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Full text of "Sketches in Holland and Scandinavia"










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Presented to the 

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO 
LIBRARY 

by the 

ONTARIO LEGISLATIVE 
LIBRARY 

1980 



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SKETCHES 



IN 



HOLLAND AND SCANDINAVIA 



BY 



AUGUSTUS J. C. HARE 

AUTHOR OF "cities OF ITALY," "WANDERINGS IN SPAIN," ETC. 



MICRC^ILMED BY 

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO 

LIBRARY 

MASTER NEGATIVE NO.: 

^iPO(>H ^ 



LONDON 
GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD 

[.-i// rights resented] 



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SKETCHES 






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IN 




HOLLAND AND SCANDINAVIA 



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AUGUSTUS J. C. HARE 



AUTHOR OK CITIES OF ITAf.V WANDERINGS IK SI'AIN ETC. 



MICROFILMED BY 

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO 

LIBRARY 

MASTER NEGATIVE NO.: 

54000.4 „ 



LONDON 
SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 WATERLOO PLACE 
^i^^^" ^ 1885 ^^^"^^ f^ 



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PREFACE. 

The slight sketches in this vokime are only the 
resalt of ordinary tours in the countries they 
attempt to describe. Yet the days they recall were so 
delightful, and their memory — especially of the tour 
in Norway— is so indescribably sunny, that I cannot 
help hoping their publication may lead others to enjoy 
what is at once so pleasant and so easy of attain- 
ment. 

Augustus J. C. Hare. 

HOLMHURST : November 1884. 



CONTENTS. 



IN HOLLAND r 



IN DENMARK 59 



IN SWEDEN 83 



IN NORWAY 105 



IN HOLLAND 



B 



IN HOLLAND. 

A T Roosendal, about an hour's railway journey 
^ ^ from Antwerp, the boundary between Belgium 
and Holland is crossed, and a branch line diverges 
to Breda. 

Somehow, like most travellers, we could not help 
expecting to see some marked change on reaching a 
new country, and in Holland one could not repress the 
expectation of beginning at once to see the pictures 
of Teniers and Gerard Dou in real life. We were 
certainly disappointed at first. Open heaths were 
succeeded by woods of stunted firs, and then b}' fields 
with thick hedges of beech or alder, till the towers of 
Breda came in sight. Here a commonplace omnibus 
took us to the comfortable inn of Zum Kroon, and 
we were shown into bedrooms reached by an open 
wooden staircase from the courtyard, and quickly joined 
the table d'hote, at which the magnates of the town 
were seated with napkins well tucked up under their 
chins, talking, with full mouths, in Dutch, of which to 

B 2 



4 IN HOLLAND. 

our unaccustomed ears the words seemed all in one 
string. Most excellent was the dinner — roast meat 
and pears, quantities of delicious vegetables cooked 
in different ways, piles of ripe mulberries and cake, 
and across the little garden, with its statues and 
bright flower-beds, we could see the red sails of the 
barges going up and down the canals. 

As soon as dinner was over, we sallied forth to see 
the town, which impressed us more than any Dutch 
city did afterwards, perhaps because it \\as the first 
we saw. The winding streets — one of them ending in 
a high windmill — are lined with houses wonderfully 
varied in outline, and of every shade of delicate 
colour, yellow, grey, or brown, though the windows 
always have white frames and bars. Passing through 
a low archway under one of the houses, we found 
ourselves, when we least expected it, in the public 
garden, a kind of wood where the trees have killed all 
the grass, surrounded by canals, beyond one of which 
is a great square chateau built by William III. of 
England, encircled b}- the Merk, and enclosing an 
arcaded court. There was an older chateau of 1350 
at Breda, but we failed to find it. 

In stately splendour, from the old houses of the 
market-place, rises the noble Hervormde Kerk 
(Protestant Church), with a lofty octagon tower, and 



BREDA. 5 

a most characteristic bulbous Dutch spire. Here, as 
we wanted to sec the interior, we first were puzzled 
by our ignorance of Dutch, finding, as everywhere in 
the smaller towns, that the natives knew no language 
but their own. But two old women in high caps and 
gold earrings observed our puzzledom from a window 







THE MAKKET-PLACE AT BREDA. 



and pointed to a man and a key — we nodded ; the 
man pointed to himself, a door, and a key — we 
nodded ; and we were soon inside the building. It 
was our first introduction to Dutch Calvinism and 
iconoclasm, and piteous indeed was it to see so 
magnificent a church thickly covered with whitewash, 



6 IN HOLLAND. 

and the quantity of statues which it contains of 
deceased Dukes and Duchesses of Nassau bereft of 
their legs and petticoats. Only, in a grand side 
chapel on the left of the choir, the noble tomb 
of Engelbrecht II. of Nassau, general under the 
Emperor Maximilian (1505), remains intact. The 
guide lights matches to shine through the transparent 
alabaster of the figures ; that of the Duke represents 
Death, that of the Duchess Sleep, as they lie beneath 
a stone slab which bears the armour of Engelbrecht, 
and is supported by figures of Cciesar, Hannibal, 
Regulus, and Philip of Macedon ; that of Caesar is 
sublime. The tomb of Sir Francis Vcre in West- 
minster Abbey is of the same design, and is supposed 
to be copied from this famous monument. Outside 
the chapel is the tomb of Engelbrecht V. of Nassau, 
with all his family kneeling, in quaint headdresses. 
The other sights of the church are the brass font in 
the Baptistery, and a noble brass in the choir of 
William dc Gaellen, Dean of the Chapter, 1539. It 
will be observed that here, and almost everywhere else 
in Holland, the names of saints which used to be 
attached to the churches ha\c disappeared ; the 
buildings are generally known as the old church, or 
new church, or great church. 

After a delicious breakfast of coffee and thick 



ZEALAND. 7 

cream, with rusks, scones, and different kinds of 
cheese, ahvays an indispensable in Dutch breakfasts, 
we took to the raihvay again and crossed Zealand, 
which chiefly consists of four islands, Noordt Beve- 
land, Zuid Beveland, Schouwen, and Walcheren, and 
is less visited by the rest of the Netherlanders than 
any other part of the country. The land is all cut 
up into vast polders, as the huge meadows are called, 
which aie recovered from the sea and protected by 
embankments. Here, if human care was withdrawn 
for six months, the whole country would be under 
the sea again. A corps of engineers called ' water- 
staat ' are continually employed to watch the waters, 
and to keep in constant repair the dykes, which are 
formed of clay at the bottom, as that is more water- 
proof than anything else, and thatched with willows, 
which are here grown extensively for the purpose. 
If the sea passes a dyke, ruin is imminent, an alarm 
bell rings, and the whole population rush to the 
rescue. The moment one dyke is even menaced, the 
people begin to build another inside it, and then rely 
upon the double defence, whilst they fortify the old 
one. But all their care has not preserved the islands 
of Zealand. Three centuries ago, Schouwen was 
entirely submerged, and every living creature was 
drowned. Soon after, Noordt Beveland was sub- 



8 



IN HOLLAND. 



merged, and remained for several years entirely under 
water, only the points of the church spires being 
visible. Zuid Beveland had been submerged in the 
fourteenth century. Walcheren was submerged as 
late as 1808, and Tholen even in 1825. It has been 
aptly asserted that the sea to the inhabitants of 




BERGEN-OI'-ZOO.M. 



Holland is what Vesuvius is to Torre del Greco. How 
well its French name of Pays-Bas suits the country ! 
De Amicis says that the Dutch have three enemies — 
the sea, the lakes, and the rivers ; they repel the sea, 
they dry the lakes, and they imprison the rivers ; but 
with the sea it is a combat which never ceases. 



BERGEN-OP-ZOOM, GOES. 9 

The story of the famous siege of 1749 made us 
Hnger at Bergen-op-Zoom, a clean, dull little town 
with bright white houses surrounding an irregular 
market-place, and surmounted by the heavy tower of 
the Church of S. Gertrude. In the Stadhuis is a fine 
carved stone chimney-piece ; but there is little wort'i 
seeing, and we were soon speeding across the rich 
pastures of Zuid Beveland, and passing its capital of 
Goes, prettily situated amongst cherry orchards, the 
beautiful cruciform church with a low central spire 
rising above the trees on its ramparts. Every now 
and then the train seems scarcely out of the water, 
which covers a vast surface of the pink-green flats, 
and recalls the description in Hudibras of — 

A country that draws fifty feet of water, 
In which men live as in the hold of nature, 
And when the sea does in upon them break, 
And drown a province, does but spring a leak. 

The peasant women at the stations are a perpetual 
amusement, for there is far more costume here than 
in most parts of Holland, and peculiar square handsome 
gold ornaments, something like closed golden books, 
are universally worn on each side of the face. 

So, crossing a broad salt canal into the island of 
Walcheren, ^ve reached Middleburg, a handsome town 
which was covered with water to the house tops w' hen 



lo IN HOLLAND. 

the island was submerged. It was the birthplace of 
Zach Janssen and Hans Lipperhey, the inventors of 
the telescope, c. i6io. In the market-place is a most 
beautiful Gothic townhall, built by the architect 
Keldermans, early in the sixteenth century. We 
asked a well dressed boy how we could get into it, 
and he, without further troubling himself, pointed the 
\va)' with his finger. The building contains a quaint 
old hall called the Vierschaar, and a so-called museum, 
but there is little enough to see. As we came out 
the bo)' met us. ' You must give me something : 
I pointed out the entrance of the Stadhuis to you.' 
In Holland we have always found that no one, rich 
or poor, does a kindness or even a civility for 
nothing ! 

The crowd in the market-place was so great that 
it was impossible to sketch the Stadhuis as we should 
have wished, but the people themselves were delight- 
full}- picturesque. The women entirely conceal their 
hair under their white caps, but have golden corkscrews 
sticking out on either side the face, like weapons of 
defence, from which the golden slabs we have observed 
before were pendant. The Nieuwe Kerk is of little 
interest, though it contains the tomb of William of 
Holland, who was elected Emperor of Germany in 
1250, and we wandered on through the quiet streets, 



DORTRECHT. ii 

till a Gothic arch in an ancient wall looked tempting. 
PassinsT throusfh it we found ourselves in the enclosure 
of the old abbey, shaded by a grove of trees, and 
surrounded by ancient buildings, part of which are 
appropriated as the Hotel Abdij, where we arrived 
utterly famished, and found a table d'hote at 2.30 P.M. 
unspeakably reviving. 

Any one who sees Holland thoroughly ought also 
to visit Zieriksee,the capital of the island of Schouwen ; 
but the water locomotion thither is so difficult and 
tedious that we preferred, keeping to the railways, 
which took us back in the dark over the country we 
had already traversed, and a little more, to Dortrecht, 
where there is a convenient tramway to take travellers 
from the station into the town. Here, at the Hotel 
de Fries, we found comfortable bedrooms, with boarded 
floors and box-beds like those in Northumbrian cot- 
tages, and we had supper in the public room, separated 
into two parts by a dais for strangers, whence we 
looked down into the humbler division, which recalled 
many homely scenes of Ostade and Teniers in its 
painted wooden ceiling, its bright, polished furniture, 
its cat and dog and quantity of birds and flowers, its 
groups of boors at round tables drinking out of 
tankards, and the landlady and her daughter in their 
gleaming gold ornaments, sitting knitting, with the 



12 I.V HOLLAND. 

waiter standing behind them amusing himself by the 
general conversation. 

Our morning at Dortrecht was very delightful, and 
it is a thoroughly charming place. Passing under a 
dark archway in a picturesque building of Charles V. 
opposite the hotel, we found ourselves at once on the 
edge of an immense expanse of shimmering river, 
with long rich polders beyond, between which the 
wide flood breaks into three different branches. Red 
and white sails flit down them. Here and there rise 
a line of pollard willows or clipped elms, and now and 
then a church spire. On the nearest shore an ancient 
windmill, coloured in delicate tints of gre\- and yellow, 
surmounts a group of white buildings. On the left is 
a broad esplanade of brick, lined with ancient houses, 
and a canal with a bridge, the long arms of which are 
ready to open at a touch and give a passage to the 
great yellow-masted barges, which are already half 
intercepting the bright red house-fronts ornamented 
with stone, which belong to some public buildings 
facing the end of the canal. With what a confusion 
of merchandise are the boats laden, and how gay is 
the colouring, between the old weedy posts to which 
they are moored ! 

It was from hence that Isabella of France, with 
Sir John de Hainault and many other faithful knights, 



DORTRECHT. 13 

set out on their expedition against Edward II, and 
the government of the Spencers. 

From the busy port, where nevertheless they are 
dredeing-, we cross another bridge and find ourselves 
in a quietude like that of a cathedral close in England. 
On one side is a wide pool half covered with floating 
timber, and, in the other half, reflecting like a mirror 
the houses on the opposite shore, with their bright 
gardens of lilies and hollyhocks, and trees of mountain 
ash, which bend their masses of scarlet berries to the 
still water. Between the houses are glints of blue 
river and of inevitable windmills on the opposite shore. 
And all this we observe standing in the shadow 
of a huge church, the Groote Kerk, with a nave 
of the fourteenth century, and a choir of the fifteenth, 
and a gigantic brick tower, in which three long Gothic 
arches, between octagonal tourelles, enclose several 
tiers of windows. At the top is a great clock, and 
below the church a grove of elms, through which 
fitful sunlight falls on the grass and the dead red of 
the brick pavement (so grateful to feet sore with the 
sharp stones of other Dutch cities), where groups of 
fishermen are collecting in their blue shirts and white 
trousers. 

There is little to see inside this or any other 
church in Holland ; travellers will rather seek for the 



14 



IN HOLLAND. 



memorials, at the Kloveniers Doelen, of the famous 
Synod of Dort, which was held 1618-19, in the hope 
of effecting a compromise between the Gomarists, or 
disciples of Calvin, and the Arminians who followed 
Zwingli, and who had recently obtained the name of 








GROOTE KERK, DORTRECHT. 



Remonstrants from the ' remonstrance ' which they 
had addressed eight years before in defence of their 
doctrines. The Calvin ists held that the greater part 
of mankind was excluded from grace, which the 



DORTRECHT. 



15 



Arminians denied ; but at the Synod of Dort the 
Calvinists proclaimed themselves as infallible as the 
Pope, and their resolutions became the law of the 
Dutch reformed Church. The Arminians were forth- 
with outlawed ; a hundred ministers who refused to 
subscribe to the dictates of the Synod were banished ; 




CANAL AT DORTRECHT. 



Hugo Grotius and Rombout Hoogerbeets were im-' 
prisoned for life at Loevestein ; the body of the 
secretary Ledenberg, who committed suicide in prison, 
was hung ; and Van Olden Barneveldt, the friend of 
William the Silent, was beheaded in his seventy- 
second year. 



i6 IN HOLLAND. 

There is nothing- in the quiet streets of Dortrecht 
to remind one that it was once one of the most 
important commercial cities of Holland, taking 
precedence even of Rotterdam, Delft, Leyden, and 
Amsterdam. It also possessed a privilege called the 
Staple of Dort, by which all the carriers on the Maas 
and Rhine were forced to unload their merchandise 
here, and pay all duties imposed, only using the boats 
or porters of the place in their work, and so bringing 
a great revenue to the town. 

More than those in any of the other towns of 
Holland do the little water streets of Dortrecht recall 
Venice, the houses rising abruptl}' from the canals ; 
only the luminous atmosphere and the shimmering 
water changing colour like a chameleon, are wanting. 

Through the street of wine — Wijnstraat — built 
over storehouses used for the staple, we went to 
the Museum to see the pictures. There were two 
schools of Dortrecht. Jacob Geritse Cuyp (1575), 
Albert Cuyp (1605), Ferdinand Bol (161 1), Nicolas 
Maas (1632), and Schalken (1643) belonged to the 
former ; Arend de Gelder, Arnold Houbraken, Dirk 
Stoop, and Ary Scheffer are of the latter. Sunshine 
and glow were the characteristics of the first school, 
greyness and sobriety of the second. But there are 
few good pictures at Dort now, and some of the best 






ROTTERDAM. I'j 

works of Cuyp are to be found in our National 
Gallery, executed at his native place and portraying 
the great brick tower of the church in the golden 
haze of evening, seen across rich pastures, where the 
cows arc lying deep in the meadow grass. The works 
of Ary Scheffer are now the most interesting pictures 
in the Dortrecht Gallery. Of the subject ' Christus 
Consolator' there are two representations. In the 
more striking of these the pale Christ is seated 
amongst the sick, sorrowful, blind, maimed, and en- 
slaved, who are all stretching out their hands to Him. 
Beneath is the tomb which the artist executed for his 
mother, Cornelia Scheffer, whose touching figure is 
represented lying with outstretched hands, in the 
utmost abandonment of repose. 

An excursion should be made from Dortrecht to 
the castle of Loevestein on the Rhine, where Grotius, 
imprisoned in 1619, was concealed by his wife in the 
chest which brought in his books and linen. It was 
conveyed safely out of the castle by her courageous 
maid Elsje van Houwening. and was taken at first to 
the house of Jacob Daatselaer, a supposed friend of 
Grotius, who refused to render any assistance. But 
his wife consented to open the chest, and the philo- 
sopher, disguised as a mason, escaped to Brabant. 

It is much best to visit Rotterdam as an excursion 






1 8 nV HOLLAND. 

from Dortrecht. We thought it the most odious 
place we ever were in — immense, filthy, and not very 
picturesque. Its handsomest feature is the vast quay 
called the Boompjes, on the Maas. Here and there a 
great windmill reminds you unmistakably of where 
you are, and the land streets are intersected every- 
where by water streets, the carriages being constantly 
stopped to let ships pass through the bridges. In the 
Groote Markt stands a bronze statue of Desiderius 
Erasmus — ' Vir saeculi sui primarius, et civis omnium 
praestantissimus,' which is the work of Hendrik de 
Keyser (1662), and in the Wijde Kerkstraat is the 
house where he was born, inscribed ' Haec est parva 
domus, magnus qua natus Erasmus, 1467,' but it is 
now a tavern. The great church of S. Lawrence — 
Groote Kerk — built in 1477-87, contains the tombs of 
a number of Dutch admirals, and has a grand pave- 
ment of monumental slabs, but is otherwise frightful. 
The portion used for service is said to be ' so con- 
veniently constructed that the zealous Christians of 
Rotterdam prefer sleeping through a sermon there, 
to any other church in the city.' Part of the rest is 
used as a cart-house, the largest chapel is a commo- 
dious carpenter's shop, and the aisles round the part 
which is still a church, where there has been an 
attempt at restoration in painting the roof yellow and 



GOUDA. 19 

putting up some hideous yellow seats, are a playground 
for the children of the town, who are freely admitted 
in their perambulators, though for strangers there is a 
separate fee for each part of the edifice they enter. 

