APPOINTMENT AT HARVARD AND SECOND VISIT TO EUROPE
While he was thus occupied with thoughts
and studies which proved to be more far-seeing than
he knew, the young professor was embarrassed by financial
difficulties in which the college found itself; and
he began after three years to consider the possibility
of a transfer to other scenes, perhaps to some professorship
in New York or Virginia.
The following letter, hitherto unpublished,
gives us the view taken in the Longfellow house of
another project, namely, that of his succeeding to
the charge of the then famous Round Hill School at
Northampton, about to be abandoned by its projector,
Joseph G. Cogswell. The quiet judgment of the
young wife thus sums it up in writing to her sister-in-law:-
Sunday
afternoon [February, 1834].
... Henry left us Friday noon in
the mail for Boston, as George will tell you.
I do not like the idea of his going to Northampton
at all-although it would be a most
beautiful place to reside in. Still I feel
sure he would not like the care of a school, and such
an extensive establishment as that is too.
He heard that Mr. Cogswell was to leave them for
Raleigh and wrote him-in answer to which
he received a long letter, wishing him much to
take the place, &c.; which determined him to go
immediately to Northampton. He requires $1600
to be advanced, and it would be incurring a certain
expense upon a great uncertainty of gaining more
than a living there. I do not think Henry
calculated at all for such a situation. If he
dislikes so much the care of such a little family
as ours, how can he expect to like the multifarious
cares of such a large one! He has promised
not to decide upon anything till he returns, and I
feel so confident that all uninterested persons
will dissuade him from it, that I rest quite at
ease. I wished him to go to satisfy himself, he
was so very sanguine as to the result of it.
We expect him home the last of next week.
This Northampton business is a profound secret and
is not mentioned out of the family!
Another extract from the same correspondent
shows us how Longfellow was temporarily influenced
at Brunswick, like Lowell afterwards at Cambridge,
by the marked hygienic and even ascetic atmosphere
of the period; an influence apparently encouraged
in both cases by their young wives, yet leaving no
permanent trace upon the habits of either poet,-habits
always moderate, in both cases, but never in the literal
sense abstemious.
Friday
evening [April, 1834].
... He has gone to a Temperance
Lecture this evening. He intends becoming
a member of the Temperance Society; indeed I do not
know but he has signed the paper already.
He is a good little dear, and I approve of everything
(almost smoking) he does. He is becoming
an advocate of vegetable diet, Dr. Mussey’s
hobby; and Clara and I have nothing but lectures
from him and Alexander, upon corsets.
The following extract gives us a glimpse
of his literary work:-
BRUNSWICK,
No, 1834.
Henry comes on famously with Outre
Mer. The No. on Spain is finished and
that on Italy will be before Thanksgiving. It
is by far more interesting than any of the other
No’s. Henry thinks himself it is much
superior in point of interest and in style. I
presume he will have the remaining No’s
published together in N. Y. this winter.
In the midst of such literary and
household cares he received the following letter:-
CAMBRIDGE,
December 1, 1834.
DEAR SIR,-Professor Ticknor
has given notice that it is his intention to resign
his office of Smith Professor of Modern Languages
in Harvard University, as soon as the Corporation shall
have fixed upon a successor.
The duty of nominating to that office
devolves upon me; and after great deliberation
and inquiry my determination is made to nominate you
for that office under circumstances which render your
appointment not doubtful,-provided I
receive a previous assurance from you of your
acceptance of it. To ascertain this is the object
of the present letter.
The salary will be fifteen hundred dollars
a year. Residence in Cambridge will be required.
The duties of the professorship will be of course
those which are required from the occupant of a full
professorship, and such as the Corporation and
the Overseers may appoint. If a relation
such as I suggest with this university be acceptable
to you, I shall be obliged by an early answer.
Should it be your wish, previously to
entering upon the duties of the office, to reside
in Europe, at your own expense, a year or eighteen
months for the purpose of a more perfect attainment
of the German, Mr. Ticknor will retain his office
till your return.
