, who came from
-London (<em>and ought to have known better</em>),
-souce some thick cream into the fine clear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-coffee she presented him with; which every
-body must confess to be <i lang="it">vera porcheria</i>!
-a very <em>piggish trick</em>!&mdash;So necessary and so
-pleasing is conformity, and so absurd and perverse
-is it ever to forbear such assimilation of
-manners, when not inconsistent with the
-virtue, honour, or necessary interest:&mdash;let us
-eat sour-crout in Germany, frittura at Milan,
-macaroni at Naples, and beef-steaks in England,
-if one wishes to please the inhabitants
-of either country; and all are very good, so it
-is a slight compliance. Poor Dr. Goldsmith
-said once&mdash;“I would advise every young fellow
-setting out in life <em>to love gravy</em>;”&mdash;and
-added, that he had formerly seen a glutton’s
-eldest nephew disinherited, because his uncle
-never could persuade him to say he liked
-gravy.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>PRAGUE.</h2>
-
-<p>The inns between Vienna and this place
-are very bad; but we arrived here safe the
-24th of November, when I looked for little
-comfort but much diversion; things turned
-out however exactly the reverse, and <i lang="fr">aux
-bains de Prague</i> in Bohemia we found beds
-more elegant, dinners neater dressed, apartments
-cleaner and with a less foreign aspect,
-than almost any where else. Such is not
-mean time the general appearance of the town
-out of doors, which is savage enough; and
-the celebrated bridge singularly ugly I think,
-crowded with vast groupes of ill-made statues,
-and heavy to excess, though not incommodious
-to drive over, and of a surprising
-extent. These German rivers are magnificent,
-and our Mulda here (which is but a
-branch of the Elbe neither) is respectable for
-its volume of water, useful for the fish contained
-in it, and lovely in the windings of its
-course.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Bohemia seems no badly-cultivated country;
-the ground undulates like many parts of
-Hertfordshire, and the property seems divided
-much in the same manner as about Dunstable;
-my head ran upon Lilly-hoo, when they
-shewed me the plains of Kolin.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Johnson was very angry with a
-gentleman at our house once, I well remember,
-for not being better company; and urged
-that he had travelled into Bohemia, and seen
-Prague:&mdash;“Surely,” added he, “the man
-who has seen Prague might tell us something
-new and something strange, and not sit silent
-for want of matter to put his lips in motion!”
-<i lang="la">Horresco referens</i>;&mdash;I have now been at
-Prague as well as Doctor Fitzpatrick, but have
-brought away nothing very interesting I fear;
-unless that the floor of the opera-stage there is
-inlaid, which so far as I have observed is a <em>new</em>
-thing; the cathedral I am sure is an <em>old</em>
-thing, and charged with heavy and ill-chosen
-ornaments, worthy of the age in which it was
-fabricated!&mdash;One would be loth to see any
-alteration take place, or any picture drive old
-Frank’s Three Kings, divided into three compartments,
-from its station over the high altar.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-St. John Neppomucene has an altar here all
-of solid silver, very bright and clean; his
-having been flung into the river Mulda in
-the persecuting days, holding fast his crucifix
-and his religion, gives him a rational title to
-veneration among the martyrs, and he is
-considered as the tutelar saint here, where his
-statue meets one at the entrance of every
-town.</p>
-
-<p>This truly Gothic edifice was very near
-being destroyed by the King of Prussia, who
-bombarded the city thirty-five years ago; I
-saw the mark made by one ball just at the
-cathedral door, and heard with horror of the
-dreadful siege, when an egg was sold for a
-florin, and other eatables in proportion: the
-whole town has, in consequence of that long
-blockade, a ragged and half-ruined melancholy
-aspect; and the roads round it, then
-broken up, have scarcely been mended since.</p>
-
-<p>The ladies too looked more like masquerading
-figures than any thing else, as they sat
-in their boxes at the opera, with rich embroidered
-caps, or bright pink and blue sattin
-head-dresses, with ermine or sable fronts, a
-heavy gold tassel hanging low down from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-left ear, and no powder; which gives a girlish
-look, and reminded me of a fashion our lower
-tradesmen in London had about fifteen or
-eighteen years ago, of dressing their daughters,
-from nine to twelve years old, in puffed
-black sattin caps, with a long ear hanging
-down on one side. It is a becoming mode
-enough as the women wear it here, but gives
-no idea of cleanliness; and I suppose that
-whilst finery retains its power of striking, delicacy
-keeps her distance, nor attempts to
-come in play till the other has failed of its
-effect. Ladies dress here very richly, as indeed
-I expected to find them, and coloured
-silk stockings are worn as they were in England
-till the days of the Spectator:&mdash;“<cite>Thrift,
-thrift, Horatio</cite>;” as Hamlet observes; for our
-expences in Great Britain are infinitely increased
-by our advancement from splendor to
-neatness.</p>
-
-<p>Here every thing seems at least five centuries
-behind-hand, and religion has not purified
-itself the least in the world since the
-days of its early struggle; for here Huss
-preached, and here Jerome, known by the
-name of Jerome of Prague, first began to
-project the scheme of a future reformation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-The Bohemians had indeed been long before
-that time indulged by the Popes with permission
-to receive the cup in the sacrament, a favour
-granted no one else; and of that no notice
-was ever taken, till further steps were
-made for the obtaining many alterations that
-have crept in since that time in other nations,
-not so hasty to do by violence what will one
-day be done of themselves without any violence
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>I asked to see some Protestant meeting-houses,
-and was introduced to a very pleasing-mannered
-Livornese, who spoke sweet Italian,
-and was minister to a little place of worship
-which could not have contained two hundred
-people at the most; in fact his flock were all
-soldiers, he said. Not a person who could
-keep a shop was to be found of <em>our</em> persuasion,
-nor was Lutheranism half so much detested
-even in Italy, he said. Though I remember
-the boys hooting us at Tivoli too, and calling
-our English Gentlemen, <em>Monsieur Dannato</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The library does not seem ancient, but the
-grave person who shewed it spoke very indifferent
-French, so that I could better trust my
-eyes than my ears; this want of language is
-terrible!&mdash;A celestial globe moving by clockwork<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-concealed within, and shewing the
-sun’s place upon the ecliptic very exactly,
-detained our attention agreeably; and I observed
-a polyglot Bible printed at London in
-Cromwell’s time, with a compliment to him
-in the preface, which they have expunged in
-succeeding editions. A missal too was curious
-enough from its being decorated with some
-singular illuminations upon one leaf; at the
-top of the page a figure of Wickliffe is seen,
-striking the flint and steel; under him, in another
-small compartment, Jerome of Prague
-blowing tinder to make his torch kindle;
-below him again down the same side, Martin
-Luther, the flambeau well lighted and blazing
-in his hand; at the bottom of the page poor
-John Huss, betrayed by the Emperor who
-promised him protection, and burning alive at
-a stake, to the apparent satisfaction of the
-charitable fathers assembled at the council of
-Constance. Another curiosity should be remembered;
-the manuscript letter from Zisca,
-the famous Protestant general who headed the
-revolters in 1420; I was amazed to see in
-how elegant an Italian hand it was written;
-the librarian said comically enough&mdash;“<cite>Ay, ay,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-it begins all about the fear of God, <span class="antiqua">&amp;c.;</span> those
-fellows</cite>,” continued he, “<cite>you know, are always
-sure to be canters!</cite>”</p>
-
-<p>The reigning sovereign has made few
-changes in church matters here, except that
-which was become almost indispensable, the
-resolution to have mass said only at one altar,
-instead of many at a time; the contrary
-practice does certainly disturb devotion, and
-produce unavoidable indecorums, as no one
-can tell what he turns his back upon, while
-the bell rings in so many places of a large
-church at once, and so many different functions
-are going forward, that people’s attention
-must almost necessarily be distracted.</p>
-
-<p>The eating here is incomparable; I never
-saw such poultry even at London or Bath,
-and there is a plenty of game that amazes
-one; no inn so wretched but you have a
-pheasant for your supper, and often partridge
-soup. The fish is carried about the streets in
-so elegant a style it tempts one; a very large
-round bathing-tub, as we should call it, set
-barrow-wise on two not very low wheels, is
-easily pushed along by one man, though full
-of the most pellucid water, in which the carp,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-tench, and eels, are all leaping alive, to a size
-and perfection I am ashamed to relate; but
-the tench of four and five pounds weight have
-a richness and flavour one had no notion of
-till we arrived at Vienna, and they are the
-same here.</p>
-
-<p>How trade stands or moves in these countries
-I cannot tell; there is great rigour shewn
-at the custom-house; but till the shopkeepers
-learn to keep their doors open at least for the
-whole of the short days, not shut them up so
-and go to sleep at one or two o’clock for a
-couple of hours, I think they do not deserve
-to be disturbed by customers who bring ready
-money. To-morrow (30th November 1786)
-we set out, wrapped in good furs and flannels,
-for</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>DRESDEN;</h2>
-
-<p>Whither we arrive safe this 4th of
-December,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent6">&mdash;&mdash;A wond’rous token</div>
-<div class="verse">Of Heav’n’s kind care, with bones unbroken!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">As the ingenious Soame Jenyns says of a less
-hazardous drive in a less barbarous country I
-hope: but really to English passengers in
-English carriages, the road from Prague hither
-is too bad to think on; while nothing literally
-impels one forward except the impossibility of
-going back. Lady Mary Wortley says, her
-husband and postillions slept upon the precipices
-between Lowositz and Aussig; but
-surely the way must have been much better
-then, as all the opium in both would scarce
-have stupefied their apprehensions now, when
-a fall into the Elbe must either have interrupted
-or finished their nap; because our
-coach was held up every step of the journey<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-by men’s hands, while we walked at the bottom
-about seven miles by the river’s side, suffering
-nothing but a little fatigue, and enjoying
-the most cloudless beautiful weather ever
-seen. The Elbe is here as wide I think as
-the Severn at Gloucester, and rolls through
-the most varied and elegant landscape possible,
-not inferior to that which adorns the sides of
-the little Dart in Devonshire, but on a greater
-scale; every hill crowned with some wood,
-or ornamented by some castle.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as we arrived, tired and hungry, at
-Aussig, we put our shattered coach on board
-a bark, and floated her down to Dresden;
-whither we drove forward in the little carts
-of the country, called chaises, but very rough
-and with no springs, as our very old-fashioned
-curricles were about the year 1750. The
