These pillars so stand out toward the street as to
give the house-fronts a curved look. Above are
balconies, in which, upon red cushions, sit the daughters
of Berne, reading and sewing, and watching their neighbors;
and in nearly every window are quantities of flowers
of the most brilliant colors. The gray stone of
the houses, which are piled up from the streets, harmonizes
well with the colors in the windows and balconies,
and the scene is quite Oriental as one looks down,
especially if it be upon a market morning, when the
streets are as thronged as the Strand. Several
terraces, with great trees, overlook the river, and
command prospects of the Alps. These are public
places; for the city government has a queer notion
that trees are not hideous, and that a part of the
use of living is the enjoyment of the beautiful.
I saw an elegant bank building, with carved figures
on the front, and at each side of the entrance door
a large stand of flowers,—oleanders, geraniums,
and fuchsias; while the windows and balconies above
bloomed with a like warmth of floral color. Would
you put an American bank president in the Retreat who
should so decorate his banking-house? We all admire
the tasteful display of flowers in foreign towns:
we go home, and carry nothing with us but a recollection.
But Berne has also fountains everywhere; some of them
grotesque, like the ogre that devours his own children,
but all a refreshment and delight. And it has
also its clock-tower, with one of those ingenious
pieces of mechanism, in which the sober people of
this region take pleasure. At the hour, a procession
of little bears goes round, a jolly figure strikes
the time, a cock flaps his wings and crows, and a
solemn Turk opens his mouth to announce the flight
of the hours. It is more grotesque, but less
elaborate, than the equally childish toy in the cathedral
at Strasburg.
We went Sunday morning to the cathedral; and the excellent
woman who guards the portal—where in ancient
stone the Last Judgment is enacted, and the cheerful
and conceited wise virgins stand over against the
foolish virgins, one of whom has been in the penitential
attitude of having a stone finger in her eye now for
over three hundred years—refused at first
to admit us to the German Lutheran service, which
was just beginning. It seems that doors are locked,
and no one is allowed to issue forth until after service.
There seems to be an impression that strangers go
only to hear the organ, which is a sort of rival of
that at Freiburg, and do not care much for the well-prepared
and protracted discourse in Swiss-German. We
agreed to the terms of admission; but it did not speak
well for former travelers that the woman should think
it necessary to say, “You must sit still, and
not talk.” It is a barn-like interior.
The women all sit on hard, high-backed benches in
the center of the church, and the men on hard, higher-backed
benches about the sides, inclosing and facing the
women, who are more directly under the droppings of
the little pulpit, hung on one of the pillars,—a
very solemn and devout congregation, who sang very
well, and paid strict attention to the sermon.