Very respectfully,
I am
Yours, etc., etc.,
JOSIAH
QUINCY.
“Good fortune comes at last
and I certainly shall not reject it,” the young
Longfellow wrote to his father. “The last
paragraph of the letter,” he adds, “though
put in the form of a permission, seems to imply a
request. I think I shall accept that also.”
Some additional correspondence, however, proved necessary,
such as follows:-
HON. JOSIAH QUINCY:
SIR,-Your letter of to-day
inclosing the Vote of the President and Fellows
of Har’d University in relation to the Professorship
of Mod’n Lang’s has been received,
and in expressing anew my desire to meet your
wishes fully in the matter before us, I beg leave to
defer an official answer until my return from
the South, in about three weeks hence.
In the mean time may I take the liberty
of calling your attention once more to the subject
of our last conversation? I feel it important
that I should be regularly appointed before sailing
for Europe. Otherwise I present myself as
any private individual whatever. But if I
go as one of your professors, I carry with me in that
very circumstance my best letter of recommendation.
It gives me a character-and a greater
claim to attention abroad, than I can otherwise
take with me. Judge Story is ready to consent
to this arrangement-so is Mr. Gray-so
is Mr. Ticknor. If you could bring the subject
once more before the corporation, I think the objections
suggested by you when I saw you this morning will
be found to give way before the good results,
which I think may be reasonably anticipated from
change in your vote where respectfully suggested.
Very
respect’y
y’r. Ob’e.
Ser’t.
HENRY
W. LONGFELLOW.
BOSTON, Jan’y 1, 1834. [Error
for 1835.]
HON. JOSIAH QUINCY:
SIR,-Placing entire confidence
in the assurances of the President and Fellows
of Harvard University in reference to my election to
the Smith Professorship of Modern Languages and
Belles Lettres in that institution,
which assurances were communicated to me in y’r
favor of 1st January, together with their Vote
upon the subject,-I have the honor
to inform you, that I shall sail for Europe in the
month of April next, and remain there till the
summer of 1836.
Very respectfully
HENRY
W. LONGFELLOW.
PORTLAND, February 3, 1835.
His first book, in a strict sense,
published before his departure, was his translation
of the “Coplas of Jorge Manrique”
(1833), in which were added to the main poem a few
translations of sonnets, the whole being prefaced
with an article from “The North American Review”
on the “Moral and Devotional Poetry of Spain.”
It was these works which had attracted the attention
of Professor Ticknor, and had led to results so important.
The young professor sailed at the time mentioned, accompanied
by his wife and two young ladies, her friends.
His first aim was Sweden, but he spent
a few weeks in London, where he met, among others,
Carlyle. So little has hitherto been recorded
of this part of Longfellow’s life or of his
early married life in any way, that I am glad to be
able to describe it from the original letters of the
young wife, which are now in my possession, and are
addressed mainly to Mrs. Longfellow, her mother-in-law.
She seems to have enjoyed her travelling experiences
very thoroughly, and writes in one case, “We
are generally taken for French ... and I am always
believed to be Henry’s sister. They say
to me, ’What a resemblance between your brother
and self!’”
Sunday
afternoon, May 31, 1835.
MY DEAR MOTHER,-I wrote you
a very few lines, in great haste, in Henry’s
letter to his Father, acknowledging the receipt of
your kind letter. I hope that you will write
us as often as your many cares will permit, &
be assured that even a few lines will always be welcomed
with delight by your absent children. We have
passed our time very delightfully in London.
The only difficulty is-there is so
much to be seen & so little time to see it in.
We have, however, seen many of the principal points.
Last Monday we passed very delightfully at Shirley
Park, near the little village of Croydon. The
ride is through a very beautiful country. We passed
several gipsy encampments, in the most picturesque
situations. Shirley Park is a truly delightful
place. The house, which is a very fine one, is
placed on a beautiful spot, & there are fine views
from all sides of it. Mrs. Skinner, the lady
of the place, is a very agreeable amiable lady-She
took us all over the grounds in her carriage, & was
very kind & attentive to us. Her house is
thronged with visitors, the great, the fashionable,
& the literati all pay their court to her.