We went to see the pictures in the Museum be- 
queathed to the town by Jacob Otto Boyman, but did 
not admire them much. It takes time to accustom 
one's mind to Dutch art, and the endless representa- 
tions of family life, with domestic furniture, pots and 
pans, &:c., or of the simple local landscapes — clipped 
avenues, sandy roads, dykes, and cottages, or even of 
the cows, and pigs, and poultr}-, which seem wonder- 
fully executed, but, where one has too much of the 
originals, scarcely worth the immense amount of time 
and labour bestowed upon them. The calm seas of 
Van de Welde and Van der Capelle onl)- afford a cer- 
tain amount of relief The scenes of villacre life are 

o 

seldom pleasing, often coarse, and never have anything 
elevating to offer or ennobling to recall. We thought 
that the real charm of the Dutch school to outsiders 
consists in the immense power and variety of its 
portraits. 

Hating Rotterdam, ^ve thankfully felt ourselves 
speeding over the flat, rich lands to Gouda, where 
we found an agricultural fete going on, banners 
half way down the houses, and a triumphal arch as 

c 2 



20 IN HOLLAND. 

the entrance to the square, formed of spades, rakes, 
and forks, with a plough at the top, and decorated 
with corn, potatoes, turnips, and carrots, and cornu- 
copias pouring out flowers at the sides. In the 
square — a great cheese market, for the Gouda cheese 
is esteemed the best in Holland — is a Gothic Stadhuis, 
and beyond it, the Groote Kerk of 1552, of which 
the bare interior is enlivened by the stained windows 
executed by Wonter and Dirk Crabeth in 1555-57. 
We were the better able to understand the design of 
these noble windows because the cartoon for each 
was spread upon the pavement in front of it ; but one 
could not help one's attention being unpleasantly dis- 
tracted b}' the number of men of the burgher class, 
smoking and with their hats on, who were allowed to 
use the church as a promenade. Gouda also made an 
unpleasant impression upon us, because, expensive 
as we found every hotel in Holland, vrc were no- 
where so outrageously cheated as here. 

It is a brief journey to the Hague — La Haye, 
Gravenhage — most delightful of little capitals, with its 
comfortable hotels and pleasant surroundings. The 
town is still so small that it seems to merit the name 
of ' the largest village in Europe,' which was given to 
it because the jealousy of other towns prevented its 
having any vote in the States General till the time of 



THE HAGUE. 



21 



Louis Bonaparte, who gave it the privileges of a city. 
It is said that the Hague, more than any other place, 
may recall what Versailles was just before the great 
revolution. It has thoroughly the aspect of a little 
royal city. Without any of the crowd and bustle 
of Amsterdam and Rotterdam, it is not dead like the 




THE VIJVER. 



smaller towns of Holland ; indeed, it even seems to 
have a quiet gaiet)', without dissipation, of its own. 
All around are parks and gardens, whence wide streets 
lead speedily through -the new town of the rich bour- 
geoisie to the old central town of stadholders, where 
a beautiful lake, the Vijver, or fish-pond, comes as a 



2 2 IN HOLLAND. 

surprise, w ith the eccentric old palace of the Binnen- 
hof rising straight out of its waters. We had been 
told it was picturesque, but were prepared for nothing 
so charming as the variet}' of steep roofs and towers, 
the clear reflections, the tufted islet, and the beautiful 
colouring of the whole scene of the Vijver. Skirting 
the lake, we entered the precincts of the palace through 
the picturesque Gudevangen Poort, where Cornelius 
de Witte, Burgomaster of Dort, was imprisoned in 
1672, on a false accusation of having suborned the 
surgeon William Tichelaur to murder the Prince of 
Orange. He was dragged out hence and torn to 
pieces by the people, together with his brother Jean 
dc Witte, Grand Pensioner, whose house remains hard 
b\' in the Kneuterdijk. 

The court of the Binncnhof is exceedingly hand- 
some, and contains the ancient Gothic Hall of the 
Knights, where Johann van Olden Barneveld, Grand 
Pensioner, or Prime Minister, was condemned to death 
' for having conspired to dismember the States of the 
Netherlands, and greatly troubled God's Church,' and 
in the front of which (May 24, 16 19) he was beheaded. 

Close to the north-east gate of the Binnenhof is 
the handsome house called Mauritshuis, containing 
the inestimable Picture Galler\' of the Hague, which 
will bear many visits, and has the great charm of not 



THE HAGUE. 



23 



being huge beyond the powers of endurance. On the 
ground floor are chiefly portraits, amongst which a 
simple dignified priest by Philippe de Champaigne, 
with a far-away expression, will certainly arrest at- 
tention. Deeply interesting is the portrait by Ravcs- 
teyn of William the Silent, in his ruff and steel armour 








KALL OF THE KXIGHTS, THE HAGUE. 



embossed with gold— a deeply lined face, with a slight 
peaked beard. His widow, Louise de Coligny, is also 
represented. There is a fine portrait by Schalckcn 
of our William the Third. Noble likenesses of Sir 
George Sheffield and his wife Anna Wake, by Van- 
dyke, are a pleasing contrast to the many works of 



24 I^ HOLLAND. 

Rubens. There arc deeply interesting portraits by 
Albert Diirer and Holbein. 

On the first floor wo. must sit down before the 
great picture which Rembrandt painted in his twenty- 
sixth }'car (1632) of the School of Anatom}-. Here 
the shrewd professor, Nicholaus Tulp, with a face 
brimming with knowledge and intelligence, is ex- 
pounding the anatomy of a corpse to a number of 
members of the guild of surgeons, some of whom are 
full of eager interest and inquiry, whilst others are in- 
attentive : the dead figure is greatly foreshortened 
and not repulsive. In another room, a fine work of 
Thomas de Ke3'ser represents the Four Burgomasters 
of Amsterdam hearing of the arrival of Marie de 
Medicis. A beautiful work of Adrian van Ostade is 
full of light and character — but only represents a 
stolid boor drinking to the health of a fiddler, while 
a child pla\-s with a dog in the background. 

A group of admirers will always be found round 
' the Immortal Bull ' of Paul Potter, which was con- 
sidered the fourth picture in importance in the Louvre, 
when the spoils of Europe were collected at Paris. 
De Amicis says, ' It lives, it breathes ; .with his bull 
Paul Potter has w^-itten the true Id}-1 of Holland.' 
It is, however — being really a group of cattle — not a 
pleasing, though a life-like picture. Much more 



THE HAGUE, 25 

attractive is the exquisite ' Presentation 'of Rembrandt 
(163 1), in which Joseph and Mar)-, simple peasants, 
present the Holy Child to Simeon, a glorious old 
man in a jewelled robe, who invokes a blessing upon 
the infant, while other priests look on with interest. 
A wonderful ray of light, falling upon the principal 
group, illuminates the whole temple. Perhaps the 
most beautiful work in the whole gallery is the Young 
Housekeeper of Gerard Dou. A lovely young woman 
sits at work b}' an open window looking into a street. 
By her side is the baby asleep in its cradle, over which 
the maid is leaning. The light falls on the chandelier 
and all the household belongings of a well-to-do citizen : 
in all there is the same marvellous finish ; it is said 
that the handle of the broom took three days to paint. 
There is not much to disco\-er in the streets of the 
Hague. In the great square called the Plein is the 
statue of William the Silent, with his finger raised, 
erected in 1 848 ' by the grateful people to the father 
of their fatherland.' In the fish-market, tame storks 
are kept, for the same reason that bears are kept at 
Berne, because storks are the arms of the town. But 
the chief attraction of the place lies in its lovely 
walks amid the noble beeches and oaks of the Bosch, 
beyond which on the left is Huis ten Bosch, the Petit 
Trianon of the Hague, the favourite palace of Queen 



26 



IN HOLLAND. 



Sophie, who held her hterary court and died there. 
It is a quiet country house, looking out upon flats, with 
dykes and a windmill. All travellers seem to visit it, 
— which must be a ceaseless surprise to the extortion- 
ate custode to whom they have to pay a gulden a head, 
and who will hurry them rapidly through some com- 
monplace rooms in which there is nothing really worth 
seeing. One room is covered with paintings of the 




SCHEVENINGEN. 



Rubens school, amid which, high in the dome, is a 
portrait of the Princess Amalia of Solms, who built 
the house in 1647. 

A tram takes people for twopence halfpenn\' to 
Scheveningen through the park, a thick wood with 
charming forest scenery. As the trees become more 
scattered, the roar of the North Sea is heard upon the 
shore. Above the sands, on the dunes or sand-hills, 



DELFT. 27 

which extend from the Helder to Dunkirk, is a broad 
terrace, lined on one side by a row of wooden pavil- 
ions with flags and porticoes, and below it are long 
lines of tents, necessary in the intense glare, while, 
nearer the waves, arc thousands o{ beehive-like 
refuges, with a single figure seated in each. The flat 
monotonous shore would soon pall upon one, yet 
through the whole summer it is an extraordinary lively 
scene. The placid happiness of Dutch family life has 
here taken possession. On Sunday afternoons, 
especially, the sands seem as crowded with human 
existence as they are represented in the picture of 
Lingelbach, which we have seen in the Mauritshuis, 
portraying the vast multitude assembled here to wit- 
ness the embarkation of Charles II. for England. 

An excursion must be made to Delft, only twenty 
minutes distant from the Hague by rail. Pepys calls 
it ' a most sweet town, with bridges and a river in 
every street,' and that is a tolerably accurate descrip- 
tion. It seems thinly inhabited, and the Dutch them- 
selves look upon it as a place where one will die of 
ennui. It has scarcely changed \\\\\\ two hundred 
years. The view of Delft by Van der Meer in the 
Museum at the Hague might have been painted 
yesterday. All the trees are clipped, for in artificial 
Holland every work of Nature is artificialised. At 



28 



IN HOLLAND. 



certain seasons, numbers of storks may be seen upon 
the chimney-tops, for Delft is supposed to be the stork 
town far excellence. Near the shady canal Oude Delft 
is a low building-, once the Convent of S. Agata, with 
an ornamented door surmounted b}- a relief, leading 




ENTRANCE TO S. AGATA, DELFT. 



into a courtyard. It is a common barrack now, for 
Holland, which has no local histories, has no regard 
whatever for its historic associations or monuments. 
Yet this is the greatest shrine of Dutch history, for it 
is here that William the Silent died. 



DELFT. 



29 



Philip II. had promised 25,000 crowns of gold to 
any one who would murder the Prince of Orange. 
An attempt had already been made, but had failed, 
and William refused to take any measures for self- 
protection, saying, ' It is useless : my years are in 
the hands of God : if there is a wretch who has no 
fear of death, m.y life is in his hand, however I may 
guard it.' At length, a }'oung man of seven-and- 
twenty appeared at Delft, who gave himself out to be 
one Guyon, a Protestant, son of Pierre Guyon, exe- 
cuted at Besancon for having embraced Calvinism, 
and declai'ed that he was exiled for his religion 
Really he was Balthazar Gerard, a bigoted Catholic, 
but his conduct in Holland soon procured him the 
reputation of an evangelical saint. The Prince took 
him into his service and sent him to accompany a 
mission from the States of Holland to the Court of 
France, whence he returned to bring the news of the 
death of the Duke of Anjou to William. At that 
time the Prince was living with his court in the con- 
vent of S. Agata, where he received Balthazar alone 
in his chamber. The moment was opportune, but the 
would-be assassin had no arms ready. William gave 
him a small sum of money and bade him hold him- 
self in readiness to be sent back to France. With 
the money Balthazar bought two pistols from a soldier 



30 IN HOLLAND. 

(who afterwards killed himself when he heard the use 
which was made of the purchase). On the next da}', 
June lO, 1584, Balthazar returned to the convent as 
William was descending the staircase to dinner, with 
his fourth wife, Louise de Coligny (daughter of the 
Admiral who fell in the massacre of S. Bartholomew), 
on his arm. He presented his passport and begged 
the Prince to sign it, but was told to return later. At 
dinner the Princess asked William who was the voune 
man who had spoken to him, for his expression was 
the most terrible she had ever seen. The Prince 
laughed, said it was Guyon, and was as gay as usual. 
Dinner being over, the family party were about to re- 
mount the staircase. The assassin was waiting in a 
dark corner at the foot of the stairs, and as William 
passed he discharged a pistol with three balls and 
fled. The Prince staggered, sa}-ing, ' I am wounded ; 
God have mercy upon me and my poor people.' His 
sister Catherine van Schwartzbourg asked, ' Do you 
trust in Jesus Christ .-* ' He said, ' Yes,' with a feeble 
voice, sat down upon the stairs, and died. 

Balthazar reached the rampart of the town in 
safety, hoping to swim to the other side of the moat, 
where a horse awaited him. But he had dropped his 
hat and his second pistol in his flight, and so he was 
traced and seized before he could leap from the wall. 



DELFT. 31 

Amid horrible tortures, he not only confessed, but 
continued to triumph in his crime. His judges be- 
lieved him to be possessed of the devil. The next 
day he was executed. His right hand was burnt off 
in a tube of red-hot iron : the flesh of his arms and 
legs was torn off with red-hot pincers ; but he never 
made a cry. It was not till his breast was cut open, 
and his heart torn out and flung in his face, that he 
expired. His head v.as then fixed on a pike, and his 
body cut into four quarters, exposed on the four gates 
of the town. 

Close to the Prinsenhof is the Oude Kerk with a 
leaning tower. It is arranged like a very ugly theatre 
inside, but contains, with other tombs of celebrities, 
the monument of Admiral van Tromp, 1650 — ' Mar- 
tinus Harberti Trompius ' — whose effigy lies upon his 
back, with swollen feet. It was this \'an Tromp who 
defeated the English fleet under Blake, and perished, 
as represented on the monument, in an engagement 
off Scheveningen. It was he who, after his victory 
over the English, caused a broom to be hoisted at his 
mast-head to typify that he had swept the Channel 
clear of his enemies. 

The Nieuwe Kerk in the Groote Markt (1412-76) 
contains the magnificent monument of William the 
Silent by Hendrik de Keyser and A. Oucllin (1621). 



32 IN HOLLAND. 

Black marble columns support a white canopy over 
the white sleeping figure of the Prince, who is re- 
presented in his little black silk cap, as he is familiar 
to us in his pictures. In the recesses of the tomb — 
— ' sojuptucux et tojirmente,' as Montegut calls it — are 
statues of Liberty, Justice, Prudence, and Religion. 
At the feet of William lies his favourite dog, which 
saved his life from midnight assassins at Malines, 
by awakening him. At the head of the tomb is 
another figure of William, of bronze, seated. In the 
same church is a monument to Hugo Grotius — ' pro- 
digium Europae ' — the greatest lawyer of the seven- 
teenth century, presented to Henri IV. by Barneveld 
as ' La merveille de la Hollande.' 

On leaving the Hague a few hours should be 
given to the dull university town of Leyden, unless it 
has been seen as an afternoon excursion from the 
capital. This melancholy and mildewed little town, 
mouldering from a century of stagnation, the birth- 
place of Rembrandt, surrounds the central tower of 
its Burg — standing in the grounds of an inn, which 
exacts payment from those who visit it. Close by is 
the huge church of S. Pancras — Houglansche Kerk 
— of the fifteenth century, containing the tomb of Van 
der Werff, burgomaster during the famous siege, who 
answered the starving people, when they came demand- 



LEYDEN. 2>l 

ing bread or surrender, that he had ' sworn to defend the 
city, and, with God's help, he meant to keep his oath, 
but that if his body would help them to prolong the 
defence, they might take it and share it amongst those 
who were most hungry.' A covered bridge over a 
canal leads to the Bredenstrasse, where there is a 
picturesque grey stone Stadhuis of the sixteenth 
century. It contains the principal work of Cornelius 
Engelbrechtsen of Leyden (1468-1533;, one of the 
earliest of Dutch painters — an altarpiece representing 
the Crucifixion, with the Sacrifice of Abraham and 
Worship of the Brazen Serpent in the side panels, 
as symbols of the Atonement : on the pedestal is 
a naked body, out of which springs a tree — the 
tree of life — and beside it kneel the donors. The 
neighbouring church of S. Peter (13 15) contains 
the tomb of Boerhaave, the physician, whose lectures 
in the University were attended b}- Peter the Great, 
and for whom a Chinese mandarin found ' a I'illustre 
M. Boerhaave, medecin, en Europe,' quite sufficient 
direction. Boerhaave was the doctor who said that 
the poor were his best patients, for God paid for 
them. 

The streets are grass-grown, the houses damp, the 
canals green with weed. The University has fallen 
into decadence since others were established at 

D 



34 /A" HOLLAND. 

Utrecht, Groningen, and Amsterdam ; but Le\-dcn is 
still the most flourishing of the four. When William 
of Orange offered the citizens freedom from taxes, as 
a reward for their endurance of the famous siege, they 
thanked him, but said they would rather have a uni- 
versity. Grotius and Cartesius (Descartes), Arminius 
and Gcmar, were amongst its professors, and the 
University possesses an admirable botanical museum 
and a famous collection of Japanese curiosities. 

The Rhine cuts up the towm of Leyden into end- 
less islands, connected b\' a hundred and fifty bridges. 
On a quiet canal near the Beesten Markt is the 
Museum, which contains the ' Last Judgment ' of 
Lucas van Leyden (1494-1533), a scholar of En- 
gelbrechtsen, and one of the patriarchs of Dutch 
painting. 

A few minutes bring us from Leyden to Haarlem 
by the railway. It crosses an isthmus between the 
sea and a lake which covered the whole country 
between Leyden, Haarlem, and Amsterdam till 1839, 
when it became troublesome, and the States-General 
forthwith, after the fashion of Holland, voted its 
destruction. Enormous engines were at once em- 
ployed to drain it by pumping the water into canals, 
which carried it to the sea, and the country was the 
richer by a new province. 



HAARLEM. 



35 



Haarlem, on the river Spaarne, stands out distinct 
in recollection from all other Dutch towns, for it has 
the most picturesque market-place in Holland — the 
Groote Alarkt — surrounded by quaint houses of 
varied outline, amidst which rises the Groote Kcrk 




MARKET-fLACE. HAARLEM. 



of S. Bavo, a noble cruciform fifteenth-century 
building. The interior, however, is as bare and 
hideous as all other Dutch churches. It contains a 
monument to the architect Conrad, designer of the 
famous locks of Katwijk, 'the defender of Holland 
against the fury of the sea and the power of 



1) 2 



o 



6 IN HOLLAND. 



tempests.' Behind the choir is the tomb of the poet 

Bilderdijk, who onU' died in 1 831, and near this the 

-grave of Laurenz Janzoom — the Coster or Sacristan 

— who is asserted in his native town, but never be- 

Heved outside it, to have been the real inventor of 

printing, as he is said to have cut out letters in wood, 

and taken impressions from them in ink, as early as 

1423. His partisans also maintain that whilst he 

was attending a midnight mass, praying for patience 

to endure the ill-treatment of his enemies, all his 

implements were stolen, and that when he found 

this out on his return he died of grief. It is further 

declared that the robber was Faust of Mayence, the 

brother of Gutenberg, and that it was thus that the 

honour of the invention passed from Holland to 

German}', where Gutenberg produced his invention 

of movable type twelve years later. There is a 

statue of the Coster in front of the church, and, on 

its north side, his house is preserved and adorned 

with his bust. 

Amongst a crowd of natives with their hats on, 
talking in church as in the market-place, we waited 
to hear the famous organ of Christian Muller 
(1735-38), and grievously were we disappointed with 
its discordant noises. All the men smoked in 
church, and this we saw repeatedly ; but it would 



HAARLEM. 



