Records Of A Girlhood Volume 1 (1 Of 2) by Frances Ann Kemble (most popular novels of all time TXT) 📖
- Author: Frances Ann Kemble
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Morris-Dance, With Their Handkerchiefs Flying, And In All The
Rustic Elegance Of Apparel Which They Could Command For The
Occasion. After Them Followed A Very Good Village Band, And Then A
Species Of Flowery Canopy, Under Which Walked A Man And Woman
Covered With Finery, Who, Lord W---- Told Me, Represented Adam And
Eve. The Procession Closed With A _Fool_ Fantastically Dressed Out,
And Carrying The Classical Bladder At The End Of His Stick. They
Drew Up Before The House And Danced Their Morris-Dance For Us. The
Scraps Of Old Poetry Which Came Into My Head, The Contrast Between
This Pretty Picture Of A Bygone Time And The Modern But By No Means
Unpicturesque Group Assembled Under The Portico, Filled My Mind
With The Pleasantest Ideas, And I Was Quite Sorry When The Rural
Pageant Wound Up The Woody Heights Again, And The Last Shout And
Peal Of Music Came Back Across The Sunny Lawn. I Am Very Glad I Saw
It. I Have Visited, Too, Hopwood Hall, An Enchanting Old House In
The Neighborhood Of Heaton, Some Parts Of Which Are As Old As The
Reign Of Edward The First. The Gloomy But Comfortable Oak Rooms,
The Beautiful And Curious Carving Of Which Might Afford One Days Of
Entertaining Study, The Low, Latticed Windows, And Intricate,
Winding, Up-And-Down Passages, Contrasted And Combined With All The
Elegant Adornments Of Modern Luxury, And The Pretty Country In
Which The House Is Situated, All Delighted Me. I Must Leave Off
Writing To You Now; I Have To Dress, And Dine At Three, Which I Am
Sorry For. Thank You For Mrs. Hemans's Beautiful Lines, Which Made
Me Cry Very Heartily. I Have Not Been Altogether Well For The Last
Few Days, And Am Feeling Tired And Out Of Spirits; If I Can Get A
Few Days' Quiet Enjoyment Of The Country At Heaton, I Shall Feel
Fitter For My Winter Work Than I Do Now.
Volume 1 Chapter 16 Pg 91
MANCHESTER, September 20, 1830.
MY DEAREST H----,
I Did Not Answer Your Letter Which I Received At Heaton, Because
The Latter Part Of My Stay There Was Much Engrossed By Walking,
Riding, Playing Battledore And Shuttlecock, Singing, And Being
Exceedingly Busy All Day Long About Nothing. I Have Just Left It
For This Place, Where We Stop To-Night On Our Way To Stafford;
Heaton Was Looking Lovely In All The Beauty Of Its Autumnal
Foliage, Lighted By Bright Autumnal Skies, And I Am Rather Glad I
Did Not Answer You Before, As It Is A Consolatory Occupation To Do
So Now.
I Am Going With My Mother To Stay A Day At Stafford With My
Godmother, An Old And Attached Friend Of Hers, After Which We
Proceed Into Buckinghamshire To Join My Aunt Dall And Henry And My
Sister, Who Are Staying There; And We Shall All Return To London
Together For The Opening Of The Theater, Which I Think Will Take
Place On The First Of Next Month. I Could Have Wished To Be Going
Immediately To My Work; I Should Have Preferred Screwing My Courage
To My Professional Tasks At Once, Instead Of Loitering By Way Of
Pleasure On The Road. Besides That, In My Visit To Buckinghamshire
I Come In Contact With Persons Whose Society Is Not Very Agreeable
To Me. My Mother, However, Made A Great Sacrifice In Giving Up Her
Fishing, Which She Was Enjoying Very Much, To Come And Chaperon Me
At Heaton, Where There Is No Fishing So Good As At Aston Clinton,
So That I Am Bound To Submit Cheerfully To Her Wishes In The
Present Instance.