-brightness of the weather made even such a
-drive delightful though, and the millions of
-geese on and off the river gave animation to
-the views, and accounted for the frequency of
-those soft downy feather-beds, which sooth
-our cares and relieve our fatigue so comfortably
-every night. Hares will scarce move
-from near the carriage wheels, so little apprehensive
-are they of offence; and the partridges<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-run before one so, it is quite amusing to look
-at them. The trout in these great rivers are
-neither large nor red: I have never seen trout
-worth catching since I left England; the river
-at Rickmansworth produces (one should like
-to know why) that fish in far higher perfection
-than it can be found in any other stream
-perhaps in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The being served at every inn, since we
-came into Saxony, upon Dresden china, gives
-one an odd feel somehow; but here at the
-Hôtel de Pologne there is every thing one can
-wish, and served in so grand a style, that I
-question whether any English inn or tavern
-can compare with it; so elegantly fine is the
-linen, so beautiful the porcelaine of which
-every the meanest utensil is made; and if the
-waiter did not appear before one dressed like
-Abel Drugger with a green cloth apron, and
-did not his entrance always fill the room with
-a strong scent of tobacco, I should think myself
-at home again almost. This really does
-seem a very charming town; the streets well
-built and spacious; the shops full of goods,
-and the people willing to shew them; and if
-they <em>do</em> cut all their wood before their own
-doors, why there is room to pass here without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-brawling and bones-breaking, which disgusts
-one so at Vienna; it seems lighter too here
-than there; I cannot tell why, but every
-thing looks clean and comfortable, and one
-feels <em>so much at home</em>. I hate prejudice; nothing
-is so stupid, nothing so sure a mark of a
-narrow mind: yet who can be sure that the
-sight of a Lutheran town does not afford in
-itself an honest pleasure to one who has lived
-so long, though very happily, under my Lord
-Peter’s protection?</p>
-
-<p>Here Brother Martin has all precedence
-paid <em>him</em>; for though the court are Romanists,
-their splendid church here is <em>called</em>
-only a chapel, and they are not permitted to
-ring the bell, a privilege the Lutherans seem
-much attached to, for nothing can equal the
-noise of <em>our</em> bells on a Sunday morning at
-Dresden.</p>
-
-<p>The architecture is truly hideous, but no
-ornaments are spared; and the church of
-Notre Dame here is very magnificent. The
-china steeples all over the country are the
-oddest things in the world; spires of blue
-or green porcelaine tiles glittering in the sun
-have a strange effect. But nothing can afford
-a stronger proof that crucifixes, Madonnas,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-and saints, need not be driven out of churches
-for fear they should be worshipped, than the
-Lutherans admission of them into <em>theirs</em>; for
-no people can be further removed from idolatry,
-or better instructed in the Christian religion,
-than the common people of this town;
-where a decent observation of the sabbath
-struck me with most consolatory feelings, after
-living at Paris, Rome, and Florence, where
-it is considered as a <em>merry</em>, not a <em>holy</em> day at
-all! and though there seems nothing inconsistent
-or offensive in our rejoicing on the day
-of our Lord’s resurrection, yet if people are
-encouraged to <em>play</em>, they will soon find out
-that they may <em>work</em> too, the shops will scarcely
-be shut, and all appearance of regard to the
-fourth commandment will be done away.
-The Lutherans really seem to observe the
-golden mean; they frequent their churches
-all morning with a rigorous solemnity, no
-carts or business of any sort goes forward in
-the streets, public and private devotion takes
-up the whole forenoon; but they do not forbear
-to meet and dance after six o’clock in
-the evening, or play a sober game for small
-sums at a friend’s house.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The society is to me very delightful; more
-women than men though, and the women
-most agreeable; exceedingly sensible, well informed,
-and willing to talk on every subject
-of general importance, but religion or politics
-seem the favourite themes, and are I believe
-most studied here;&mdash;no wonder, the court and
-city being of different sects, each steadily and
-irrevocably fixed in a firm persuasion that
-their own is best, causes an investigation that
-comes not in the head of people of other
-countries; and it is wonderful to see even the
-low Romanists skilled in controversial points
-to a degree that would astonish the people
-nearest the Pope’s person, I am well persuaded.</p>
-
-<p>The Saxons are excessively loyal however,
-and have the sense to love and honour their
-sovereign no less for his difference of opinion
-from theirs, than if all were of one mind;
-yet knowing his principles, they watch with a
-jealous eye against encroachments, while the
-amiable elector and electress use every tender
-method to induce their subjects to embrace
-<em>their</em> tenets, and weary heaven with prayers
-for their conversion, as if the people were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-heathens. One great advantage results from
-this odd mixture of what so steadily resists
-uniting; it is the earnest desire each has to
-justify and recommend their notions by their
-practice, so that the inhabitants of Dresden
-are among the most moral, decent, thinking
-people I have seen in my travels, or indeed
-in my life. The general air and manner both
-of place and people, puts one in mind of the
-pretty clean parts of our London, about Queen
-Square, Ormond Street, Lincoln’s-Inn-Fields,
-and Southampton Row.</p>
-
-<p>The bridge is beautiful, more elegant than
-showy; the light iron railing is better in
-some respects than a stone balustrade, and I
-do not dislike the rule they make to themselves
-of going on <em>one</em> side the way always,
-and returning the other, to avoid a crowd and
-confusion.</p>
-
-<p>But it is time to talk about the picture
-gallery, where, cold as our weather is, I contrive
-to pass three hours every day, my feet
-well defended by <i lang="fr">perlaches</i>, a sort of cloth
-clogs, very useful and commodious. And
-now I have seen the <i lang="it">Notte di Corregio</i> from
-which almost all pictures of <em>effect</em> have taken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-their original idea; and here are three other
-Corregios inimitable, invaluable, incomparable.
-Surely this <i lang="it">Notte</i> might stand side by
-side with Raphael’s Transfiguration; and as
-Sherlock says that Shakespear and Corneille
-would look only on the Vesuvius side of the
-prospect at Naples, while Pope and Racine
-would turn their heads towards Posilippo;
-so probably, while the two first would fasten
-all their attention upon the Demoniac, the
-two last would console their eyes with the
-sweetness of Corregio’s Nativity. His little
-Magdalen too set round with jewels, itself
-more precious than any or than all of them,
-possesses wonderful powers of attraction; it is
-an hour before one can recollect that there are
-some glorious Titians in the same façade; but
-Caracci, who depends not on his colouring for
-applause, loses little by their vicinity, and
-Poussin is always equally respectable. The
-Rembrandts are beyond credibility perfect of
-their kind, and produce a most powerful effect.
-His portrait of his own daughter has
-neither equal nor price, I believe; though the
-girl has little dignity to be sure, and less grace
-about her; but if to represent nature as she <em>is</em>
-suffices, this is the first single figure in Europe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-as painting a <em>live woman</em>.&mdash;The Jupiter and
-Ganymede is very droll indeed, and done
-with very <em>un</em>-Italian notions; but the eagle
-looks as if one might pluck his feathers; it
-is very life itself.&mdash;A candle-light Rubens here
-is shewn as a prodigious rarity; a Ruysdael
-as much resembling nature in <em>his</em> country, I
-do believe, as Claude Lorraine ever painted
-in <em>his</em>.&mdash;The crayons Cupid of Mengs which
-dazzles, and the portrait of old Parr by Vandycke
-which interests one, are pictures which
-call one to look at them again and again; and
-the little Vanderwerfs kept in glass cases,
-smooth as ivory, and finished to perfection,
-are all alike to be sure; one would wonder
-that a man should never be weary of painting
-single figures so, and constantly repeating the
-same idea; his eyes must have had peculiar
-strength too, to endure such trials, mine have
-been pained enough this morning with only
-looking at his labours, and those of the indefatigable
-Denny. Let me refresh them
-with a Parnassus of Giacomo Tintoret, who
-puts all the colourists to flight except Corregio.</p>
-
-<p>But here are two pictures which display
-prodigious genius, by a master of whom I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-never heard any one speak, Ferdinand Bol,
-who unites grace and dignity to the clear obscure
-of Rembrandt, whose scholar he was.
-Jacob blessing Pharoah, painted by him, is
-delightful; and Joseph’s expressions while he
-presents his father, full of affectionate partiality
-and fond regard for the old man, heightens
-his personal beauty; while the king’s character
-is happily managed too, and gives one
-the highest idea of the artist’s skill. A Madonna
-reposing in her flight to Egypt with a
-fatigued look, her head supported by her
-hand, is elegant, and worthy of the Roman
-or Bolognese schools; the landscape is like
-Rembrandt. This gallery boasts an Egyptian
-Mary by Spagnolet, too terrifying to look long
-at; and a small picture by Lodovico Carracci
-of the Virgin clasping her Son, who lies asleep
-in her lap, while a vision of his future crucifixion
-shewn her by angels in the sky,
-agitates every charming feature of her face,
-and causes a shrinking in her figure which
-no power of art can exceed.</p>
-
-<p>As I suffered so much for the sake of seeing
-this collection, I have indulged myself too long
-in talking of it perhaps; but Garrick is dead,
-and Siddons at a distance, and some compensation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-must be had; can any thing afford it
-except the statues of Rome, and the pictures
-of Bologna? here are a vast many from thence
-in this magnificent gallery.</p>
-
-<p>We had a concert made on purpose for us
-last night by some amiable friends: it was a
-very good one. What I liked best though,
-was Mr. Tricklir’s new invention of keeping
-a harpsichord always in tune; and it seems to
-answer. I am no good mechanic, nor particularly
-fond of multiplying combinations;
-but the device of adding a thermometer to
-shew how much heat the strings will bear without
-relaxation seems ingenious enough:
-we had a vast many experiments made, and
-nobody could put the strings out of tune, or
-even break them, when his method was
-adopted; and it does not take up two minutes
-in the operation.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen the Elector’s treasures; and,
-as a Frenchman would express it, <i lang="fr">C’est icy
-qu’on voit des beaux diamants!</i><a name="FNanchor_51" id="FNanchor_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> The yellow
-brilliant ring is <em>unique</em> it seems, and valued
-at an enormous sum; the green one is larger,
-and set transparent; it is not green like an
-emerald, but pale and bright, and beyond<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-conception beautiful: hyacinths were new
-to me here, their glorious colour dazzles one;
-and here is a white diamond from the Great
-Mogul’s empire, of unequalled perfection;
-besides an onyx large as a common dinner
-plate, well known to be first in the universe.