She is a great admirer of Willis’s, & thinks
his writings superior to Irving’s!-On
Wednesday we visited the National Gallery, the finest
collection of old paintings in the city. We saw
while we were there, the Queen pass into the city,
attended by the horse-guards in their beautiful
uniforms. Five or six carriages passed with a
coachman & two footmen to each, lost almost in
the quantity of gold lace which covered them.
Last of all came her Majesty’s carriage with
two coachmen & four footmen in the same magnificent
livery. Thursday was the king’s birth
day. The drawing room was the most splendid
one that had ever been seen-so Willis says.
In the eve’g there was a grand illumination.
About ten Henry and Mr. Frazer went out to see
it. The crowd was so immense, that it was with
the greatest difficulty they made their way home.
Four women from St. Giles’s armed with large
clubs pointed with iron, passed through the crowd
striking in all directions. We took a carriage
& drove to see the illuminations. It was
after eleven & the crowd had nearly dispersed.
There were brilliant crowns & a variety of pretty devices
formed with coloured lamps & some very fine gas
ones. I suspect however there was very little
true rejoicing in all this show & splendour.
The Queen is very unpopular among the people.
Friday morn’g-Willis called.
He had been to breakfast with the beautiful Mrs.
Wadsworth, & was on his way, to breakfast at 3 in the
aft. with the Duchess of St. Albans. Mrs.
Wadsworth, from Genesseo, was a Philadelphia lady
& has been greatly admired on the continent & here.
She returns in a few days to America. Yesterday
morning Mr. Barnard a young lawyer from Connecticut
called upon me. He arrived but a month before
us, & takes much the same route as we do, though a
more extensive one. He will be in Stockholm in
the course of the summer. Mr. Carlyle of
Craigenputtock was soon after announced, & passed
an half hour with us much to our delight. He has
very unpolished manners, & broad Scottish accent,
but such fine language & beautiful thoughts that
it is truly delightful to listen to him. Perhaps
you have read some of his articles in the Edinburgh
Review. He invited us to take tea with him
at Chelsea, where they now reside. We were
as much charmed with Mrs. C[arlyle] as with her husband.
She is a lovely woman with very simple & pleasing manners.
She is also very talented & accomplished, & how
delightful it is to see such modesty combined
with such power to please. On Tuesday we visit
Chantrey’s study with them. This morning
Mr. Bentham, a nephew of Jeremy’s, called,
& invited us to dine with them on Wednesday-We
may see the great potentate appear. Henry
is petitioning for room to write, & saying that
I must retire, but I must tell you my dreams.
A few nights since I heard Samuel [Longfellow]
preach for Dr. Nichols. Last night I dreamt
I was with my father & sisters, telling them of all
I had seen. I only went to America to make a call
& tell you all we had safely arrived, & was to
return immediately. You will give very much
love to all for me. They must all write me, &
their letters shall be answered as speedily as
possible. We leave here the last of this
week. I shall leave letters to be sent by the
first opportunity. George & Ann must not
forget us.
Your ever
affectionate
MARY.
The Carlyles are again mentioned in
a letter written while crossing the German Ocean.
STEAM
SHIP, GERMAN OCEAN,
Thursday,
June 11 .
... We have some very pleasant
passengers. A German lady with her father
and little girl. What a strange idea foreigners
have of America! This lady who appears very
intelligent asked us if America was anything
like London!! Then we have a German Prince
with huge mustachios; Clara played whist with him
last evening! Oh dear! I do not know
as I shall be able to speak to you when I return,
I see so many lords and ladies! but in reality these
lords and ladies are not half as agreeable people
as some of Henry’s literary friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle have more genuine worth and talent
than half of the nobility in London. Mr. Carlyle’s
literary fame is very high, and she is a very
talented woman-but they are people
after my own heart-not the least pretension
about them. Mrs. Carlyle has a pin with Goethe’s
head upon it, which that great author sent her
himself. She is very proud of it I assure you.
