The Harris-Ingram Experiment eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about The Harris-Ingram Experiment.

The Harris-Ingram Experiment eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about The Harris-Ingram Experiment.

The Harrises standing on the monument, looked eastward, and Leo pointed out the River Seine shooting beneath more than a score of beautiful stone and iron bridges, and making a bold curve of seven miles through Paris.  Then the Seine flows like a ribbon of silver in a northwesterly direction into the English Channel.  On the right bank is seen the Palais du Trocadero of oriental style, which was used for the International Exposition of 1878.  On the left bank stands the Palais du Luxembourg, rich in modern French art, the Hotel des Invalides, where rests Napoleon, and the Church of St. Genevieve, or the Pantheon, where Victor Hugo is buried.

Beyond the Place de la Concord are the Royal Gardens of the Tuileries, where Josephine and Eugenie walked among classic statues, vases, fountains and flowers; the Louvre filled with priceless art treasures, the beautiful Hotel de Ville or city-hall, majestic Notre Dame, and the graceful Column of July.  Paris is truly an earthly Paradise.  For centuries it has been the residence of French rulers, and the mecca of her pleasure loving citizens.  Fire, famine, foreign invasion, civil war, and pestilence have often swept over this, the fairest of cities, yet from each affliction, Phoenix-like, Paris has risen brighter and gayer than ever.

Gertrude, May, and Lucille were charmed with the fair vision before them, and were anxious to leave the Arch of Triumph and become a part of the gay city.  The carriages drove back to the Place de la Concord, one of the finest open places in Europe.  Around this place the chief cities of France are represented by eight large stone figures.  That of Strasburg the French keep in mourning.  In the center stands the Obelisk of Luxor, of reddish granite, which was brought at great expense from Egypt and tells of Rameses II. and his successor.  Other ornaments are twenty rostral columns, bearing twin burners.  On grand occasions this place and the avenue are illuminated by thirty thousand gas lights.

In the Place de la Concord the guillotine did its terrible work in the months between January 21st, 1793, and May 3rd, 1795, when thousands of Royalists and Republicans perished.  Two enormous fountains adorned with Tritons, Nereids, and Dolphins beautify the court.  No wonder the brilliant writer Chateaubriand objected to the erection here of these fountains, observing that all the water in the world could not remove the blood stains which sullied the spot.

How beautiful the vista up the broad and short Rue Royale, which conducts to the classic Madeleine!  Alfonso was entranced with the beauty of this rare temple, which was begun and finally dedicated as a church, though Napoleon earnestly hoped to complete it as a temple of glory for his old soldiers.  Its cost was nearly three million dollars.  A colonnade of fifty-two huge fluted Corinthian columns and above them a rich frieze surround the church.  The approach is by a score and more of stone steps and through enormous bronze doors on which the Ten Commandments are illustrated.

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The Harris-Ingram Experiment from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.