37 



be difficult to say where we ever saw a Dutchman 
with a pipe out of his mouth. Every man seemed 
to be systematically smoking away the few wits he 
possessed. 

Opposite the Groote Kerk is the Stadhuis, an old 
palace of the Counts of Holland remodelled. It 
contains a delightful little galler}'- of the works of 
Franz Hals, which at once transports the spectator 
into the Holland of two hundred years ago— such is 
the marvellous variety of life and vigour impressed 
into its endless figures of stalwart officers and hand- 
some young archers pledging each other at banquet 
tables and seeming to welcome the visitor with jovial 
smiles as he enters the chamber, or of serene old 
ladies, ' regents ' of hospitals, seated at their council 
boards. The immense power of the artist is shown 
in nothing so much as in the hands, often gloved, 
dashed in with instantaneous power, }-et always 
having the effect of the most consummate finish at a 
distance. Behind one of the pictures is the entrance 
to the famous 'secret-room of Haarlem,' seldom seen, 
but containing an inestimable collection of historic 
relics of the time of the famous siege of Leyden. 

April and May are the best months for visiting 
Haarlem, which is the bulb nursery garden of the 
world. ' Oignons a fleurs ' are advertised for sale 



38 IN HOLLAND. 

everywhere. Tulips arc more cultivated than any 
other flowers, as ministering most to the national 
craving for colour ; but times are changed since a 
single bulb of the tulip ' L'Amiral Liefkenshoch ' 
sold for 4,500 florins, one of ' Viceroy ' for 4,200, 
and one of' Semper Augustus' for 13,000. 

Now we entered Amsterdam, to which we had 
looked forward as the climax of our tour, having 
read of it and pondered upon it as ' the Venice of 
the north- ; ' but our expectations were raised much 
too hiij^h. Anv-thiuL"- more unlike Venice it would 
be difficult to imagine : and there is a terrible want 
of varictv and colour ; many of the smaller towns of 
Holland are far more interesting and infinitely more 
picturesque. 

A castle was built at Amsterdam in 1204, but 
the town only became important in the sixteenth 
century, since \\hich it has been the most commercial 
of ancient European cities. It is situated upon the 
influx of the Amstel to the Y, as the arm of the 
Zuider Zee which forms the harbour is called, and it 
occupies a huge semicircle, its walls being enclosed 
by the broad moat, six and a half miles long, which 
is known as Buitensingel. The greater part of the 
houses are built on piles, causing Erasmus to say 
that the inhabitants lived on trees like rooks. In 



AMSTERDAM. 



39 



the centre of the town is the great square called 
Dam, one side of \\'hich is occupied by the handsome 
Royal Palace — Het Palais — built b}- J. van Kampen 
in 1648. The Nieuwe Kerk (i 408-1 470) contains a 
number of monuments to adm.irals, including those of 
Van Ruiter — ' immensi tremor oceani ' — who com- 




MUL NEAR AMSTEKDAM. 



manded at the battle of Solbay, and Van Speyk, 
who blew himself up with his ship in 1831, rather 
than yield to the Belgians. In the Oude Kerk of 
1300 there are more tombs of admirals. Hard by, 
in the Nieuwe Markt, is the picturesque cluster of 



40 IN HOLLAND. 

fifteenth-century towers called S. Anthonicswaag, 
once a city gate and now a weighing-house. 

But the great attraction of Amsterdam is the 
Picture Gallery of the Trippenhuis, called the Rijks 
Museum, and it deserves many visits. Amongst the 
portraits in the first room we were especially attracted 
by that of William the Silent in his skull-cap, by 
iMicreveld, but all the House of Orange are repre- 
sented here from the first to the last We also see 
all the worthies of the nation — Ruyter, Van Tromp 
and his wife, Grotius and his wife, Johann and 
Cornel is de Witt, Johann van Oldcnharncveldt, and 
his wife Maria of Utrecht, a peaceful old lady in a 
ruff and brown dress edged with fur, by Moreelse. 
The two great pictures of the gallery hang opposite 
each other. That by Bartholomew van der Heist, 
the most famous of Dutch portrait-painters, repre- 
sents the Banquet of the Musqueteers, who thus 
celebrated the Peace of Westphalia, June i8, 1648. 
It contains twent}'-five life-size portraits, is the best 
work of the master, and was pronounced by Sir 
Joshua Re}-nolds to be the ' first picture of portraits 
in the world.' The canvas is a mirror faithfully 
representing a scene of actual life. In the centre 
sits the jovial, rollicking Captain de Wits with his 
legs crossed. The delicate imitation of reality is 



AMSTERDAM. 41 

equally shown in the Rhenish wine-glasses, and in 
the ham to which one of the guests is helping 
himself. 

The rival picture is the ' Night Watch ' of Rem- 
brandt (1642), representing Captain Frans Banning 
Kok of Purmerland and his lieutenant W'illem van 
Ruytenberg of Vlaardingen, emerging from their 
watch-house on the Singel. A joyous troop pursue 
their leader, who is in a black dress. A strange light 
comes upon the scene, who can tell whence ? Half 
society has always said that this picture was the 
marvel of the world, half that it is unworthy of its 
artist ; but no one has ever been quite indifferent to it. 

Of the other pictures we must at least notice, by 
Nicholas Maas, a thoughtful girl leaning on a cushion 
out of a window with apricots beneath ; and by Jan 
Steen, ' The Parrot Cage,' a simple scene of tavern 
life, in which the v/aiting-maid calls to the parrot 
hanging aloft, who looks knowingly out of the cage, 
whilst all the other persons present go on with their 
different employments. In the 'Eve of S. Nicholas,' 
another work of the same artist, a naughty boy finds 
a birch-rod in his shoe, and a good little girl, laden 
with gifts, is being praised by her mother, whilst 
other children are looking up the chimney by which 
the discriminating fairy Befana is supposed to have 



42 IN HOLLAND. 

taken her departure. There are man\- beautiful 
works of Ruysdael, most at home amongst water- 
falls ; a noble Vandyke of 'William II.' as a bo)-, 
with his little bride, Mary Stuart, Charles I.'s 
daughter, in a brocaded silver dress ; and the famous 
Terburg called 'Paternal Advice' (known in England 
b)' its replica at Bridgewater HouseJ, in which a 
daughter in white satin is receiving a lecture from 
her father, her back turned to the spectator, and 
her annoyance, or repentance, only exhibited in her 
shoulders. Another famous work of Terburg is ' The 
Letter,' which is being brought in b\' a trumpeter to 
an officer seated in his uniform, ^\ ith his young wife 
kneeling at his side. Of Gerard Dou Amsterdam 
possesses the wonderful ' Evening School,' with four 
luminous candles, and some thoroughly Dutch chil- 
dren. A crirl is laborioush- followinij with her finsi;er 
the instructions received, and a boy is diligently 
writing on a slate. The girl who stands behind, 
instructing him, is holding a candle which throws a 
second light upon his back, that upon the table 
falling on his features ; indeed the painting is often 
known as the ' Picture of the Four Candles.' 

Through the lab\'rinthine quays we found our 
wa>' to the Westerhoof to take the afternoon steamer 
to Purmerende for an excursion to Broek, ' the 



BROEK. 43 

cleanest village in the world.' Crossing the broad 
Amstel, the vessel soon enters a canal, which some- 
times lies at a great depth, nothing being visible but 
the tops of masts and points of steeples ; and which 
then, after passing locks, becomes level with the tops 
of the trees and the roofs of the houses. We left the 
steamer at T Schouw, and entered, on a side canal, 
one of the trekschuiten, which, until the time of 
railroads, were the usual means of travel — a long 
narrow cabin, encircled by seats, forms the whole 
vessel, and is drawn by a horse ridden by a boy (het- 
jagerte) — a most agreeable easy means of locomo- 
tion, for movement is absolutely imperceptible. 

No place was ever more exaggerated than Broek. 
There is really very little remarkable in it, except 
even a greater sense of dampness and ooziness than 
in the other Dutch villages. It was autumn, and 
there seemed no particular attempt to remove the 
decaying vegetation or trim the little gardens, or to 
sweep up the dead leaves upon the pathways, yet 
there used to be a law that no animal was to enter 
Brock for fear of its being polluted. A brick path 
winds amongst the low wooden cottages, painted blue, 
green, and white, and ends at the church, with its 
miniature tombstones. 

The most interesting excursion to be made from 



>-'•*'*' ^ 


*« 'fm 


•^. 


*■ ^ 


ft 


• <9rjffe«-/ 





44 I-^^ HOLLAND. 

Amsterdam is that to the Island of Marken in the 
Zuider Zee — a huge meadow, where the peasant 
women pass their whole Hves without ever seeing 
anything beyond their island, whilst their husbands, 
who with very few exceptions are fishermen, see 
nothing be\-ond the fisher-towns of the Zuider 
Zee. There are vcr\- picturesque costumes here, 
the men wearing red \\'oollen shirts, brown vests, 
wooden shoes, fur caps, and gold buttons to their 
collars and knickerbockers ; the women, embroidered 
stomachers, which are handed down for generations, 
and enormous white caps, lined with brown to show 
off the lace, and with a chintz cover for week days, 
and their own hair flowing below the cap over their 
shoulders and backs. 

An evening train, with an old lady, in a diamond 
tiara and gold pins, for our companion, took us to the 
H elder, and we awoke next morning at the pleasant 
little inn of Du Burg upon a view of boats and nets 
and the low-h'ing Island of Texel in the distance. 
The boats and the fishermen are extremely pic- 
turesque, but there is nothing else to see, after the 
visitor has examined the huge granite Helder Dyke, 
the artificial fortification of north Holland, which 
contends successfully to preserve the land against the 
sea. There is an admirably managed Naval Institute 



THE HELDER. 



45 



here. It was by an expedition from the Holder that 
Nova Zembla was discovered, and it was near this 
that Admirals Ruyter and Tromp repulsed the English 
fleet. Texel, which lies opposite the Helder, is the 
first of a chain of islands ^Vlieland, Terschelling-, 
and Ameland, which protect the entrance of the 
Zuider Zee. 

The country near the Helder is bare and desolate 
in the extreme. It is all peat, and the rest of Holland 
uses it as a fuel mine. It was here that the genius of 
Ruysdael was often able to make a single tree, or even 
a bush rising out of the flat by a stagnant pool, both 
interesting and charming to the spectator. We crossed 
the levels to Alkmaar, which struck us as being alto- 
gether the prettiest place in the country and as pos- 
sessing all those attributes of cleanliness which arc 
usually given to Broek. The streets, formed of bricks 
fitted close together, are absolutely spotless, and every 
house front shines fresh from the mop or the syringe. 
Yet excessive cleanliness has not dcstro}'ed the pic- 
turesqueness of the place. The fifteenth-century 
church of S. Lawrence, of exquisitely graceful ex- 
terior, rises in the centre of the town, and, in spite of 
being hideously defaced inside, has a fine vaulted roof, 
a coloured screen, and, in the chancel, a curious tomb 
to Florens V., Count of Holland, 1295, though only 



46 



IN HOLLAND. 



his heart is buried there. Near the excellent Hotel 
du Burg is a most bewitching almshouse, with an old 
tourelle and screen, and a lovely garden in a court 
surrounded by clipped lime-trees. And more charm- 
ing still is an old weigh-house of 1582, for the cheese, 
the great manufacture of the district, for which there 



i.^. 
,^ii~-.- 






h~ 



J?'-^^- ' 



Jh 



j,^-~7^0/,if, 









.'^-<i■i 




APPROACH TO ALKMAAK. 



is a famous market every Friday, where capital cos- 
tumes may be seen. The rich and gaily painted facade 
of the old building, reflected in a clear canal, is a 
perfect marvel of beauty and colour ; and artists 
should sta\' here to paint — not the view given here, 
but another which we discovered too late — more in 
front, with gable-ended houses leading up to the 



ALKMAAR, HOORN. 



47 



principal building, and all its glowing colours repeated 
in the water. 

It is three hours' drive from Alkmaar to Hoorn, 
a charming old town with bastions, gardens, and 




THE WEIGH-HOUSE, ALK.MAAR. 



semi-ruined gates. On the West Poort a relief com- 
memorates the filial devotion of a poor boy, who 
arrived here in 1579, laboriously dragging his old 
mother in a sledge, when all were flying from the 



48 IN HOLLAND. 

Spaniards. Opposite the weighing-house for the 
cheeses is the State College, which bears a shield with 
the arms of England, sustained by two negroes. It 
commemorates the fact that when \'an Tromp defeated 
the English squadron, his ships came from Hoorn and 
on board were two negroes, who took from the English 
flagship the shield which it was then the custom to 
fix to the stern of a vessel, and brought it back here 
as a troph}-. Hoorn was one of the first places in 
Holland to embrace the reformed religion, which 
spread from hence all o\er the country, but now not 
above half the inhabitants are Calvinists. 

In returning from Alkmaar we stopped to see 
Zaandam, quite in the centre of the land of windm.ills, 
of which we counted eighty as visible from the station 
alone. The\- are of everv shade of colour, and are 
mounted on poles, on towers, on farm buildings, and 
made picturesque by every conceivable variet}- of prop, 
balconv, o-aller\- and insertion. Zaandam is a ver\' 
pretty village on the Zaan which flows into the Y. 
\\\i\\ gail}- painted houses, and ga}- little gardens, and 
perpetual movement to and from its landing-stage. 
Turning south from thence, a little entry on the right 
leads down some steps and over a bridge to some 
cottages on the bank of a ditch, and inside the last 
of these is the tiny venerable hovel where Peter the 



.'.! 



UTRECHT. 



49 



Great stayed in 1697 ^s Peter Michaeloff. It retains 
its tiled roof and contains some old chairs and a box- 
bed, but unfortunately Peter was only here a week. 

The evening of leaving Zaandam we spent at 
Utrecht, of which the name is so well known from 




MILL AT ZAANDAM. 



the peace which terminated the war of the Spanish 
succession, April ii, 1715. The town, long the seat 
of an ecclesiastical court, was also the great centre of 
the Jansenists, dissenters from Roman Catholicism 
under Jansenius, Bishop of Ypres, condemned by 



y^'-" ^. 




■4 


^ 

*.'» 







5° 



ly HOLLAND. 



Alexander VII. in 1656, at the instigation of the 
Jesuits. The doctrines of Jansenius still linger in its 
gloomy houses. Every appointment of a bishop is 
still announced to the Sovereign Pontiff, who as regu- 

i 




PALSHUIZEX, UTRECHT. 



larly responds b}- a bull of excommunication, which is 
read aloud in the cathedral, and then immediately 
put away and forgotten. Solemn and sad, but pre- 
eminently respectable, Utrecht has more the aspect of 
a decayed Geiman cit\- than a Dutch town, and so 



KAMPEN. 5: 

has its Cathedral of S. Martin (1254-67), which, 
though the finest Gothic building in Holland, is only 
a magnificent fragment, with a detached tower (1321- 
82) 338 feet high. The interior as usual is ruined by 
Calvinism and yellow paint. It contains the tomb of 
Admiral van Gent, who fell in the battle of Solbay. 
The nave, which fell in 1674, has never been rebuilt. 
The S. Pieterskerk (1039) and S. Janskerk offer no- 
thing remarkable, but on a neighbouring canal is the 
quaint Paushuizen, or Pope's house, which was built 
by Pope Adrian VI. (Adrian Floriszoom) in 15 17. 
Near this is the pretty little Archiepiscopal Museum, 
full of mediaeval relics. 

The interesting Moravian establishment of Zeist 
may be visited from Utrecht. 

From Utrecht we travelled over sandy flats to 
Kampen, near the mouth of the wide river Yssel, with 
three picturesque gates — Haghen Poort, Cellebroeders 
Poort, and Broeders Poort ; and a town hall of the 
sixteenth century. Here, as frequently elsewhere in 
Holland, we suffered from arriving famished at mid- 
day. All the inns were equally inhospitable: 'The 
table d'hote is at 4 P.M. : we cannot and luill not be 
bothered with cooking before that, and there is nothing 
cold in the house.' ' But you have surely bread 
and cheese ? ' ' Certainly wot— nothing! 

E 2 



52 



IN HOLLAND. 



At ZwoUe, however, we found the Kroon an ex- 
cellent hotel with an obliging landlord ; and Zwolle, 
the native place of Terburg (1608), is a charming old 




CELLEBKOEDERS POORT. KAMPEN. 



town with a girdle of gardens, a fine church (exter- 
nally), and a noble brick gateway called the Sassen- 
poort. 

It was more the desire of seeing something of the 



LEEUWARDEN. 



53 



whole country than anything else, and a certain 
degree of misplaced confidence in the pleasant volumes 
of Harvard, which took us up from Zwolle, through 




SASSENPOORT, AT ZWOLLE. 



Friesland, the cow-paradise, to Leeuwarden, its ancient 
capital. Sad and gloomy as most other towns of 
Holland are, Leeuwarden is sadder and gloomier still. 
Its streets are wide and not otherwise than handsome, 



54 



IN HOLLAND. 



but they are almost deserted, and there are no objects 
of interest to see unless a leaning tower can be called 
so, with a top, like that at Pisa, inclined the other way, 
to keep it from toppling ov'er. An hour's walk from 
the town there is said to be a fine still-inhabited castle, 
and, if time had allowed, respect for S. Boniface would 
have taken us to Murmerwoude, where he was mar- 
tyred (June 8, 853), with his fifty-three companions. 
King Pepin raised a hermitage on the spot, and an 
ancient brick chapel still exists there. 

Here and elsewhere in Friesland nothing is so 
worthy of notice as the helmets — the golden helmets 
of the women — costing something equivalent to 25/. 
or 30/., handed down as heirlooms, fitting close to 
the head, and not allowing a particle of hair to be 
visible. 

In the late evening we went on to Groningen, a 
university town with a good hotel (Seven Provincen), 
an enormous square, and a noble tnll Gothic tower of 
1627, whence the watchman still sounds his bugle. 
Not far off is Midwolde, where the village church has 
fine tombs of Charles Jerome, Baron d'Inhausen and 
his wife, Anna von Ewsum. 

As late as the sixteenth century this province was 
for the most part uninhabited — savage and sand}', and 
overrun by wolves. But three hundred \-ears of hard 



DE VENTER. 



55 



work has transformed it into a fertile country, watered 
by canals, and sprinkled with country houses. Agri- 
culturally it is one of the richest provinces of the 
kingdom. This is mostly due to its possessing a race 
of peasant-farmers who never shrink from personal 
hard work, and who will continue to direct the plough 
whilst they send their sons to the university to study 
as lawyers, doctors, or churchmen. These peasant 
farmers or boers possess the beklemregt, or right of 
hiring land on an annual rent, which the landlord can 
never increase. A peasant can bequeath his right to 
his heirs, whether direct or collateral. To the land, 
this system is an indescribable advantage, the cultiva- 
tors doing their utmost to bring their lands to perfec- 
tion, because they are certain that no one can take 
away the advantage from themselves or their de- 
scendants. 