-What majestic treasures are these!&mdash;The sapphires
-and rubies beat those of Bavaria, but
-the Electress’s pearls at Munich are unrivalled
-yet. Saxony is a very rich country in her
-own bosom it seems; the agates and jaspers
-produced here are excellent, nor are good
-amethysts wanting; the topazes are pale and
-sickly.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be finer, or in its way
-more tasteful, than a chimney-piece made for
-the Elector, entirely from the manufacture
-and produce of his own dominions; that part
-which we should form of marble is white
-porcelane, with an exquisite bas-relief in the
-middle copied from the antique; its sides are
-set with Saxon gems, cameowise; and such
-carnelions much amaze one in so northern a
-latitude; the workmanship is beyond praise.&mdash;I
-asked the gentleman who shewed us the
-cabinet of natural history, why such richly-coloured
-minerals, and even precious stones,
-were found in these climates; while every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-animal product grows paler as it approaches
-the pole?&mdash;“Where phlogiston is frequent,”
-replied he, “there is no danger of the tint
-being too lightly bestowed: our quantity of
-iron here in Saxony, gives purple to the amethysts
-you admire; and see here if the rainbow-stone
-of Labrador yields in glowing hue
-to the productions of Mexico or Malabar.”&mdash;The
-specimens here however were not as valuable
-as the conversation of him who has the
-care of them; but a <i lang="la">plica Polonica</i> took much
-of my attention; the size and weight of it was
-enormous, its length four yards and a half;
-the person who was killed by its growth was
-a Polish lady of quality well known in King
-Augustus’s court; it is a very strange and a
-very shocking thing!</p>
-
-<p>Our library here is new and not eminently
-well stocked; but it is too cold weather now
-to stand long looking at rarities. The first
-Reformation bible published by Luther himself,
-with a portrait of the first Protestant
-Elector, is however too curious and interesting
-to be neglected; in frost and snow such
-sights might warm a heart well disposed to see
-the word of God disseminated, which had
-lain too long locked up by ignorance and interest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-united. Here is a book too, which
-how it escaped Pinelli I know not, a Venetian
-translation of the holy scriptures <i lang="it">a Brucioli</i>,
-the date 1592. King Augustus’s maps please
-one from their costliness; the Elector has
-twelve volumes of them; every letter is gold,
-every city painted in miniature at the corners,
-while arms, trophies, &amp;c. adorn the whole,
-to an incredible expence: they were engraved
-on purpose for his use; and that no other
-Prince might ever have such again, he ordered
-the plates to be broke.</p>
-
-<p>Sunday, December 17. I am just now returned
-home from the Lutheran church of
-Notre Dame; where, though the communicants
-do not kneel down like us, it is odd
-to say I never saw the sacrament administered
-with such solemnity and pomp. Four priests
-ornamented with a large cross on the back, a
-multitude of lighted tapers blazing round
-them, a uniformity in the dress of all who
-received, and music played in a flat third
-somehow very impressively, as they moved
-round in a sort of procession, making a profound
-reverence to the altar when they passed
-it, struck me extremely, who have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-lately accustomed to see very little ceremony
-used on <em>such</em> occasions; and I well remember
-at Pisa in particular, that while we were looking
-about the church for curiosity, one poor
-woman knelt down just by us, and a priest
-coming out administered the sacrament to her
-alone, the whole finishing in less than five
-minutes I am persuaded. I said to Mr. Seydelman,
-when we had returned home to-day,
-that the Saxons seemed to follow the
-first manner in reformation, our Anglicans
-the second, and the Calvinists the third: he
-understood my allusion to the cant of connoisseurship.</p>
-
-<p>The sedan chairs here give the town a sort
-of homeish look; I had not been carried
-in one since I left Genoa, and it is so comfortable
-this cold clear weather! A regular
-market too, though not a fine one, has an
-English air; and a saddle of mutton, or more
-properly a chine, was a sight I had not contemplated
-for two years and a half. The
-Italians do call a cook <i lang="it">teologo</i>, out of sport;
-but I think he would be the properest theologian
-in good earnest, to tell why Catholics
-and Protestants should not cut their meat alike
-at least, if they cannot agree in other points.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-This is the first town I have seen however,
-where the butchers divided their beasts as we
-do.</p>
-
-<p>The arsenal we have walked over delighted
-us but little: Saxons should say to their
-swords, like Benvolio in the play, “<cite>God send
-me no need of thee!</cite>”&mdash;for the Emperor is on
-one side of them, and the King of Prussia on
-the other. This last is always mentioned as
-a pacific prince though; and the first has so
-much to do and to think of, I hope he will
-forget Dresden, and suffer them to possess their
-fine territory and gems in perfect peace and
-quietness. One thing however was odd and
-pretty, and worth remarking, That at Rome
-there was an arsenal in the church&mdash;I mean
-belonging to it; and here there is a church in
-the arsenal.</p>
-
-<p>The bombardment of this pretty town by
-their active neighbour Frederic; the sweet
-Electress’s death in consequence of the personal
-mortifications she received during that
-dreadful siege; the embarkation of the treasures
-to send them safe away by water; and
-the various distresses suffered by this city in the
-time of that great war;&mdash;make much of our
-conversation, and that conversation is interesting.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-I only wonder they have so quickly
-recovered a blow struck so hard.</p>
-
-<p>The gaiety and good-humour of the court
-are much desired by the Saxons, who have a
-most lofty notion of princes, and repeat all
-they say, and all that is said of them, with a
-most venerating affection. I see no national
-partiality to England however, as in many
-other parts of Europe, though our religions
-are so nearly allied: and here is a spirit of
-subordination beyond what I have yet been
-witness to&mdash;an aunt kissing the hand of her
-own niece (a baby not six years old), and
-calling her “<i lang="fr">ma chere comtesse!</i>”&mdash;carried it
-as high I think as it can be carried.</p>
-
-<p>The environs of Dresden are happily disposed,
-for though it is deep winter we have
-had scarcely any snow, and the horizon is very
-clear, so that one may be a tolerable judge of
-the prospects. Our river Elbe is truly majestic
-and the great islands of ice floating
-down it have a fine appearance.</p>
-
-<p>They do not double their sash-windows as
-at Vienna, but there is less wind to keep out.
-In every place people have a trick of lamenting,
-and there are two themes of lamentation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-universal for aught I see&mdash;the weather and
-the poor. I see no beggars here, and feel no
-rain,&mdash;but hear heavy complaints of both.
-Crying the hour in the night as at London
-pleased me much; why the ceremony is accompanied
-by the sound of a horn, nobody
-seems able to tell. The march of soldiers
-morning and night to music through the
-streets is likewise agreeable, and gives ideas
-of security; but driving great heavy waggons
-up and down, with two horses a-breast,
-like a chaise in England, and a postillion upon
-one of them, is very droll to look at. Ordinary
-fellows too in the Elector’s livery (blue
-and yellow) would seem strange, but that as
-soon as Dover is left behind every man seems
-to belong to some other man, and no man to
-himself. The Emperor’s livery is very handsome,
-but I do not admire <em>this</em>. A custom of
-fifteen or twenty grave-looking men, dressed
-like counsellors in Westminster Hall, with
-half a dozen boys in their company for <i lang="it">sopranos</i>,
-singing counterpoint under one’s window,
-has an odd effect; they are confraternities
-of people I am told, who live in a sort
-of community together, are maintained by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-contributing friends, and taught music at their
-expence; so in order to accomplish themselves,
-and shew how well they are accomplished,
-this curious contrivance is adopted.
-Every Sunday we hear them again in the
-church belonging to the parish that maintains
-them. A procession of bakers too is a droll
-oddity, but shews that where there is much
-leisure for the common people, some cheap
-amusement must be found: two of these
-bakers fight at the corner of every street for
-precedence, which by this means often changes
-hands; yet does not the conquered baker
-shew any signs of shame or depression, nor
-does the contest last long, or prove interesting.
-I suppose they have settled all the battles beforehand:
-no meaning seemed to be annexed
-either by performers or spectators to the
-show; we could make little diversion out of
-it, but have no doubt of its being an old superstition.</p>
-
-<p>On Christmas eve I went to Santa Sophia’s
-church, and heard a famous preacher; his
-manner was energetic, and he kept an hour-glass
-by him, finishing with strange abruptness
-the moment it was expired. This was in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-use among our distant provinces as late as
-Gay’s time; he mentions it in a line of his
-pastorals, and says&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">He preach’d the hour-glass in her praise quite out;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">speaking of dead Blouzelind as I recollect.
-It now seems a strange <i lang="fr">grossiereté</i>, but refinement
-follows hard upon the heels of reformation.</p>
-
-<p>There is an agreeable fancy here, which
-one has always heard of, but never seen
-perhaps; the notion of calling together a dozen
-pretty children to receive presents upon
-Christmas eve. The custom is exceedingly
-amiable in itself, and gives beside a pleasing
-pretext for parents and relations to meet, and
-while away the time till supper in reciprocating
-caresses with their babies, and rejoicing in
-that species of happiness (the purest of all
-perhaps) which childhood alone can either
-receive or bestow. I was invited to an exhibition
-of this sort, and for some time saw
-little preparation for pleasure, except the sight
-of fourteen or fifteen well-dressed little creatures,
-all under the age of twelve I think, and
-more girls than boys: the company consisted
-of three or four and twenty people; all spoke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-French, and I was directed to observe how
-the young ones watched for the opening of a
-particular door; which however remained
-shut so long, that I forgot it again, and had
-begun to interest myself in chat with my
-nearest neighbour (no mother of course), when
-the door flew wide, and the master of the
-house announced the hour of felicity, shewing
-us an apartment gaily illuminated with coloured
-lamps; a sort of tree in grotto-work
-adorned the middle, and the presents were
-arranged all round; dolls innumerable, variously
-adjusted; fine new clothes, fans, trinkets,
-work-baskets, little escritoires, purses,
-pocket-books, toys, dancing-shoes,&mdash;every
-thing. The children skipped about, and capered
-with exultation;&mdash;“My own mama!
