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CHAPTER I - FIRST IMPRESSIONS.—“DER FRÈISCHUTZ”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

Save the damsel, who stood under the vinehung porch of the post-house at Egeln, to show the splendid flaxen ringlets which were gathered up at the back of her head by a massive silver bodkin,—there was little to be seen for the first six hours after leaving Halberstadt, by the schnellpost which runs between Cologne and the metropolis of Prussia. At Magdeburg, a mid-day halt of three hours gave us time to assist at the opening of a Kirmesse: this would have been gay and pretty, but for a hurricane of wind, which raised clouds of sharp stony dust, to the laceration of the skins and the blinding of the eyes of holiday-keepers. The cathedral, too, was to be seen; one of the finest buildings of its class in North Germany. The front is very complete, and its two graceful lantern-towers with the noble window between them have a certain originality in the combination of their Gothic details I had not elsewhere encountered. The building has been recently repaired, so that the alabaster pulpit, by Sebastian Extel, and the tombs of Kaiser Otto, and Editha of England his wife, — a pair of stately sitting figures, — and Peter Visscher's exquisite Apostles in bronze round the monument of Archbishop Ernest, are not dishonoured by being lost amidst the dust and mildew which make so many an ancient building desolate rather than venerable.

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Music and Manners in France and Germany
A Series of Travelling Sketches of Art and Society
, pp. 71 - 100
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1841

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