Loitering in Pleasant Paths. Marion Harland

Loitering in Pleasant Paths - Marion Harland


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       Marion Harland

      Loitering in Pleasant Paths

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066248352

       LOITERINGS IN PLEASANT PATHS.

       CHAPTER I. The Average Briton.

       CHAPTER II. Olla Podrida.

       CHAPTER III. Spurgeon and Cummings.

       CHAPTER IV. The Two Elizabeths.

       CHAPTER V. Prince Guy.

       CHAPTER VI. Shakspeare and Irving.

       CHAPTER VII. Kenilworth.

       CHAPTER VIII. Oxford .

       CHAPTER IX. Sky-larks and Stoke-Pogis.

       CHAPTER X. Our English Cousins.

       CHAPTER XI. Over the Channel.

       CHAPTER XII. Versailles—Expiatory Chapel—Père Lachaise.

       CHAPTER XIII. Southward-Bound.

       CHAPTER XIV. Pope, King, and Forum.

       CHAPTER XV. On Christmas-Day.

       CHAPTER XVI. L’Allegro and Il Penseroso.

       CHAPTER XVII. With the Skeletons.

       CHAPTER XVIII. “ Paul—a Prisoner. ”

       CHAPTER XIX. Tasso and Tusculum.

       CHAPTER XX. From Pompeii to Lake Avernus.

       CHAPTER XXI. “ A Sorosis Lark. ”

       CHAPTER XXII. In Florence and Pisa.

       CHAPTER XXIII. “ Beautiful Venice. ”

       CHAPTER XXIV. Bologna.

       CHAPTER XXV. “ Non é Possibile! ”

       CHAPTER XXVI. Lucerne and The Rigi.

       CHAPTER XXVII. Personal and Practical.

       CHAPTER XXVIII. Home-life in Geneva—Ferney.

       CHAPTER XXIX. Calvin—The Diodati House—Primroses.

       CHAPTER XXX. Corinne at Coppet.

       CHAPTER XXXI. Chillon.

       Table of Contents

       The Average Briton.

       Table of Contents

      SUNDAY in London: For the first time since our arrival in the city we saw it under what passes in that latitude and language for sunshine. For ten days we had dwelt beneath a curtain of gray crape resting upon the chimney-tops, leaving the pavements dry to dustiness. “Gray crape” is poetical—rather—and sounds better than the truth, which is, that the drapery, without fold or shading, over-canopying us, was precisely in color like very dirty, unbleached muslin, a tint made fashionable within a year or so, under the name of “Queen Isabella’s linen” (“le linge de la Reine Isabeau”). The fixed cloud depressed and oppressed us singularly. It was a black screen set above the eyes, which we were all the while tempted to push up in order to see more clearly and farther—a heavy hand upon brain and chest. For the opaqueness, the clinging rimes of the “London fog,” we were prepared. Of the mysterious withholding for days and weeks of clouds threatening every minute to fall, we had never heard. We had bought umbrellas at Sangster’s, as does every sensible tourist immediately after securing rooms at a hotel, and never stirred abroad without them; but the pristine plaits had not been disturbed. Struggle as we might with the notion, we could not rid ourselves of the odd impression that the whole nation had gone into mourning. Pleasure-seeking, on the part of sojourners who respected conventionalities, savored of indecorum. We were more at our ease in the crypt of St. Paul’s, and among the dead of Westminster Abbey, than anywhere else, and felt the conclave of murderers, the blood-flecked faces of the severed heads, the genuine lunette and knife of Samson’s guillotine in Madame Tussaud’s Chamber of Horrors, to be “quite the thing in the circumstances.”

      The evil, nameless spell was broken by the clangor of the Sabbath bells. “The gray pavilion rose” and did not fall—for twenty-four hours. Strolling through St. James’s Park in the hour preceding sunsetting, we pointed out to one another the pale blue, dappled with white, of the zenith, the reddening mists of the horizon. The ground was strewed with autumnal leaves, russet and brown. The subdued monotony of the two shades of decay did not move us to adverse criticism. The crimsons, golds, and purples that were robing woods we knew of over the water,


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