They live very retired, not wishing to mix with
fashionable society, which they regard in its
true light; still they have some friends among
the nobility who know how to value them.
STOCKHOLM,
August 5, 1835.
MY DEAR MOTHER,-I hope you
have received my letter to you from London ere
this. We sent letters home from here July 21st
by Capt. Symons directly to Boston-it
was as soon as possible after our arrival; among
them Henry sent a letter to his father, & I to Mary,
Sam & Anne. I was quite delighted to receive
a letter from Mary & Sam-hope they
will write me often. Since our last letters we
have removed our lodgings to “N.
Clara Soedra Kyko Gatan.” We have more
rooms but not as good ones as in the Droteninggatan.
We have made some very pleasant acquaintances
here. July 15th we dined at Mr. Arfwedson’s-the
father of the gentleman who married an American lady.
Mr. A - resides at Liston Hill in
the Park-he has a little English cottage,
built by Sir Robert Liston, formerly English minister
to this court. It is a sweet spot-the
Maeler flows almost directly beneath the windows
of the cottage-a little flower garden is
upon its banks, & a fine grove of trees in the rear
of the cottage. Mr. Arfwedson is a fine old
man-his wife has been dead several
years. The only ladies present were our countrywoman
Mrs. A - & the eldest daughter
of Mr. Arfwedson-the wife of Baron S .
She is a very delicate and graceful lady, was dressed
very tastefully & altogether unlike the Swedish
ladies we had before seen. Mr. A’s
second daughter is just married to a brother of her
sister’s husband who is also a Baron.
They went immediately to Copenhagen, we have not
therefore seen her, but have heard much of her
great beauty. There were a number of gentlemen
present at dinner, several of which were English.
The dinner table was by far the prettiest we have
seen in Sweden.... The dessert plates were very
beautiful, white china-upon each of which
was a different flower elegantly painted.
After coffee the gentleman proposed a drive to
Rosendale, a little palace in the park. It is
the favorite spot of king Bernadotte. We
first went to the splendid porphyry vase, which
stands in the centre of the flower garden back of the
palace. The top of this celebrated & immense
vase is cut from a single block of porphyry.
Sweden is very celebrated for its fine porphyry.
The lower rooms of the palace are handsomely furnished,
but the upper ones are quite splendid. All
the rooms were carpeted with beautiful carpets-the
walls were hung with silk damask-each room
a different color, with curtains, sofas & chairs to
correspond. One room was hung with white
damask, & the chairs & sofa were covered with
beautiful embroidery-the ground of which
was white, wrought by the Queen & her maids of
honor. There was a great profusion of this
beautiful embroidery-fire screens, ottomans,
&c.-The chandeliers, mirrors & candelabras
were very elegant. In one room was a portrait
of the king, which was very like him. In another
that of the Queen-much flattered. She
was a daughter of a merchant of Marseilles.
There are no bed-chambers in this palace. The
king very rarely sleeps out of his palace in town.
We returned to Mr. Arfwedson’s & took tea.
Mrs. A - is very accomplished, she
speaks nearly all the modern languages. She
invited us to dine with them on the next Sabbath.
July 16th. We dined at Mr. Stockoe’s,
a partner of Mr. Erskine’s. We met
quite a large & pleasant party there. The Stockoe’s
are excellent, kind-hearted people. They
have paid us every attention. Mrs. S -
sends us presents of fruits & flowers, & all those
little attentions which it is so agreeable to
receive.-I was quite unwell on Sunday,
on account of a very long walk the evening previous.
I did not therefore go to young Arfwedson’s.
Clara & H - went & had a very
pleasant visit. They met there Baron Stackelberg,
who was Swedish minister in America fourteen years.
He returned but two years since. He has called
upon us several times since, & is a jovial old
man with perfectly white hair & whiskers.
