Title: The Life of the Moselle
Author: Octavius Rooke
Illustrator: Henry Noel Humphreys
Octavius Rooke
Release date: February 14, 2014 [eBook #44913]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Ein donnernd Hoch aus voller Brust
Ersling zum Himmel laut,
Dir schönem, deutschem Moselstrom,
Dir, deutschen Rheines Braut!
Julius Otto.
The beautiful scenery of the Moselle has too long been left without notice. It is true, some of our Artists have presented to us scenes on the banks of this river; but English travellers are, for the most part, ignorant how very charming and eminently picturesque are the shores of this lovely stream.
“The Rhine! the Rhine!” is quoted by every one, and admired or abused at every fireside, but the Moselle is almost wholly unexplored. Lying, as she does, within a district absolutely overrun with summer-tourists, it is altogether inexplicable that a river presenting scenery unsurpassed in Europe should be so neglected by those who in thousands pass the mouth of her stream. When the Roman Poet Ausonius visited Germany, it was not the Rhine, but the Moselle which most pleased him; and although glorious Italy was his home, yet he could spare time to explore the Moselle, and extol the loveliness of her waters in a most eloquent poem.
The Moselle, which rises among the wooded mountains of the Department des Vosges, never during its whole course is otherwise than beautiful. Below Trèves it passes between the Eifel and Hunsruck ranges of mountains, which attain to the height of ten or twelve hundred feet above the level of the river.
In the Thirty Years’ War the Moselle country suffered severely from the ravages of the different armies; but there still remain on the shores of this river more old castles and ruins, and more curious old houses, than can elsewhere be found in a like space in Europe.
Having in the following pages endeavoured to lay before English readers the interesting scenery of the Moselle, I trust, that although in summer my countrymen do not mount her stream, fearful, perhaps, of discomfort; yet that by the fireside in winter the public will not object to glide down the river, in the boat now ready for them to embark in; and hoping that they will enjoy the reproduction of a tour that afforded me so much pleasure,
I subscribe myself
Their humble servant,
THE AUTHOR.
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |||||
| I. | THE SOURCE | 1 | ||||
| II. | REMIREMONT AND EPINAL | 12 | ||||
| III. | TOUL AND NANCY | 24 | ||||
| IV. | METZ | 39 | ||||
| V. | FROM METZ TO TRÈVES | 65 | ||||
| VI. | TRÈVES | 70 | ||||
| VII. | RIVER INCIDENTS | 99 | ||||
| VIII. | PIESPORT | 110 | ||||
| IX. | THE VINTAGE | 125 | ||||
| X. | VELDENZ | 133 | ||||
| XI. | BERNCASTEL | 144 | ||||
| XII. | ZELTINGEN AND THE MICHAELSLEI | 153 | ||||
| XIII. | TRARBACH | 165 | ||||
| XIV. | ENKIRCH AND THE MARIENBURG PROMONTORY | 173 | ||||
| XV. | BERTRICH | 185 | ||||
| XVI. | BREMM, NEEF, AND BEILSTEIN | 197 | ||||
| XVII. | COCHEM | 207 | ||||
| XVIII. | CARDEN AND ELZ | 219 | ||||
| XIX. | OLD CASTLES | 235 | ||||
| XX. | GONDORF AND COBERN | 249 | ||||
| XXI. | CHANGE OF THE SEASONS | 261 | ||||
| XXII. | COBLENCE AND JUNCTION WITH RHINE | 269 | ||||
FROM SKETCHES BY OCTAVIUS ROOKE;
THE BORDERS AND FLORAL DECORATIONS BY NOEL HUMPHREYS;
THE ENGRAVINGS BY T. BOLTON.