You Probably Have By This Time Heard And Read Accounts Of The
Opening Of The Railroad, And The Fearful Accident Which Occurred At
It, For The Papers Are Full Of Nothing Else. The Accident You
Mention _Did_ Occur, But Though The Unfortunate Man Who Was Killed
Bore Mr. Stephenson's Name, He Was Not Related To Him. I Will Tell
You Something Of The Events On The 15th, As, Though You May Be
Acquainted With The Circumstances Of Poor Mr. Huskisson's Death,
None But An Eyewitness Of The Whole Scene Can Form A Conception Of
It. I Told You That We Had Had Places Given To Us, And It Was The
Main Purpose Of Our Returning From Birmingham To Manchester To Be
Present At What Promised To Be One Of The Most Striking Events In
The Scientific Annals Of Our Country. We Started On Wednesday Last,
To The Number Of About Eight Hundred People, In Carriages
Constructed As I Before Described To You. The Most Intense
Curiosity And Excitement Prevailed, And, Though The Weather Was
Uncertain, Enormous Masses Of Densely Packed People Lined The Road,
Shouting And Waving Hats And Handkerchiefs As We Flew By Them. What
With The Sight And Sound Of These Cheering Multitudes And The
Tremendous Velocity With Which We Were Borne Past Them, My Spirits
Rose To The True Champagne Height, And I Never Enjoyed Anything So
Much As The First Hour Of Our Progress. I Had Been Unluckily
Separated From My Mother In The First Distribution Of Places, But
By An Exchange Of Seats Which She Was Enabled To Make She Rejoined
Volume 1 Chapter 16 Pg 92Which Was Considerably
Damped By Finding That She Was Frightened To Death, And Intent Upon
Nothing But Devising Means Of Escaping From A Situation Which
Appeared To Her To Threaten With Instant Annihilation Herself And
All Her Traveling Companions. While I Was Chewing The Cud Of This
Disappointment, Which Was Rather Bitter, As I Had Expected Her To
Be As Delighted As Myself With Our Excursion, A Man Flew By Us,
Calling Out Through A Speaking-Trumpet To Stop The Engine, For That
Somebody In The Directors' Carriage Had Sustained An Injury. We
Were All Stopped Accordingly, And Presently A Hundred Voices Were
Heard Exclaiming That Mr. Huskisson Was Killed; The Confusion That
Ensued Is Indescribable: The Calling Out From Carriage To Carriage
To Ascertain The Truth, The Contrary Reports Which Were Sent Back
To Us, The Hundred Questions Eagerly Uttered At Once, And The
Repeated And Urgent Demands For Surgical Assistance, Created A
Sudden Turmoil That Was Quite Sickening. At Last We Distinctly
Ascertained That The Unfortunate Man's Thigh Was Broken. From Lady
W----, Who Was In The Duke's Carriage, And Within Three Yards Of
The Spot Where The Accident Happened, I Had The Following Details,
The Horror Of Witnessing Which We Were Spared Through Our Situation
Behind The Great Carriage. The Engine Had Stopped To Take In A
Supply Of Water, And Several Of The Gentlemen In The Directors'
Carriage Had Jumped Out To Look About Them. Lord W----, Count
Batthyany, Count Matuscenitz, And Mr. Huskisson Among The Rest Were
Standing Talking In The Middle Of The Road, When An Engine On The
Other Line, Which Was Parading Up And Down Merely To Show Its
Speed, Was Seen Coming Down Upon Them Like Lightning. The Most
Active Of Those In Peril Sprang Back Into Their Seats: Lord W----
Saved His Life Only By Rushing Behind The Duke's Carriage, And
Count Matuscenitz Had But Just Leaped Into It, With The Engine All
But Touching His Heels As He Did So; While Poor Mr. Huskisson, Less
Active From The Effects Of Age And Ill Health, Bewildered, Too, By
The Frantic Cries Of "Stop The Engine! Clear The Track!" That
Resounded On All Sides, Completely Lost His Head, Looked Helplessly
To The Right And Left, And Was Instantaneously Prostrated By The
Fatal Machine, Which Dashed Down Like A Thunderbolt Upon Him, And
Passed Over His Leg, Smashing And Mangling It In The Most Horrible
Way. (Lady W---- Said She Distinctly Heard The Crushing Of The
Bone.) So Terrible Was The Effect Of The Appalling Accident That,
Except That Ghastly "Crushing" And Poor Mrs. Huskisson's Piercing
Shriek, Not A Sound Was Heard Or A Word Uttered Among The Immediate
Spectators Of The Catastrophe. Lord W---- Was The First To Raise
The Poor Sufferer, And Calling To Aid His Surgical Skill, Which Is
Considerable, He Tied Up The Severed Artery, And For A Time, At
Least, Prevented Death By Loss Of Blood. Mr. Huskisson Was Then
Placed In A Carriage With His Wife And Lord W----, And The Engine,
Having Been Detached From The Director's Carriage, Conveyed Them To
Manchester. So Great Was The Shock Produced Upon The Whole Party By
This Event, That The Duke Of Wellington Declared His Intention Not
To Proceed, But To Return Immediately To Liverpool. However, Upon
Its Being Represented To Him That The Whole Population Of
Manchester Had Turned Out To Witness The Procession, And That A
Disappointment Might Give Rise To Riots And Disturbances, He
Consented To Go On, And Gloomily Enough The Rest Of The Journey Was
Volume 1 Chapter 16 Pg 93Accomplished. We Had Intended Returning To Liverpool By The
Railroad, But Lady W----, Who Seized Upon Me In The Midst Of The
Crowd, Persuaded Us To Accompany Her Home, Which We Gladly Did.
Lord W---- Did Not Return Till Past Ten O'clock, At Which Hour He
Brought The Intelligence Of Mr. Huskisson's Death. I Need Not Tell
You Of The Sort Of Whispering Awe Which This Event Threw Over Our
Whole Circle, And Yet, Great As Was The Horror Excited By It, I
Could Not Help Feeling How Evanescent The Effect Of It Was After
All. The Shuddering Terror Of Seeing Our Fellow-Creature Thus
Struck Down By Our Side, And The Breathless Thankfulness For Our
Own Preservation, Rendered The First Evening Of Our Party At Heaton
Almost Solemn; But The Next Day The Occurrence Became A Subject Of
Earnest, It Is True, But Free Discussion; And After That, Was
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