قراءة كتاب In and Around Berlin
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IN AND AROUND BERLIN
BY
MINERVA BRACE NORTON
CHICAGO
A.C. McCLURG AND COMPANY
1889
Copyright
By A.C. McClurg and Company
A.D. 1889
TO MY HUSBAND,
WHOSE GENEROUS SYMPATHY MADE POSSIBLE THESE PAGES;
To my Countrymen and Countrywomen
WHO HAVE VISITED BERLIN;
TO THOSE WHO HOPE TO GO THERE,
AND TO THE
LARGER NUMBER OF ARMCHAIR TRAVELLERS,
I Dedicate this Book.
M.B.N.
CONTENTS.
Chap. | Page | |
I. | First Impressions | 9 |
II. | Family and Social Life | 20 |
III. | Education | 51 |
IV. | Churches | 79 |
V. | Museums | 103 |
VI. | The German Reichstag and the Prussian Parliament | 125 |
VII. | Prominent Personages | 133 |
VIII. | The Emperor's Ninetieth Birthday | 159 |
IX. | Streets, Parks, Cemeteries, and Public Buildings | 179 |
X. | Palaces | 195 |
XI. | The Homes of the Humboldts | 209 |
XII. | Philanthropic Work | 221 |
XIII. | Around Berlin | 249 |
IN AND AROUND BERLIN.
I.ToC
FIRST IMPRESSIONS.
t was seven o'clock of a gray November morning when we arrived in Berlin for our first residence abroad. The approach to the city reminded us of the newer parts of New York, and we found that the population was about the same. But here the resemblance ceases. New York is the metropolis of a great nation,—the heart whence arterial supplies go forth, and to which all returning channels converge; the cosmopolitan centre of a New World. Berlin is the increasingly important capital of the German Empire,—growing rapidly, but still the royal impersonation of Prussia and the Hohenzollerns; seated in something of mediæval costume and quiet beside the river Spree; as content to cast a satisfied glance backward to Frederick the Great and the Electors of Brandenburg as to look forward to imperial supremacy among the Great Powers, and the championship of continental Protestant Europe.
There is one continuous thread woven through the old history and the new, and this appeared in the first hour of our stay. Everywhere on the streets the one thing most strange to our American eyes was the number of striking military uniforms mingled with the more sober garb of civilians. Officers of fine form and gentlemanly bearing, in uniforms of dark blue with scarlet trimmings and long, dragging, rattling swords, were commanding the evolutions of infantry in the main streets; while frequent glimpses of gold-laced light blue or scarlet jackets or of plumed and helmeted hussars animated the scene on the crowded sidewalks. Germany is, as it has been from the beginning, a military power.
We drove first to the home of an American friend. We were not prepared for the four long flights of stairs up which we were directed by the porter on the ground floor. "What reverses of fortune have come to A.," thought we, "that she lives in an attic!" The tenement was a good one, to be sure, when we found it,—large and lofty apartments with many windows, commanding a fine view. But to one unused to many stairs, and weakened by continuous illness in a long sea-voyage, the exhaustion of that first ascent was something to be remembered. It was, however, but the precursor of hundreds of similar feats, which our residence involved, as nearly all families live up several flights of stairs. Only once did we see an elevator in Germany. In the elegant hotel known as the Kaiserhof,