<h2><SPAN name="Letter_13" id="Letter_13"></SPAN>Letter 13.</h2>
<p class="right"><span class="smcap">London.</span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Dear Charley</span>:—</p>
<p class="text">O, we have had a noble treat; and how I longed
for your company, as we spent hour after hour in the
British Museum. The building is very fine, but the
inside—that is every thing. The entire front is, I
think, about four hundred feet, and I reckoned <span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_88" id="Page_88" title="88"></SPAN></span>forty-four
columns forming a colonnade; these are forty-five
feet high. The portico is now receiving magnificent
sculpture in relief; and when the whole is
finished, and the colossal statues surmount the pediment,
and the fine iron palisadoes, now erecting, are
completed, I think the edifice will be among the
finest in the world. The entrance hall is most imposing,
and the ceiling is richly painted in encaustic.
The staircases are very grand, and their side walls
are cased with red Aberdeen granite, brought to an
exquisite polish. To describe the British Museum
would be a vain attempt. In the hall are several
fine statues. Especially did we admire the one of
Shakspeare by Roubilliac, and given by Garrick.
We soon found our way to the Nineveh Gallery, and
were wide awake to look after the relics of Nineveh
dug up by Layard on the banks of the Tigris.
Here is a monstrous human head, having bull's horns
and ears, many fragments of horses' heads, bulls,
&c., &c. The colossal figure of the king is very
grand, and discovers great art. There is also a fine
colossal priest, and the war sculptures are of the deepest
interest. Then we went to the Lycian Room.
The sculptures here were found at Xanthus, in
Lycia. These ruins claim a date of five hundred
years before Christ. Here are some exquisite fragments
of frieze, describing processions, entertainments,
sacrifices, and female figures of great beauty.</p>
<p class="text"><span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_89" id="Page_89" title="89"></SPAN></span>In the Grand Saloon are numerous Roman remains
of sculpture. In the Phigalian Saloon are marbles
found at a temple of Apollo, near Phigalia, in
Arcadia, in 1814. The Elgin Saloon is devoted to
the magnificent marbles taken in 1804, from temples
at Athens, by the Earl of Elgin, and were purchased
by Parliament for thirty-five thousand pounds.
They are chiefly ornaments from the Parthenon, a
Doric temple built in the time of Pericles, B.C. 450,
by Phidias. No one can fail to be impressed with
the great beauty of these conceptions. The famous
Sigean inscription is written in the most ancient of
Greek letters, boustrophedon-wise; that is, the lines
follow each other as oxen turn from one furrow to
another in ploughing.</p>
<p class="text">There are five galleries devoted to natural history,
and are named thus: the Botanical Museum, Mammalia
Gallery, Eastern Zoölogical Gallery, Northern
Zoölogical Gallery, and the Mineral Gallery. The
specimens in all these are very fine. Nothing can
be finer than the mammalia. The preservation has
been perfect, and far surpasses what I have been
accustomed to see in museums, where decay seems
to be often rioting upon the remains of nature. The
department of ornithology is wonderful, and I could
have enjoyed a whole day in examining the birds of
all climates. In conchology the collection is very
rich. I do not often get such a gratification as I
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_90" id="Page_90" title="90"></SPAN></span>had among the portraits which are hanging on the
walls of these galleries. The very men I had heard
so much of, and read about, were here lifelike,
painted by the best artists of their day. I was
much pleased with the picture of Mary, Queen of
Scots, by Jansen; of Cromwell, by Walker; of
Queen Elizabeth, by Zucchero; of Charles II., by
Lely; of Sir Isaac Newton; of Lord Bacon; of
Voltaire; of John Guttenburg; and of Archbishop
Cranmer. As to the library and the MSS., what
shall I say? The collection of books is the largest
in the kingdom, and valuable beyond calculation.
It amounts to seven hundred thousand. We looked
at illuminated gospels, Bibles, missals, till we were
bewildered with the gold and purple splendor; and
then we walked from one glass case to another,
gazing upon autographs that made us heart-sick
when we thought of our juvenile treasures in this
line. If ever I did covet any thing, it was some old
scraps of paper which had the handwriting of Milton,
Cromwell, Luther, Melancthon, Erasmus, and
a long <i>et cætera</i> of such worthies. You know how
much we love medals and coins; well, here we revelled
to our heart's delight. Country after country
has its history here, beautifully illustrated. The
museum has two spacious rooms devoted to reading,
and the access to these treasures is very liberal.</p>
<p class="text">If I could stay in London one year, I should
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_91" id="Page_91" title="91"></SPAN></span>certainly propose to spend three or four months in
study and research at the British Museum; nor do I
imagine that it would be lost time. It seems to me
that such a place must make scholars; but I know,
by my own painful recollection, that opportunities for
improvement are not always valued as they should
be. I have been much struck lately with the thought
that men of leisure are not the men who do much
in literature. It never has been so. Here and
there a rich man cultivates his mind; but it is your
busy men who leave the mark upon the age.</p>
<p class="text">While in the museum, we were shown Lord
Chief Justice Campbell, the author of the Lives
of the Chancellors, &c. He is a working-man, if
there be one in England, and yet he finds time to
elaborate volume upon volume. I feel ashamed
when I think how little I have acquired, how very
little I know that I might have understood, and
what immensely larger acquisitions have been made
by those who have never enjoyed half my advantages.
There is a boy, only fifteen, who resorts
to this museum, and is said to understand its contents
better than most of its visitors; and a livery
servant, some few years ago, used to spend all his
hours of leisure here, and wrote some excellent
papers upon historical subjects. If I have gained
any good by my journey yet, it is the conviction,
I feel growing stronger every day, that I must work,
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_92" id="Page_92" title="92"></SPAN></span>and that every one must work, in order to excel.
It seems to me that we are in a fair way to learn
much in our present tour, for every day's excursion
becomes a matter of regular study when we come
to our journal, which is now kept posted up daily,
as a thing of course. We are trying, at all events,
to make ourselves so familiar with the great attractions
of London, that in future life we may understand
the affairs of the city when we hear of them.</p>
<p class="center">Yours affectionately,</p>
<p class="right"><span class="smcap">weld.</span></p>
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