The Arcturus had been delayed in discharging freight by a series of storms which prevailed at the bay, and was now down at Haparanda Fjord taking in ballast. The probability was that she would not leave for several days. Meantime I was extremely anxious to see a little more of domestic life in Iceland, and made several foot-expeditions to the farm-houses in the neighborhood of Reykjavik. At one of these I passed a night. In giving the details of an awkward adventure that befell me on that occasion, it is only necessary for me to say of the house that it was built in the usual primitive style, already described at some length. The people were farmers, and the family consisted of an old man and his wife, three or four stout sons, and a buxom daughter some twenty years of age. A few words of Danish enabled me to make them understand that I wished for a cup of coffee, some bread, and lodgings for the night. They were About eleven o’clock the old people began to manifest symptoms of drowsiness, and gave me to understand that whenever I felt disposed to go to bed the girl would show me my room. A walk of ten or twelve miles over the lava-bergs rendered this suggestion quite acceptable, so I bade the family a friendly good-night, and followed the girl to another part of the house. She took me into a small room with a bed in one corner. By a motion of her hand she intimated that I could rest there for the night. I sat down on the edge of the bed and said it was very good—that I was much obliged to her. She still lingered in the room, however, as if waiting to see if she could be of any farther assistance. I could not be insensible to the fact that she was a very florid and good-natured looking young woman; but, of course, that was none of my business. All I could do with propriety was to thank her again, and signify by taking off my overcoat that I was about to go to bed. Still she lingered, apparently disposed to be as friendly as circumstances would permit. It was somewhat awkward being alone AN AWKWARD PREDICAMENT. Such primitive scenes are to be found only in the interior. In the towns the women are in dress and manners very like their sisters elsewhere. Hoops and crinoline are frequently to be seen not only among the Danes, who, as a matter of course, import them from Copenhagen, but among the native women, who can see no good reason why they should not be as much like pyramids or Jokuls as others of their sex. Bonnets and inverted pudding-bowls are common on the heads of the Reykjavik ladies, though as yet they have not found their way into the interior. All who can afford it indulge in a profusion of jewelry—silver clasps, breast-pins, tassel-bands, etc., and various articles of filigree made by native artists. These feminine traits I had not expected to find so fully developed in so out-of-the-way a country. But where is it that lovely woman will not make herself still more captivating? I once saw in Madagascar a belle On my return to Reykjavik I found that the steamer was to sail next day. I was very anxious to visit Mount Hecla, but my time and means were limited, and would not permit of a farther sojourn in this interesting land. It was a great satisfaction to have seen any thing of it at all; and if I have given the reader even a slight glimpse of its wonders, my trip has not been entirely unsuccessful. THE END. THE NEW BOOKS OF THE SEASON PUBLISHED BY HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. —— Harper & Brothers will send the following works by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on receipt of the price. Harper’s Catalogue and Trade-List may be obtained gratuitously on application to the Publishers personally, or will be sent by mail on receipt of Five Cents. —— McClintock and Strong’s CyclopÆdia. A CyclopÆdia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature. 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Keyl and E.A. Smith, under the Author’s Superintendence. 8vo, Cloth, Beveled, $450. “They do honor to American Literature, and would do honor to the Literature of any Country in the World.” THE RISE OF A History By JOHN LOTHROP MOTLEY. New Edition. With a Portrait of William of Orange. 3 vols. 8vo, Muslin, $900. We regard this work as the best contribution to modern history that has yet been made by an American.—Methodist Quarterly Review. The “History of the Dutch Republic” is a great gift to us; but the heart and earnestness that beat through all its pages are greater, for they give us most timely inspiration to vindicate the true ideas of our country, and to compose an able history of our own.—Christian Examiner (Boston). This work bears on its face the evidences of scholarship and research. The arrangement is clear and effective; the style energetic, lively, and often brilliant. *** Mr. Motley’s instructive volumes will, we trust, have a circulation commensurate with their interest and value.—Protestant Episcopal Quarterly Review. To the illustration of this most interesting period Mr. Motley has brought the matured powers of a vigorous and brilliant mind, and the abundant fruits of patient and judicious study and deep reflection. The result is, one of the most important contributions to historical literature that have been made in this country.—North American Review. We would conclude this notice by earnestly recommending our readers to procure for themselves this truly great and admirable work, by the production of which the author has conferred no less honor upon his country than he has won praise and fame for himself, and than which, we can assure them, they can find nothing more attractive or interesting within the compass of modern literature.