[The Pilgrims Of The Rhine by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
The Pilgrims Of The Rhine

CHAPTER XXI
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But clear against the sun rose the spires and roofs of Coblentz, backed by many a hill sloping away to the horizon.

High, dark, and massive, on the opposite bank, swelled the towers and rock of Ehrenbreitstein,--a type of that great chivalric spirit--the HONOUR that the rock arrogates for its name--which demands so many sacrifices of blood and tears, but which ever creates in the restless heart of man a far deeper interest than the more peaceful scenes of life by which it is contrasted.

There, still--from the calm waters, and the abodes of common toil and ordinary pleasure--turns the aspiring mind! Still as we gaze on that lofty and immemorial rock we recall the famine and the siege; and own that the more daring crimes of men have a strange privilege in hallowing the very spot which they devastate.
Below, in green curves and mimic bays covered with herbage, the gradual banks mingled with the water; and just where the bridge closed, a solitary group of trees, standing dark in the thickest shadow, gave that melancholy feature to the scene which resembles the one dark thought that often forces itself into our sunniest hours.

Their boughs stirred not; no voice of birds broke the stillness of their gloomy verdure: the eye turned from them, as from the sad moral that belongs to existence.
In proceeding to Trarbach, Gertrude was seized with another of those fainting fits which had so terrified Trevylyan before; they stopped an hour or two at a little village, but Gertrude rallied with such apparent rapidity, and so strongly insisted on proceeding, that they reluctantly continued their way.

This event would have thrown a gloom over their journey, if Gertrude had not exerted herself to dispel the impression she had occasioned; and so light, so cheerful, were her spirits, that for the time at least she succeeded.
They arrived at Trarbach late at noon.


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