A Pendant to “The
Domain of Arnheim”
DURING A pedestrian trip last summer,
through one or two of the river counties of New York,
I found myself, as the day declined, somewhat embarrassed
about the road I was pursuing. The land undulated
very remarkably; and my path, for the last hour, had
wound about and about so confusedly, in its effort
to keep in the valleys, that I no longer knew in what
direction lay the sweet village of B-, where I had
determined to stop for the night. The sun had
scarcely shone strictly speaking during
the day, which nevertheless, had been unpleasantly
warm. A smoky mist, resembling that of the Indian
summer, enveloped all things, and of course, added
to my uncertainty. Not that I cared much about
the matter. If I did not hit upon the village
before sunset, or even before dark, it was more than
possible that a little Dutch farmhouse, or something
of that kind, would soon make its appearance although,
in fact, the neighborhood (perhaps on account of being
more picturesque than fertile) was very sparsely inhabited.
At all events, with my knapsack for a pillow, and
my hound as a sentry, a bivouac in the open air was
just the thing which would have amused me. I
sauntered on, therefore, quite at ease Ponto
taking charge of my gun until at length,
just as I had begun to consider whether the numerous
little glades that led hither and thither, were intended
to be paths at all, I was conducted by one of them
into an unquestionable carriage track. There
could be no mistaking it. The traces of light
wheels were evident; and although the tall shrubberies
and overgrown undergrowth met overhead, there was
no obstruction whatever below, even to the passage
of a Virginian mountain wagon the most aspiring
vehicle, I take it, of its kind. The road, however,
except in being open through the wood if
wood be not too weighty a name for such an assemblage
of light trees and except in the particulars
of evident wheel-tracks bore no resemblance
to any road I had before seen. The tracks of which
I speak were but faintly perceptible having
been impressed upon the firm, yet pleasantly moist
surface of what looked more like green Genoese
velvet than any thing else. It was grass, clearly but
grass such as we seldom see out of England so
short, so thick, so even, and so vivid in color.
Not a single impediment lay in the wheel-route not
even a chip or dead twig. The stones that once
obstructed the way had been carefully placed not
thrown-along the sides of the lane, so as to define
its boundaries at bottom with a kind of half-precise,
half-negligent, and wholly picturesque definition.
Clumps of wild flowers grew everywhere, luxuriantly,
in the interspaces.
What to make of all this, of course
I knew not. Here was art undoubtedly that
did not surprise me all roads, in the ordinary
sense, are works of art; nor can I say that there
was much to wonder at in the mere excess of art manifested;
all that seemed to have been done, might have been
done here with such natural “capabilities”
(as they have it in the books on Landscape Gardening) with
very little labor and expense. No; it was not
the amount but the character of the art which caused
me to take a seat on one of the blossomy stones and
gaze up and down this fairy like avenue
for half an hour or more in bewildered admiration.
One thing became more and more evident the longer I
gazed: an artist, and one with a most scrupulous
eye for form, had superintended all these arrangements.
The greatest care had been taken to preserve a due
medium between the neat and graceful on the one hand,
and the pittoresque, in the true sense of the
Italian term, on the other. There were few straight,
and no long uninterrupted lines. The same effect
of curvature or of color appeared twice, usually, but
not oftener, at any one point of view. Everywhere
was variety in uniformity. It was a piece of
“composition,” in which the most fastidiously
critical taste could scarcely have suggested an emendation.
I had turned to the right as I entered
this road, and now, arising, I continued in the same
direction. The path was so serpentine, that at
no moment could I trace its course for more than two
or three paces in advance. Its character did
not undergo any material change.
Presently the murmur of water fell
gently upon my ear and in a few moments
afterward, as I turned with the road somewhat more
abruptly than hitherto, I became aware that a building
of some kind lay at the foot of a gentle declivity
just before me. I could see nothing distinctly
on account of the mist which occupied all the little
valley below. A gentle breeze, however, now arose,
as the sun was about descending; and while I remained
standing on the brow of the slope, the fog gradually
became dissipated into wreaths, and so floated over
the scene.
