 
       
      shrimps and Broadstairs flounders, they may
 eat barbels from the Loiret and salmon from
 the Loire.
The great delight of arriving at Orleans
 (except, perhaps, the anticipation of eating
 genuine plums in a preserved —should
 the season forbid a recent —condition) is
consciousness of having escaped from the
 half-dozen negatives of the Beauceron
wilderness. At Orleans there are vines, and
 promising ones too; a single stem left to a
 single stool about the height of a raspberry-
cane. These slight peculiarities of training
 are worthy of note. Remember, we are now
entering a district almost unthought of in
England, which sends forth, in tolerable
 seasons, incredible supplies of excellent wine.
 On descending, as they call it, at your inn at
 Orleans, only call for a bottle of white
 Beaugency, and if your landlord treats
you well, you will find it delicious. I put white
 Beaugency in italics, because there are white
 French wines and yellow wines. The distinction
is striking to the eye, and might be
 made to enter into common conversation,
 without exposing the innovator to a just
 charge of affectation. Some of the wines of
 the Orleannais and the Touraine have a
 peculiar Irish whiskeyfied taste (to my own
 palate), as if the bottles had had a whiff of
 smoke puffed into them; sometimes it varies
 to a kind of aromatic, cocoa-nutty flavour.
 But their great merit, in the merchant's
 eyes, is their versatility; the number of
characters they are able to assume; the wide
 range of parts in their répertoire. Vouvray,
 near Tours, is quite celebrated for its
champagne. You may drink madeira which has
 never crossed the sea, and sherry which
 knows nothing of the south side of the
 Pyrenees. All these are spoken of with as
 little reserve as a London pastrycook would
 employ in mentioning mock turtle. It may
 be believed that when the wines of the
 Loire once reach Bercy and the Entrepôt de
 Vins at Paris, they are made to represent by
 turns the growth of every known and
unknown vineyard. Their fundamental excellence,
which enables them to manifest such
 varied talent, arises from the same cause
 which gives the Rhine wines their strength
 and keeping qualities —namely, that where
 the best samples are produced, the river
 flows from east to west. It makes no difference
that, in the analogous case, the Rhine
 flows from west to east —from Bingen to
 Mayence. The grand consequence is, that
 the northern bank of either stream lies
fully exposed to the noontide sun.
The principal lions of Orleans are the
 cathedral and the Loire, with its one stone
 bridge over it. It would not be reasonable
 to ask for more than one to span such an
inundative shingle-sweeping stream; the railway,
 however, has contrived for itself a second viaduct.
The first conducts you to an ill-kept
botanic garden (for which I should blush celestial
 rosy red, as Milton says, were I the director),
 open to the public on Mondays and Thursdays.
The only things there worth looking
 at were not botanic —some silky-feathered
 Cochin China fowls. As a set-off, at Orleans
 there are public and gratuitous lectures, and
 lessons in the art of pruning and grafting
 fruit trees, created, to borrow the indigenous
 phrase, by the department and the town in
 partnership.
The Orleans folk (and the same remark
 applies as you travel southwards) smoke a
 considerably less amount of the weed than is
 consumed in the northern departments of
 France, especially in those which are
contiguous to the Belgian and the Prussian
 frontiers. There you may see even quite
 young men with a little round hole worn in
 the teeth on each side of the jaw, simply by
 the wear and tear caused by constantly holding
a short clay pipe in the mouth. The
 Orleannais and Touraine women, besides
 carrying flat baskets on their heads, are also
 fond of surmounting their noddles with caps
 shaped like sewing-thimbles. While looking
 at them, I could not drive from my mind the
 punishment administered in dame-schools
 called thimble-pie. More pleasing objects
 were the handsome carriages and well-dressed
 people who frequent the streets. The grocers'
 shops filled with stores of dried plums in
 great variety, besides pears and figs, are
 cheering to beholders gifted with a sweet
 tooth, as are also the confectioners' windows.
 Savoury condiments are seen in the market,
 in the guise of burnt turnips and flat-baked
 onions, to give colour and flavour to the pot-
à-feu. Glance respectfully at the hôtels of
 the noblesse, with their lofty portes-cochères
 and their dull, dull walled-in courts, lighted
 with oil réverbères, and wonder that people
 whose names begin with De should permit
 such abominable faults in orthography as are
 to be seen on the posters pasted up against
 their walls and even painted on the corners
 of their streets.
Off to Blois in double-quick time! The
 banks of the Loire, as seen from the railway,
 do not correspond to De Balzac's eulogies;
 those of the Seine are infinitely prettier; and
 everywhere, as you rattle along, you have
 evidences that the Loire is a mischievous
 stream,—a passionate person who now and
 then loses all self-control,—a temporary
 maniac, with lucid intervals, during which he
 is sorry for the injury he has done to his
 friends and neighbours. He buries them
beneath beds of shingle, sand, and gravel; he
 drowns them under a rushing cataract, and
 sweeps all their goods and chattels away;
 and then, by-and-by, he disfigures the
landscape by displaying an empty bed, with more
 grey stones than water exposed to view.
 His natural guardians try to keep him within
bounds by a sort of double-straight-jacket,
 called a levée. But the levées raised on each
 side of the Loire do not improve the beauty
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