On leaving Groningen we traversed the grey, 
monotonous, desolate district of the Drenthe, sprinkled 
over at intervals by the curious ancient groups of 
stones called Hunnebedden, or beds of death (Hun 
meaning death), beneath which urns of clay contain- 
ing human ashes have been found. From Deventer 
(where there is an old weigh-house, and a cathe- 
dral of S. Lievin vvith a cr}'pt and nave of 1334), 
time did not allow us to make an excursion to 



56 AV HOLLAND. 

the great royal palace of Het Loo, the favourite 
residence of the sovereigns. The descriptions in 
Harvard rather made us linger unnecessarily at Zut- 
phen, a dull town, with a brick Groote Kcrk (S. Wal- 
purgis) which has little remaining of its original 
twelfth-century date, and a rather picturesque ' bit ' 
on the walls, where the ' Waterpoort ' crosses the 
river like a bridge. 

At Arnhem, the Roman Arenacum, once the re- 
sidence of the Dukes of Gueldres, and still the capital 
of Guelderland, we seemed to have left all the charac- 
teristics of Holland behind. Numerous modern villas, 
which might have been built for Cheltenham or 
Leamington, cover the wooded hills above the Rhine. 
In the Groote Kerk (1452) is a curious monument of 
Charles van Egmont, Due de Gueldres, 1538, but 
there is nothing else to remark upon. We intended 
to have made an excursion hence to Cleves, but des- 
perateh' wet weather set in, and, as Dutch rain often 
lasts for weeks together when it once begins, we were 
glad to hurry England-w^ards, only regretting that we 
could not halt at Nymegen, a most picturesque place, 
where Charlemagne lived in the old palace of the 
Valckhof (or Waalhof, residence on the Waal), of 
which a fragment still exists, with an old baptistery, 
a Stadhuis of 1534, and a Groote Kerk containing a 



CHARACTERISTIC TOWNS. 57 

noble monument to Catherine de Bourbon (1469), wife 
of Duke Adolph of Gueldres. 

We left Holland feeling that we should urge our 
friends by all means to see the pictures at Rotterdam, 
the Hague, and Amsterdam, but to look for all other 
characteristics of the Netherlands in such places as 
Breda, Dortrecht, Haarlem, Alkmaar, and Zwolle. 



IN DENMARK 



IN DENMARK. 

TI^ORMERLY the terrors of a sea-voyage from 
^ Kiel deterred many travellers from thinking of 
a tour in Denmark or Sweden, but now a succession 
of railways makes everything easy, and while nothing 
can be imagined more invigorating or pleasant, there 
is probably no pleasure more economical than a sum- 
mer in Scandinavia. Those who are worn with a 
London season will feel as if every breath in the 
crystal air of Denmark endued them with fresh health 
and strength, and then, after they have seen its old 
palaces and its beech woods and its Thorwaldsen 
sculptures, a voyage of ten minutes will carry them 
over the narrow Sound to the soft beauties of genial 
Sweden and the wild splendours of Norway. 

Either Hamburg or Liibeck must be the starting- 
point for the overland route to Denmark, and the old 
free city of Liibeck, though quite a small place, is one 
of the most remarkable towns in Germany. We ar- 
rived there one hot summer afternoon, after a weary 



62 IN DENMARK. 

journey over the arid sandy plains which separate it 
from Berlin, and suddenly seemed to be transported into 
a land of verdure. Lilacs and roses bloomed every- 
where ; a wood lined the bank of the limpid river 
Trave, and in its waters — beyond the old wooden 
bridge — were reflected all the tallest steeples, often 
strangely out of the perpendicular, of many-towered 
Llibeck. A wonderful gate of red brick and golden- 
hucd terra-cotta is the entrance from the station, and 
in the market-place arc the quaintest turrets, towers, 
tourelles, but all ending in spires. The lofty houses, 
so full of rich colour, throw cool shade on the streets 
on the hottest summer day ; and we enjoyed a 
Sunday in the excellent hotel, with wooden galleries 
opening towards a splashing fountain in a quiet 
square, where a fat constable busied himself in keep- 
ing everybody from fulfilling any avocation whatever 
whilst service was being performed in the churches, 
but let them do exactly as they pleased as soon as it 
was over. 

It must, at best, be a weary journey across West 
Holstein, through a succession of arid flats varied by 
stagnant swamps. We spent the weary hours in 
studying Dunham's ' History of Denmark, Sweden, 
and Norway,' which cannot be sufficiently recom- 
mended to all Scandinavian travellers. The glowing 



SLESIVJG. 63 

accounts in the English guide books of a lake and an 
old castle beguiled us into spending a night at Sles- 
wig, but it turned out that the lake had disappeared 
before the memory of man, and that the castle was a 
white modern barrack. The colourless town and its 
long sleepy suburb, moored as if upon a raft in the 
marshes, strafjo-le along the edge of a waveless fiord. 
At the end is the rugged cathedral like a barn, with 
a belfry like a dovecot, and inside it a curious altar- 
piece by Hans Briiggemann, pupil of Albert Durer, 
and the nobie monument of Frederick I., the first 
Lutheran King of Denmark ; while richly carved 
doors at the sides of the church admit one to see how 
the grandmother of the Princess of Wales and various 
other potentates lie — Danish fashion — in gorgeous 
exposed coffins without any tombs at all. Every- 
where roses grow in the streets, trained upon the 
house walls ; and, up the pavement, crowds of the 
children were hurrying in the early morning, carrying 
in their hands the shoes they were going to wear when 
they were in school. In the evenings these children 
will not venture outside the town, for over the marshes 
they say that the wild huntsman rides, followed by 
his demon hounds and blowing his magic horn. It 
is the spirit of Duke Abel the fratricide, who, in the 
fens, murdered his brother Eric VI. of Denmark, and 



64 IN DENMARK. 

who was afterwards lost there himself, falling from 
his horse, and being dragged down by the weight of 
his armour. To give rest to his wandering spirit, the 
clergy dug up his body and despatched it to Bremen, 
but there his vampire gave the canons no peace, so 
they sent the corpse back again, and now it lies once 
more in the marshes of Gottorp. 

Most unutterably hideous is the country through 
which the railway now travels, wearisome levels only 
broken here and there by mounds, probably sepul- 
chral. A straight line with tiny hillocks at intervals 
would do for a sketch of the whole of Sleswig and 
the greater part of Funen and Zealand. In times of 
early Danish history it was a frequent punishment to 
bury criminals alive in these dismal peat mosses. 
Twelve hours of changelcssly flat scenery bring 
travellers from Hamburg to Frederikshaven, where 
we embark upon the Little Belt, the luggage-vans of 
the train being shunted on board the steamer. Im- 
mediatel)' opposite lie the sandy shores of Funen, 
and in a few minutes we are there. Then four hours 
of ugly scenery take us across the island. It is only 
necessary to look out at the little town of Odense, 
called after the old hero-god, which was the birth- 
place of Hans Christian Andersen in 1805. The 
cathedral of Odense contains the shrine of the sainted 



NYBORG, KORSOR. 65 

King Canute IV. (1080-86), who was murdered 
while kneeHng before the altar, owing to indignation 
at the severe taxation to which the love of Church 
endowment had incited him. 

Nyborg, where we meet the sea again, will recall 
to lovers of old ballads the story of the innocent 
young knight Folker Lo\vmanson,and his cruel death 
here in a barrel of spikes, from the jealousy of 
Waldemar IV. for his beautiful queen Helwig, and 
how, to know his fate — 

With anxious heart did Denmark's Queen 

To Nyborg urge her horse, 
And at the gate his bier she met, 

And on it Folker's corse. 

Such honour shown to son of knight 

I never yet could hear ; 
The Queen of Denmark walked on foot 

Herself before his bier. 

In tears then Helwig mounted horse 

And silent homeward rode, 
For in her heart a life-long grief 

Had taken its abode. 

At Nyborg we embark on a miserable steamer for 
the passage of the Great Belt. It lasts an hour and a 
half, and is often most wretched. On landing at 
Korsor travellers are hurried into the train which is 
waiting for the vessel. 



66 IN DENMARK. 

Now the country improves a little. Here and 

there we pass through great beech woods. Down 

the green glades of one of them a glimpse is caught 

of the college of Soro. It occupies the site of a 

monastery founded by Asker Ryg, a chieftain who, 

when he departed on a journey of warfare, vowed that 

if the child to which his wife, Inge, was about to give 

birth proved to be a girl, he would give his new 

building a spire, but a tower if it were a boy. On his 

return he saw two towers rising in the distance. Inge 

had given birth to twin sons, who lived to become 

Asbiorn Snare, celebrated in the ballad of ' Fair 

Christal,' and Absalon, the warrior Bishop of Roes- 

kilde— 'first captain by sea and land.' Absalon is 

buried here in the church of Soro, which contains the 

tomb of King Olaf, the shortlived son of the famous 

Queen Margaret ; of her cruel father, Waldemar 

Atterdag, whose last words expressed regret that he 

had not suffocated his daughter in her cradle ; and 

of her grandfather, Christopher II., with his wife, 

Euphemia of Pomerania. Soon we pass Ringsted, 

which is scarcely worth stopping at, though its church 

contains the fine brass of King Erik Menred (13 19) 

and his queen, Ingeborga, and though twenty kings 

and queens were entombed there before Roeskilde 

became the ro\-al place of sepulture. Amongst them 



RIXGSTED. 67 

lies the popular Queen Dagmar, first wife of VValdemar 
II., still celebrated in ballad literature, for there is 
scarcely a Dane who is ignorant of the touching story 
of ' Queen Dagmar's Death,' which begins 

Queen Dagmar is lying at Ribe sick, 
At Ringsted is made her grave, 

and which contains her last touching request to her 
husband, and her simple confession of the only ' sin ' 
she could remember — 

Had I on a Sunday not laced my sleeves, 

Or border upon them sewn, 
No pangs had I felt by day or night. 

Or torture of hell-fire known. 

Tradition tells us that the dismal town of Ringsted 
was founded by King Ring, a warrior who, when he 
was seriously wounded in battle, placed the bodies of 
his slain heroes and that of his queen, Alpol, on board 
a ship laden with pitch, and going out to the open 
sea, set the vessel on fire, and then fell upon his 
sword. 

In the twilight we pass Roeskilde, and at loir.M. 
long rows of street lamps reflected in canals show- 
that we have reached Copenhagen. 

To those whose travels have chiefly led them 
southwards there is a great pleasure in the first 
awaking in Copenhagen. Everything is new — the 

!■■ 2 



68 IN DENMARK. 

associations, the characteristics, the history ; even the 
very names on the omnibuses are suggestive of the 
sagas and romances of the North ; and though the 
summer sun is hot, the atmosphere is as clear as that 
of a tramontana day in an Itahan winter, and the air 
is indescribably elastic. The comfortable Hotel 
d'Angleterre stands in the Kongens Nytorv, a modern 
square, with trees surrounding a statue in the centre, 
but there are glimpses of picturesque shipping down 
the side streets, and hard by is a spire quite ideally 
Danish, formed by three marvellous dragons with 
their tails twisted together in the air. Tradition 
declares that it was moved bodily from Calmar, in 
the south of Sweden. It rises now from a beautiful 
building of brick erected in 1624 by Christian IV., 
brother-in-law of James I. of England, and used as 
the Exchange. 

Not far off is the principal palace — Christiansborg 
Slot, often rebuilt, and very white and ugly. It 
was partially destroyed by fire in 1884. Besides 
the royal residence, its vast courts contain the 
Chambers of Parliament, the Royal Library, and a 
Picture Gallery chiefly filled with the works of native 
artists, amongst which those of Marstrand and Bloch 
are very striking and well worthy of attention. 

A queer building in the shadow of the palace. 



COPENHAGEN. 



69 



which attracts notice b}' its frescoed walls, is the 
Thorwaldsen Museum, the shrine where Denmark has 
reverentially collected all the works and memorials of 



her greatest artist — Bertel Thorwaldsen. 



Though 









THE DRAGON TOWER, COPENHAGEN. 



his family is said to have descended from the Danish 
king Harold Stildetand, he was born (in 1770) the son 
of one Gottschalk, who, half workman, half artist, was 
employed in carving figures for the bows of vessels. 



70 IN DENMARK. 

From his earliest childhood little Bertel accompanied 
his father to the wharfs and assisted him in his work, 
in which he showed such intelligence that in his 
eleventh year he was allowed to enter the Free School 
of Art. Here he soon made wonderful progress in 
sculpture, but could so little be persuaded to attend 
to other studies that he reached the age of eighteen 
scarcely able to read. In his twenty-third }'ear he 
obtained the great gold medal, to which a travelling 
stipend is attached, and thus he was enabled to go to 
Rome, where, encouraged at first by the patronage of 
Thomas Hope, the English banker, he soon reached 
the highest pitch of celebrity. Denmark became 
proud of her son, so that his visits to his native town 
in 1 8 19 and 1837 were like triumphal progresses, all 
the citv going forth to meet him, and lodging him 
splendidly at the public cost ; but his heart always 
clung to the Eternal City, which continued to be 
the scene of his labours. Of his many works per- 
haps his noble lion at Lucerne is the best known. He 
never married, though he was long attached to a 
member of the old Scottish house of Mackenzie, and 
he died on a visit to Copenhagen in 1 844. 

In accordance with Thorwaldsen's own wish, he 
rests in the centre of his works. His grave has no 
tombstone, but is covered with green ivy. All around 



COPENHAGEN. 71 

the little court which contains it are halls and galleries 
filled with the marvellously varied productions of his 
Gfenius, arranged in the order of their execution — casts 
of all his absent sculptures and many most grand 
originals. Especially beautiful are the statue of 
Mercury, modelled from a Roman boy, of which the 
original is in the possession of Lord Ashburton, and 
the exquisite reliefs of the Ages of Love, and of Day 
and Night, the two latter resulting from the inspiration 
of a single afternoon. But all seem to culminate in 
the great Hall of Christ, for though the statues here 
are only cast from those in the Vor Frue Kirche, they 
are far better seen in the well-lighted chamber than 
in the church. The colossal figures of the apostles 
lead up to the Saviour in sublime benediction ; perhaps 
the statues of Simon Zelotes and the pilgrim S.James 
are the noblest amongst them. In the last room arc 
gathered all the little personal memorials of Thor- 
w^aldsen — his books, pictures, and furniture. 

The Museum of Northern Antiquities should also 
be visited and the Tower of the Trinity Church, with 
a roadway inside making an easy ascent to the strange 
view of many roofs and many waters which is obtained 
from the top. But the most delightful place in Copen- 
hagen is the Palace of Rosenborg, standing at the end 
of a stately old garden — where it was built by Inigo 



73 /X /'/ \.l/./A'A. 

JiMics for Christian 1\'., and containinL; the moiii where 
the kiiiL^ cUeil. w ith his wedihiiL; lUess. aiul most of his 
tither clothes aiul possessicMis. This pahice-buiUlini; 
monarch, cclebratetl lor the tlrinkiniJ bouts in which 





f»^' 



.^ 



■ysicst 



nib KOahNti<.>Ku 1'ALAl.b, CUftiMIAliKN. 



he iniUilqed with his hiotlui -in-law. janies 1. of 
l-aiLihuul, was the greatest ilaiuly o\ his time, anil 
befcire we lea\e Denmark we shall become \ei\- 
lamiliar with his portraits, always distini;uisheil In- 



the wonderful left whisker twisteil into a pii^tail tailing" 
on one side of the chin, (."tther rcx^nis in Rosenborj^- 
are devoted to each of the succeeding;" sovereigns, and 
tilled witli relics aiul iiieniorials which carry one back 
into most romantic corners of Danish histor\\ the 
e\ er-alternate succession of Christians and h^edericks 
making a most terrible bewilderment. t.lv>\\ n to the 
t\\\^ laigiish queens, Louisa the beloved and Caroline 
Matilda the unfortunate. Most curious amongst a 
mvriad obiects of \alue are the three great silver 
Lions — ' Creat IVlt. Little IVlt. and Sound' — which, 
by ancient custom, appear as mourners at all the 
funerals of the soxereigns. accompanying tluMn to 
Roeskilde and returning afterwards to the pal.ice. 

1 hose interested in such matters will \\.\nder as 
we did through the more .uicient parts of Copenh.igen 
in search of old siher and specimens of the older 
Copenhagen china. l'\>rmerly the china m\itated that 
ot Miessen, hut it has now .i more distinctive character, 
and is chiell\- used in reproducing the w \Mks of I'hor- 
waldsen. C openhagen has no other especial m.uui- 
factiues. 

No visitors to tlio Panish capital nnist omit .i \ isit 
to lixoli, tlu^ pioliy odd pleasure grounds \cr\- re- 
spectable too-noar the r.iilw.w station, where all 
kinds ot e\ening anuiseuKMUs aic provided in illu- 



74 IN DENMARK. 

minated gardens and woods by a tiny lake, really 
very pretty. Here we watched the cars rushing like 
a whirlwind down one hill and up another, with their 
inmates screaming in pleasurable agony ; and saw the 
extraordinary feats of ' the Cannon King,' who tossed 
a cannon ball, catching it on his hands, his head, his 
feet — anywhere, and then stood in front of a cannon 
and was shot, receiving in his hands the ball, which 
did nothing worse than twist him round by its force. 

One day we went out — an hour and a half by rail 
— to Roeskilde, where a church was first founded by 
William, an Englishman, in the days of King Harold 
Blaatand (Blue-tooth), brother of Canute the Great. 
It is dedicated to S. Lucius, because tradition tells 
that a terrible dragon, who infested the neighbouring 
fiord and banqueted on the inhabitants, was destroyed 
for ever when the head of the holy Pope S. Lucius 
was brought from Rome and presented for his break- 
fast. The tall spires of the cathedral rise, slender and 
grey, from the little town, and beneath, embosomed in 
sweeping cornfields, a lovely fiord stretches away into 
pale blue distances. Endless kings and queens are 
buried at Roeskilde. The earlier sovereigns have 
glorious tombs, amongst which the most conspicuous 
is that of Queen Margaret — ' the Semiramis of the 
North,' who, born in the prison of Syborg, where her 



ROESKILDE. 75 

unhappy mother Queen Helwig was imprisoned by 
Waldemar Atterhag, and allowed to run wild in the 
forest in her childhood, lived to become one of the 
wisest of Northern sovereigns, and to unite, by the Act 
known as ' the Union of Calmar,' the crowns of Den- 
mark, Sweden, and Norway, which attained unwonted 



j-v 




-■ ' j~^!^ ~:=^''^s^^~=i.=^:;.:^^^^^it^E^, 










ROESKILDE. 



prosperity under her sway. There are effigies of 
Frederic II. and Christian IV., the grandfather and 
uncle of our Charles I., which recall his type of coun- 
tenance and have the same peaked beard. Christian 
IV., the great palace-builder, whose birth was believed 
to have been prophesied by the mermaid Isbrand, 
was born (April 12, 1577) under a hawthorn tree on 



76 IN DENMARK. 

the road between P'rederiksborg and Roeskilde, as 
his mother, Sophia of Mecklenbourg, insisted on tak- 
ing walks with her ladies in waiting far longer than 
was prudent. This king, his father, and all the later 
members of his royal house lie, not in their tombs, 
but in gorgeous coffins embossed with gold and silver 
upon the floor of the church, which has a very odd 
effect. The entrance of one of the private chapels is 
a gate with a huge figure, in wrought ironwork, of the 
devil with his tail in his hand. In another chapel arc 
fine works of Marstrand (1810-75), the best of the 
pupils of Eckersberg, who gave the first stimulus to 
the art of painting in Denmark, where it has since 
attained to great eminence. 