—Evangelical Review. It is not often that we have the pleasure of commending to the attention of the lover of books a work of such extraordinary and unexceptionable excellence as this one.—Universalist Quarterly Review. There are an elevation and a classic polish in these volumes, and a felicity of grouping and of portraiture, which invest the subject with the attractions of a living and stirring episode in the grand historic drama.—Southern Methodist Quarterly Review. The author writes with a genial glow and love of his subject.—Presbyterian Quarterly Review. Mr. Motley is a sturdy Republican and a hearty Protestant. His style is lively and picturesque, and his work is an honor and an important accession to our national literature.—Church Review. Mr. Motley’s work is an important one, the result of profound research, sincere convictions, sound principles, and manly sentiments; and even those who are most familiar with the history of the period will find it a fresh and vivid addition to their previous knowledge. It does honor to American Literature, and would do honor to the literature of any country in the world.—Edinburgh Review. A serious chasm in English historical literature has been (by this book) very remarkably filled. *** A history as complete as industry and genius can make it now lies before us, of the first twenty years of the revolt of the United Provinces. *** All the essentials of a great writer Mr. Motley eminently possesses. His mind is broad, his industry unwearied. In power of dramatic description no modern historian, except, perhaps, Mr. Carlyle, surpasses him, and in analysis of character he is elaborate and distinct.—Westminster Review. It is a work of real historical value, the result of accurate criticism, written in a liberal spirit, and from first to last deeply interesting.—AthenÆum. The style is excellent, clear, vivid, eloquent; and the industry with which original sources have been investigated, and through which new light has been shed over perplexed incidents and characters, entitles Mr. Motley to a high rank in the literature of an age peculiarly rich in history.—North British Review. It abounds in new information, and, as a first work, commands a very cordial recognition, not merely of the promise it gives, but of the extent and importance of the labor actually performed on it.—London Examiner. Mr. Motley’s “History” is a work of which any country might be proud.—Press (London). Mr. Motley’s History will be a standard book of reference in historical literature.—London Literary Gazette. Mr. Motley has searched the whole range of historical documents necessary to the composition of his work.—London Leader. This is a really great work. It belongs to the class of books in which we range our Grotes, Milmans, Merivales, and Macaulays, as the glories of English literature in the department of history. *** Mr. Motley’s gifts as a historical writer are among the highest and rarest.—Nonconformist (London). Mr. Motley’s volumes will well repay perusal. *** For his learning, his liberal tone, and his generous enthusiasm, we heartily commend him, and bid him good speed for the remainder of his interesting and heroic narrative.—Saturday Review. The story is a noble one, and is worthily treated. *** Mr. Motley has had the patience to unravel, with unfailing perseverance, the thousand intricate plots of the adversaries of the Prince of Orange; but the details and the literal extracts which he has derived from original documents, and transferred to his pages, give a truthful color and a picturesque effect, which are especially charming.—London Daily News. M. Lothrop Motley dans son magnifique tableau de la formation de notre RÉpublique.—G. Groen Van Prinsterer. Our accomplished countryman, Mr. J. Lothrop Motley, who, during the last five years, for the better prosecution of his labors, has established his residence in the neighborhood of the scenes of his narrative. No one acquainted with the fine powers of mind possessed by this scholar, and the earnestness with which he has devoted himself to the task, can doubt that he will do full justice to his important but difficult subject.—W.H. Prescott. The production of such a work as this astonishes, while it gratifies the pride of the American reader.—N.Y. Observer. The “Rise of the Dutch Republic” at once, and by acclimation, takes its place by the “Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,” as a work which, whether for research, substance, or style, will never be superseded.—N.Y. Albion. A work upon which all who read the English language may congratulate themselves.—New Yorker Handels Zeitung. Mr. Motley’s place is now (alluding to this book) with Hallam and Lord Mahon, Alison and Macaulay in the Old Country, and with Washington Irving, Prescott, and Bancroft in this.—N.Y. Times. The authority, in the English tongue, for the history of the period and people to which it refers.—N.Y. Courier and Enquirer. This work at once places the author on the list of American historians which has been so signally illustrated by the names of Irving, Prescott, Bancroft, and Hildreth.—Boston Times. The work is a noble one, and a most desirable acquisition to our historical literature.—Mobile Advertiser. Such a work is an honor to its author, to his country, and to the age in which it was written.—Ohio Farmer. Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, —— Harper & Brothers will send the above Work by Mail postage paid (for any distance in the United States under 3000 miles), on receipt of the Money. Mr. Motley, the American historian of the United Netherlands—we owe him English homage.