-my dear aunt! my sweet kind grandpapa!”&mdash;resounded
-wherever we turned our heads;
-I think it was the loveliest little show imaginable,
-and am sorry to know how description
-must necessarily wrong it: <i lang="fr">les etrennes de
-Dresde</i> shall however remain indelibly fixed
-in my memory. When the pretty dears had
-appropriated and arranged their presents, cake
-and lemonade were brought to quiet their agitated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-spirits, and all went home happy to bed.
-Their sparkling eyes and rosy cheeks served
-for our theme till supper-time; and I sat trying,
-but in vain, to find a reason why paternal
-affection appears so much warmer always
-in Protestant countries, and filial piety in
-those which remain firm to the church of
-Rome.</p>
-
-<p>We returned home to our inn exceedingly
-well amused; the supper had been magnificent,
-and the preceding fast gave it additional relish.
-I now tremble with apprehension however lest
-the show of yesterday was too splendid: for if
-the mothers begin once to vie with each other
-whose gifts shall be grandest, or if once the
-friend at whose house the treat is prepared
-produces a more costly entertainment than his
-neighbours have hitherto contented themselves
-with giving, this innocent and even praiseworthy
-pastime will soon swell into expensive
-luxury, and burst from having been poisoned
-by the corroding touch of malice and of envy.</p>
-
-<p>Our Saxons however seemed well-bred,
-airy, and agreeable in last night’s hour of festivity;
-and could I have fancied their gaiety
-quite natural like that of Venice or Verona, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-might perhaps have caught the sweet infection,
-and felt disposed to merriment myself; but
-much of this was studied mirth one saw, and
-pleasure upon principle, as in our own island;
-which, though more elegant, is less attractive.
-It is difficult to catch the contagion of artificial
-hilarity, and a celebrated surgeon once told
-me, that one might live with safety at Sutton-house
-among the inoculated patients, without
-ever taking the disorder, unless the operation
-were regularly performed upon one’s self.</p>
-
-<p>Well! we must shortly quit this very comfortable
-resting-place, and leave a town more
-like our own than any I have yet seen; where,
-however, the dresses, of ordinary women I
-mean, are extraordinary enough, each when
-she is made up for show wearing a rich old-fashioned
-brocade cloke lined with green
-lutestring, and edged round with narrow fur.
-This is universal. Her neat black love-hood
-however is not so ugly as the man’s bright
-yellow brass comb, stuck regularly in all their
-heads of long straight hair who are not people
-of fashion; and no powder is ever used
-among the Lutherans here in Saxony I see,
-except by gentlemen and ladies, who often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
-take all <em>theirs</em> out when they go to church,
-from some odd principle of devotion. It is
-very pretty though to see the little clean-faced
-lads and wenches running to school so in a
-morning at every protestant town, with the
-grammar and testament under their arm,
-while every the meanest house has a folio bible
-in it, and all the people of the lowest
-ranks can read it.</p>
-
-<p>On this 1st of January 1787, I may boast
-of having visited lord Peter, Jack, and Martin,
-all in the course of one day. Hearing Mons.
-Dumarre preach to the French Huguenots in
-the morning, attending the established church
-at Notre Dame at noon, and going to the
-Elector’s truly-magnificent place of worship at
-night, where Hasse’s Te Deum was sung, and
-executed with prodigious regularity and pomp,
-over against an altar decorated with well-employed
-splendour, exhibiting zeal for God’s
-house, animated by elegant taste, and encouraged
-by royal presence;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">While from the censer clouds of fragrance roll,</div>
-<div class="verse">And swelling organs lift the rising soul.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span></p>
-<p>I studied then to keep my mind, I hope I
-kept it free from narrow and from vulgar prejudice,
-desirous only of seeing the three principal
-sects of Christians adoring their Redeemer,
-each in the way they think most likely to
-please him; nor will I mention which method
-had the most immediate effect on <em>me</em>; but this
-I saw, that beneath</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Such plain roofs as piety could raise,</div>
-<div class="verse">Made vocal only by our maker’s praise,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Monsieur Dumarre produced from his peaceful
-auditors more tears of gratitude and
-tenderness in true remembrance of the sacred
-season, than were shed at either of the other
-churches. Indeed the sublime and pathetic
-simplicity of the place, the truly-touching
-rhetoric of the preacher, his story a sad one;
-while his persecuted family were forced to fly
-their native country, driven thence by the rigour
-of Romish severity, and his life exactly
-corresponding to the purity of that doctrine he
-teaches: his tones of voice, his tranquillity of
-manners,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">His plainness moves men more than eloquence,</div>
-<div class="verse">And to his flock, joy be the consequence!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The established sect here&mdash;<em>Lutheranism</em>,
-keeps almost the exact medium between the
-other two, though their places of worship strike
-me as something more theatrical than one
-could wish; very stately they are certainly,
-and very imposing. As few people however
-are fond of a middle state, as here is prodigious
-encouragement given by the court to
-Romanists, and full toleration from the state
-to the disciples of John Calvin, I wonder
-more members of the national church do not
-quit her communion for that of one of these
-chapels, which however owe their very existence
-in Saxony to that truly christian and
-catholick spirit of toleration, possessed by
-Martin alone.</p>
-
-<p>We have recovered ourselves now from all
-fatigues; our coach and our spirits are once
-more repaired, and ready to set out for</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>BERLIN.</h2>
-
-<p>The road hither is all a heavy sand, cut
-through vast forests of ever-green timber, but
-not beautiful like those of Bavaria, rather tedious,
-flat, and tristful: to encrease which
-sensations, and make them more grievous to
-us, our servants complained bitterly of the last
-long frosty night, which we spent wholly in
-the carriage till it brought us here, where the
-man of the house, a bad one enough indeed,
-speaks as good English as I do, and has lived
-long in London. I am not much enchanted
-with this place however. Dean Swift said, that
-a good style was only proper words in proper
-places; and if a good city is to be judged of
-in the same way, perhaps Berlin may obtain
-the first place, which one would not on an
-immediate glance think it likely to deserve; as
-a mere residence however, it will be difficult to
-find a finer.</p>
-
-<p>He who sighs for the happy union of situation,
-climate, fertility, and grandeur, will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-think <em>Genoa</em> transcends all that even a warm
-imagination can wish. If with a very, very
-little less degree of positive beauty, he feels
-himself chiefly affected by a number of Nature’s
-most interesting features, finely, and
-even philosophically arranged; <em>Naples</em> is the
-town that can afford him most matter both of
-solemn and pleasing speculation.</p>
-
-<p>If ruins of pristine splendour, solid proofs
-of universal dominion, <em>once</em>, nay <em>twice</em> enjoyed:
-with the view of temporal power crushed
-by its own weight, solicits his curiosity.&mdash;It
-will be amply gratified at <em>Rome</em>; where all that
-modern magnificence can perform, is added
-to all that ancient empire has left behind.
-Romantic ideas of Armida’s palace, fancied
-scenes of perennial pleasure, and magical
-images of ever varying delight, will be best realized
-at smiling <em>Venice</em> of any place; but if a
-city may be called perfect in proportion to its
-external convenience, if making many houses
-to hold many people, keeping infection away
-by cleanliness, and ensuring security against
-fire by a nice separation of almost every
-building from almost every other; if uniformity
-of appearance can compensate for elegance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-of architecture, and space make amends
-for beauty, <em>Berlin</em> certainly deserves to be
-seen, and he who planned it, to be highly commended.
-The whole looks at its worst now;
-all the churches are in mourning, so are the
-coaches: no theatre is open, and no music
-heard, except now and then a melancholy
-German organ droning its dull round of tunes
-under one’s window, without even the London
-accompaniment of a hoarse voice crying
-<em>Woolfleet oysters</em>. Come! Berlin can boast an
-arsenal capable of containing arms for two
-hundred and fifty thousand men. The contempt
-of decoration for a place destined to real
-use seemed respectable in itself, and characteristic
-of its founder. No columns of guns
-or capitals of pistols, neatly placed, are to be
-seen here. A vast, large, clean, cold-looking
-room, with swords and muskets laid up only
-that they may be taken down, is all one has to
-look at in Frederick’s preparations for attack
-or defence.</p>
-
-<p>In accumulation of ornaments one hopes to
-find elegance, and in rejection of superfluity
-there is dignity of sentiment; but nothing can
-excuse a sovereign prince for keeping as curiosities<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-worthy a traveller’s attention, a heap
-of trumpery fit to furnish out the shop of a
-Westminster pawnbroker. Our cabinet of
-rarities here is literally no better than twenty
-old country gentlemen’s seats, situated in the
-distant provinces of England, shew to the servants
-of a neighbouring family upon a Christmas
-visit, when the housekeeper is in good
-humour, and, gently wiping the dust off my
-<em>late lady’s mother’s</em> amber-boxes, produces
-forth the wax figures of my lord John and
-my lord Robert when <em>babies</em>. For this pitiable
-exhibition, ships cut in paper, and saints
-carved in wood, we paid half a guinea each;
-not gratuity to the person who has them in
-charge, but tax imposed by the government.
