A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 109 pages of information about A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817.

A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 109 pages of information about A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817.

At a small distance, is the residence of Marshal Victor, Duc de Belluno, whom I met walking in the grounds.  I was very civilly permitted to enter, on sending a message desiring permission, as a traveller, to see it.  It stands at the entrance of the village of Menard, and was once the favourite residence of Madame de Pompadour, the mistress of Louis XV.  The river Loire winds beautifully beneath the terrace.  The grounds are of a vast extent, and tastefully laid out.  Over the entrance, the workmen were then placing the arms of the Marshal, finely executed in stone.

The country is thickly enclosed on each side of the river, varied with hill and dale, clothed with vineyards.  The villages and small towns along the banks, as far as Orleans, are numerous and invariably picturesque.  Nothing can be more beautiful than the natural festoons which are formed by the long shoots of the vines as they project over the road.  The peasants and the vignerons live in the midst of their vineyards; their dwellings are excavations in chalky strata of the solid rock, which afford them warm and dry habitations; some of them were so covered with the vines that the entrance was scarcely visible, and the comparison of them to so many birds nests is not badly imagined.  The hedges were covered with wild thyme and rosemary; and the clematis interwoven with honeysuckles and other fragrant flowers, richly perfumed the air.  The grapes in Touraine and Orleanois are not abundant this year, but the wine that is expected to be made, will, it is supposed, from the dryness of the summer, be of an excellent quality.

The town of Orleans is memorable for the siege it sustained against the English in 1428, when the maid of Orleans acquired so much renown, and whose barbarous execution at Rouen, cannot be remembered without feelings of horror and indignation, and must ever remain a stain on the memory of that brave soldier the Duke of Bedford.  The transactions subsequent to that event, led to the almost entire expulsion of the English from France; and those glittering conquests which were an object of more glory than interest, and had been purchased at such an expense of blood and treasure, were from that time lost to the English nation.

During the Revolution, the ancient statue of this celebrated female was taken down and unfortunately destroyed, and one more modern, but less interesting, finely executed in bronze, has been since erected.  She is habited in armour, with a lance and shield, supposed to be leading on the victorious troops.  At the four angles, are the emblematical figures in relief, of the principal events of her singular career.  On a marble pedestal, is inscribed: 

  A JEANNE D’ARC.

Orleans is the chief seat of the department of the Loiret, formerly the capital of Orleanais, on the river Loire, over which it has a handsome bridge like the one at Tours, though not of such extent, as the river here is not so wide, and very shallow.  The communication by water with Paris is carried on by means of a canal.

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A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.