The district around Roeskilde, and indeed the 
greater part of Denmark, is devoted to corn, for there 
is no country in Europe, except England and Bel- 
gium, which can compete with this as a corn-grower. 
It is curious that though the neighbouring Sweden 
and Norway are so covered with pines, no conifer will 
grow in Denmark except under most careful cultiva- 
tion. The principal native tree is the beech, and the 
beech woods are nowhere more beautiful than in 
the neighbourhood of Copenhagen. The railway to 
Elsinore passes through the beautiful beech forests 
which are familiar to us through the stories of Hans 



FREDERIKSB OR G. 



77 



Christian Andersen. Here, near a little roadside 
station, rises tlie Hampton Court of Denmark, the 
great Castle of Frederiksborg, the most magnificent 
of the creations of Christian IV., which John of 
Friburg erected for that monarch, who looked per- 
sonally into the minutest details of his expenses, and 




. u„- _ ■• '■i^--'\'''~y::^.7^^f' 



' ■ -iC t f r :■ ■- ■" ~ 



--^^■^--^^^^ 




THE CASTLE OF FREL^ERIKSBORG. 



so raised this structure, glorious as it is, with an 
economy which greatly astonished his thrifty parlia- 
ment. In the depths of the beech woods is a great 
lake, in the centre of which, on three islands united 
by bridges, rises the palace, most beautiful in its time- 
honoured hues of red brick and grey stone, with high 
roofs, richly sculptured windows, and wondrous 
towers and spires. Each view of the castle seems 



78 IN DENMARK. 

more picturesque than the last. It is a dream of 
architectural beauty, to which the great expanse of 
transparent waters and the deep verdure of the sur- 
rounding woods add a mysterious charm. A gigantic 
gate tower admits the visitor to the courtyard, where 
Christian IV., with his own hand, chopped off the 
head of the Master of the Mint, which he had esta- 
blished here, who had defrauded him. ' He tried to 
cheat us, but we have cheated him, for we have 
chopped his head off,' said the King. Inside, the 
palace has been gorgeously restored since a great 
hrc b\- which it was terribly injured in 1859. The 
chapel, with the pew of Christian IV. — ' bedekammer,' 
pra}-er chamber, it is called — is most curious. There 
is a noble series of the pictures of the native artist 
Carl Bloch, recalling the works of Overbeck in their 
majest}' and depth of feeling, but far more forcible. 

A drive of four miles through beech woods leads 
to the comfortable later palace of Fredensborg, built 
as • a Castle of Peace ' by Frederick IV. and Louisa 
of Mecklenbourg, with a lovely garden, and a view of 
the Esrom lake down green glades, in one of which is 
a m}-sterious assembly of stone statues in Norwegian 
costumes. 

We may either take the railway or drive by Gurre 
from hence to Elsinore (Helsingor), where the great 



ELSINORE. 



79 



castle of Kronberg rises, with many towers built of 
grey stone, at the end of the little town on a low 
promontory jutting out into the sea. Stately avenues 
surround its bastions, and it is delightful to walk upon 
the platform where the first scene of Shakspere's 
' Hamlet ' is laid, and to watch the numberless ships in 







CASTLE OF ELSINORE. 



the narrow Sound which divides Denmark and 
Sweden. The castle is in perfect preservation. It 
was formerly used as a palace. Anne of Denmark 
was married here by pioxy to James VI. of Scotland, 
and here poor Caroline Matilda sate daily for hours at 
her prison window watching vainly for the fleet of 
England which she believed was coming to her 



8o IN DENMARK. 

rescue. Beyond the castle, a sandy plain reminding 
us of Scottish links, covered with bent-grass and 
drifted by seaweed, extends to Marienlyst, a little 
fashionable bathing place embosomed in verdure. 
Here a Carmelite convent was founded by the wife 
of Eric IX., that Queen Philippa — daughter of Henry 
IV. of England — who successfully defended Copen- 
hagen against the Hanseatic League, but was after- 
wards beaten by her husband, because her ships were 
defeated at Stralsund, an indignity which drove her 
to a monastic life. Hamlet's Grave and Ophelia's 
Brook are shown at Marienlyst, having been invented 
for anxious inquirers by the complaisant inhabitants. 
Alas ! both were unknown to Andersen, who lived here 
in his childhood, and it is provoking to learn that 
Hamlet had really no especial connection with 
Elsinore, and was the son of a Jutland pirate in the 
insignificant island of Mors. But Denmark is the 
very home of picturesque stories, which are kept alive 
there by the ballad literature of the land, chiefly of 
the fourteenth or fifteenth centuries, but still known 
to rich and poor alike as in no other country. For 
hundreds of years these poetical histories have been 
the tunes to which, in winter, when no other exercise 
can be taken, people dance for hours, holding each 
other's hands in two lines, making three steps forwards 



THE SOUND. 



Si 



and backwards, keeping time, balancing, or remaining 
still for a moment, as they sing one of their old ballads 
or its refrain. 




TOUEK OF HEI-SINCBORG CHIRJH. 



Tt was in a wild evening, with huge blue foam- 
crested waves rushing down the Sound, that we 
crossed in ten minutes to Helsingborg in Sweden, 

G 



82 /.y DEXMARK. 

mounted for the sunset to the one huge remaining 
tower of its castle, and sketched as typical of almost 
all village towers in Denmark the bclfrv of the church 
where King Eric Menred was married to the Swedish 
princess Ingeborga. 



IN SWEDEN 



IN SWEDEN. 

T T is not beautiful in Sweden, but it is very pretty ;, 
-*- if everything were not so very much aHke, it 
would be very pretty indeed. The whole country as 
far north as Upsala is like an exaggerated Surrey — 
little hills covered with fir-woods and bilberries, 
brilliant, glistening little lakes sleeping in sandy 
hollows, but all just like one another. 

We turned aside in our way from Helsingborg to 
the north to visit the old university of Lund, the 
Oxford of Sweden, a sleepy city, where the students 
lead a separate life in lodgings of their own, only 
being united in the public lectures ; for in Sweden, as 
in Italy, the taking of a degree only proves that the 
graduates have passed a certain number of examina- 
tions, not, as in England, that they have lived 
together for three years at least, forming their cha- 
racter and taste by mutual companionship and 
intimacy. The cathedral of Lund is a most noble 
Norman building, with giants and dwarfs sculptured 



86 



IN SWEDEN. 



against the pillars of its grand crypt, and a glorious 
archbishop's tomb, green and mossy with damp. 

An immense railway journey, by day and night 
through the endless forests, brought us to Stockholm, 
where we arrived in the early morning. Though the 
town is little beyond an ugly collection of featureless 
modern streets, the situation is quite exquisite, for the 




'm.^'^:7^ 



THE JUN'CTIOX OF LAKE MAI.AR AND THE ISALTIC, STOCKHOLM. 



city occupies a succession of islets between Lake 
Malar and the Baltic, surrounding, on a central isle, 
the huge Palace built from stately designs of Count 
Tessin in the middle of the last century, and the old 
church of Riddarholmen, where Gustavus Adolphus 



STOCKHOLM. 87 

and many other royal persons repose beneath the 
banner-hung arches. 

It sounds odd, but, next to the Palace, the most 
imposing building in Stockholm is certainly the Grand 
Hotel Rydberg, which is most comfortable and 
economical, in spite of its palatial aspect. There is 
no table d'hote, and everything is paid for at the time, 
in the excellent restaurant on the first floor of the 
hotel. Here, a side table is always covered with 
dainties peculiarly Swedish, corn and birch brandy, 
and different kinds of potted fish, with fresh butter 
and olives, and it is the universal custom in Sweden 
to attack the side table before sitting down to the 
regular dinner. The rooms in the hotel arc excellent, 
and their front windows overlook all that is most 
characteristic in Stockholm— the glorious view down 
the fiord of the Baltic : its farther hill}- bank covered 
with houses and churches ; the bridge at the junction 
of the Baltic and Lake Malar, which is the centre of 
life in the capital, and the little pleasure garden be- 
low, where hundreds of people are constantl)' eating 
and drinking under the trees, and whence strains of 
music are wafted late into the summer night ; the 
mighty palace dominating the principal island, and 
the little steam gondolas, filled with people, which 
dart and hiss through the waters from one island to 



8S IN SWEDEN. 

another. In Stockholm, where waters are many and 
bridges io^si, these steam gondolas are the chief means 
of communication, and we made great use of them, 
the passages costing twelve oere, or one penny. The 
great white sea-gulls, poising over the water-streets or 
floating upon the waves, are also a striking feature. 

The museums of Stockholm have little to call for 
any especial notice, except a grand statue of the 
sleeping Endymion from the Villa Adriana, and the 
curious collection of royal clothes down to the present 
date, a gallery of costume like that which once 
existed in London at the Tower Royal. The chief 
curiosity which the Swedish collection contains is the 
hat worn by Charles XII. when he was killed, in 
which the upward progress of the bullet can be traced, 
proving that the king's death was caused by an 
assassin, and not the result of a chance shot from the 
walls of Frederikshald. No especial features mark 
the interior of the Palace, though the Royal Stable 
for a hundred and forty-six horses is worthy of a visit ; 
and the churches are uninteresting, except perhaps 
S. Nicholas, the coronation church, which contains 
the helmet and spurs of .S. Olaf, stolen from 
Throndtjern. Riddarholmen can scarcely be regarded 
as a church ; it is rather a great sepulchral hall hung 
with trophies, having a few tombs on the floor of the 



STOCKHOLM. 89 

building, and \aults opening under the side walls, in 
which the different groups of royal persons are buried 
together in families. Under a chapel on the left lies 
Gustavus Adolphus, the justly popular great-grandson 
of Gustavus Wasa, who fell at the battle of Lutzen, 
and who, as soldier, general, and king, ever knew true 
merit, and laboured for the glory of his country 
rather than for his own. In the opposite chapel 
repose the present royal family, descendants of 
Bernadotte, Prince of Pontecorvo, the only one of 
Napoleon's generals whose dynasty still, occupies a 
throne. He began life as a common soldier, and his 
election as Charles XIV. of Sweden v/as chiefly due 
to the kindness with which he treated Swedish 
prisoners taken in the Pomeranian wars. But the 
Swedes have never had cause to repent of their choice, 
and their reigning house is probably the most popular 
in Europe. The coffins of those members of the 
royal family who have died within the memory of 
man are ever laden with fresh flowers. 

Close by the Riddarholmen Church is the most 
picturesque bit of street architecture in Stockholm, 
where a statue of Burger Jarl, the traditional founder 
of the town, forms a foreground to the chapel of 
Gustavus Adolphus and one of the many bridges. 

In saying that Stockholm is not picturesque one 



9° 



IN SWEDEN. 



may seem to have spoken disparagingly, but, never- 
theless, it is perfectly charming: there is so much life 
and movement upon its blue waters, and its many 
little public gardens give such a gay aspect to the 
buildings. Of these, the chief is the KongstragSrdcn, 




RIDDARHOLJIEN, STOCKHOLM. 



surrounding a statue of Charles XIII., where the 
pleasant Cafe Blanche is filled all the evening with 
an animated crowd, gossiping and eating ices under 
the verandah and shrubberies, and listening to the 
music. While we were staying in Stockholm a 
hundred Upsala students came in their white caps to 



ROSENDAL AND ULRIKSDAL. 91 

sing national melodies in the Catherina Church. We 
lived through two hours of fearful heat to hear them, 
and most beautiful it was. King Oscar II. was present 
— a noble royal figure and handsome face. He is the 
ideal sovereign of the age — artist, poet, musician, 
student, equally at home in ancient and modern 
languages, profoundly versed in all his duties, and 
nobly performing them. 

We had intended going often, as the natives do, to 
dine amongst the trees and flowers at Hasselbacken, 
in the Djurgarden, a wooded promontory, to which 
little steamers arc alwaj-s plying, but, alas ! during 
eight of the ten July days we spent at Stockholm it 
rained incessant!}-. We were so cold that we were 
thankful for all the winter clothes we brought with us, 
and were filled with pity for the poor Swedes in being 
cheated out of their short summer, of which every 
day is precious. The streets were always sopping, 
but, in the covered gondolas, we managed several ex- 
cursions to quiet, damp palaces on the banks of lonely 
fiords — Rosendal, remarkable for a grand porphyry 
vase in a brilliant little flower garden ; and Ulriksdal, 
with its clipped avenues and melancholy creek. 

Our limited knowledge of Swedish often caused 
us to embark in amusing ignorance as to whither we 
were going, and led us into many a surprise. One 



92 AV SWEDEN. 

day we set oft, intending to go to Drottningholm, but, 
on reaching the quay, found the steamer just gone. 
At that moment such a fearful storm of rain came on 
that we were obliged to rush for shelter wherever we 
could, and the nearest point of refuge was the deck 
of the steamer jMary, which instantly started. We 
feared we might be bound for the Baltic, and, failing 
to make any one understand us, resolved to disembark 
at the first landing-place. But then the rain was 
worse than ever, and we allowed ourselves to be 
carried on down Lake Malar, till our boat turned into 
a little creek, and landed us on the pier of a manu- 
facturing tow n. We had not reached the end of the 
pier, however, before the rain came on again in such 
convulsive torrents that we fled back to the Maty, 
which again started on its travels, and this time, after 
stopping at many little ports, conveyed us back to 
Stockholm. When we asked the captain what we 
were to pay for our voyage, he said, ' Oh, nothing ;' 
and very much amused he and his crew seemed to be 
by our ignorance and adventures. 

We had a fine day for our excursion by railway to 
Upsala, whence we hired a little carriage to take us on 
to Old Upsala, about three miles distant. A drive 
across a dull, marshy plain brings one to a delightfully 
wild district of downs, covered with hundreds of little 



OLD UPSALA. 93 

sepulchral mounds like Wiltshire barrows, amid which 
three great tumuli, standing close together, are said to 
mark the graves of Odin, Thor, and Fre}'a — heroes in 
their lifetime, gods in their death. Close beside them 
for centuries rose the temple which was the most 
sacred shrine of Scandinavian worship. It glittered 
all over with gold, and a golden chain, nine hundred 
ells in circumference, ran round its roof In the 
temple were three statues, around which hcvered all 
the principal mythological traditions of the north. 
The central figure was that of Odin or AVodan, the 
wizard-king, who is said to have come in the dawn of 
Swedish history from his domains of Asir, which ex- 
tended from the Euxinc to the Caspian, and whose 
capital was Asgard. He landed in Funen, where he 
founded Odense, and left his son Skjold as a sovereign. 
Thence he passed into Sweden, and established his 
government at Sigtuna, not far from Upsala. His 
existence is affirmed by the Saxon Chronicle. He 
was called 'the Father of Victor}-,' for if he laid his 
hands on the heads of his generals, and predicted 
their success when they went out to battle, that 
success never failed them. He was also, says Snorro 
Sturlesen, ' the Father of all the arts of modern 
Europe.' Tradition has endowed him with every 
miraculous power. He could change his looks at 



94 IN SWEDEN. 

pleasure— to his friends most beautiful, but a demon 
to his enemies. By his eloquence he captivated all 
who heard him, and as he always spoke in verse he 
was called ' the Artificer of Song.' His verses were 
endowed with such magic power that they could strike 
his enemies with blindness or deafness, or could blunt 
their weapons. To listen to the sweetness of his 
music even the ghosts would come forth and the 
mountains would unfold their inmost recesses. He 
was the inventor of Runic characters. He could 
slaughter thousands at a blow, and he could render 
his own followers invulnerable. At his will he could 
assume the form of beasts ; at his word the fire would 
cease to burn, the wind to blow, or the sea to rage. 
If he hurled his spear between two armies, it secured 
victor}' to those on whose side it fell. The dwarfs 
(Lapps) had built for him a ship called Skidbladiier, 
in which he could cross the most dangerous seas 
with safety ; but when he did not want to use it, he 
could fold it up like a handkerchief Everything was 
known to Odin, for did he not possess the mummified 
head of his enemy ]\Iimir, which was all-wise, and 
he had only to consult it .^ Yet, with all these gifts 
and attributes, Odin remained human ; he had no 
power over death. When he felt his end approaching 
he assembled all his friends and followers, and, giving 



THE GRAVES OF THE GODS. 



95 



himself nine wounds in a circle, allowed himself to 
bleed to death. The body of the great chieftain was 
burnt, and his ashes were buried under the mound of 
Upsala ; but his spirit was believed to have gone back 
to the marvellous home in the V^alhalla of Asgard, of 
which he had so often spoken, and whither he had 
always said that he should return. Henceforward it 




THE GRAVES OF THE GODS. 



was considered that all blessings and mercies were 
gifts sent by Odin. The younger Edda tells that all 
who die in battle arc Odin's adopted children. The 
Valkyriae pick them out upon the battle-field and 
conduct them to the Valhalla, where they have per- 
petual life in the halls of Odin. Their da}-s are spent 
in hunting or the joys of imaginary combats, and they 



C)6 //V SWEDEN. 

return at night to feast upon the inexhaustible flesh of 
the boar Sahrimnir, and to drink, out of horn cups, the 
mead formed from the milk of a single goat, which is 
strong enough nightly to intoxicate all the heroes. 
Huge logs constantly burn within the palace of Odin, 
for warmth is the northern idea of heaven, while in 
their hell it is eternal winter. When a Scandinavian 
chieftain died in battle, not only were his war-horse 
and all his gold and silver placed upon his funeral- 
pyre, but all his followers slew themselves that he 
might enter the halls of Odin properh' attended. 
The more glorious the chieftain the greater the num- 
ber who must accompan\'him to Valhalla. To rejoin 
Odin in Asgard became the height of a warrior's 
ambition. It is recorded of Ragnar Lodbrok that 
when he was dying no word of lamentation w^as 
heard from him : on the contrary, he was transported 
with joy as he thought of the feast preparing for him 
in Odin's palace. ' Soon, soon,' he exclaimed, ' I 
shall be seated in the pleasant habitation of the gods, 
and drinking mead out of carved horns ! A brave 
man does not dread death, and I shall utter no word 
of fear as I enter the halls of Odin.' But stranger 
than all the legends concerning Odin is the fact that 
his memory is still so far fresh that ' Go to Odin ' 
is yet used by the common people where an uncivil 



THE GRAVES OF THE GODS. 97 

wish as to the lower regions would find expression 
in England. The fourth day of the week still com- 
memorates Odin or Wodan — in old Norse Odinsdgr, 
in Swedish and Danish Onsdag, in English Wednes- 
day. 

On the right hand of Odin, in the temple of Up- 
sala, sate the statue of Freyja, or Freyer, represented 
as a hermaphrodite, with the attributes of productive- 
ness. Freyja was the goddess of love, who rode in 
a car drawn by wild cats. She knew beforehand all 
that would happen, and divided the souls of the dead 
with Odin. She is commemorated in the sixth day 
of the week, that Freytag or Freyja's Day which in 
Latin is Dies Veneris, or Venus' Day. 