July 22nd. The Stockoe’s invited us
to drive out to Haga with them. We went out at
six in the evening. This palace is about two English
miles from town. It was built by Gustavus
the 3rd, & was his favorite residence. The
furniture was very old, but there is one fine room
lined with mirrors. In the drawing
room is a centre table with a deep top & pots
of flowers placed in it. This top was covered
entirely with moss, this had a very pretty effect,
especially as there were a variety of flowers
all in bloom. The table was on castors &
could be placed in any position.... We were shown
three very small chambers, where Gustavus the
4th was imprisoned after he was dethroned.
His queen lived with him there. In another building,
a pavilion, were some rooms furnished in more modern
style. The Queen sleeps in these rooms when
she comes to Haga, [but] the royal family rarely
visit this palace. The grounds are very beautiful.
We walked round the Park to the famous palace
which Gustavus 3d commenced building after his
return from Italy. Here he expended two millions,
& the foundations were but laid & the stones in readiness
for the walls when he was assassinated. The
work was then immediately stopped as the people
were much opposed to the undertaking. We
saw the model of this building which was to have been
a very extensive one. A row of columns all around
it, to have been built in the Italian style.
The model was more like a temple than a palace.
We took tea at a little inn in Hagalund & returned
home late in the evening-The king has
a great number of palaces round Stockholm, there
are seven or eight, & as many it is said in every
province.
We have a very pleasant little family
of our own, & have fine times together. Mr.
Hughes says “for one lady it would have been
intolerable, for two very unpleasant; but for three
quite agreeable.” Henry has been much
disappointed not to receive a letter from his
father. We are now expecting letters every day
from home, & when Wm. Goddard arrives next month
we hope to have many-
Please to give my love to Aunt
Lucia & say to her I shall write her
very soon. Be so kind as to give much love
to all the family for me,
& accept much love & respect for yourself & Mr
Longfellow from
Your ever
affectionate
MARY
-
MY DEAREST MOTHER,-As a little
blank space is left, I will fill it with a postscript.-We
have just returned-that is to say, day
before yesterday,-from a visit to the
University of Upsala, and the Iron mines of Dannemora;-of
which Mary will give you a description all in
good time. We already begin to think of leaving
Stockholm-and shall probably take the
steamboat to Gothenburg in about three weeks.-For
my own part, I should like to go sooner if we
could. I am disappointed in Sweden. The climate
is too cold and unpleasant. I want a little
warm sunshine. Something that I can feel,
as well as see. From Gothenburg we shall go to
Copenhagen, and after passing a month there, take
steamboat to Stettin, and so to Berlin. We
shall not return to the North again but pass
the next summer in Germany and France.
Much love to all. Very affectionately
your Son
H.
W. LONGFELLOW
MRS. STEPHEN LONGFELLOW,
Care of Hon. Stephen Longfellow,
Portland, Maine,
U. S. of America.
[TO] HON. STEPHEN LONGFELLOW,
PORTLAND, MAINE, U. S. OF AMERICA.
COPENHAGEN,
September 21, 1835.
MY DEAR SIR,-Henry has consented
that I should copy a few pages of his journal
for you; but I could not prevail on him to grant this,
till I promised again & again for you, that you
would not on any condition, allow it to go out
of your house. The children can read it
there; & I will ask of you the same favor for my father
and my sisters, for I know they will take much
interest in it.
If it cheers a lonely winter’s
evening, or cheats you of a few
melancholy hours, I shall feel most amply repaid
for the trouble I
have taken.
We have regretted much to hear of your
feeble health, but hope that your journey has
quite renovated you. I [was] delighted to receive
a second letter from Mrs. L[ongfellow], in a p[ackage]
of letters which reached us a few days since.
She is very kind to write me, & I shall not fail
to write her, as often as possible, while absent.
With this you will receive a letter
for Aunt Lucia. I shall answer
Mrs. L’s letter very soon.
Henry has become quite learned
in the Swedish, & can already
translate Danish. He is studying Icelandic
also, as I presume he has
told you. He is in fine health & spirits.