As it came fully into view thus
gradually as I describe it piece by piece,
here a tree, there a glimpse of water, and here again
the summit of a chimney, I could scarcely help fancying
that the whole was one of the ingenious illusions
sometimes exhibited under the name of “vanishing
pictures.”
By the time, however, that the fog
had thoroughly disappeared, the sun had made its way
down behind the gentle hills, and thence, as it with
a slight chassez to the south, had come again fully
into sight, glaring with a purplish lustre through
a chasm that entered the valley from the west.
Suddenly, therefore and as if by the hand
of magic this whole valley and every thing
in it became brilliantly visible.
The first coup d’oeil, as the
sun slid into the position described, impressed me
very much as I have been impressed, when a boy, by
the concluding scene of some well-arranged theatrical
spectacle or melodrama. Not even the monstrosity
of color was wanting; for the sunlight came out through
the chasm, tinted all orange and purple; while the
vivid green of the grass in the valley was reflected
more or less upon all objects from the curtain of
vapor that still hung overhead, as if loth to take
its total departure from a scene so enchantingly beautiful.
The little vale into which I thus
peered down from under the fog canopy could not have
been more than four hundred yards long; while in breadth
it varied from fifty to one hundred and fifty or perhaps
two hundred. It was most narrow at its northern
extremity, opening out as it tended southwardly, but
with no very precise regularity. The widest portion
was within eighty yards of the southern extreme.
The slopes which encompassed the vale could not fairly
be called hills, unless at their northern face.
Here a precipitous ledge of granite arose to a height
of some ninety feet; and, as I have mentioned, the
valley at this point was not more than fifty feet
wide; but as the visiter proceeded southwardly
from the cliff, he found on his right hand and on his
left, declivities at once less high, less precipitous,
and less rocky. All, in a word, sloped and softened
to the south; and yet the whole vale was engirdled
by éminences, more or less high, except at two
points. One of these I have already spoken of.
It lay considerably to the north of west, and was
where the setting sun made its way, as I have before
described, into the amphitheatre, through a cleanly
cut natural cleft in the granite embankment; this
fissure might have been ten yards wide at its widest
point, so far as the eye could trace it. It seemed
to lead up, up like a natural causeway, into the recesses
of unexplored mountains and forests. The other
opening was directly at the southern end of the vale.
Here, generally, the slopes were nothing more than
gentle inclinations, extending from east to west about
one hundred and fifty yards. In the middle of
this extent was a depression, level with the ordinary
floor of the valley. As regards vegetation, as
well as in respect to every thing else, the scene
softened and sloped to the south. To the north on
the craggy precipice a few paces from the
verge up sprang the magnificent trunks
of numerous hickories, black walnuts, and chestnuts,
interspersed with occasional oak, and the strong lateral
branches thrown out by the walnuts especially, spread
far over the edge of the cliff. Proceeding southwardly,
the explorer saw, at first, the same class of trees,
but less and less lofty and Salvatorish in character;
then he saw the gentler elm, succeeded by the sassafras
and locust these again by the softer linden,
red-bud, catalpa, and maple these yet again
by still more graceful and more modest varieties.
The whole face of the southern declivity was covered
with wild shrubbery alone an occasional
silver willow or white poplar excepted. In the
bottom of the valley itself (for it must
be borne in mind that the vegetation hitherto mentioned
grew only on the cliffs or hillsides) were
to be seen three insulated trees. One was an
elm of fine size and exquisite form: it stood
guard over the southern gate of the vale. Another
was a hickory, much larger than the elm, and altogether
a much finer tree, although both were exceedingly
beautiful: it seemed to have taken charge of the
northwestern entrance, springing from a group of rocks
in the very jaws of the ravine, and throwing its graceful
body, at an angle of nearly forty-five degrees, far
out into the sunshine of the amphitheatre. About
thirty yards east of this tree stood, however, the
pride of the valley, and beyond all question the most
magnificent tree I have ever seen, unless, perhaps,
among the cypresses of the Itchiatuckanee. It
was a triple stemmed tulip-tree the
Liriodendron Tulipiferum one of the natural
order of magnolias. Its three trunks separated
from the parent at about three feet from the soil,
and diverging very slightly and gradually, were not
more than four feet apart at the point where the largest
stem shot out into foliage: this was at an elevation
of about eighty feet. The whole height of the
principal division was one hundred and twenty feet.
