Sunny Memories of Foreign 
Lands, vol 2 [with accents] 
 
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V2 
by Harriet Beecher Stowe (#4 in our series by Harriet Beecher Stowe) 
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Title: Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands V2 
Author: Harriet Beecher Stowe 
Release Date: November, 2004 [EBook #6931] [This file was first
posted on February 12, 2003] 
Edition: 10 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO Latin-1 
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, SUNNY 
MEMORIES OF FOREIGN LANDS V2 *** 
 
Skip Doughty, Tiffany Vergon, Charles Franks, and the Online 
Distributed 
 
SUNNY MEMORIES OF FOREIGN LANDS. 
BY MRS. HARRIET BEECHER STOWE, Author of "Uncle Tom's 
Cabin," Etc. 
..... "When thou haply seest Some rare note-worthy object in thy travels, 
Make me partake of thy happiness." SHAKESPEARE 
IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. II. 
 
CONTENTS OF THE SECOND VOLUME. 
LETTER XIX. Breakfast.--Macaulay.--Hallam.--Milman.--Sir R. 
Inglis.-- Lunch at Surrey Parsonage.--Dinner at Sir E. Buxton's. 
LETTER XX. Dinner at Lord Shaftesbury's. 
LETTER XXI. Stoke Newington.--Exeter Hall.--Antislavery Meeting. 
LETTER XXII. Windsor.--The Picture Gallery.--Eton.--The Poet Gray. 
LETTER XXIII. Rev. Mr. Gurney.--Richmond, the Artist.--Kossuth.-- 
Pembroke Lodge.--Dinner at Lord John Russell's.--Lambeth Palace. 
LETTER XXIV. Playford Hall.--Clarkson. 
LETTER XXV. Joseph Sturge.--The "Times" upon 
Dressmaking.--Duke of Argyle.-- Sir David Brewster.--Lord 
Mahon.--Mr. Gladstone. 
LETTER XXVI. London Milliners.--Lord Shaftesbury. 
LETTER XXVII. Archbishop of Canterbury's Sermon to the Ragged 
Scholars.--Mr. Cobden.--Miss Greenfield's Concert.--Rev. S. R. Ward.
--Lady Byron.--Mrs. Jameson.--George Thompson.--Ellen Crafts. 
LETTER XXVIII. Model Lodging Houses.--Lodging House 
Act.--Washing Houses. 
LETTER XXIX. Benevolent Movements.--The Poor Laws.--The 
Insane.-- Factory Operatives.--Schools, &c. 
LETTER XXX. Presentation at Surrey Chapel.--House of Parliament.-- 
Miss Greenfield's Second Concert.--Sir John Malcolm.--The Charity 
Children.--Mrs. Gaskell.--Thackeray. 
JOURNAL. London to Paris.--Church Music.--The Shops.--The 
Louvre.--Music at the Tuileries.--A Salon.--Versailles.--M. Belloc. 
LETTER XXXI. The Louvre.--The Venus de Milon. 
JOURNAL. M. Belloc's Studio.--M. Charpentier.--Salon 
Musicale.--Peter Parley.--Jardin Mabille.--Remains of Nineveh.--The 
Emperor.-- Versailles.--Sartory.--Père la Chaise.--Adolphe 
Monod.--Paris to Lyons.--Diligence to Geneva.--Mont Blanc.--Lake 
Leman. 
LETTER XXXII. Route to Chamouni.--Glaciers. 
LETTER XXXIII. Chamouni.--Rousse, the Mule.--The Ascent. 
JOURNAL. The Alps. 
LETTER XXXIV. The Ice Fields. 
JOURNAL. Chamouni to Martigny.--Humors of the Mules. 
LETTER XXXV. Alpine Flowers.--Pass of the Tête Noir. 
JOURNAL. The Same. 
LETTER XXXVI. Ascent to St. Bernard.--The Dogs. 
LETTER XXXVII. Castle Chillon.--Bonnevard.--Mont Blanc from 
Geneva.--Luther and Calvin.--Madame De Wette.--M. Fazy. 
JOURNAL. A Serenade.--Lausanne.--Freyburg.--Berne.--The 
Staubbach.-- Grindelwald. 
LETTER XXXVIII. Wengern Alps.--Flowers.--Glaciers.--The Eiger. 
JOURNAL. Glaciers.--Interlachen.--Sunrise in the 
Mountains.--Monument to the Swiss Guards of Louis 
XVI.--Basle.--Strasbourg. 
LETTER XXXIX. Strasbourg. 
LETTER XL. The Rhine.--Heidelberg. 
JOURNAL. To Frankfort. 
LETTER XLI. Frankfort.--Lessing's "Trial of Huss." 
JOURNAL. To Cologne.--The Cathedral.
LETTER XXII. Cologne.--Church of St. Ursula.--Relics.--Dusseldorf. 
JOURNAL. To Leipsic.--M. Tauchnitz.--Dresden.--The 
Gallery.--Berlin. 
LETTER XLIII. The Dresden Gallery.--Schoeffer. 
LETTER XLIV. Berlin.--The Palace.--The Museum. 
LETTER XLV. Wittenberg.--Luther's House.--Melanchthon's House. 
LETTER XLVI. Erfurt.--The Cathedral.--Luther's Cell.--The Wartburg. 
JOURNAL. The Smoker discomfited.--Antwerp.--The Cathedral 
Chimes.--To Paris. 
LETTER XLVII. Antwerp.--Rubens. 
LETTER XLVIII. 
Paris.--School of Design.--Egyptian and Assyrian Remains.--Mrs. S. C. 
Hall.--The Pantheon.--The Madeleine.--Notre 
Dame.--Béranger.--French Character.--Observance of Sunday. 
JOURNAL. Seasickness on the Channel. 
LETTER XLIX. 
York.--Castle Howard.--Leeds.--Fountains Abbey.--Liverpool.--Irish 
Deputation.--Departure. 
 
LETTER XIX. 
May 19. 
Dear E.:-- 
This letter I consecrate to you, because I know that the persons and 
things to be introduced into it will most particularly be appreciated by 
you. 
In your evening reading circles, Macaulay, Sidney Smith, and Milman 
have long been such familiar names that you will be glad to go with me 
over all the scenes of my morning breakfast at Sir Charles Trevelyan's 
yesterday. Lady Trevelyan, I believe I have said before, is the sister of 
Macaulay, and a daughter of Zachary Macaulay--that undaunted laborer 
for the slave, whose place in the hearts of all English Christians is little 
below saintship. 
We were set down at Welbourne Terrace, somewhere, I believe, about 
eleven o'clock, and found quite a number already in the drawing room. 
I had met Macaulay before, but as you have not, you will of course ask 
a lady's first question, "How does he look?" 
Well, my dear, so far as relates to the mere outward husk of the soul,
our engravers and daguerreotypists have done their work as well as 
they usually do. The engraving that you get    
    
		
	
	
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