With many wishes for your health
& my Mother’s, & with much respect
& affection for you both-I am as ever
Your affectionate
MARY
-
[On outside of letter.] September
28. I have written by the same
ship that brings you this. H. W. L. Also
a letter to George.
[Endorsement.]
Mary P. Longfellow to
S. Longfellow, containing a
Copy of Henry’s Journal
Sep, 1835.
COPENHAGEN,
September 22, 1835.
MY DEAR AUNT LUCIA,-Pray
do not be alarmed on receiving this letter for
fear that you must answer it. I have not hoped
such a favor, but am content, however much I should
be delighted to hear from you, to write you occasionally
without the hopes of an answer, thinking & knowing
you would be as happy to receive a letter from me as
any of my dear friends. I received a very
entertaining letter from Anne a few days since.
Henry says “Anne’s letters have some pith
to them.” Pray urge her to write us
often, & I shall take just as much interest in
hearing about her family affairs as if I was in Brunswick.
And so you have made a visit in Boston,
& have been upon railroads, to balloon ascensions,
theatres & I know not what. After such a quiet
life as you have passed for several years, it must
be quite a pleasant little incident, & I know
that you must have enjoyed your visit much.
But, after all, do you not think that the pleasure
of travelling is greatest when it has been all
passed, & you are seated once more in your quiet
home,-& retrace in imagination your wanderings?
It must be so-I think-then you
remember only what is agreeable, & the thousand
little inconveniences, one must suffer in travelling,
are forgotten.
I cannot tell you how delighted
we all are that we are out of
Sweden. Henry scolds
not a little that a summer in Europe should
have been passed there.
You have heard before this, by our letters
from Gothenburg, that we were detained there a
week, much against our will. We passed the time,
however, very pleasantly. H[enry] delivered a
letter from my Uncle Robert [Storer] to Mr. Wijk
of that place, & he was very attentive & kind
to us. On Sunday the 6th of September we dined
with him, & had the pleasure of being introduced
to his celebrated lady. She appears as his
daughter, being more than thirty years younger than
her husband. We had heard of her great beauty
in America. I cannot say that she is beautiful,
but she is extremely pretty with very interesting
manners. They have travelled much on the continent
& in England. The dinner was much more American
than any we had seen in Sweden. In the centre
of the table was a high glass dish filled with
a musk-melon & surrounded with flowers. The remainder
of the dessert was not placed upon the table,
but came on after meat, &c., as in our country.
After soup, fish & meat, we had a nice baked
apple pudding; & after this, the cloth was removed
from the nicely polished round table, & the dessert
of cake, apples, pears, preserves, nuts & raisins
was placed upon it. Captain Condry from Newburyport
dined there, a very pleasant and gentlemanly man.
Mrs. Wijk urged us to remain to tea, but we left
them soon after dinner.
Monda. In the aft’ walked
around Gothenburg, a pleasant town, & much preferable
as an abiding place to Stockholm, in my opinion.
On returning home found Mr. and Mrs. Wijk.
She looked sweetly & was dressed elegantly.
They called to invite us to pass the morrow with them,
at their country seat.-Tuesda.
At eleven in the morning, took a carriage to Mr.
Wijk’s. A long & tedious ride, one & a
quarter Swedish mile from town. We arrived
there at one, found Mr. W[ijk] & his lady waiting
to receive us. We took a walk round the grounds
before dinner. The house built in a very pretty
style & the grounds something like an English
Park. An English gentleman, a brother-in-law
of Mr. Wijk’s dined with us. He has a country
seat adjoining. After dinner, we walked to
this gentleman’s grounds. They are
quite delighted with a fine lake near the house.
We then visited the factories, which the owner,
a man of great mechanical genius, has erected
upon his grounds. We saw all the different stages
the flax went through before weaving & lastly
the weaving itself. We returned home & took
tea with Mrs. Wijk & then bade adieu. Found on
our return home Mr. Appleton had arrived from Stockholm.
He goes to Copenhagen with us.