Nothing can surpass in beauty the form, or the glossy,
vivid green of the leaves of the tulip-tree. In
the present instance they were fully eight inches
wide; but their glory was altogether eclipsed by the
gorgeous splendor of the profuse blossoms. Conceive,
closely congregated, a million of the largest and most
resplendent tulips! Only thus can the reader
get any idea of the picture I would convey. And
then the stately grace of the clean, delicately granulated
columnar stems, the largest four feet in diameter,
at twenty from the ground. The innumerable blossoms,
mingling with those of other trees scarcely less beautiful,
although infinitely less majestic, filled the valley
with more than Arabian perfumes.
The general floor of the amphitheatre
was grass of the same character as that I had found
in the road; if anything, more deliciously soft, thick,
velvety, and miraculously green. It was hard to
conceive how all this beauty had been attained.
I have spoken of two openings into
the vale. From the one to the northwest issued
a rivulet, which came, gently murmuring and slightly
foaming, down the ravine, until it dashed against the
group of rocks out of which sprang the insulated hickory.
Here, after encircling the tree, it passed on a little
to the north of east, leaving the tulip tree some
twenty feet to the south, and making no decided alteration
in its course until it came near the midway between
the eastern and western boundaries of the valley.
At this point, after a series of sweeps, it turned
off at right angles and pursued a generally southern
direction meandering as it went until it
became lost in a small lake of irregular figure (although
roughly oval), that lay gleaming near the lower extremity
of the vale. This lakelet was, perhaps, a hundred
yards in diameter at its widest part. No crystal
could be clearer than its waters. Its bottom,
which could be distinctly seen, consisted altogether,
of pebbles brilliantly white. Its banks, of the
emerald grass already described, rounded, rather than
sloped, off into the clear heaven below; and so clear
was this heaven, so perfectly, at times, did it reflect
all objects above it, that where the true bank ended
and where the mimic one commenced, it was a point
of no little difficulty to determine. The trout,
and some other varieties of fish, with which this
pond seemed to be almost inconveniently crowded, had
all the appearance of veritable flying-fish.
It was almost impossible to believe that they were
not absolutely suspended in the air. A light
birch canoe that lay placidly on the water, was reflected
in its minutest fibres with a fidelity unsurpassed
by the most exquisitely polished mirror. A small
island, fairly laughing with flowers in full bloom,
and affording little more space than just enough for
a picturesque little building, seemingly a fowl-house arose
from the lake not far from its northern shore to
which it was connected by means of an inconceivably
light looking and yet very primitive bridge.
It was formed of a single, broad and thick plank of
the tulip wood. This was forty feet long, and
spanned the interval between shore and shore with
a slight but very perceptible arch, preventing all
oscillation. From the southern extreme of the
lake issued a continuation of the rivulet, which,
after meandering for, perhaps, thirty yards, finally
passed through the “depression” (already
described) in the middle of the southern declivity,
and tumbling down a sheer precipice of a hundred feet,
made its devious and unnoticed way to the Hudson.
The lake was deep at some
points thirty feet but the rivulet seldom
exceeded three, while its greatest width was about
eight. Its bottom and banks were as those of
the pond if a defect could have been attributed,
in point of picturesqueness, it was that of excessive
neatness.
