and, although the 
appearance of the hotels is not in their favour, there is nothing to 
complain of in regard to cleanliness or attention: at least so we found it 
at La Croix Blanche, where the singular beauty of our hostess added to 
the romance of our position, perched, as we were, on a balcony without 
awning, in a building which had evidently been part of an old tower. It 
is true that we should have preferred something rather less exposed 
when we found ourselves confined for a whole day, in consequence of 
the pouring rain, and found that a stream of water had made its way 
from our balcony into each of our rooms; whose bricked floors were 
little improved by their visit. Our suggestion of covering the way, in 
order that, in wet weather, both the dinner and its bearers might be 
sheltered, appeared to excite surprise, though our attendants came in 
constantly with their high caps wet through and their aprons soaked. 
Our nearly exhausted patience, as we gazed hopelessly on the dull sky 
of an August day, was at length rewarded; and the sun, which had 
obstinately concealed himself for several days, burst forth on the 
second morning of our arrival, and changed by its power the whole face 
of things at Falaise. We lost no time in taking advantage of the fine day 
which invited us, and sallied forth, all expectation, into the streets, 
which we found, as well as the walks, as dry as if no rain had fallen for 
months; so fresh and bright is the atmosphere in this beautiful place. 
The town is clean and neat; most of the ruinous, striped houses, with 
projecting stories, such as deform the streets of Lisieux, being cleared 
away; leaving wide spaces and pure air, at least in the centre-town, 
where the best habitations are situated. There are other divisions, less 
airy and more picturesque, called the fauxbourgs of Guibray and St.
Laurent, and le Val d'Ante; where many antique houses are still 
standing, fit to engage the pencil of the antiquarian artist. 
The churches of Falaise are sadly defaced, but, from their remains, 
must have been of great beauty. The Cathedral, or Eglise de St. Laurent, 
is partly of the twelfth century; the exterior is adorned with carving, 
and gargouilles, and flying-buttresses, of singular grace; but the whole 
fabric is so built in with ugly little shops, that all fine effect is 
destroyed. The galleries in the church of La Trinité are elaborately 
ornamented, as are some of the chapels, whose roofs are studded with 
pendants. Much of this adornment is due to the English, under Henry 
V., and a good deal is of the period of the renaissance. 
The church of Guibray was founded by Duke William, as the Norman 
windows and arches testify; but a great deal of bad taste has been 
expanded in endeavouring to turn the venerable structure into a Grecian 
temple, according to the approved method of the time of Louis XIV. A 
statue of the wife of Coeur de Lion was once to be seen here, but has 
long disappeared. That princess resided in this part of Falaise, at one 
period of her widowhood, and contributed greatly to the embellishment 
of the church. 
There are many columns and capitals, and arches and ornaments of 
interest in the church of St. Gervais, defaced and altered as it is; but it 
is impossible to give all the attention they deserve to these buildings, 
when the towers of the splendid old castle are wooing you to delay no 
longer, but mount at once the steep ascent which leads to its walls. 
Rising suddenly from the banks of a brawling crystal stream, a huge 
mass of grey rocks, thrown in wild confusion one on the other, sustains 
on its summit the imposing remains of the castle, whose high white 
tower, alone and in perfect preservation, commands an immense tract 
of smiling country, and seems to have defied the attacks of ages, as it 
gleams in the sun, the smooth surface of its walls apparently uninjured 
and unstained. This mighty donjon is planted in a lower part of the 
height; consequently, high as it appears, scarcely half of its real 
elevation is visible. Its walls are of prodigious thickness, and seem to 
have proved their power through centuries of attack and defence to
which it has been exposed; careless alike of the violence of man and the 
fury of the elements. Adjoining the keep are ranges of ruined walls, 
pierced with fine windows, whose circular arches, still quite entire, 
show their early Norman construction. Close to the last of these, whose 
pillars, with wreathed capitals, are as sharp as if just restored, is a low 
door, leading to a small chamber in the thickness of the    
    
		
	
	
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