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Passages From the English Notebooks
Volume II   Volume II - Liverpool__
Nathaniel Hawthorne
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       _ September 17th.--I took the train for Rugby, and thence to Liverpool. The most noticeable character at Mrs. Blodgett's now is Mr. T------, a Yankee, who has seen the world, and gathered much information and experience already, though still a young man,--a handsome man, with black curly hair, a dark, intelligent, bright face, and rather cold blue eyes, but a very pleasant air and address. His observing faculties are very strongly developed in his forehead, and his reflective ones seem to be adequate to making some, if not the deepest, use of what he sees. He has voyaged and travelled almost all over the world, and has recently published a book of his peregrinations, which has been well received. He is of exceeding fluent talk, though rather too much inclined to unfold the secret springs of action in Louis Napoleon, and other potentates, and to tell of revolutions that are coming at some unlooked-for moment, but soon. Still I believe in his wisdom and foresight about as much as in any other man's. There are no such things. He is a merchant, and meditates settling in London, and making a colossal fortune there during the next ten or twenty years; that being the period during which London is to hold the exchanges of the world, and to continue its metropolis. After that, New York is to be the world's queen city.
       There is likewise here a young American, named A------, who has been at a German University, and favors us with descriptions of his student life there, which seems chiefly to have consisted in drinking beer and fighting duels. He shows a cut on his nose as a trophy of these combats. He has with him a dog of St. Bernard, who is a much more remarkable character than himself,--an immense dog, a noble and gentle creature; and really it touches my heart that his master is going to take him from his native snow-mountain to a Southern plantation to die. Mr. A------ says that there are now but five of these dogs extant at the convent; there having, within two or three years, been a disease among them, with which this dog also has suffered. His master has a certificate of his genuineness, and of himself being the rightful purchaser; and he says that as he descended the mountain, every peasant along the road stopped him, and would have compelled him to give up the dog had he not produced this proof of property. The neighboring mountaineers are very jealous of the breed being taken away, considering them of such importance to their own safety. This huge animal, the very biggest dog I ever saw, though only eleven months old, and not so high by two or three inches as he will be, allows Mr. ------ to play with him, and take him on his shoulders (he weighs, at least, a hundred pounds), like any lapdog. _
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PREFACE
Volume I
   Volume I - Passages from Hawthorne's English Note-Books
   Volume I - A Walk To Bebbington
   Volume I - Rock Park
   Volume I - Eaton Hall
   Volume I - Conway Castle
   Volume I - Leamington
   Volume I - To The Lakes
   Volume I - Newby Bridge. Foot Of Windermere
   Volume I - Furness Abbey
   Volume I - The Lakes
   Volume I - The Launch
   Volume I - Smithell's Hall
   Volume I - Shrewsbury
   Volume I - London
   Volume I - Liverpool
   Volume I - London_
   Volume I - Southampton
   Volume I - Worcester
   Volume I - London__
   Volume I - Aldershott Camp
   Volume I - Wooton
   Volume I - Battle Abbey
   Volume I - Hastings
Volume II
   Volume II - London.--Milton-Club Dinner
   Volume II - Reform-Club Dinner
   Volume II - The House Of Commons
   Volume II - Scotland.--Glasgow
   Volume II - Edinburgh.--The Palace Of Holyrood
   Volume II - Holyrood Abbey
   Volume II - High Street And The Grass-Market
   Volume II - The Castle
   Volume II - Melrose
   Volume II - Liverpool_
   Volume II - Southampton_
   Volume II - To Blackheath
   Volume II - Oxford
   Volume II - The Bodleian Library
   Volume II - Ormskirk Church
   Volume II - To York
   Volume II - The Minster
   Volume II - To Nottingham
   Volume II - To Scotland
   Volume II - Glasgow
   Volume II - Inverannan
   Volume II - Inversnaid
   Volume II - The Trosachs' Hotel.--Ardcheanochrochan
   Volume II - Stirling
   Volume II - Melrose__
   Volume II - Durham
   Volume II - Durham Cathedral
   Volume II - Old Trafford, Manchester
   Volume II - Leamington
   Volume II - Kenilworth
   Volume II - Liverpool__
   Volume II - Leamington_
   Volume II - London.