up from among the little bazaars (where they sell
feather fans, and miniature bark canoes, and jars and
vases and bracelets and brooches carved out of the
local rocks), made our friends with their trunks very
conscious of their disproportion to the accommodations
of the smallest. They were the sole occupants
of the omnibus, and they were embarrassed to be received
at their hotel with a burst of minstrelsy from a whole
band of music. Isabel felt that a single stringed
instrument of some timid note would have been enough;
and Basil was going to express his own modest preference
for a jew’s-harp, when the music ceased with
a sudden clash of the cymbals. But the next moment
it burst out with fresh sweetness, and in alighting
they perceived that another omnibus had turned the
corner and was drawing up to the pillared portico of
the hotel. A small family dismounted, and the
feet of the last had hardly touched the pavement when
the music again ended as abruptly as those flourishes
of trumpets that usher player-kings upon the stage.
Isabel could not help laughing at this melodious parsimony.
“I hope they don’t let on the cataract
and shut it off in this frugal style; do they, Basil?”
she asked, and passed jesting through a pomp of unoccupied
porters and tallboys. Apparently there were not
many people stopping at this hotel, or else they were
all out looking at the Falls or confined to their
rooms. However, our travellers took in the almost
weird emptiness of the place with their usual gratitude
to fortune for all queerness in life, and followed
to the pleasant quarters assigned them. There
was time before supper for a glance at the cataract,
and after a brief toilet they sallied out again upon
the holiday street, with its parade of gay little
shops, and thence passed into the grove beside the
Falls, enjoying at every instant their feeling of
arrival at a sublime destination.
In this sense Niagara deserves almost to rank with
Rome, the metropolis of history and religion; with
Venice, the chief city of sentiment and fantasy.
In either you are at once made at home by a perception
of its greatness, in which there is no quality of
aggression, as there always seems to be in minor places
as well as in minor men, and you gratefully accept
its sublimity as a fact in no way contrasting with
your own insignificance.
Our friends were beset of course by many carriage-drivers,
whom they repelled with the kindly firmness of experienced
travel. Isabel even felt a compassion for these
poor fellows who had seen Niagara so much as to have
forgotten that the first time one must see it alone
or only with the next of friendship. She was
voluble in her pity of Basil that it was not as new
to him as to her, till between the trees they saw a
white cloud of spray, shot through and through with
sunset, rising, rising, and she felt her voice softly
and steadily beaten down by the diapason of the cataract.