On the left of Odin sate Thor, who, says the Edda, 
was ' the most valiant of the sons of Odin.' He was 
the offspring of Odin and Frigga, ' the mother of the 
gods,' and the brother of ' Balder the Beautiful.' As 
the defender and avenger of the gods, he was repre- 
sented as carrying the hammer with which he de- 
stroyed the giants, and which always returned to his 
hand when he threw it. He wore iron gauntlets, and 
had a girdle which doubled his strength when he put 
it on. The fifth day of the week was sacred to Thor, 
in old Norse Thorsdag, in Swedish and Danish Tors- 
dag, in English Thursday ; in Latin Dies Jovis, for 

H 



98 IN SWEDEN. 

Jupiter, the God of Thunder, had the same attributes 
as Thor. 

There were three great festivals at Upsala, when 
multitudes flocked to the temple to consult its famous 
oracles or to sacrifice. The first was the winter festival 
of 'Mother Night' — saturnalia in honour of Frey, or 
the sun, to invoke the blessings of a fruitful year ; the 
second feast was in honour of the Earth ; the third 
was in honour of Odin, to propitiate the Father of 
Battles. Every ninth year, at least, the king and all 
persons of distinction were expected to appear before 
the great temple, and nine victims were chosen for 
human sacrifice — captives in time of war, slaves in 
time of peace — ' I send thee to Odin ' being the con- 
solatory last words spoken to each as he fell. If public 
calamities had been caused b}- any royal mismanage- 
m.ent, the people chose their king as a sacrifice ; thus 
the first king of the petty province of Vermeland was 
burnt to appease Odin during a famine. It is also 
recorded that King Aun sacrificed his nine sons to 
obtain a prolongation of his own life. The victims 
were either hewn down or burnt in the temple itself, 
or hung in the grove adjoining — ' Odin's Grove ' — of 
which every leaf was sacred. Still, according to the 
Voluspa, the famous prophecy of Vela, at the end of 
the world even Odin, with all the other pagan deities, 



OLD UPS ALA. 



99 



will perish in the general chaos, when a new earth of 
celestial beauty will arise upon the ruins of the 
old. 

One of the most curious little churches in Chris- 
tendom now stands upon the site of the ancient tem- 
ple. The apse is evidently built out of the pagan 




THE CHLRCH OF OLD II'SALA. 



sanctuar}-. The belfry, Swedish-fashion, is detached, 
built of massive timbers and painted bright red. 
There arc scarcely any human habitations near, only 
the mighty barrows, overgrown ^\■ith wild thyme and 
a thousand other flowers, which rise over the graves of 
the gods. In the tomb of Odin the Government still 

H 2 



ICO IN SWEDEN. 

gives the mead, which was the nectar of Scandinavian 
heroes, to pilgrim visitors. 

Like most of the Swedish towns, Upsala is disap- 
pointing, and its mean, ill-paved streets show few signs 
of antiquity. At the east end of the cathedral is the 
lofty tomb of Gustavus Wasa, the first Protestant 
King of Sweden, whose effigy lies between the charm- 
ing figures of his two pretty little wives. In 15 19 he 
was carried off as a hostage by that Christian, King 
of Denmark, who forcibly made himself King of 
Sweden also, and ruled with savage tyranny. Es- 
caping to Lubeck, he headed a revolutionary party 
against the tyrant, and, after many defeats, succeeded 
in taking Stockholm, w^here he was made king in 1523. 
Soon after, Olaf Petri's translation of the New Testa- 
ment led to the Reformation in Sweden, where Gus- 
tavus Wasa was another Henry VIII., in taking the 
opportunity of seizing two-thirds of the Church 
revenues, and depriving all ecclesiastics of their in- 
comes if they refused to embrace Lutheranism. One 
of his daughters-in-law was the famous Polish princess. 
Queen Catherine Jagellonica, who tried hard to upset 
the new religion, and inculcated Catholicism upon her 
son. King Sigismund, who was deposed, on religious 
grounds, in favour of his uncle, Charles IX., the father 
of Gustavus Adolphus. This Queen Catherine Jagel- 



GRirSHOLM. 



lOI 



lonica has a fine tomb in a side chapel of Upsala 
Cathedral. 

On a brilliant July morning we embarked at Stock- 
holm in the steamer which runs twice a week down 
Lake Malar to Gripsholm. Most lovely were the long 




GRIPSHOLM. 



reaches of still water with their fringe of russet rocks, 
every crevice tufted with birch and dwarf mountain 
ash, opening here and there to show some red timber 
houses or a wooden spire. It was several hours of 
soft diorama, with the music of the pines, before the 
great castle of Gripsholm, the Windsor of Sweden, 



102 AV SWEDEN. 

came in sight, with its many red towers and Eastern- 
looking domes and cupolas. We were landed at the 
little pier of Mariefred, in itself a lovely scene, with 
old trees feathering into the water, and a picturesque 
church rising in a grove of walnuts on a green hill 
behind. Hard by is a little inn where the whole of 
the passengers in the steamer dined together, at many 
little tables, the great staple of food being fresh trout 
and salmon of the lake, the bilberries and cloudberries 
of the rocks, and the birch brandy and wild straw- 
berries from the woods. After dinner every one 
trooped along the meadow paths to the castle, and 
rambled in friendly companionship over its numerous 
rooms, full of interest, and with many curious royal 
})ortraits and pieces of ancient furniture. There are 
endless historic recollections connected with Grips- 
holm, but they centre for the most part around the 
sons of Gustavus Wasa. Of these, John was im- 
mured here by Eric XIV., with his wife Catherine 
Jagellonica, who, during her imprisonment, gave 
birth to her son Sigismund (afterwards Sigismund 
III. of Poland), in a box-bed which still, remains. 
Eric intended to have put his brother to death, but 
when he entered his cell for the purpose was so 
overcome by fraternal feeling that he begged his 
pardon instead. That pardon was not granted, for 



GRIPSHOLM. lo 



o 



when John got the upper hand he imprisoned Eric 
in a small chamber at the top of the castle, where 
he languished for ten years, during which he wrote 
a treatise on military art, and translated the history 
of Johannes Magnus, and where— in the end — he 
was poisoned. 



IN NORWAY 



IN NORWAY. 

nr^HE weather changed to a cloudless sunshine, 
^ which hatched all the mosquitoes, as we entered 
Norway in the second week in July, and the heat was 
so intense that, in the long railway journey from 
Stockholm, we were very thankful for the little tank 
of iced water with which each railway carriage is 
provided. We were disappointed in Kristiania, which 
is a very dull place. The town was built by Christian 
IV. of Denmark, and has a good central church of 
his time, but it is utterly unpicturesquc. In the 
picture gallery are several noble works of Tidemann, 
the special painter of expression and pathos. As a 
companion for life is the memory of a picture which 
represents the administration of the last sacrament 
to an old peasant, whose wife's grief is turned to re- 
signation, which ceases even to have a wish for his 
retention, as she beholds the heaven-born comfort 
with which he is looking into an unknown future. 
Another of the finest works of the artist represents 



io8 IN NORWAY. 

the reception of the sacrament b}' a convict, young 
and deeply repentant, before his execution. 

There is no striking scenery in the environs of 
Kristiania, but they are wonderfully prett)-. From the 
avenues upon the ramparts you look down over the 
broad expanse of the fyord, with low blue mountain 
distances. Little steamers dart backwards and for- 
wards, and convey visitors in a few minutes across 
the bay to Oscars Halle, a tower and small country 
villa of the king on a wooded knoll. 

We went by the railway which winds high amongst 
the hills to Kongsberg, a mining village in a lofty 
situation. Here, in a garden of white roses, there 
is a most comfortable small hotel kept by a Dane, 
which is a capital starting-point for all expeditions 
in Telemarken, There is a pretty waterfall near the 
village, and the church should be visited, for the sake 
of its curious pulpit hour-glass — indeed, four glasses — 
quarter, half-hour, three-quarters, hour — and the top of 
a stool let into the wall with an inscription saying 
that Mr. Jacobus Stuart, King of Scotland (James I. 
of England), sate upon it, Nov. 25, 1589, to hear a 
sermon preached by Mr. David Lentz, ' between 1 1 
and 12,' on ' The Lord is my Shepherd.' 

We engaged a carriage at Kongsberg for the 
excursion to Tinoset, whence we arranged to go on 



KONGSBERG. 



109 



to the Ryukan Foss, said to be the highest waterfall 
in Europe. We do not advise future travellers with- 
out unlimited time to follow us in the latter part of 
the expedition by the lake, but the carriage excursion 
is quite enchanting. What an exquisite drive it is 
through the forest — the deep ever- varying woods of 
noble pines and firs springing from luxuriant thickets 
of junipers, bilberries, and cranberries ! The loveliest 
mountain floA^ers grow in these woods — huge lark- 
spurs of rank luxuriant foliage and flowers of faint 
dead blue ; pinks and blue lungworts and orchids ; 
stagmoss wreathing itself round the grey rocks, and 
delicate, lovely soldanella drooping in the still recesses. 
Our midday halt was at Bolkesjo, where the forest 
opens to green lawns, hill-set, with a charming view 
down the smooth declivities to a many-bayed lake, 
with mountain distances. Here, amid a group of old 
brown farm-buildings covered with rude paintings and 
sculpture, is a farmhouse, inhabited by the same 
family through many generations. It is one of the 
* stations ' where it is part of the duty of the farmer or 
'bonder' who is owner of the soil to find horses for 
the use of travellers. These horses are supplied at a 
very trifling charge, and are brought back by a boy 
who sits behind the carriole or carriage upon the port- 
manteau : but as the horses, when not called for, are 



iro IN NORWAY. 

turned loose or used by the bonder in his own farm 
or field work, travellers generally have to wait a long 
time while they are caught or sent for. They order 
their horses ' strax' — directly- one of the first words 
an Englishman learns to use on entering Norway, yet 
they scarcely ever appear before half an hour, so that 
Norwegians repeat with amusement the story of an 
Englishman who, when he wished to spend an hour 
at a station, ordered his horses ' after two strax's.' 
These halts are not always congenial to English 
impatience, yet they give opportunities of becoming 
acquainted with Norwegian life and people which can 
be obtained in no other way, and recollection will 
oftener go back to the quiet time spent in waiting 
for horses amid the grey rocks above some foaming 
streamlet, in the green oases surrounded by forest, or 
in clean-boarded rooms strewn with fresh fir foliage, 
than to the more established sights of Norwa}'. Most 
delicious indeed were the two hours which wo passed 
at Bolkesjo, in the high pastures where the peasants 
were mowing the tall grass ablaze with flowers, and 
the mountains were throwing long purple shadows 
over the forest, and the wind blowing freshly from the 
gleaming lake — and then, most delicious was the 
well-earned meal of eggs and bacon, strawberries and 
cream, and other homely dainties in the farmhouse 



BOLKESJO. 



1 1 r 



where the beams and furniture were all painted and 
carved with mottoes and texts, and the primitive box- 
beds had crimson satin quilts. Portraits sent by well- 
pleased royal visitors hung on the walls side by side 
with common-coloured scripture prints, like those 
which are found in English cottages. The cellar is 
under a bed, beneath which it \\-as funny to see the 



^g-|^^^^^^g-_-^^ 




EOLKESJO. 



old farmeress disappear as she went down to fetch up 
for us her home-brewed ale. 

With the cordial ' likkelie reise ' of our old hostess 
in our ears, we left Bolkesjo full of pleasant thoughts. 
But what roads, or rather what want of roads, lead to 
Tinoset !— there were banks of glassy rock, up which 
our horses scrambled like cats ; there Avere awful 
moments when everything seemed to come to an end, 



112 IN NORWAY. 

and when they gathered up their legs, and seemed to 
fling themselves down headlong with the carriage on 
the top of them, and yet we reached the bottom of 
the abyss buried in dust, to rise gasping and gulping 
and wondering we were alive, to begin the same 
pantomime over again. 

Late in the evening, long after the sunlight had 
faded, and when the forests seemed to have gone to 
sleep and all sounds were silent, Vv^e reached Tinoset. 
The inn is a wooden chalet on the banks of a lake 
with a single great pine-tree close to the door. It was 
terribly crowded, and the little wooden cells were the 
smallest apology for bedrooms, where all through the 
night we heard the winds howling among the moun- 
tains, and the waves lashing the shore under the 
windows. In the morning the lake was covered with 
huge blue waves crested with foam, and we were 
almost sorry when the steamer came and we felt 
obliged to embark, because, as it was not the regular 
day for its passage, we had summoned it at some 
expense from the other end of the lake. We were 
thoroughly wet with the spray before we reached the 
little inn at Strand, with a pier where w^e disembarked, 
and occupied the rest of the afternoon in drawing the 
purple hills, and the road winding towards them 
through the old birch-trees. An excursion to the 



HITTERDAL. 



II' 



Ryukan Foss occupied the next day ; a dull drive 
through the plain, and then an exciting skirling of 
horrible precipices, followed by a clamber up a 
mountain pathlet to a chalet, where we were thankful 
for our well-earned dinner of trout and ale before 
proceeding to the Foss, the 560-feet-high fall of a 







OLD CHIKCH OF HITTEKDAL. 



mountain torrent into a black rift in the hills — a 
boiling, roaring abyss of water, with drifts of spray 
which are visible for miles before it can be seen 
itself 

In returning from Tinoset, we took the way by 
Hitterdal, the date- forgotten old wooden church so 

I 



H4 I^ ^'OR WA Y. 

familiar from picture-books. It had been our principal 
object in coming to Norway, yet the long drive had 
made us so ravenous in search of food that we 
could only endure to stay there half an hour. The 
church, however, is most intensely picturesque, rising 
with an infinity of quaintest domes and spires, all 
built of timber, out of a rude cloister painted red, the 
whole having the appearance of a very tall Chinese 
pagoda, yet only measuring altogether 84 feet by 57. 
The belfry, Norwegian-wise, stands alone on the other 
side of the church}'ard, which is overgrown with pink 
willow-herb. When we reached the inn, as famished 
as wolves in winter, we were told by our landlady 
that she could not give us any dinner. ' Nei, nei,' no- 
thing would induce her — she had too much work on 
her hands already — perhaps, however, the woman at 
the house with the flag would give us some. So, 
hungry and faint, we walked forth again to a house 
which had a flag flying in front of it, where all was 
silent and deserted, except for a dog who received us 
furiously. Having pacified him, and finding the front 
door locked, we made good our entrance at the back, 
examined the kitchen, peeped into all the cupboards, 
lifted up the lids of all the saucepans, and not till we 
had searched every corner for food ineffectuall}% were 
met by the pretty, pleasant-looking young lady of the 



HITTERDAL. 



"5 



house, who informed us in excellent English, and 
with no small surprise at our conduct, that we had 
been committing a raid upon her private residence. 
Afterwards we discovered a lonely farmhouse, where 
there had once been a flag, and where they gave us a 
very good dinner, ending in a great bowl of cloud- 
berries—in which we were joined by two pleasant 




THRONDTJEM FVORD. 



young ladies and their father, an old gentleman 
smoking an enormous long pipe, who turned out to 
be the Bishop of Christiansand. The house of the 
landamann of Hitterdal contains a relic connected 
with a picturesque story quaintly illustrative of an- 
cient Scandinavian life. It is an axe, with a handle 
projecting beyond the blade, and curved, so that 
it can be used as a walking-stick. Formerly it 

* I 2 



ii6 IN NORWAY. 

belonged to an ancient descendant of the Kongen, or 
chieftains of the district, who insisted upon carrying 
it to church with him in accordance with an old privi- 
lege. The priest forbade the bearing of the warlike 
weapon into church, which so much affected the old 
man that he died. His son, who thought it necessary 
to avenge his father's death, went to the priest with 
the axe in his hands, and demanded the most precious 
thing he possessed — when the priest brought his Bible 
and gave it to him, open upon a passage exhorting to 
forgiveness of injuries. 

On July 25 we left Kristiania for Throndtjem — 
the whole journey of three hundred and sixty miles 
being very comfortable, and only costing 30 francs. 
The route has no great beauty, but endless pleasant 
variety — rail to Eidswold, with bilberries and straw- 
berries in pretty birch-bark baskets for sale at all the 
railway stations ; a vibrating steamer for several hours 
on the long, dull Miosen lake ; railway again, with 
some of the carriages open at the sides ; then an 
obligatory night at Koppang, a large station, where 
accommodation is provided for every one, but where, if 
there are many passengers, several people, strangers 
to each other, are expected to share the same room. 
On the second day the scenery improves, the railway 
sometimes running along and sometimes over the river 



THRONDTJEAL 



117 



Glommen, on a wooden causeway, till the gorge of 
mountains opens beyond Storen, into a rich country 
with turfy mounds constantly reminding us of the 
graves of the hero-gods of Upsala. Towards sunset, 
beyond the deep cleft in which the river Nid runs 
between lines of old painted wooden warehouses, rises 




THRONDTJEM CATHEDRAL. 



the burial-place of S. Olaf, the shrine of Scandina- 
vian Christianity, the stumpy-towered cathedral of 
Throndtjem. The most northern railway station and 
the most northern cathedral in Europe ! 

Surely the cradle of Scandinavian Christianity is 
one of the most beautiful places in the world ! No 
one had ever told us about it, and we went there only 
because it is the old Throndtjem of sagas and ballads. 



ii8 IN NORWAY. 

and expecting a wonderful and beautiful cathedral. 
But the whole place is a dream of loveliness, so ex- 
quisite in the soft silvery morning light on the fyord 
and delicate mountain ranges, the rich nearer hills 
covered with bilberries and breaking into steep cliffs 
— that one remains in a state of transport, which is 
at a climax while all is engraven upon an opal sun- 
set sky, when an amethystine glow spreads over the 
mountains, and when ships and buildings meet their 
double in the still, transparent water. Each wide 
street of curious low w^ooden houses displays a new 
vista of sea, of rocky promontories, of woods dipping 
into the water ; and at the end of the principal street 
is the grey massive cathedral where S. Olaf is buried, 
and where northern art and poetry have exhausted 
their loveliest and most pathetic fancies around the 
grave of the national hero. 

The ' Cathedral Garden,' for so the grave^'ard is 
called, is most touching. Acres upon acres of graves 
are all kept — not by officials, but by the families they 
belong to— like gardens. The tombs are embowered 
in roses and honeysuckle, and each little green mound 
has its own vase for cut flowers daily replenished, and 
a seat for the survivors, which is daily occupied, so 
that the link between the dead and the living is never 
broken. 



THR OND TJEM. 1 1 9 

Christianity was first established in Norway at 
the end of the tenth century by King Olaf Trygveson, 
son of Trygve and of the lady Astrida, whose ro- 
mantic adventures, when sold as a slave after her 
husband's death, are the subject of a thousand stories. 
When Olaf succeeded to the throne of Norway after 
the death of Hako, son of Sigurd, in 996, he 
proclaimed Christianity throughout his dominions, 
heard matins daily himself, and sent out missionaries 
through his dominions. But the duty of the so- 
called missionaries had little to do with teaching, they 
were only required to baptize. All who refused bap- 
tism were tortured and put to death. When, at one 
time, the estates of the province of Throndtjem tried 
to force Olaf back to the old religion, he outwardly 
assented, but made the condition that the offended 
pagan deities should in that case be appeased by 
human sacrifice — the sacrifice of the twelve nobles 
who were most urgent in compelling him ; and upon 
this the ardour of the chieftains for paganism was 
cooled, and they allowed Olaf unhindered to demolish 
the great statue of Thor, covered with gold and 
jewels, in the centre of the province of Throndtjem, 
where he founded the city then called Nidarcs, upon 
the river Nid. 

