THE STUDY OF NATUKE. 45 



throughout an immense circuit, and perhaps owed to it its name, the 

 Hicrh Forest. 



At the other end of the enclosure, from a deep sheet of water, 

 rose a small ascent, crowned with a garland of pines. These fine 

 trees, incessantly beaten by the sea-breezes, and shaken by the 

 adverse winds which follow the currents of the great river and its 

 two tributaries, groaned in the struggle, and day and night filled the 

 profound silence of the place with a melancholy harmony. At times, 

 you might have thought yourself by the sea; they so imitated the 

 noise of the waves, of the ebbing and flowing tide. 



By degi-ees, as the season became a little drier, this sojourn ex- 

 hibited itself to me in its real character; serious, indeed, but more 

 varied than one would have supposed at the first glance, and beauti- 

 ful with a touching beauty which went home to the soul. Austere, 

 as became the gate of Brittany, it had all the luxuriant verdure of 

 the Vendean coast. 



I could have thought, when I saw the pomegranates blooming in 

 the open air, robust and loaded Avith flowers, that I was in the south. 

 The magnolia, no dwarf, as we see it elsewhere, but splendid and 

 magnificent, and full-gTOA^Ti, like a gi'eat tree, perfumed all my garden 

 with its huge white blossoms, which contain in their thick chalices an 

 abundance of I know not what kind of oil, an oil sweet and penetrat- 

 ing, whose odour follows you everywhere; you are enveloped in it. 



We found ourselves this time in possession of a true garden, a 

 large establishment, a thousand domestic occupations with which we 

 had previously dispensed. A wild Breton girl rendered help only in 

 the coarser tasks. Save one weekly journey to the town, we were 

 very lonely, but in an extremely busy soKtude; rising very early in 

 the morning, at the first awakening of the birds, and even before the 

 day. It is true that we retired to rest at a good hovir, and almost at 

 the same time as the birds. 



This profusion of fruits, vegetables, and ])lants of every kind, 

 enabled us to keep numerous domestic animals: only the difliculty 

 was, that nourislnng them, knowing each of them, and well-known by 