—London Times. “As interesting as a romance, and as reliable as a proposition of Euclid.” —— History of FROM THE DEATH OF WILLIAM THE SILENT TO THE SYNOD OF DORT. WITH A By JOHN LOTHROP MOTLEY, LL.D., D.C.L., Corresponding Member of the Institute of France, Author of “The Rise of the Dutch Republic.” With Portraits and Map. 2 vols. 8vo, Muslin, $6 00. Critical Notices. His living and truthful picture of events.—Quarterly Review (London), Jan., 1861. Fertile as the present age has been in historical works of the highest merit, none of them can be ranked above these volumes in the grand qualities of interest, accuracy, and truth.—Edinburgh Quarterly Review, Jan., 1861. This noble work.—Westminster Review (London). One of the most fascinating as well as important histories of the century.—Cor. N.Y. Evening Post. The careful study of these volumes will infallibly afford a feast both rich and rare.—Baltimore Republican. Already takes a rank among standard works of history.—London Critic. Mr. Motley’s prose epic.—London Spectator. Its pages are pregnant with instruction.—London Literary Gazette. We may profit by almost every page of his narrative. All the topics which agitate us now are more or less vividly presented in the History of the United Netherlands.—New York Times. Bears on every page marks of the same vigorous mind that produced “The Rise of the Dutch Republic;” but the new work is riper, mellower, and though equally racy of the soil, softer flavored. The inspiring idea which breathes through Mr. Motley’s histories and colors the whole texture of his narrative, is the grandeur of that memorable struggle in the 16th century by which the human mind broke the thraldom of religious intolerance and achieved its independence.—The World, N.Y. The name of Motley now stands in the very front rank of living historians. His Dutch Republic took the world by surprise; but the favorable verdict then given is now only the more deliberately confirmed on the publication of the continued story under the title of the History of the United Netherlands. All the nerve, and power, and substance of juicy life are there, lending a charm to every page.—Church Journal, N.Y. Motley indeed, has produced a prose epic, and his fighting scenes are as real, spirited, and life-like as the combats in the Iliad.—The Press (Phila.). His history is as interesting as a romance, and as reliable as a proposition of Euclid. Clio never had a more faithful disciple. We advise every reader whose means will permit to become the owner of these fascinating volumes, assuring him that he will never regret the investment.—Christian Intelligencer, N.Y. Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, Hand, finger pointing right Harper & Brothers will send the above Work by Mail, postage prepaid (for any distance in the United States under 3000 miles), on receipt of the Money. By Mrs. Gaskell. —— CRANFORD. 16mo, Cloth, $125. COUSIN PHILLIS. 8vo, Paper, 25 cents. A DARK NIGHT’S WORK. 8vo, Paper, 50 cents. MARY BARTON. A Tale of Manchester Life. 8vo, Paper, 50 cents. THE MOORLAND COTTAGE. 16mo, Cloth, 75 cents. MY LADY LUDLOW. 8vo, Paper, 25 cents. NORTH AND SOUTH. 8vo, Paper, 50 cents. RIGHT AT LAST, and Other Tales. 12mo. Cloth, $150. SYLVIA’S LOVERS. 8vo, Paper, 75 cents. WIVES AND DAUGHTERS. With Illustrations. 8vo, Cloth, $200; Paper, $150. —— From the London Examiner. That tender pathos, which could sink so deep—that gentle humor, which could soar so lightly—that delicate perception, which nothing could escape—that wide sympathy, which ranged so far—those sweet moralities, which rang so true; it is indeed hard and sad to feel that these must be silent for us henceforth forever. Let us be grateful, however, that we have still those writings of hers which England will not willingly let die, and that she has given us no less an example of conscientious work and careful pains, by which we all alike may profit. For Mrs. Gaskell had not only genius of a high order, but she had also the true feeling of the artist, that grows impatient at whatever is unfinished or imperfect. Whether describing with touching skill the charities of poor to poor, or painting, with an art which Miss Austin might have envied, the daily round of common life, or merely telling, in her graphic way, some wild or simple tale: whatever the work, she did it with all her power, sparing nothing, scarcely sparing herself enough, if only the work were well and completely done. From the New York Evening Post. It is said that George Sand remarked to an English friend: “Mrs. Gaskell has done what neither I nor other female writers in France can accomplish—she has written novels which excite the deepest interest in men of the world, and which every girl will be the better for reading.” —— Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. —— Hand, finger pointing right Sent by Mail to any part of the United States, postage free, on receipt of the Price. Transcriber's Note Minor typographic errors in punctuation and spelling (omitted or transposed letters, etc.) have been repaired. Hyphenation has been made consistent where there was a prevalence of one form over another. Archaic and variant spelling has been preserved as printed, where reference to the alternate spelling could be established from other sources, e.g. the Frith of Forth, gambling-hells, feed referring to the paying of a fee. If alternate spelling of proper nouns could not be established, it has been made consistent within the text. The spelling of other words and phrases in languages other than English has been preserved as printed. Omitted page numbers were the location of illustrations in the original book; these were moved so that they were not in the middle of a paragraph. |