No end of stories arc narrated of the cruelties of 



I20 IN NORWAY. 

Olaf Trygvcson. When Egwind, a northern chief- 
tain, refused to abandon his idols, he first attempted 
to bribe him, but, when gentler means failed, a chafing- 
dish of hot coals was placed upon his belly till he 
died. Raude the magician had a more horrible fate : 
an adder was forced down a horn into his stomach, 
and left to eat its wa}' out again ! 

The first Christian king of Norway was an habi- 
tual drunkard, and, by twofold adultery, he, the 
husband of Godruna, married Thyra of Denmark, 
the wife of Duke Borislaf of Pomerania. This led 
to a war with Denmark and Sweden, whose united 
fleets surrounded him near Stralsund. As much 
mystery enshrouds the stor\^ of his death as is con- 
nected with that of Arthur, Barbarossa, or Harold : 
as his ro}al \esscl, the Long Serpent, was boarded by 
the enemy, he plunged into the sea and was no more 
seen, though some chroniclers say that he swam to 
the shore in safety and died afterwards at Rome, 
whither he went on pilgrimage. 

Olaf Trygveson had a godson Olaf, son of Harald 
Grenske and Asta, who had the nominal title of king 
given to all sea captains of royal descent. From his 
twelfth )ear, Olaf Haraldsen was a pirate, and he 
headed the band of Danes who destroyed Canterbury 
and murdered S. Elphege — a strange feature in the 



THR OND TJEM. 1 2 1 

life of one who has been himself regarded as a saint 
since his death. By one of the strange freaks of 
fortune common in those times, this Olaf Haraldsen 
gained a great victory over the chieftain Sweyn, who 
then ruled at INidaros, and, chiefly through the in- 
fluence of Sigurd Syr, a great northern landowner 
who had become the second husband of his mother, 
he became seated in 1016 upon the throne of Norway. 
His first care was for the restoration of Christianity, 
which had fallen into decadence in the sixteen years 
which had elapsed since the defeat of Olaf Trygveson. 
The second Olaf imitated the violence and cruelty 
of his predecessor. Whenever the new religion was 
rejected, he beheaded or hung the delinquents. In 
his most merciful moments he mutilated and blinded 
them : ' he did not spare one who refused to serve 
God.' After fourteen years of unparalleled cruelties in 
the name of religion, he fell in battle with Canute the 
Great at Sticklestadt. He had abducted and married 
Astrida, daughter of the King of Sweden, but by her 
he had no children. By his concubine Alfhilda he 
left an only son, who lived to become Magnus the 
Good, King of Norway. There is a very fine stor)' of 
the way in which Magnus obtained his name. Olaf 
had said, ' I very seldom sleep, and if I ever do it will 
be the worse for any one who awakens me.' Whilst 



122 IN NORWAY. 

he was asleep Alfhilda's child was born. Then the 
King's scald or poet and Siegfried the mass priest 
debated together as to whether they should awaken 
him. At first the}' thought they would ; then the poet 
said, ' No ; I kno\\' him better than that : he must r.ot 
be awakened.' ' That is all very well,' said the priest, 
'but the child must be baptised at once. What shall 
we call him ? ' ' Oh,' said the scald, ' I know that the 
King said that the child should be named after the 
greatest monarch that ever lived, and his name was 
Magnus,' for he only remembered one part of the 
name. So they called him Magnus. 

When the King woke up he was furious. ' Who 
can have dared to do this thing — to christen the child 
without consulting me, and to give him this out- 
landish name, which is no name at all — who can have 
dared to do it ?' 

Then the mass priest was terrified and shrank into 
his shoes, but the scald answered boldl}', ' I did it, 
and I did it because it was better to send two souls 
to God than one soul to the devil ; for if the child 
had died unbaptised it would have been lost, but if 
)Ou kill Siegfried and me we shall go straight to 
heaven.' 

And then King Olaf thought he would say no 
more about it. 



THRONDTJEM. 123 

However terrible the cruelties of Olaf Haraldsen 
were in his lifetime, they were soon dazzled out of 
sight amid the halo of miracles with which his 
memory was encircled by the Roman Catholic 
Church. It was only recollected that when, accord- 
ing to the legend, he raced for the kingdom with his 
half-brother Harald, in his good ship the Ox, 

Saint Olat, who on God relied, 

Three days the first his house descried ; 

after which 

Harald so fierce with anger burned 
He to a lothely dragon turned ; 

but because 

A pious zeal Saint Olaf bore, 

He long the crown of Norway wore. 

His admirers narrated that when he was ab- 
sently cutting chips from a stick with his knife on 
a Sunday, a servant passed him with the reproof, 
' Sir, it is Monday to-morrow,' when he placed the 
sinful chips in his hand, and, setting them on fire, 
bore the pain till they were all consumed. It was 
remembered that as he walked to the church which 
Olaf Trygveson had founded at Nidaros, he ' wore a 
glory in hs yellow hair.' And gradually he became 
the most popular saint of Scandinavia. His shirt was 
an object of pilgrimage in the Church of S. Victor 



124 /^V JVOJ^JFAV. 

at Paris, and many churches were dedicated to him 
in England, and especially in London, where Tooley 
Street still records his familiar appellation of S. 
Tooley. 

It was when the devotion to S. Olaf was just 
beginning that Earl Godwin and his sons were 
banished from England for a time. Two of these, 
Harold and Tosti, became vikings, and, in a great 
battle, they vowed that, if they were victorious, they 
would give half the spoil to the shrine of S. Olaf ; 
and a huge silver statue, which they actually gave, 
existed at Throndtjem till 1500, and if it existed 
still would be one of the most important relics in 
archaeology. The old Kings of Norway used to dig 
up the saint from time to time and cut his nails. 
When Harold Hardrada was going to England, he 
declared that he must see S. Olaf once again. ' I 
must see my brother once more,' he said, and he also 
cut the saint's nails. But he also thought that from 
that time it would be better that no one should see 
his brother any more — it would not be for the good 
of the Church — so he took the keys of the shrine 
and threw them into the fyord ; at the same time 
however, he said it would be good for men in after- 
ages- to know what a great king was like, so he 
caused S. Olaf's measure to be engraved upon the 



THRONDTJEM. 



125 



wall in the church at Throndtjcm — his measure of 
seven feet — and there it is still. 

Around the shrine of Olaf in Throndtjem, in 
which, in spite of Harold Hardrada, his ' incorrupt 




S. OLAF S WELL. 



body ' was seen more than five hundred years after 
his death, has arisen the most beautiful of northern 
cathedrals, originating in a small chapel built over 
his grave within ten years after his death. The 



1 26 IiY NOR WA V. 

exquisite colour of its green-grey stone adds greatly 
to the general effect of the interior, and to the 
delicate sculpture of its interlacing arches. From 
the ambulatory behind the choir opens a tiny 
chamber containing the Well of S. Olaf, of rugged 
yellow stone, with the holes remaining in the pave- 
ment through which the dripping water ran away 
when the buckets were set down. Amongst the 
many famous Bishops of Throndtjcm, perhaps the 
most celebrated has been Anders Arrebo, ' the father 
of Danish poetry' (i 587-1637), who wrote the 
' Hexameron,' an extraordinarily long poem on the 
Creation, which nobody reads now. The cathedral is 
given up to Lutheran worship, but its ancient relics 
are kindly tended and cared for, and the building 
is being beautifully restored. Its beautiful Chapter 
House is lent for English service on Sundays. 

In the wide street which leads from the sea to 
the cathedral is the ' Coronation House,' the wooden 
palace in which the Kings and Queens of Sweden and 
Norway stay when they come hither to be crowned. 
Hither the present beloved Queen, Sophie of Nassau, 
came in 1873, driving herself in her own carriole from 
the Romsdal, in graceful compliance with the popular 
mode of Norwegian travel. It is because even the 
finest buildings in Norway are generally built of 



THR OXD TJEM. 1 2 7 

wood that there are so few of any real antiquit\-. 
Near the shore of the fyord, the custom-house occu- 
pies the site of the Orething, where the elections of 
tvvent}' kings have taken place. It is sacred ground 
to a King of Norway, who passes it bareheaded. 
The familiar affection with which the Norwegians 
regard their sovereigns can scarcely be comipre- 
hended in any other country. To their people they 
are ' the father and m.other of the land.' The broken 
Norse is rem.embered at Throndtjem in which King 
Carl Johann begged people ' to make room for their 
old father ' when they pressed too closely upon 
him. When the present so beloved Queen drov^e 
herself to her coronation, the people met her with 
flowers at all the ' stations ' where the horses were 
changed. 'Are you the mother of the land?' 
they said. ' You look nice, but you must do more 
than look nice ; that is not the essential.' One old 
woman begged the lady in waiting to beg her 
majesty to get upon the roof of the house. ' Then 
we should all see her.' At Throndtjem the peasants 
touchingly and affectionately always addressed her 
as ' Du.' 

In returning from Throndtjem we left the railway 
at Storen, where we engaged a double carriole, and a 
carriage for four with a pleasant boy called Johann 



128 /JV A^OJ^IVAV. 

as its driver, for the return journey. It was difficult 
to obtain definite information about anything, English 
books being almost useless from their incorrectness, 
and we set off with a sort of sense of exploring an 
unknown country. At every ' station ' we changed 
horses, which were sent back b\' the bo\-, who perched 
upon the luggage behind, and we marked our dis- 
tances by calling our horses after the Kings of 
England. Thus, setting off from Storen with William 
the Conqueror, we drove into the Romsdal with 
Edward VI. After a drive with Lady Jane Grey, we 
set off again with !\Iary. But the Kings of England 
failed us long before our driving days were over, and 
we used up all the Kings of Rome also. As we were 
coming down a steep hill into Lillehammer with 
Tarquinius Superbus, something gave way and he 
quietly walked out of the harness, leaving us to run 
briskly down-hill and subside into the hedge. We 
captured Tarquinius, but how to put him in again 
was a mystery, as we had never harnessed a horse 
before. However, b}' tr}ing every strap in turn we 
got him in somehow, and escaped the fate of Red 
Ridino- Hood amid the lonelv hills. 

For a great distance after leaving Storen there is 
little especially striking in the scenery, except one 
gorge of old weird pine-trees in a rift of purple 



THE DOVRE FYELD. 129 

mountains. After you emerge upon the high Dovre- 
Fyeld, the huge ranges of Sneehatten rise snowy, 
gleaming, and glorious, above the wide yellow-grey 
expanse, hoary with reindeer moss, though, as the 
Dovre-Fyeld is itself three thousand feet high, and 
Sneehatten only seven thousand three hundred, it 
does not look so high as it really is. Next to 
Throndtjem itself, the old ballads and songs of 
Norway gather most thickly around the Dovre- 
Fyeld. It is here that the witches are supposed to 
hold their secret meetings at their Blokulla, or black 
hill. Across these yellow hills of the Jerkin -Fyeld 
the prose Edda describes Thor striding to his conflict 
with the dragon Jormangandur ' by Sneehatten's peak 
of snow,' where ' the tall pines cracked like a field of 
stubble under his feet ; ' and here, according to the 
ancient fragment called the ballad of ' The Twelve 
Wizards,' as given in Prior's ' Ancient Danish 
Ballads '— 

At Dovrefeld, over on Norway's reef, 
Were heroes who never knew pain or grief. 

There dwelt there many a warrior keen, 
The twelve bold brothers of Ingeborg queen. 

The first with his hand the storm could hush 
The second could stop the torrent's rush. 



I30 IN NORWAY. 

The third could dive in the sea as a fish ; 
The fourth never wanted meat on dish. 

The fifth he would strike the golden lyre, 
And young and old to the dancing fire. 

The sixth on the horn would blow a blast, 
Who heard it would shudder and stand aghast. 

The seventh go under the earth could he ; 
The eighth he could dance on the rolling sea. 

The ninth tamed all that in greenwood crept ; 
The tenth not a nap had ever slept. 

The eleventh the grisly lindvvorm liound, 
And will what he would, the means he found. 

The twelfth he could all things understand, 
Though done in a nook of the farthest land. 

Their equals were never seen there in the North, 
Nor anywhere else on the face of the earth. 

In spite of great fatigue from the distances to be 
accomplished, each day's journey in carriage or car- 
riole has its peculiar charms, the going on and on 
into an unknou'n land, meeting no one, sleeping in 
odd, primitive, but always clean rooms, setting off 
again at half-past five or six, and halting at comfort- 
able stations, with their ever-moderate prices and 
their cheery farm-servants, who kissed our hands all 



I 



NORWEGIAN STATIONS. 131 

round on receiving the very smallest gratuity— a 
coin meaning twopence-halfpenny being a source of 
ecstatic bliss. 

The ' bonders,' who keep the stations, generally 
themselves represent the gentry of the country, the 
real gentry filling the position of the English aris- 
tocracy. The bonders are generally very well off, 
having small tithes, good houses, boundless fuel, a 
great variety of food, and continual change of labour 
on their own small properties. Their wives, who 
never walk, have a sledge for winter, and a carriole 
and horse to take them to church in summer. In 
the many months of snow, when the cows and horses 
are all stabled in the ' laave,' and when out-of-door 
occupations fail, they occupy the time with household 
pursuits — carpentering, tailoring, or brewing. When 
a bonder dies, his wife succeeds to his property until 
her second marriage ; then it is divided amongst his 
children. 

The ' stations ' or farmhouses are almost entirely 
built of wood, but those of a superior class have a 
single room of stone, used only in bridals or births, a 
custom handed down from old times when a place of 
special safety was required at those seasons. 

Nine-tenths of the country are covered with pine- 
forests, but the trees are ah\ays cut down before they 



132 IN NORWAY. 

grow old. We did not see a single old tree in 
Norway. The pines are of two kinds only —the 
Funi, our pine, Pimis silvestris ; and the Gran, our 
fir, Pimis abies. 

Wolves seldom appear except in winter, when 
those who travel in sledges are often pursued by them. 
Then hunger makes them so bold that they will often 
snatch a dog from between the knees of a driver. 

From the station of Dombaas (where there is a 
telegraph station and a shop of old silver) we turned 
aside down the Romsdal, which soon became beautiful, 
as the road wound above the chrysoprase river Rauma, 
broken by many rocky islets and swirling into many 
waterfalls, but always equally radiant, equally trans- 
parent, till its colour is washed out by the melting 
snow in a ghastly narrow valley, which we called the 
Valley of Death. 

The little inn at Aak, in Romsdal, with a large 
garden stretching along the hillside, disappointed us 
at first, as the clouds hid the mountain-tops, but 
morning revealed how glorious they are — purple 
pinnacles of rock or pathless fields of snow embossed 
upon a sky which is delicately blue above but melts 
into the clearest opal. Grander, we thought, than 
any single peak in Switzerland is the tremendous 
peak of the Romsdalhorn, and the walks in all 



ROMSDAL. 



133 



directions are most exquisite— into deep glades filled 
uith columbines and the giant larkspurs, which are 
such a feature of Norway : into tremendous mountain 
gorges : or to Waeblungsnaes, along the banks of the 
lovely fyord, with its marvellously quaint forms of 
mountain distance. Aak is a place where a month 




IN THE ROMSDAL, NORWAY. 



may be spent most delightfully, as well as most com- 
fortably and economically. 

We had heard a great deal before we went to 
Norway about the difficulty of getting proper food, 
but our own experience is that we were never fed 
more luxuriously. Perhaps very late in the season 



134 IN NORWAY. 

the provisions at the country ' stations ' may be some- 
what used up, but when we were there in July only 
those who could not live without a great deal of meat 
could have any cause for complaint, and once a week 
we generally had reindeer for a treat. When we 
arrived in the evenings, we always found an excellent 
meal prepared — the most delicious coffee, tea, and 
cream ; baskets of bread, rusks, cakes and biscuits of 
various descriptions ; fresh salmon and trout ; cloud- 
berries, bilberries, raspberries, mountain strawberries 
and cream ; and for all this about a franc and a half 
is the payment required. 

My companions lingered at Kristiania whilst I 
paid a visit, which is one of the most delightful re- 
collections ot my tour, to a native family near Moss, 
at the mouth of the fyord ; then we came back to 
Denmark, travelling in the same train with the beloved 
Prince Imperial, who was then in the height of health 
and happiness, and received at every station with the 
enthusiastic ' Hochs ! ' which in Scandinavia supply 
the place of the English hurrah. 



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WANDERINGS IN SPAIN. With Illustrations. Fourth 
Edition. Crown 8vo. "js. dd. 

'Mr. Hare's book is admirable. We are sure no one will regret making it the 
companion of a Spanish journey. It will bear reading repeatedly when one is 
moving among the scenes it describes— no small advantage when the travelling 
library is scanty.'— Saturday Review. 

' Here is the ideal book of travel in Spain ; the book which exactly anticipates 
the requirements of everybody who is fortunate enough to be going to that 
enchanted land ; the book which ably consoles those who are not so happy by 
supplying the imagination from the daintiest and most delicious of its stories." 

Spectator. 

' Since the publication of " Castilian Days," by the American diplomat, Mr. John 
Hay, no pleasanter or more readable sketches have fallen under our notice.' 

ATHEN/EU.M. 

THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF FRANCES 
BARONESS BUNSEN. With Portraits. 2 vols, crown 
8vo. 24^. 

MEMORIALS OF A QUIET LIFE. 3 vols, crown 8vo. 
Vols. I. and II. 21^. ; Vol. III., with numerous Photographs, 
io.r. 6'/. 

' The name of Hare is one deservedly to be honoured ; and in these " Memorials," 
which are as true and satisfactory a biography as it is possible to write, the author 
places his readers in the heart of the family, and allows them to see the hidden 
sources of life and love by which it is nourished and sustained.' — Athen.-fum. 

' One of those books which it is impossible to read without pleasure. It conveys 
a sense of repose not unlike that which everybody must have felt out of service time 
in quiet little village churches. Its editor will receive the hearty thanks of every 
cultivated reader for these profoundly interesting "Memorials" of two brothers, 
whose names and labours their universities and church have alike reason to cherish 
with affection and remember with pride, who have smoothed the path of faith to so 
many troubled wayfarers, strengthening the weary and confirming the weak.' 

Standard. 

' The book is rich in insight and in contrast of character. It is varied and full of 
episodes, which few can fail to read with interest ; and as exhibiting the sentiments 
and thoughts of a very influential circle of minds during a quarter of a century, it 
may be said to have a distinct historical value.' — Nonconformist. 

' A charminz book, simply and gracefully recording the events of simple and 
gracious life. Its connection with the beginning of a great movement in the English 
Church will make it to the thoughtful reader more profoundly suggestive than many 
biographies crowded and bustling with incident. It is almost the first of a class of 
books the Christian world just now greatly needs, as showing how the spiritual life 
was maintained amid the shaking of religious " opinions " ; how the life of the soul 
deepened as the thoughts of the mind broadened ; and how, in their union, the two 
formed a volume of larger and more thoroughly vitalised Christian idea than the 
English people had witnessed for many days.'— Glasgow Herald. 