-Every house here is obliged to maintain so
-many soldiers, excepting such and such only
-who have the word <em>free</em> written over their
-doors; here seem to be no people in the town
-almost except soldiers though; so they naturally
-command whatever is to be had. Most
-nations begin and end with a <em>military</em> dominion,
-as red is commonly the first and last colour
-obtained by the chymist in his various experiments
-upon artificial tints. This state is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-yet young, and many things in it not quite
-come to their full growth, so we must not be
-rigorous in our judgments. I have seen the
-library, in which we were for the first time
-shewn what is confidently <em>said</em> to be an Æthiopian
-manuscript, and such it certainly may be
-for aught I know. What interested me much
-more was our Tonson’s <cite>Cæsar</cite>, a book remarkable
-for having been written by the first
-hero and general in the world perhaps, dedicated
-to the second, and possessed by the
-third. Here is an exceeding perfect collection
-of all Hogarth’s prints.</p>
-
-<p>This city appears to be a very wholesome
-one; the houses are not high to confine the
-air between them, or drive it forward in currents
-upon the principle of Paris or Vienna;
-the streets are few, but long, straight, and
-wide; ground has not been spared in its construction,
-which seems a most judicious one;
-and with this well-earned praise I am most
-willing to quit it. It is the first place of any
-consequence I have felt in a hurry to run away
-from; for till now there have been <em>some</em> attractions
-in every town; something that commanded
-veneration or invited fondness; something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-pleasing in its society, or instructive in
-its history. It would however be sullen
-enough to feel no agreeable sensation in seeing
-this child of the present century come to age
-so: the tomb of its author is the object of our
-present curiosity, which will be gratified to-morrow.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="fr">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Ou sont ils donc, ces foudres de guerre,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Qui faisoient trembler l’univers?</div>
-<div class="verse">Ils ne sont plus qu’un peu de terre,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Restes, qu’ont epargnis les vers<a name="FNanchor_52" id="FNanchor_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>POTZDAM.</h2>
-
-<p>And now, if Berlin wants taste and magnificence,
-here’s Potzdam built on purpose, I
-believe, to shew that even with both a place
-may be very dismal and very disagreeable. The
-commonest buildings in this city look like the
-best side of Grosvenor-square in London, or
-Queen’s-square at Bath. I have not seen a
-street so narrow as Oxford Road, but many
-here are much wider, with canals up the middle,
-and a row of trees planted on each side, a
-gravel walk near the water for foot passengers,
-instead of a <i lang="fr">trottoir</i> by the side of the
-houses. Every dwelling is ornamented to a
-degree of profusion; but to one’s question of,
-“Who lives in these palaces?” one hears that
-they are all empty space, or only occupied by
-goods never wanted, or corn there is nobody
-to feed with: this amazes one; and in fact
-here are no inhabitants of dignity at all proportioned
-to the residences provided for them;
-so that when one sees the copies of antique<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-bas-reliefs, in no bad sculpture, decorating the
-doors whence dangle a shoulder of mutton,
-or a shoemaker’s last, it either shocks one or
-makes one laugh, like the old Bartholomew
-trick of putting a baby’s face upon an old
-man’s shoulders, or sticking a king’s crown
-upon a peasant’s head.</p>
-
-<p>The churches are very fine on the outside,
-but strangely plain within: that, however, where
-the royal body reposes looked solemn and
-stately in its mourning dress. Black velvet,
-with silver fringe and tassels very rich and
-heavy, hung over the pulpit, family seat, &amp;c.
-and every thing struck one with an air of melancholy
-dignity. The king of Prussia’s corpse,
-no longer animated by ambition, rests quietly
-in an unornamented solid silver coffin, placed in
-a sort of closet above ground, the door to
-which opens close to the pulpit’s feet, and
-shews the narrow space which now holds his
-body, beside that of his father, and the great
-elector, as he is still justly called.</p>
-
-<p>My sepulchral tour is now nearly finished:
-we have in the course of this journey seen the
-last remains of many a celebrated mortal.
-Virgil, Raphael, Ariosto, Scipio, Galileo,
-Petrarch, Carlo Borromeo, and the king of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
-Prussia. How different each from other in
-his life! How like each other now! But</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container" lang="fr">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Tous ces morts ont vecu; toi qui lis&mdash;tu mourras:</div>
-<div class="verse">L’instant fatal approche, et tu n’y pense pas<a name="FNanchor_53" id="FNanchor_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I could have wished before my return to
-have paused a moment on the tomb of Melancthon,
-who might be said to have united
-in himself <em>their</em> separate perfections. Courage,
-genius, moderation, piety! persevering
-steadiness in the right way himself; candid
-acknowledgment of merit, even in his enemies,
-where he saw their intentions right,
-though he thought their tenets and their conduct
-wrong. But we are removed far from
-the dwelling of the <em>peacemaker</em>; let us at least
-look at the palace, now we have examined the
-coffin of him whose study and delight was <em>war</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Sans Souci is surely an elegantly chosen
-spot, its architecture excellent, its furniture
-rich yet delicate, the gardens very happily
-disposed, the prospect from its windows agreeable,
-the pictures within an admirable collection.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-A hall built in imitation of the Colonna
-gallery shews Frederick’s taste at once and liberal
-spirit: the front seems borrowed from
-something at St. Peter’s; all is beautiful; the
-gilding of his long-room makes a very sudden
-and strong effect, nor are marbles of immense
-value wanting; here is a specimen of every
-thing I think, and two agate tables of prodigious
-size and beauty. The Silesian chrysopaz,
-and Carolina marble of a bright scarlet
-colour, quite luminous like the feathers of a
-fighting cock, struck me with their singular
-and splendid appearance. Rubens’s merit was
-not new to me, I hope; yet here is a resurrection
-of Lazarus, in which he has been lavish
-of it. The composition of this picture seems
-to have been intended to surpass every thing
-put together by other artists: its colouring
-glows like life.</p>
-
-<p>The king’s town-house, however, is finer far
-than this his villa was designed to be; but I
-grew very tired walking over it: when one has
-dragged through twenty-four rooms variously
-hung with pink and silver, green and gold, &amp;c.
-one grows cruelly weary with repeating the same
-ideas by drawling through forty-eight more.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-I wished to see his own private living apartments,
-and to mind with what books and
-pictures he adorned the dressing-room he always
-sate in: the first were chiefly works of
-Voltaire and Metastasio&mdash;the last were small
-landscapes of Albano and Watteau. At our
-desire they shewed us the little bed he slept,
-the chairs he sate in familiarly. Suetonius in
-French and Italian was the last author he
-looked into; they have made a mark at the
-death of Augustus, where he was reading
-when the same visitant called on him, quite
-unexpected by himself it seems, though all
-his attendants were well aware of his approach.
-As he expired he said, <cite>I give you a
-vast deal of trouble</cite>. We saw the spot he sate
-in at the moment; for Frederick no more
-died in his bed, than did the famous Flavius
-Vespasian; his servants wept as they repeated
-the particulars, caressing while they spoke
-his favourite dogs, one of which, a terrier,
-could hardly be prevailed upon to quit the
-body. It used to amuse the king to see them
-frighted when he would take them to a long
-room lined with French mirrors, which he
-did now and then to laugh at the effect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Every thing at Potzdam shews a man in
-haste to enjoy what he had laboured so hard
-to procure; nor did he ever refuse himself,
-they say, any gratification that could make
-age less wearisome, or illness less afflictive.
-He had much taste of English ingenuity&mdash;combinations
-of convenience, and improvements
-in mechanism: his own writing-table,
-however, was contrived by himself; it stands
-on four legs, one pair longer than the other
-to make it slope; the covering is green velvet,
-with a square hole for the standish to drop
-in and not spill the ink: I liked the device
-exceedingly, but wondered he thought any
-device worth his preference. His conversation
-to his servants was affable and even gay; they
-loved his person, it is plain, and half adore
-his memory.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the manners then, and such the
-death, of the far-famed philosopher of Sans
-Souci! And in truth, when he had so often
-set all present and future happiness to hazard,
-it would have been inconsistent not to hasten
-the enjoyment: nobody comes to inhabit his
-fine town, however, which has much the look
-of buildings in a stage perspective. Soldiers
-only, and such as sell wares necessary to soldiers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>
-were all the human creatures I could
-see here; nor are families, or travellers of any
-sort indeed, better accommodated here than
-at inns of less pompous appearance on the
-outside.</p>
-
-<p>For accommodations, however, I care but
-little; I have now walked over the oldest and
-the youngest cities in all Europe, and have
-left each with sincere admiration of their contents.
-Both are full of buildings and empty
-of inhabitants, nor am I desirous to add to
-the number in either. I was going to step
-forward into some room of the palace yesterday&mdash;“Madam,
-come back this instant,” exclaimed
-our Cicerone; “if that chamber is entered,
-my head will be off my shoulders in
-three days time.” Another well attested anecdote
-may be worth relating: A gentleman
-with whom we passed an agreeable evening at
-Berlin, whose lady invited to meet us whatever
-was most charming in the town, told the
-following story of a soldier who, being desirous
-of his body’s dissolution, but fearful of
-his soul’s rushing unprepared into eternity,
-caught and murdered a six months old baby;
-giving this strange account of his own feelings
-on the occasion, and adding, that he did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
-like to kill an adult, lest his own impatience
-of life’s insupportable torment might by that
-means precipitate his neighbour to perdition;
-but that a baptized infant would be sure of
-heaven, and he himself should gain time to
-prepare for following it&mdash;“And, Lord!” said my
-informer, “what reasoners this world has in it!”
-The soldier was hanged six weeks after the
-dreadful crime was committed; he made a
-very decent and penitential end.</p>
-
-<p>On such facts what observations or reflections
-can result? I made none, but gave God
-thanks that I was born a subject of Great
-Britain.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2><span class="smcap">POTZDAM to HANOVER.</span></h2>
-
-<p>On the 13th of January 1787 then we
-quitted Potzdam, strongly impressed by the
-beauties of a town apparently fabricated by a
-modern Cadmus, who, when all the soldiers
-that he could <em>raise</em> were fallen in <em>battle</em> for his
-amusement, retired with the five that were
-left, and built a fine city!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Brandenbourg was our next resting place,
-and seemed to me to merit a longer stay in it;
-I saw an old Runick figure in the street, its
-size colossal, and its composition seemed black
-basalt; but of this I could obtain no account
-for want of language, our still recurring torment.&mdash;This
-place seems fuller of inhabitants
-than the last; but it is <em>so</em> melancholy to have
-no compensation for the fatigues of a tedious
-journey! and in these countries information
-cannot be procured for travellers that do not
-mean to reside, present letters, &amp;c.; which
-task we have at this season little taste to renew.</p>
-
-<p>Magdebourg makes a respectable appearance
-at a distance, from the loftiness of its
-turrets; one sees them at least four long hours
-before the roads which lead to it permit one’s
-approach; and the towers seem to retire before
-one, like Ulysses’s fictitious country raised
-to deceive him. Never was I so weary in my
-life as when we entered Magdebourg, where,
-instead of going out to see sights as usual, I
-desired nothing so sincerely as a hot supper
-and soft bed, which the inns of Germany never
-fail to afford us in even elegant perfection.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Our linen too, so beautifully, and I will add
-so unnecessarily fine! The king of Naples
-probably never saw such sheets and table-cloths
-as we have been comforted with here, not only
-at Dresden, but every post since.</p>
-
-<p>Magdebourg seems to have almost all its
-streets united by bridges; the Elbe divides
-there into so many branches, and none of them
-small.</p>
-
-<p>Helmstadt is a little place which affords few
-images to the mind, and Brunswick to mere
-passengers, as we were, seemed to yield none
-but sad ones. The houses all of wood, even to
-prince Ferdinand’s palace, and painted of a dull
-olive colour with heavy pensile roofs, giving
-the town a melancholy look; but we met
-with young Englishmen who commended the
-society, and said no place could be gayer than
-Brunswick. This is among the reports one
-wishes to be true, and we are led the more
-willingly to believe them.</p>
-
-<p>Another delight which I enjoyed at this
-city was, to find that every body in it, and
-every body passing through it, adored the
-duchess, whose partial fondness, and tender
-remembrance of her native country, justly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
-endears her name to every subject of Great
-Britain. Her chapel is pretty; the garden,
-where they said she always walked two hours
-every day, put me in mind of Gray’s-Inn
-walks twenty or thirty years ago; they were
-then very like it.</p>
-
-<p>From these scenes of solitude without retirement,
-and of age without antiquity, I was
-willing enough to be gone; but they would
-shew me one curiosity they said, as I seemed
-to feel particular pleasure in speaking of their
-charming duchess. We followed, and were
-shewn <em>her coffin!</em> all in silver, finely carved,
-chased, engraved, what you will. “Before
-she is dead!” exclaimed I&mdash;“Before she was
-even married, madam,” replied our Cicerone;
-“it is the very finest ever made in Brunswick;
-we had it ready for her against she came home
-to us, and you see the plate left vacant for
-her age.” I was glad to drive forward now,
-and slept at Peina; which, though in itself
-a miserable place, exhibits one consolatory
-sight for a Christian&mdash;the sight of toleration.