The expanse of the green turf was
relieved, here and there, by an occasional showy shrub,
such as the hydrangea, or the common snowball, or
the aromatic seringa; or, more frequently, by a clump
of geraniums blossoming gorgeously in great varieties.
These latter grew in pots which were carefully buried
in the soil, so as to give the plants the appearance
of being indigenous. Besides all this, the lawn’s
velvet was exquisitely spotted with sheep a
considerable flock of which roamed about the vale,
in company with three tamed deer, and a vast number
of brilliantly plumed ducks. A very
large mastiff seemed to be in vigilant attendance
upon these animals, each and all.
Along the eastern and western cliffs where,
toward the upper portion of the amphitheatre, the
boundaries were more or less precipitous grew
ivy in great profusion so that only here
and there could even a glimpse of the naked rock be
obtained. The northern precipice, in like manner,
was almost entirely clothed by grape-vines of rare
luxuriance; some springing from the soil at the base
of the cliff, and others from ledges on its face.
The slight elevation which formed
the lower boundary of this little domain, was crowned
by a neat stone wall, of sufficient height to prevent
the escape of the deer. Nothing of the fence kind
was observable elsewhere; for nowhere else was an
artificial enclosure needed: any stray
sheep, for example, which should attempt to make its
way out of the vale by means of the ravine, would
find its progress arrested, after a few yards’
advance, by the precipitous ledge of rock over which
tumbled the cascade that had arrested my attention
as I first drew near the domain. In short, the
only ingress or egress was through a gate occupying
a rocky pass in the road, a few paces below the point
at which I stopped to reconnoitre the scene.
I have described the brook as meandering
very irregularly through the whole of its course.
Its two general directions, as I have said, were first
from west to east, and then from north to south.
At the turn, the stream, sweeping backward, made an
almost circular loop, so as to form a peninsula which
was very nearly an island, and which included about
the sixteenth of an acre. On this peninsula stood
a dwelling-house and when I say that this
house, like the infernal terrace seen by Vathek, “était
d’une architecture inconnue dans
les annales de la terre,”
I mean, merely, that its tout ensemble struck me with
the keenest sense of combined novelty and propriety in
a word, of poetry (for, than in the words
just employed, I could scarcely give, of poetry in
the abstract, a more rigorous definition) and
I do not mean that merely outre was perceptible
in any respect.
In fact nothing could well be more
simple more utterly unpretending than this
cottage. Its marvellous effect lay altogether
in its artistic arrangement as a picture. I could
have fancied, while I looked at it, that some eminent
landscape-painter had built it with his brush.
The point of view from which I first
saw the valley, was not altogether, although it was
nearly, the best point from which to survey the house.
I will therefore describe it as I afterwards saw it from
a position on the stone wall at the southern extreme
of the amphitheatre.
The main building was about twenty-four
feet long and sixteen broad certainly not
more. Its total height, from the ground to the
apex of the roof, could not have exceeded eighteen
feet. To the west end of this structure was attached
one about a third smaller in all its proportions: the
line of its front standing back about two yards from
that of the larger house, and the line of its roof,
of course, being considerably depressed below that
of the roof adjoining. At right angles to these
buildings, and from the rear of the main one not
exactly in the middle extended a third
compartment, very small being, in general,
one-third less than the western wing. The roofs
of the two larger were very steep sweeping
down from the ridge-beam with a long concave curve,
and extending at least four feet beyond the walls in
front, so as to form the roofs of two piazzas.
These latter roofs, of course, needed no support;
but as they had the air of needing it, slight and perfectly
plain pillars were inserted at the corners alone.
The roof of the northern wing was merely an extension
of a portion of the main roof. Between the chief
building and western wing arose a very tall and rather
slender square chimney of hard Dutch bricks, alternately
black and red: a slight cornice of projecting
bricks at the top. Over the gables the roofs
also projected very much: in the main building
about four feet to the east and two to the west.