FLORENCE. Fcp. 8vo. cloth limp, 2s. dd. 
VENICE. Fcp. 8vo. cloth limp, is. 6d. 



London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place. 



WORKS BY AUGUSTUS J. C. HARE 

LIFE AND LETTERS OF FRANCES, BARONESS 
BUNSEN, Fourth Edition. With Portraits. 2 vols., crown 
8vo, Cloth, 21S. 

MEMORIALS OF A QUIET LIFE. 3 vols., crown 8vo. 

Vols. I. and II., Cloth, 21s. [Nineteenth Edition) ; Vol. III., with 
numerous Photographs, Cloth, 105. 6d. 

" One of those books which it is impossible to read without pleasure. It 
conveys a sense of repose not unlike that which everybody must have felt 
out of service time in quiet little village churches. Its editor will receive 
the hearty thanks of every cultivated reader for these profoundly interesting 
' Memorials' of two brothers, whose names and labours their universities 
and Church have ahke reason to cherish with affection and remember with 
pride, who have smoothed the path of faith to so many troubled wayfarers, 
strengthening the weary and confirming the weak." — Standard. 

DAYS NEAR ROME. With more than 100 Illustrations 
by the Author. Third Edition. 2 vols., crown 8vo, Cloth, 75. 6d. 

WALKS IN ROME. Sixteenth Edition. Revised by the 
Author and St. Clair Baddeley. With 3 Plans and Illus- 
trations showing recent discoveries. 2 vols., fcap. 8vo, Cloth 
limp, los. 6d. 

"The best handbook of the city and environs of Rome ever published. 
, . . Cannot be too much commended." — Pall Mall Gazette. 

" This book is sure to be very useful. It is thoroughly practical, and is 
the best guide that has yet been offered." — Daily News. 

" Mr. Hare's book fills a real void, and gives to the tourist all the latest 
discoveries and the fullest information bearing on that most inexhaustible 
of subjects, the city of Rome. ... It is much fuller than ' Murray,' and 
any one who chooses may know how Rome really looks in sun or shade." — 
Spectator, 

WALKS IN LONDON. Seventh Edition, revised. With 
additional Illustrations. 2 vols., fcap. 8vo, Cloth limp, \2s. 

"One of the really valuable as well as pleasant companions to the peri- 
patetic philosopher's rambling studies of the town." — Daily Telegraph. 

WESTMINSTER. Reprinted from "Walks in London," 

as a Handy Guide. Third Edition. 120 pages. Paper Covers, 
dd. net ; Cloth, l^. 

WANDERINGS IN SPAIN. With 17 Full-page Illus- 
trations. Eighth Edition. Fcap. 8vo, Cloth limp, 3^. 

"Here is the ideal book of travel in Spain; the book which exactly 
anticipates the requirements of everybody who is fortunate enough to be 
going to that enchanted land ; the book which ably consoles those who are 
not so happy by supplying the imagination from the daintiest and most 
delicious of its stories." — Spectator. 

GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 



2 WORKS BY AUGUSTUS J. C. HARE 

CITIES OF SOUTHERN ITALY AND SICILY. 

With Illustrations. Crown 8vo, Cloth, los. bd. 

" Mr. Hare's name will be a sufficient passport for the popularity of his 
work. His books on the Cities of Italy are fast becoming as indispen- 
sable to the traveller in that part of the country as the guide-books of 
Murray or of Baedeker. . . . His book is one which I should advise all 
future travellers in Southern Italy and Sicily to find room for in their port- 
manteaus. " — Academy. 

CITIES OF NORTHERN ITALY. Secoftd Edition. 
With Illustrations. 2 vols., crown 8vo, Cloth, "]$. 6d. 

" We can imagine no better way of spending a wet day in Florence or 
Venice than in reading all that Mr. Hare has to say and quote about the 
history, arts, and famous people of those cities. These volumes come 
under the class of volumes not to borrow, but to buy." — Mom i fig Post 

CITIES OF CENTRAL ITALY. Seco7id Editiofi. With 
Illustrations. 2 vols., crown 8vo, Cloth, 7^-. (yd. 

SKETCHES IN HOLLAND AND SCANDINAVIA. 

Crown Svo, with Illustrations, Cloth, 3^'. 

" This little work is the best companion a visitor to these countries can 
have, while those who stay at home can also read it with pleasure and 
profit." — Glasgow Herald. 

STUDIES IN RUSSIA. Crown Svo, with numerous 
Illustrations, Cloth, 6s. 

"Mr. Hare's book may be recommended as at once entertaining and 
instructive." — AtheficEum. 

"A delightful and instructive guide to the places visited. It is, in fact, 
a sort of glorified guide-book, with all the charm of a pleasant and culti- 
vated literary companion." — Scotsman. 

FLORENCE. Sixth Edition. Revised by the Author 
and W. St. Clair Baddeley. Fcap. 8vo, Cloth limp, t,s. 
With 2 Plans and 30 Illustrations. 

VENICE. Sixth Edition. Revised by the Author and 
W. St. Clair Baddeley. Fcap. Svo, Cloth limp, y. With 
2 Plans and 17 Illustrations. 

' ' The plan of these little volumes is excellent. . . . Anything more 
perfectly fulfilling the idea of a guide-book we have never seen. " — Scottish 
Review. 

THE RIVIERAS. Fcap. Svo, Cloth limp, y- With 67 

Illustrations. 

PARIS. New Edition, revised. With 50 Illustrations. 

Fcap. Sv-i, Cloth limp, 6s. 2 vols., sold separately. 
GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 



WORKS BY AUGUSTUS J. C. HARE 3 

DAYS NEAR PARIS. With Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 
Cloth, 6s. ; or in 2 vols., Cloth limp, ds. 6d. 

NORTH-EASTERN FRANCE. Crown 8vo, Cloth, 
6s. With Map and 86 Woodcuts. 

Picardy — Abbeville and Amiens — Paiis and its Environs — Arras and 
the Manufacturing Towns of the North — Champagne — Nancy and the 
Vosges, &c. 

SOUTH-EASTERN FRANCE. Crown 8vo, Cloth, 
65. With Map and 176 Woodcuts. 

The different lines to the South — Burgundy — Auvergne — The Cantal 
— Provence — The Alpes Dauphinaises and Alpes Maritimes, <S:c. 

SOUTH-WESTERN FRANCE. Crown 8vo, Cloth, 

6s. With Map and 232 Woodcuts. 

The Loire — The Gironde and Landes — Creuse — Correze — The 
Limousin — Gascony and Languedoc — The Cevennes and the Pyre- 
nees, (S;c. 

NORTH-WESTERN FRANCE. Crown 8vo, Cloth, 
6.C With Map and 73 Woodcuts. 

Normandy and Brittany — Rouen — Dieppe — Cherbourg — Bayeux 
— Caen — Coutances — Chartres — Mont S. Michel — Dinan — Brest — 
Alen^on, &c. 

" Mr. Hare's volumes, with their charming illustrations, are a reminder 
of how much we miss by neglecting provincial France." — Times. 

"The appreciative traveller in France will find no more pleasant, inex- 
haustible, and discriminating guide than Mr. Hare. , . . All the volumes 
are most liberally supplied with drawings, all of them beautifully executed, 
and some of them genuine masterpieces." — Echo. 

"Every one who has used one of Mr. Hare's books will welcome the 
appearance of his new work upon France. . . . The books are the most 
satisfactory guide-books for a traveller of culture who wishes improvement 
as well as entertainment from a tour. ... It is not necessary to go to the 
places described before the volumes become useful. While part of the 
work describes the district round Paris, the rest practically opens up a new 
country for English visitors to provincial France." — Scotsman. 

SUSSEX. Second Edition. With Map and 45 Woodcuts. 
Crown Svo, Cloth, 6s. 

SHROPSHIRE. With Map and 48 Woodcuts. Cloth, 6^. 

LONDON: GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD 



4 WORKS BY AUGUSTUS J. C. HARE 

THE STORY OF TWO NOBLE LIVES. Charlotte, 
Countess Canning, and Louisa, Marchioness of Water- 
ford. In 3 vols. Crown 8vo, Cloth, £i, lis. 6d. Illustrated 
with II engraved Portraits and 21 Plates in Photogravure from 
Lady Waterford's Drawings, 8 full-page and 24 smaller Woodcuts 
from Sketches by the Author. 

Also a Special Large Paper Edition, with India Proofs of the 
Plates. Crown 4to, ^3, 3^. net. 

THE GURNEYS OF EARLHAM: Memoirs and Letters 
of the Eleven Children of John and Catherine Gurney of 
Earlham, 1775-1875, and the Story of their Religious Life under 
many Different Forms. Illustrated with 33 Photogravure Plates 
and 19 Woodcuts. In 2 vols., crown 8vo, Cloth, 255. 

[Second Edition. 

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES: Memorial Sketches 
of Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Dean of Westminster ; Henry 
Alford, Dean of Canterbury ; Mrs. Duncan Stewart ; and 
Paray le Monial. Illustrated with 7 Portraits and 17 Wood- 
cuts. Crown Svo, Cloth, 6^. 

THE STORY OF MY LIFE: 1834 to 1870. Vols. I. 
to III. Recollections of Places, People, and Conversations, from 
Letters and Journals. Illustrated with 18 Photogravure Portraits 
and 144 Woodcuts from Drawings by the Author. Crown Svo, 
Cloth, £1, lis. 6d. 

THE STORY OF MY LIFE: 1870 to 1900. Vols. IV. 

to VI. With 12 Photogravure Plates and 247 Woodcuts. Crown 
Svo, Cloth, ;^ I, 115. 6d. 



BY THE LATE AUGUSTUS WILLIAM HARE 

RECTOR OF ALTO\ BARNES 

THE ALTON SERMONS. Fifth Edition. Crown 8vo, 

SERMONS ON THE LORD'S PRAYER. Crown 8vo, 
\s. 6d. 

. y 

GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 



THE STORY OF MY LIFE 

By AUGUSTUS J. C. HARE 

Vols. I. to III. Crown 8vo, ^i, lis. 6d. 
Vols. IV. to VI. Crown 8vo, ^i, lis. 6d. 



FJ^ESS NOTICES 

"The story is full of varied interest. . . . Readers who know 
how to pick and choose will find plenty to entertain them, and 
not a little which is well worth reading." — T/ie Times. 

"Mr. Hare gives an idyllic picture of the simple, refined, 
dignified life at Lime. . . . The volumes are an inexhaustible 
storehouse of anecdote." — Daily News. 

"The reader rarely comes across a passage which does not 
afford amusement or pleasant entertainment." — The Scotsman. 

" One may safely predict that this wi!' be the most popular 
book of the season. . . . We have not space to point out a 
twentieth part of the passages that might be described as having 
a special interest. Moreover, though the book is, among other 
things, a repertoiy of curious occurrences and amusing anec- 
dotes, it is much more remarkable as a book of sentiment and 
character, and a story of real life told with remarkable fulness." 
— The Guardian. 

"A book which will greatly amuse the reader." — The 
Spectator. 

" Much of what the author has to tell is worthy the telling, 
and is told with considerable ease and grace, and with a power 
to interest out of the common. He introduces us to the best of 
good company, and tells many excellently witty stories. . . . 

GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 



( 2 ) 

Whenever he is describing foreign life he is at his best ; and 
nothing can exceed the beautiful pathos of the episodes in which 
his mother appears. Indeed, he has the gift of tenderness for 
all good women and brave m&x\."— Daily Telegraph. 

"This autobiography could not fail to be exceptionally in- 
teresting. There may be readers who will protest that the 
more minute details of daily life might have been abridged with 
advantage, but the aim of the book makes this elaborate treat- 
ment of the subject indispensable. The conscientious record 
of a mental development amid curious surroundings, would 
make these volumes valuable if not a single name of note were 
mentioned. . . . Even more interesting than the stories of 
people and things that are still remembered are the glimpses 
of a past which is quickly fading out of recollection." — The 
Standard. 

" The book is unexceptionable on the score of taste. ... It 
is an agreeable miscellany into which one may dip at random 
with the certainty of landing something entertaining, rather 
than an autobiography of the ordinary kind. The concluding 
chapter is full of a deep and tender pathos." — The Ma7ichester 
Guardian. 

" Mr. Hare's style is graceful and felicitous, and his life-his- 
tory was well worth writing. The volumes simply teem with 
good things, and in a single article we can but skim the surface 
of the riches they contain. A word must also be said of the 
beauty and delicacy of the illustrations. Few living men dare 
brave criticism by giving us the story of their lives and promis- 
ing more. But Mr. Hare is quite justified. He has produced 
a fascinating work, in some parts strange as any romance, and 
his reminiscences of great men are agreeable and interesting.'' — 
Birmijigham Gazette. 

GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 



I 



) 



"An inexhaustible storehouse of anecdote." — Soiith-Westcni 
News. 

" These volumes possess an almost unique interest because 
of the striking series of portraits we get in them, not so much of 
celebrities, of whom w-e often hear enough, but of ' originals ' in 
private life. . . . They give us a truly remarkable picture of 
certain sections of European society, and, above all, introduce 
us to some singularly quaint types of human character," — 
Glasgow Herald. 

" Brimful of anecdotes, this autobiography will yield plenty of 
entertainment. We should like to quote many a characteristic 
little tale, but must content ourselves by heartily recommending 
all who care for the pleasantest of pleasant gossip concerning 
famous people and places to procure these three volumes." 
— Publisher's Circular. 

" Mr. Hare has an easy, agreeable style, and tells a story with 
humour and skill." — The Saturday Review. 

" It would be well for all who think the children of to-day are 
over-pampered and too much considered, to read Mr. Hare's 
Xxi^r — Lady s Pictorial. 

" Very delicate, idyllic, and fascinating are the pictures the 
author has drawn of daily life in old rectories and country 
houses." — The World. 

" Mr. Hare has the gift, the rare gift, of writing about himself 
truthfully. Nor can a quick eye for shades of character be 
denied to Mr. Hare, who does not seem ready to take people at 
their own estimate or even at what may be called their market 
price. But we do not detect a touch of malice, but only that 
knack of telling the truth which is so hateful to the ordinary 
biographer, and so distasteful to that sentimental public which 
is never so happy as when devouring sugared falsehoods." — The 
Speaker. 



GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 



( 4 ) 

"The book has throughout a strong human interest. It 
contains a great many anecdotes, and in our opinion, at all 
events, deserves to take rank among notable biographical 
works." — Westminster Gazette. 

"A deeply interesting book. It is the story of a man who 
has seen much and suffered much, and who out of the fulness of 
his experience can bring forth much to interest and entertain. 
. . . The book has a wealth of apt quotations and graceful 
reference, and though written in a scholarly and cultured way, 
it is always simple and interesting. . . . Nothing in the work 
has been set down in malice ; there are excuses for everybody. 
... Of course it is hardly necessary to say that the book 
teems with entertainment from beginning to end." — St. James's 
Budget. 

"There is much besides human character and incident in 
these well-packed and well-illustrated volumes. ... No one 
will close the work without a feeling not only of gratitude for a 
long gallery of interesting and brilliantly-speaking portraits, but 
of sympathy with the biographer." — The Athenccttin. 

" It is doubtful whether any Englishman living has had a 
wider acquaintance among people worth knowing in England 
and on the Continent, than the author of these memoirs. It is 
also doubtful whether any man, with equal opportunities, could 
have turned them to so good an account. . . . We have here 
an incomparable storehouse of anecdotes concerning conspicuous 
persons of the first half of this Victorian age." — New York Sun. 

" This is assuredly a book to read." — Freeitian. 

" Singularly interesting is this autobiography. . . . Alto- 
gether it is a notable book, and may well be recommended to 
those who arc interested in the intellectual life of our time." — 
New York Herald. 

GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 



( 5 ) 

"Mr. Hare's excellence, apart from felicity of style and 
directness of method, has ever been conspicuous by the ex- 
cellence that comes of wide knowledge of his subject, and a 
keenly sympathetic nature. Alive as he has ever been to 
responsive emotion, he possesses also a bright humour that 
seizes upon the discrepancies, the nuances and cjuaintnesses of 
whatever comes within the range of his eye and pen. These 
qualities have made for Mr. Hare a circle of admirers who, 
while they have sought in his pages no very thrilling passages, 
have felt steadily the growth of a liking given to an old friend 
who is always kindly and oftentimes amusing. . . .Mr. Hare 
dwells with a rare and touching love upon his mother, and 
these passages are amongst the most appealing in the book." 
— Philadelphia Courier: 

" ]Mr. Hare has given us a picture of English social life that 
for vividness, picturesqueness, and completeness, is not excelled 
in literature. There is a charming lack of attempt to be literary 
in the telling of the story — a refreshing frankness and quaint- 
ness of expression. He takes his readers with him so that they 
may breathe the same social atmosphere in which he has spent 
his life. With their own eyes they see the things he saw, and 
best of all they have freedom to judge them, for Mr. Hare does 
not force himself or his opinions upon them." — New York Press. 

" Mr. Hare's memoirs are their own excuse for being, and 
are a distinct addition to the wide and delightful realm of 
biographical literature." — Chicago Journal. 

" It is rarely that an autobiography is planned on so ample a 
scale, and yet, to tell the truth, there are singularly few of these 
pages which one really cares to skip." — Good Words. 

"A sad history of Mr. Hare's childhood and boyhood this is 
for the most part, but there were bursts of sunshine in Augustus 
Hare's life — sunshine shed around him by the kindly, noble- 

GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 



( 6 ) 

minded lady who is called mother all through these volumes, 
and for whom his reverence and gratitude deepened with years." 
— Clifton Society. 

"The 'Story of My Life' is no commonplace autobiography, 
and plunge in where you may, there is something to interest and 
attract."— The Sketch. 

" No one can read these ver)' fascinating pages without feeling 
that what their author has written is absolutely that which no 
other would have ventured to say of him, and what not one in a 
million would have told concerning himself. There is a wonder- 
ful charm of sincerity in what he discloses as to his own feel- 
ings, his likes and dislikes, his actions and trials. He lays 
open, with photographic fidelity, the storj* of his life." — New 
York Churchman. 

" These fair volumes might be labelled the Literature of Peace. 
They offer an outlook on life observant, and yet detached, from 
the turmoil of disillusion." — New York Times. 

" Mr. Hare has written an autobiography that will not soon 
be forgotten." — Chicago Tribune. 

"The story of Mr. Hare's literary life is most entertaining, 
and the charm of the work lies pre-eminently in the pictures of 
the many interesting and often famous men and women whom 
he has known.'" — Boston Congregationalist. 

" Mr. Hare's story is an intensely interesting one, and his 
style, which at first appears to be diffuse, is soon seen to be 
perfectly well adapted to the writer's purpose. . . . These 
volumes are full of the most valuable and attractive material 
for the student of human nature." — The Book Buyer. 

" Mr. Hare's story contains no touches of egotism, but is 
always plain, honest, and straightforward. It is distinctly 
worth reading." — London Literary World. 



GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON 






^J^