-Here Romanists, Lutherans, and Calvinists,
-live all affectionately and quietly together,
-under the protection of the bishop of Paderborne;
-and here I first saw the king of England’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
-livery upon the king of England’s servants
-since I left home&mdash;“And if they <em>are</em> ragged
-youngsters who wear it,” said I, “they are
-my fellow-subjects, and glad am I to see
-them!”</p>
-
-<p>The villages and churches hereabouts resemble
-those of Merionethshire, only that not
-a mountain rears its head at all&mdash;one vast,
-wide, barren flat, through which roads that
-no weather can render better than barely passable
-brought us at length to Hanover, which
-stands, as all these cities do in the north of
-Germany, upon an immense plain, with a
-thick wood of noble timber trees breaking
-from time to time the almost boundless void,
-and relieving the eye, which is fatigued by
-extent without any object to repose upon, in
-a manner I can with difficulty comprehend,
-much less explain; but the sight of a passing
-waggon, or distant spire, is a felicity seldom
-found, though continually sought by me,
-while travelling through these wide wasted
-countries, where no idea is afforded to the
-imagination, no image remitted to the mind,
-but that of two armies encountering each
-other, to dispute the plunder of some place
-already unable to feed its few inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The horses however are exceedingly beautiful;
-we were offered a pair of very fine ones for
-only forty pounds. They would have run such
-hazards getting home! “There are two ways to
-chuse out of,” said I; “if we purchase them,
-we shall repent on it every day till we arrive in
-London; if we do not, we shall repent on it
-every day after we get there.” Such is life!
-we did not buy the cattle.</p>
-
-<p>The cleanliness of the windows, the manner
-of paving and lighting the streets at
-Hanover, put us in mind a little of some country
-towns in the remoter provinces of England;
-and there seems to be likewise a little glimpse
-of British manners, dress, &amp;c. breaking through
-the common and natural fashions of the
-country. This was very pleasing to us, but
-I wished the place grander; I do not very well
-know why, but we had long counted on comforts
-here as at home, and I had formed expectations
-of something much more magnificent
-than we found; though the Duke of
-York’s residence does give the town an air
-of cheerfulness it scarce could shew without
-that advantage; and here are concerts and
-balls, and efforts at being gay, which may
-probably succeed sometime. How did all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-the talk however, and all the pamphlets, and
-all the lamentations made by old King George’s
-new subjects, rush into my mind, when I
-recollected the loud, illiberal, and indecent
-clamours made from the year 1720 to the year
-1750, at least till the alarm given by the
-Rebellion began to operate, and open people’s
-eyes to the virtues of the reigning family! for
-till then, no topic had so completely engrossed
-both press and conversation, as the misfortunes
-accruing to <em>poor</em> old England, from their
-King’s desire of enriching his Electoral
-dominions, and feeding his favourite Hanoverians
-with their good guineas, making fat the
-objects of his partial tenderness with their
-best treasures&mdash;in good time! Such groundless
-charges remind one of a story the famous
-French wit Monsieur de Menage tells of his
-mother and her maid, who, having wasted or
-sold a pound of butter, laid the theft upon
-the <em>cat</em>, persisting so violently that it had been
-all devoured by the rapacious favourite, that
-Madame de Menage said, “It’s very well;
-we will weigh the cat, poor thing! and know
-the truth:” The scales were produced, but
-puss could be found to weigh only <em>three quarters</em>,
-after all her depredations.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span class="smcap">From HANOVER to BRUSSELS.</span></h2>
-
-<p>Travelling night and day through the
-most dismal country I ever yet beheld, brought
-us at length to Munster, where we had a good
-inn again, and talked English. Well may
-all our writers agree in celebrating the miseries
-of Westphalia! well may they, while the
-wretched inhabitants, uniting poverty with
-pride, live on their hogs, with their hogs, and
-like their hogs, in mud-walled cottages, a
-dozen of which together is called by courtesy
-a village, surrounded by black heaths, and
-wild uncultivated plains, over which the unresisted
-wind sweeps with a velocity I never
-yet was witness to, and now and then, exasperated
-perhaps by solitude, returns upon itself
-in eddies terrible to look on. Well, the woes
-of mortal man are chiefly his own fault; war
-and ambition have depopulated the country,
-which otherwise need not I believe be poor,
-as here is capability enough, and the weather,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
-though stormy, is not otherwise particularly
-disagreeable. January is no mild month any
-where; even Naples, so proverbially delicious,
-is noisy enough with thunder and lightning;
-and the torrents of rain which often fall at
-this season at Rome and Florence, make them
-unpleasing enough. Nor do I believe that
-the <em>very</em> few people one finds here are of a
-lazy disposition at all; but it is so seldom that
-one meets with the <em>human face divine</em> in this
-Western side of Germany, that one scarce
-knows what they are, but by report.</p>
-
-<p>The town of Munster is catholic I see;
-their cathedral heavily and clumsily adorned,
-like the old Lutheran church called Santa
-Sophia at Dresden. One pair of their silver
-candlesticks however are eight feet high, and
-exhibit more solidity than elegance. They
-told us something about the <em>three kings</em>, who
-must have lost their way amazingly if ever
-they wandered into Westphalia, and deserved
-to lose their name of <em>wise men</em> too, I think.
-We were likewise shewn the sword worn by
-St. Paul, they told us, and a backgammon
-table preserved behind the high altar, I could
-not for, my life find out why; at first our interpreter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-told us, that the man said it had belonged
-to <em>John the Baptist</em>, but on further enquiry
-we understood him that it was once
-used by some Anabaptists; as that seemed no
-less wild a reason for keeping it there, than
-the other seemed as an account of its original,
-we came away uninformed.</p>
-
-<p>Of the reason why Hams are better here
-than in any other part of Europe, it was not
-so difficult to obtain the knowledge, and the
-inquiry was much more useful.</p>
-
-<p>Poor people here burn a vast quantity of
-very fine old oak in their cottages, which,
-having no chimney, detain the smoke a long
-time before it makes its escape out at the door.
-This smoke gives the peculiar flavour to that
-bacon which hangs from the roof, already fat
-with the produce of the same tree growing
-about these districts in a plenty not to be believed.
-Indeed the sole decoration of this
-devasted country is the large quantity of majestic
-timber trees, almost all oak, living to
-such an age, and spreading their broad arms
-with such venerable dignity, that it is <em>they</em>
-who appear the ancient possessors of the land,
-who, in the true style of Gothic supremacy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-suck all the nutriment of it to themselves, only
-shaking off a few acorns to content the immediate
-hunger of the animal race, which
-here seems in a state of great degeneracy indeed,
-compared to those haughty vegetables.</p>
-
-<p>This day I saw a fryar; the first that has
-crossed my sight since we left the town of Munich
-in Bavaria. On the road to Dusseldorp one
-sees the country mend at every step; but
-even <em>I</em> can perceive the language harsher, the
-further one is removed from Hanover on
-either side: for Hanover, as Madame de Bianconi
-told me at Dresden, is the Florence of
-Germany; and the tongue spoken at that
-town is supposed, and justly, the criterion of
-perfect <em>Teutsch</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The gallery of paintings here shall delay
-us but two or three days; I am so very weary
-of living on the high roads of <em>Teuchland</em> all
-winter long! Gerard Dow’s delightful
-mountebank ought, however, to have two of
-those days devoted to him, and here is the
-most capital Teniers which the world has to
-show. Jaques Jordaens never painted any
-thing so well as the feast in this gallery, where
-there are likewise some wonderful Sckalkens;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-besides Rembrandt’s portrait of himself much
-out of repair, and old Franck’s Seven Acts of
-Mercy varnished up, as well as the martyrdoms
-representing some of the persecutions in
-early times of Christianity; these might be
-called the Seven Acts of Cruelty&mdash;a duplicate
-of the picture may be seen at Vienna. When
-one has mentioned the Vanderwerfs, which
-are all sisters, and the demi-divine Carlo Dolce
-in the window, representing the infant
-Jesus with flowers, full of sweetness and innocent
-expression, it will be time to talk of
-the General Judgment, painted with astonishing
-hardihood by Rubens, and which we
-stopt here chiefly to see. The second Person
-of the Trinity is truly sublime, and formed
-upon an idea more worthy of him, at least
-more correspondent to the general ideas than
-that in Cappella Sestini; where a beholder is
-tempted to think on Julius Cæsar somehow,
-instead of Jesus Christ&mdash;a Conqueror, more
-than a Saviour of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>St. Michael’s figure is incomparable; those of
-Moses and St. Peter happily imagined; the spirit
-of composition, the manner of grouping and
-colouring, the general effect of the whole,
-prodigious! I know not why he has so fallen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-below himself in the Madonna’s character;
-perhaps not imitating Tintoret’s lovely Virgin
-in Paradise, he has done worse for fear of
-being servile. Tintoret’s idea of her is so <em>very</em>
-poetical! but those who shewed it me at Venice
-said the drawing was borrowed from
-Guariento, I remember.</p>
-
-<p>Who however except Rubens would have
-thought so justly, so liberally, so wisely, about
-the Negro drawn up to heaven by the angels?