The principal door was not exactly in the main division,
being a little to the east while the two
windows were to the west. These latter did not
extend to the floor, but were much longer and narrower
than usual they had single shutters like
doors the panes were of lozenge form, but
quite large. The door itself had its upper half
of glass, also in lozenge panes a movable
shutter secured it at night. The door to the
west wing was in its gable, and quite simple a
single window looked out to the south. There was
no external door to the north wing, and it also had
only one window to the east.
The blank wall of the eastern gable
was relieved by stairs (with a balustrade) running
diagonally across it the ascent being from
the south. Under cover of the widely projecting
eave these steps gave access to a door leading to
the garret, or rather loft for it was lighted
only by a single window to the north, and seemed to
have been intended as a store-room.
The piazzas of the main building and
western wing had no floors, as is usual; but at the
doors and at each window, large, flat irregular slabs
of granite lay imbedded in the delicious turf, affording
comfortable footing in all weather. Excellent
paths of the same material not nicely adapted,
but with the velvety sod filling frequent intervals
between the stones, led hither and thither from the
house, to a crystal spring about five paces off, to
the road, or to one or two out houses that
lay to the north, beyond the brook, and were thoroughly
concealed by a few locusts and catalpas.
Not more than six steps from the main
door of the cottage stood the dead trunk of a fantastic
pear-tree, so clothed from head to foot in the gorgeous
bignonia blossoms that one required no little scrutiny
to determine what manner of sweet thing it could be.
From various arms of this tree hung cages of different
kinds. In one, a large wicker cylinder with a
ring at top, revelled a mocking bird; in another an
oriole; in a third the impudent bobolink while
three or four more delicate prisons were loudly vocal
with canaries.
The pillars of the piazza were enwreathed
in jasmine and sweet honeysuckle; while from the angle
formed by the main structure and its west wing, in
front, sprang a grape-vine of unexampled luxuriance.
Scorning all restraint, it had clambered first to the
lower roof then to the higher; and along
the ridge of this latter it continued to writhe on,
throwing out tendrils to the right and left, until
at length it fairly attained the east gable, and fell
trailing over the stairs.
The whole house, with its wings, was
constructed of the old-fashioned Dutch shingles broad,
and with unrounded corners. It is a peculiarity
of this material to give houses built of it the appearance
of being wider at bottom than at top after
the manner of Egyptian architecture; and in the present
instance, this exceedingly picturesque effect was
aided by numerous pots of gorgeous flowers that almost
encompassed the base of the buildings.
The shingles were painted a dull gray;
and the happiness with which this neutral tint melted
into the vivid green of the tulip tree leaves that
partially overshadowed the cottage, can readily be
conceived by an artist.
From the position near the stone wall,
as described, the buildings were seen at great advantage for
the southeastern angle was thrown forward so
that the eye took in at once the whole of the two fronts,
with the picturesque eastern gable, and at the same
time obtained just a sufficient glimpse of the northern
wing, with parts of a pretty roof to the spring-house,
and nearly half of a light bridge that spanned the
brook in the near vicinity of the main buildings.
I did not remain very long on the
brow of the hill, although long enough to make a thorough
survey of the scene at my feet. It was clear that
I had wandered from the road to the village, and I
had thus good traveller’s excuse to open the
gate before me, and inquire my way, at all events;
so, without more ado, I proceeded.
The road, after passing the gate,
seemed to lie upon a natural ledge, sloping gradually
down along the face of the north-eastern cliffs.
It led me on to the foot of the northern precipice,
and thence over the bridge, round by the eastern gable
to the front door. In this progress, I took notice
that no sight of the out-houses could be obtained.
As I turned the corner of the gable,
the mastiff bounded towards me in stern silence, but
with the eye and the whole air of a tiger. I held
him out my hand, however, in token of amity and
I never yet knew the dog who was proof against such
an appeal to his courtesy. He not only shut his
mouth and wagged his tail, but absolutely offered me
his paw-afterward extending his civilities to Ponto.
