With What I Hope May Be Deemed A Pardonable Curiosity, We
Peeped And Sometimes Stepped Into These Interiors, And Were Gratified
By The Neatness And Even Elegance Which They Exhibited.
We found the
people remarkably civil, and apparently too much accustomed to English
travellers to trouble themselves about us.
The hotel was not of the
best class, and we only saw some very inferior cafes, consisting
of one small room, with a curtain before the open door, and on the
outside a rude representation, on a board, of a coffee-pot, and a
cup and saucer. All the shops at Arles had curtains at the doors,
a peculiarity which we had not previously observed in the towns of
France. We went into a handsome church, where we found a few people,
principally beggars, at prayers, and leaving a small donation in the
poor-box, beguiled the time by walking and sitting in the boulevard
of the town.
We were glad to embark at twelve o'clock, and soon afterwards we were
again in motion. The Rhone is at this place a fine broad stream; but
its banks were less interesting than those which we had passed the
previous day. We came at length to a large tract of low land, washed
on the other side by the Mediterranean, which we were told was
tenanted by troops of wild horses, known by their being invariably
white. There were certainly many horses to be seen, and amongst them
numerous white ones; but they appeared to be exceedingly tame, and had
probably only been turned out for the benefit of grazing on the salt
marsh.
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