-who still retains the old terrestrial character, so
-far as to shew a disposition to laugh at <em>their</em>
-situation who on earth tormented him. When
-all is said, every body knows very well that
-Michael Angelo’s picture on this subject is by
-far the finest; and that neither Rubens nor Tintoret
-ever pretended, or even hoped to be
-thought as great artists as he: but though Dante
-is a sublimer poet than Tasso, and Milton a
-writer of more eminence than Pope, <em>these</em> last
-will have readers, reciters, and quoters, while
-the others must sit down contented with silent
-veneration and acknowledged superiority.</p>
-
-<p>This day we saw the Rhine&mdash;what rivers
-these are! and what enormous inhabitants they
-do contain! a brace of bream, and eels of a magnitude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-and flavour very uncommon except in
-Germany, were our supper here. But the
-manners begin I see to fade away upon the
-borders; our soft feather beds are left behind;
-men too, sometimes sad, nasty, ill-looked
-fellows, come in one’s room to sweep, &amp;c. and
-light the fire in the stove, which is now always
-made of lead, and the fumes are very
-offensive; no more tight maids to be seen:
-but we shall get good roads; at Liege, down
-in a dirty coal pit, the bad ones end I think;
-and that town may be said to finish all our
-difficulties. After passing through our last
-disagreeable resting-place then, one finds the
-manners take a tint of France, and begins to
-see again what one has often seen before.
-The forests too are fairly left behind, but neat
-agriculture, and comfortable cottages more than
-supply their loss. Broom, juniper, every
-English shrub, announce our proximity to Great
-Britain, while pots of mazerion in flower at
-the windows shew that we are arrived in a
-country where spring is welcomed with ceremony,
-as well as received with delight. The
-forwardness of the season is indeed surprising;
-though it freezes at night now and then, the
-general feel of the air is very mild; willows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
-already give signs of resuscitation, while flights
-of yellowhammers, a bird never observed in
-Italy I think, enliven the fields, and look as if
-they expected food and felicity to be near.</p>
-
-<p>Louvaine would have been a place well
-worth stopping at, they tell me; but we were
-in haste to finish our journey and arrive at</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>BRUSSELS.</h2>
-
-<p>Every step towards this comfortable city
-lies through a country too well known to need
-description, and too beautiful to be ever described
-as it deserves. <i lang="fr">Les Vues de Flandres</i>
-are bought by the English, admired by the
-Italians, and even esteemed by the French,
-who like few things out of their own nation;
-but these places once belonged to Louis Quatorze,
-and the language has taken such root
-it will never more be eradicated. Here are
-very fine pictures in many private hands; Mr.
-Danot’s collection does not want me to celebrate
-its merits; and here is a lovely park,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-and a pleasing coterie of English, and a very
-gay carnival as can be, people running about
-the streets in crowds; but their theatre is a
-vile one: after Italy, it will doubtless be difficult
-to find masques that can amuse, or theatres
-that can strike one. But never did nation
-possess a family more charming than that of
-<i lang="fr">La Duchesse d’Arenberg</i>, who, graced with
-every accomplishment of mind and person,
-devotes her time and thoughts wholly to the
-amusement of her amiable consort, calling
-round them all which has any power of alleviating
-his distressful condemnation to perpetual
-darkness, from an accident upon a
-shooting party that cost him his sight about
-six or seven years ago. Mean time her arm
-always guides, her elegant conversation always
-soothes him; and either from <i lang="fr">gaieté de cœur</i>,
-philosophical resolution to bear what heaven
-ordains without repining, or a kind desire of
-corresponding with the Duchess’s intentions,
-he appears to lose no pleasure himself, nor
-power of pleasing others, by his misfortune;
-but dances, plays at cards, chats with his
-English friends, and listens delightedly (as
-who does not?) when charming Countess Cleri
-sings to the harpsichord’s accompaniment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-with all Italian taste, and all German execution.
-By the Duke D’Aremberg we were
-introduced to Prince Albert of Saxony, and
-the Princesse Gouvernante, whose resemblance
-to her Imperial brother is very striking; her
-hand however, so eminently beautiful, is to
-be kissed no more; the abolition of that ceremony
-has taken place in all the Emperor’s
-family. The palace belonging to these princes
-is so entirely in the English taste, with pleasure
-grounds, shrubbery, lawn, and laid out
-water, that I thought myself at home, not
-because of the polite attentions received, for
-those I have found <em>abroad</em>, where no merits
-of mine could possibly have deserved, nor no
-services have purchased them. Spontaneous
-kindness, and friendship resulting merely from
-that innate worth that loves to energize its
-own affections on an object which some circumstances
-had casually rendered interesting,
-are the lasting comforts I have derived from
-a journey which has shewn me much variety,
-and impressed me with an esteem of many
-characters I have been both the happier and
-the wiser for having known. Such were the
-friends I left with regret, when, crossing the
-Tyrolese Alps, I sent my last kind wishes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-back to the dear state of Venice in a sigh;
-such too were my emotions, when we took
-leave last night at Lady Torrington’s; and
-resolving to quit Brussels to-morrow for Antwerp,
-determined to exchange the brilliant
-conversation of a <em>Boyle</em>, for the glowing pencil
-of a <em>Rubens</em>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>ANTWERP.</h2>
-
-<p>This is a dismal heavy looking town&mdash;<em>so</em>
-melancholy! the Scheld shut up! the grass
-growing in the streets! those streets so empty
-of inhabitants! and it was so famous once.
-<i lang="la">Atuatum nobile Brabantiæ opidum in ripâ Schaldis flu.
-Europæ nationibus maximè frequentatum.
-Sumptuosis tam privatis quam publicis
-nitet ædificiis</i><a name="FNanchor_54" id="FNanchor_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>, say the not very old books of
-geography when speaking of this once stately
-city;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">But trade’s proud empire sweeps to swift decay,</div>
-<div class="verse">As ocean heaves the labour’d mole away.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Goldsmith.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And surely if the empire of Rome is actually
-fled away into air like a dream, the opulence
-of Antwerp may well crumble to earth
-like a clod. What defies time is genius; and
-of that, many and glorious proofs are yet left
-behind in this place. The composition of a
-picture painted to adorn the altar under which
-lies buried that which was mortal of its artist,
-is beyond all meaner praise. The figure of St.
-George might stand by that of Corregio, and suffer
-no diminution of one’s esteem. The
-descent from the cross too!&mdash;Well! if Daniel
-de Volterra’s is more elegantly pathetic, Rubens
-has put <em>his</em> pathos in a properer place.&mdash;The
-blessed Virgin Mary ought to be but the
-second figure certainly in a scene which represents
-our almighty Saviour himself completing
-the redemption of all mankind. But here
-is another devotional piece, highly poetical,
-almost dramatic, representing Christ descending
-in anger to consume a guilty world. The
-globe at a distance low beneath his feet, his
-pious mother prostrate before him, covering
-part of it with her robe, and deprecating the divine
-wrath in a most touching manner. St.
-Sebastian shewing his wounds with an air of
-the tenderest supplication; Carlo Borromæo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-beseeching in heaven for those fellow-creatures
-he ceased not loving or serving while on earth;
-and St. Francis in the groupe, but surely ill-chosen;
-as he who left the world, and planned
-only his own salvation by retirement from its
-cares and temptations, would be unlikely
-enough to intreat for its longer continuance:
-his dress however, so favourable to painters,
-was the reason he was pitched upon I trust, as
-it affords a particularly happy contrast to the
-cardinal’s robes of St. Carlo.</p>
-
-<p>I will finish my reflections upon painting
-here, and apologize for their frequency only
-by confessing my fondness for the art; and my
-conviction, that had I said nothing of that
-art in a journey through Italy and Germany,
-where so much of every traveller’s attention is
-led to mention it, I should have been justly
-blamed for affectation; while being censured
-for impertinence disgusts me less of the two.
