<h2><SPAN name="chap21"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
<p class="letter">
Stonington—Great Falls of the Potomac</p>
<p>The greatest pleasure I had promised myself in visiting Washington was the
seeing a very old friend, who had left England many years ago, and married in
America; she was now a widow, and, as I believed, settled in Washington. I soon
had the mortification of finding that she was not in the city; but ere long I
learnt that her residence was not more than ten miles from it. We speedily met,
and it was settled that we should pass the summer with her in Maryland, and
after a month devoted to Washington, we left it for Stonington.</p>
<p>We arrived there the beginning of May, and the kindness of our reception, the
interest we felt in becoming acquainted with the family of my friend, the
extreme beauty of the surrounding country, and the lovely season, altogether,
made our stay there a period of great enjoyment.</p>
<p>I wonder not that the first settlers in Virginia, with the bold Captain Smith
of chivalrous memory at their head, should have fought so stoutly to dispossess
the valiant father of Pocohantas of his fair domain, for I certainly never saw
a more tempting territory. Stonington is about two miles from the most romantic
point of the Potomac River, and Virginia spreads her wild, but beautiful, and
most fertile Paradise, on the opposite shore. The Maryland side partakes of the
same character, and perfectly astonished us by the profusion of her wild fruits
and flowers.</p>
<p>We had not been long within reach of the great falls of the Potomac before a
party was made for us to visit them; the walk from Stonington to these falls is
through scenery that can hardly be called forest, park, or garden; but which
partakes of all three. A little English girl accompanied us, who had but lately
left her home; she exclaimed, “Oh! how many English ladies would glory in
such a garden as this!” and in truth they might; cedars, tulip-trees,
planes, shumacs, junipers, and oaks of various kinds, most of them new to us,
shaded our path. Wild vines, with their rich expansive leaves, and their sweet
blossom, rivalling the mignionette in fragrance, clustered round their
branches. Strawberries in full bloom, violets, anemonies, heart’s-ease,
and wild pinks, with many other, and still lovelier flowers, which my ignorance
forbids me to name, literally covered the ground. The arbor judae, the
dog-wood, in its fullest glory of star-like flowers, azalias, and wild roses,
dazzled our eyes whichever way we turned them. It was the most flowery two
miles I ever walked.</p>
<p>The sound of the falls is heard at Stonington, and the gradual increase of this
sound is one of the agreeable features of this delicious walk. I know not why
the rush of waters is so delightful to the ear; all other monotonous sounds are
wearying, and harass the spirits, but I never met any one who did not love to
listen to a waterfall. A rapid stream, called the “Branch Creek,”
was to be crossed ere we reached the spot where the falls are first visible.
This rumbling, turbid, angry little rivulet, flows through evergreens and
flowering underwood, and is crossed <i>a plusieures reprises</i>, by logs
thrown from rock to rock. The thundering noise of the still unseen falls
suggests an idea of danger while crossing these rude bridges, which hardly
belongs to them; having reached the other side of the creek, we continued under
the shelter of the evergreens for another quarter of a mile, and then emerged
upon a sight that drew a shout of wonder and delight from us all. The rocky
depths of an enormous river were opened before our eyes and so huge are the
black crags that inclose it, that the thundering torrents of water rushing
through, over, and among the rocks of this awful chasm, appear lost and
swallowed up in it.</p>
<p>The river, or rather the bed of it, is here of great width, and most frightful
depth, lined on all sides with huge masses of black rock of every imaginable
form. The flood that roars through them is seen only at intervals; here in a
full heavy sheet of green transparent water, falling straight and unbroken;
there dashing along a narrow channel, with a violence that makes one dizzy to
see and hear. In one place an unfathomed pool shows a mirror of inky blackness,
and as still as night; in another the tortured twisted cataract tumbles
headlong in a dozen different torrents, half hid by the cloud of spray they
send high into the air. Despite this uproar, the slenderest, loveliest shrubs,
peep forth from among these hideous rocks, like children smiling in the midst
of danger. As we stood looking at this tremendous scene, one of our friends
made us remark, that the poison alder, and the poison vine, threw their
graceful, but perfidious branches, over every rock, and assured us also that
innumerable tribes of snakes found their dark dwellings among them.</p>
<p>To call this scene beautiful would be a strange abuse of terms, for it is
altogether composed of sights and sounds of terror. The falls of the Potomac
are awfully sublime: the dark deep gulf which yawns before you, the foaming,
roaring cataract, the eddying whirlpool, and the giddy precipice, all seem to
threaten life, and to appal the senses. Yet it was a great delight to sit upon
a high and jutting crag, and look and listen.</p>
<p>I heard with pleasure that it was to the Virginian side of the Potomac that the
“felicity hunters” of Washington resorted to see this fearful
wonder, for I never saw a spot where I should less have liked the annoying
“how d’ye,” of a casual rencontre. One could not even give or
receive the exciting “is it not charming,” which Rousseau talks of,
for if it were uttered, it could not be heard, or, if heard, would fall most
earthly dull on the spirit, when rapt by the magic of such a scene. A look, or
the silent pressure of the arm, is all the interchange of feeling that such a
scene allows, and in the midst of my terror and my pleasure, I wished for the
arm and the eye of some few from the other side of the Atlantic.</p>
<p>The return from such a scene is more soberly silent than the approach to it;
but the cool and quiet hour, the mellowed tints of some gay blossoms, and the
closed bells of others, the drowsy hum of the insects that survive the day, and
the moist freshness that forbids the foot to weary in its homeward path, have
all enjoyment in them, and seem to harmonize with the half wearied, half
excited state of spirits, that such an excursion is sure to produce: and then
the entering the cool and moonlit portico, the well-iced sangaree, or still
more refreshing coffee, that waits you, is all delightful; and if to this be
added the happiness of an easy sofa, and a friend like my charming Mrs.
S—, to soothe you with an hour of Mozart the most fastidious European
might allow that such a day was worth waking for.</p>
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