Wednesda. At two in the aft’
we left Gothenburg, in a little boat for the steamer
station, which is three miles from the town.
Mr. Wijk accompanied us to the wharf. When
we arrived at the steamer pier-found
the boat had not arrived from Christiana, & there we
waited three hours for it. We left about 6
in the evening. The steamer crowded.
We were obliged to sleep in the gentleman’s cabin,
& the cabin was entirely filled with hammocks swung
one above another.-Thursda.
Arrived in Copenhagen at 2 P.M. Found good accommodations
at the Hotel Royal. Monda. Mr. Appleton
& Mary G - left us, for London.
Tuesda. In the morning went over the new
palace, not yet entirely completed. It is a fine
building, the rooms very neat, most of them carpeted.
The carpet English, & upon the king’s apartments
of the most ordinary & coarsest Kidderminster.
The Queen’s were Brussels, but nothing extraordinary.
In one large room was the king’s throne-A
gilded chair covered with crimson velvet, & his
initials worked in gold upon it. The platform,
& the steps by which you ascend to it, were also
covered with crimson velvet. The window-curtains
were superb-of crimson velvet & a gold
vine wrought upon the edge of them. The Queen’s
apartments were more splendid than the king’s.
She had also a room similar to the king’s, with
a throne like his & curtains the same. The dancing
hall was very fine with seven immense chandeliers
in it.-The king and Queen both had
their dining halls. There was a most splendid
hall for dubbing knights. An immense
room, with gallery all around it, supported by
pillars which appeared like white marble, but were
of some composition. The ceiling was very
beautiful, white with raised gilt figures.
The chapel was very fine; also the hall of justice,
where criminals for high treason, I think, are
tried. There is a throne of crimson velvet
at one end, & three silver lions, with golden
manes, as large as life & in very fierce attitudes
are guarding it.
Thursda. In the morning at
the museum of “Northern Antiquities.”
The collection has been made since 20 years & is the
largest in Europe. We were first shown the
knives, chisels, arrows, &c., used before any
metal was discovered & many-many years before
Christianity. They were all of stone.
We also saw the first rude urns which were used
for the burial of dead bodies. Gold, silver &
copper were discovered before iron; when iron was
discovered it was for a long time so valuable,
that we saw that instruments were made of copper
& only pointed with iron. Thus we were shown these
instruments from their first rude state till they
arrived quite at perfection. We also saw
the gold rings & bracelets which the ancients
wore, & which they cut off, piece by piece, to give
in exchange for clothing or food before the use
of money. We saw a beautiful ebony altar
piece with gold & silver figures raised upon it.
It was intended for a chapel of one of the former kings;
but he afterwards altered his plan & erected a
large church,-so that it has never
been used.
I fear, my dear Aunt, you will find
this all very stupid & tedious, & will not thank
me much for the copious extracts from my poor
little journal. I flatter myself, however,
you will take an interest in all that we do &
see, so I give you the best descriptions in my power.
Copenhagen appears like a different place to us, from
what it did when here before. Henry would
like to pass the winter here, he is now so charmed
with it. We have a much pleasanter situation,
than when here before, & coming from Sweden any
place would be quite delightful. Indeed it
seems now quite like London-the cries remind
us of that city & it appears almost as noisy.
How different from our first impression of Copenhagen!
but then we were direct from London & after that
immense and overpowering place everything seems dull
and lifeless. We shall probably leave here
this week Thursday, & shall take these letters
to Hamburg with us, with the hopes of sending
them directly to America from there. Henry sends
books to the college from here, but it is so uncertain
when they go I do not like to leave my letters.
How lonely you will be without Sammy this winter;
I feel very glad he has entered as Freshman, for we
shall have him a year longer with us. Give
much love to all from us-Clara is very
well and seems very happy. She enjoys travelling
very much, & is just as good & excellent a girl
as ever-Henry desires very much love
to Aunt Lucia-accept much from your ever
affectionate
MARY.
To MISS LUCIA WADSWORTH, Portland,
Me.