-What I have learned from the Italians is a
-maxim more valuable than all my stock of
-connoisseurship: <i lang="it">Che c’è in tutto il suo bene, e
-il suo male</i>&mdash;that <em>there is much of evil and of
-good in every thing</em>: and the life of a traveller
-evinces the truth of that position perhaps more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-than any other. So persuaded, we made a
-bold endeavour to cross the Scheld; but the
-wind was so outrageously high, no boat was
-willing to venture till towards night: at that
-hour “<i lang="la">Unus, et hic audax</i><a name="FNanchor_55" id="FNanchor_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>,” as Leander says,
-offered his service to convey us; but the
-passage of the Rhine had been so rough before,
-that I felt by no means disposed to face
-danger again just at the close of the battle.</p>
-
-<p>When we find a disposition to talk over our
-adventures, the great ice islands driving down
-<i lang="la">Rhenus ferox</i>, as Seneca justly calls it, and
-threatening to run against and destroy our
-awkward ill-contrived boat, may divert care
-over a winter’s fire, some evening in England,
-by recollection of past perils. I thought it a
-dreadful one at the time; and have no taste
-to renew a like scene for the sake of crossing
-the Scheld, and arriving a very few moments
-sooner than returning through Brussels will
-bring us&mdash;<i lang="fr">a la Place de</i></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>LILLE;</h2>
-
-<p>Where every thing appears to me to be
-just like England, at least just by it; and
-in fact four and twenty hours would carry us
-thither with a fair wind: and now it really
-does feel as if the journey were over; and
-even in that sensation, though there is some
-pleasure, there is some pain too;&mdash;the time
-and the places are past;&mdash;and I have only left
-to wish, that my improvements of the one,
-and my accounts of the others, were better;
-for though Mr. Sherlock comforts his followers
-with the kind assertion, That if a hundred
-men of parts travelled over Italy, and
-each made a separate book of what <em>he</em> saw and
-observed, a hundred excellent compositions
-might be made, of which no two should be
-alike, yet all new, all resembling the original,
-and all admirable of their kind.&mdash;One’s constantly-recurring
-fear is, lest the readers should
-cry out, with Juliet&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Yea, but all this did I know before!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span></p>
-<p>How truly might they say so, did I mention
-the oddity (for oddity it still is) in this town
-of Lille, to see dogs drawing in carts as beasts
-of burden, and lying down in the market-place
-when their work is done, to gnaw the
-bones thrown them by their drivers: they are
-of mastiff race seemingly, crossed by the bull-dog,
-yet not quarrelsome at all. This is a
-very awkward and barbarous practice however,
-and, as far as I know, confined to this city;
-for in all others, people seem to have found
-out, that horses, asses, and oxen are the proper
-creatures to draw wheel carriages&mdash;except
-indeed at Vienna, where the streets are
-so very narrow, that the men resolve rather to
-be harnessed than run over.</p>
-
-<p>How fine I thought these churches thirteen
-years ago, comes now thirteen times a-day
-into my head; they are not fine at all; but
-it was the first time I had ever crossed the
-channel, and I thought every thing a wonder,
-and fancied we were arrived at the world’s
-end almost; so differently do the self-same
-places appear to the self-same people surrounded
-by different circumstances! I now feel as if
-we were at Canterbury. Was one to go to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
-Egypt, the sight of Naples on the return
-home would probably afford a like sensation
-of proximity: and I recollect, one of the gentlemen
-who had been with Admiral Anson
-round the world told us, that when he came
-back as near as our East India settlements, he
-considered the voyage as finished, and all his
-toils at an end&mdash;so is my little book; and
-(if Italy may be considered, upon Sherlock’s
-principle, as a sort of academy-figure set up
-for us all to draw from) my design of it may
-have a chance to go in the portfolio with the
-rest, after its exhibition-day is over.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the general effect travelling
-has upon the human mind, it is different with
-different people. Brydone has observed, that
-the magnetic needle loses her habits upon the
-heights of Ætna, nor ever more regains her
-partiality for the <em>north</em>, till again newly
-touched by the loadstone: it is so with many
-men who have lived long from home; they
-find, like Imogen,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">That there’s living out of Britain;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and if they return to it after an absence of
-several years, bring back with them an alienated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-mind&mdash;this is not well. Others there
-are, who, being accustomed to live a considerable
-time in places where they have not
-the smallest intention to fix for ever, but on
-the contrary firmly resolve to leave <em>sometime</em>,
-learn to treat the world as a man treats his
-mistress, whom he likes well enough, but has
-no design to marry, and of course never provides
-for&mdash;this is not well neither. A third
-set gain the love of hurrying perpetually from
-place to place; living familiarly with all, but
-intimately with none; till confounding their
-own ideas (still undisclosed) of right and
-wrong, they learn to think virtue and vice
-ambulatory, as Browne says; profess that
-climate and constitution regulate men’s actions,
-till they try to persuade their companions
-into a belief most welcome to themselves,
-that the will of God in one place is by
-no means his will in another; and most resemble
-in their whirling fancies a boy’s top I
-once saw shewn by a professor who read us a
-lecture upon opticks; it was painted in regular
-stripes round like a narrow ribbon, red,
-blue, green, and yellow; we set it a-spinning
-by direction of our philosopher, who, whipping
-it merrily about, obtained as a general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-effect the total privation of all the four colours,
-so distinct at the beginning of its <em>tour</em>;&mdash;<em>it
-resembled a dirty white!</em></p>
-
-<p>With these reflexions and recollections we
-drove forward to Calais, where I left the
-following lines at our inn:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Over mountains, rivers, vallies,</div>
-<div class="verse">Here are we return’d to Calais;</div>
-<div class="verse">After all their taunts and malice,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ent’ring safe the gates of Calais;</div>
-<div class="verse">While, constrain’d, our captain dallies,</div>
-<div class="verse">Waiting for a wind at Calais,</div>
-<div class="verse">Muse! prepare some sprightly sallies</div>
-<div class="verse">To divert <i lang="fr">ennui</i> at Calais.</div>
-<div class="verse">Turkish ships, Venetian gallies,</div>
-<div class="verse">Have we seen since last at Calais;</div>
-<div class="verse">But tho’ Hogarth (rogue who rallies!)</div>
-<div class="verse">Ridicules the French at Calais,</div>
-<div class="verse">We, who’ve walk’d o’er many a palace,</div>
-<div class="verse">Quite well content return to Calais;</div>
-<div class="verse">For, striking honestly the tallies,</div>
-<div class="verse">There’s little choice ’twixt them and Calais.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It would have been graceless not to give
-these lines a companion on the other side the
-water, like Dean Swift’s distich before and
-after he climbed Penmanmaur: these verses
-were therefore written, and I believe still remain,
-in an apartment of the Ship inn:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">He whom fair winds have wafted over,</div>
-<div class="verse">First hails his native land at Dover,</div>
-<div class="verse">And doubts not but he shall discover</div>
-<div class="verse">Pleasure in ev’ry path round Dover;</div>
-<div class="verse">Envies the happy crows which hover</div>
-<div class="verse">About old Shakespeare’s cliff at Dover;</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor once reflects that each young rover</div>
-<div class="verse">Feels just the same, return’d to Dover.</div>
-<div class="verse">From this fond dream he’ll soon recover</div>
-<div class="verse">When debts shall drive him back to Dover,</div>
-<div class="verse">Hoping, though poor, to live in clover,</div>
-<div class="verse">Once safely past the straits of Dover.</div>
-<div class="verse">But he alone’s his country’s lover,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who, absent long, returns to Dover,</div>
-<div class="verse">And can by fair experience prove her</div>
-<div class="verse">The best he has found since last at Dover.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Lord, Madam! why we came here on purpose sure
-to see the end of the world.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Freed from his keepers thus with broken reins</div>
-<div class="verse">The wanton courser prances o’er the plains.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Dryden.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> When the mountain was in <em>ill-humour</em>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> More laborious than gathering up the Sibyl’s leaves.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> I have danced in my bed so often this year.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6" id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Is she yet alive? Is she yet alive?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7" id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Be it as it may.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8" id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Which was once Anxur, and now is Terracina.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9" id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> The temple sacred to the maiden Juno and un-razored
-Jove.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10" id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">And the steep hills of Circe stretch around,</div>
-<div class="verse">Where fair Feronia boasts her stately grove,</div>
-<div class="verse">And Anxur glories in her guardian Jove.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Pitt.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11" id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> White Anxur’s salutary waters roll.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12" id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Why, Madam, you have hit on it sure enough.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13" id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Surge, et ego ipse homo sum. <span class="smcap">Vulgate.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14" id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> This hiding-hole received Nero after his golden
-house.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15" id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Our Alexander sells keys, altars, heaven;</div>
-<div class="verse">When law and right are sold, he’ll buy:&mdash;that’s even.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16" id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Juno too has her thunder.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17" id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Here’s something at last that’s truly great however!
-why this Alexander looks fit to be king of France.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18" id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> <em>Paglia</em> is a straw-coloured marble, wonderfully beautiful,
-and extremely rare; found only in some northern
-tracts of Africa, I am told here.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19" id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> What you are already, that desire to be for ever.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20" id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Girt with the limus, and as to their temples, <em>they</em>
-were crowned with vervain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> That’s the name of the spring.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> There was an old religious temple hard by, where
-Clitumnus himself was venerated with suitable dress and
-ornaments.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Nightly lamenting, &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> The colony of Ancona, founded by Sicilians.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25" id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The beauteous gulph which fair Ancona laves,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ancona wash’d by white Dalmatian waves.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26" id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> I am a light-fingered fellow, Master.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27" id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> We are all sinners you know.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28" id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> The best among the Cæsars.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29" id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Mayst thou be happier than Augustus!&mdash;better than
-Trajan!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30" id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Eating increases one’s appetite.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31" id="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Though fat Bologna feeds to the fill,</div>
-<div class="verse">Our Padua is fatter still.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32" id="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Pompous and holy ancient Rome we call,</div>
-<div class="verse">Venice rich, wise, and lordly over all.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33" id="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Truth alone is pleasing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34" id="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Wilt thou have music? hark, Apollo plays,</div>
-<div class="verse">And twenty <em>caged</em> nightingales shall sing.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35" id="Footnote_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Not Hybla’s sweets, nor Naples devoloons,</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor grapes which hide the hill with rich festoons;</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor fat Bologna’s valley, have I chose;</div>
-<div class="verse">What is your wish then? May I speak?&mdash;<em>repose</em>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36" id="Footnote_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Thy knowledge is nothing till other men know that
-thou knowest it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37" id="Footnote_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Methinks there seems to be much slavery required
-from those who inhabit your fine free country of England.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38" id="Footnote_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> In the fine cieling of Palazzo Ludovigi at Rome,
-the Hours which surround Aurora’s chariot are employed
-in extinguishing the Stars with their hands.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39" id="Footnote_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> One volume of this Leonardiana is now in the private
-library of the king of England at the queen’s house in the
-park, preserved from Charles or James the First’s collection,
-and written with the left hand, or rather backwards,
-to be read only with the help of a mirror.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40" id="Footnote_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> All so natural and pretty,&mdash;quite in the English style.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41" id="Footnote_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> That is, with a heap of friends about one in this
-manner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42" id="Footnote_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Oh! God keep one from that.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43" id="Footnote_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> What prince makes his residence here?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44" id="Footnote_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Her studies, manners, arts, to all proclaim</div>
-<div class="verse">Fair Clelia’s glory, and her sex’s shame.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45" id="Footnote_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Two lords in vain unlucky Dido tries;</div>
-<div class="verse">One dead, she flies the land; one fled&mdash;she dies.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46" id="Footnote_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Faithful to his cares, and companionable in his studies.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47" id="Footnote_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> Whoever sees thee without being smitten with extraordinary
-passion, must, I think, be incapable of loving
-even himself.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48" id="Footnote_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> Nothing too much.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49" id="Footnote_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> The lazy ox for trappings sighs.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50" id="Footnote_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Ever stormy or venemous.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51" id="Footnote_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> Here’s the place to see fine diamonds.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52" id="Footnote_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">What are they after all their pains,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">These thunderbolts of war?</div>
-<div class="verse">Mere caput mortuum that remains</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Which worms vouchsafe to spare.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53" id="Footnote_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">All these have liv’d; ye too who read must die:</div>
-<div class="verse">Haste and be wise, the fateful minutes fly.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54" id="Footnote_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Antwerp is a noble town of Brabant, situated on
-the banks of the Scheld; frequented by most of the nations
-in Europe, and sumptuous in its buildings both
-public and private.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55" id="Footnote_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> One&mdash;and he a bold one.</p>
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-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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