As no bell was discernible, I rapped
with my stick against the door, which stood half open.
Instantly a figure advanced to the threshold that
of a young woman about twenty-eight years of age slender,
or rather slight, and somewhat above the medium height.
As she approached, with a certain modest decision of
step altogether indescribable. I said to myself,
“Surely here I have found the perfection of
natural, in contradistinction from artificial grace.”
The second impression which she made on me, but by
far the more vivid of the two, was that of enthusiasm.
So intense an expression of romance, perhaps I should
call it, or of unworldliness, as that which gleamed
from her deep-set eyes, had never so sunk into my heart
of hearts before. I know not how it is, but this
peculiar expression of the eye, wreathing itself occasionally
into the lips, is the most powerful, if not absolutely
the sole spell, which rivets my interest in woman.
“Romance, provided my readers fully comprehended
what I would here imply by the word “romance”
and “womanliness” seem to me convertible
terms: and, after all, what man truly loves in
woman, is simply her womanhood. The eyes of Annie
(I heard some one from the interior call her “Annie,
darling!”) were “spiritual grey;”
her hair, a light chestnut: this is all I had
time to observe of her.
At her most courteous of invitations,
I entered passing first into a tolerably
wide vestibule. Having come mainly to observe,
I took notice that to my right as I stepped in, was
a window, such as those in front of the house; to
the left, a door leading into the principal room;
while, opposite me, an open door enabled me to see
a small apartment, just the size of the vestibule,
arranged as a study, and having a large bow window
looking out to the north.
Passing into the parlor, I found myself
with Mr. Landor for this, I afterwards
found, was his name. He was civil, even cordial
in his manner, but just then, I was more intent on
observing the arrangements of the dwelling which had
so much interested me, than the personal appearance
of the tenant.
The north wing, I now saw, was a bed-chamber,
its door opened into the parlor. West of this
door was a single window, looking toward the brook.
At the west end of the parlor, were a fireplace, and
a door leading into the west wing probably
a kitchen.
Nothing could be more rigorously simple
than the furniture of the parlor. On the floor
was an ingrain carpet, of excellent texture a
white ground, spotted with small circular green figures.
At the windows were curtains of snowy white jaconet
muslin: they were tolerably full, and hung decisively,
perhaps rather formally in sharp, parallel plaits
to the floor just to the floor. The
walls were prepared with a French paper of great delicacy,
a silver ground, with a faint green cord running zig-zag
throughout. Its expanse was relieved merely by
three of Julien’s exquisite lithographs a trois
crayons, fastened to the wall without frames.
One of these drawings was a scene of Oriental luxury,
or rather voluptuousness; another was a “carnival
piece,” spirited beyond compare; the third was
a Greek female head a face so divinely
beautiful, and yet of an expression so provokingly
indeterminate, never before arrested my attention.
The more substantial furniture consisted
of a round table, a few chairs (including a large
rocking-chair), and a sofa, or rather “settee;”
its material was plain maple painted a creamy white,
slightly interstriped with green; the seat of cane.
The chairs and table were “to match,” but
the forms of all had evidently been designed by the
same brain which planned “the grounds;”
it is impossible to conceive anything more graceful.
On the table were a few books, a large,
square, crystal bottle of some novel perfume, a plain
ground glass astral (not solar) lamp with
an Italian shade, and a large vase of resplendently-blooming
flowers. Flowers, indeed, of gorgeous colours
and delicate odour formed the sole mere decoration
of the apartment. The fire-place was nearly filled
with a vase of brilliant geranium. On a triangular
shelf in each angle of the room stood also a similar
vase, varied only as to its lovely contents.
One or two smaller bouquets adorned the mantel, and
late violets clustered about the open windows.
It is not the purpose of this work
to do more than give in detail, a picture of Mr. Landor’s
residence as I found it. How he made
it what it was and why with
some particulars of Mr. Landor himself may,
possibly form the subject of another article.