A commotion in the courtyard of the "Grande Maison," which was just
opposite the timber market-house, and the appearance of the driver on
his box, in all the dignity of office, was our signal for departure. We
looked back after leaving the town, and there in the distance, uprising
towards the sky, was the lovely spire of le Folgoet, a monument to
departed greatness, superstition, and religious fervour; a dream of
beauty which will last, we may hope, for many ages to come.
We soon re-entered the road we had travelled earlier in the day; and in
due time, after one or two narrow escapes of being overturned, so high
was the wind, so blinding the dust, we re-entered Landerneau, a haven of
refuge from the boisterous gale.
Our host had prepared us a sumptuous repast, of which the crowning glory
was a pyramid of strawberries flanked on one side by a ewer of the
freshest cream, and on the other by a quaint old sugar basin of chased
silver, of the First Empire period. Could mortals have desired more,
even on Olympus--even in the Amaranthine fields of Elysium?
It was not yet the dinner-hour and we had it all to ourselves, with the
waiter's undivided attention, who hoped we had not been disappointed in
our little excursion. "He had been five years in Landerneau, but had
never yet seen le Folgoet. Dame! he had no time for pilgrimages, and
doubted whether, after all, they did much good. For his part, he didn't
believe in miracles.
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