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January, 10 AD (search for this): article 4
ing recently changed hands at the price of $200,000. On this occasion bidders were present from the region around and even from Richmond, and furniture was sold at fabulous prices. The mere springs-goer, who frequents these watering-places to escape the heat of the lower country, to whirl in a fashionable throng, or to use the healing waters, whatever other object he may secure, cannot fully appreciate the true beauty and glory of mountain scenery. To do this one must spend the first days of October amid the mountains. Then, and then alone, do those grim piles attire themselves with a gorgeousness which might befit an Easter a queen.--For man to die is to become loathsome, but Nature is most beautiful in her dying hours. And this is specially true in the mountains. Certainly nowhere else is the autumnal foliage so varied and so glorious in its hues. Whether it is due to the peculiarity of the trees or of the climate, I do not know; but though I have often in Eastern Virginia
October 7th, 1863 AD (search for this): article 4
Letter from Western Virginia. [correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch] Greenbrier (Va.) White SulphurSprings, Oct. 7th, 1863. Having recently come to this county, I propose to give some account of my trip for the benefit of your readers. You are aware that the cars now run only to Milton, which makes some twenty miles more of staging to Lewisburg. Nevertheless one can make the trip from Staunton — by way of the Bath Alum and the Warm, Hot, and Healing Springs — in thirty-six hours. These watering-places, and especially the one from which this letter hails, present, as you may suppose, a striking contrast to their appearance before the war. Then, even out of the springs season, they afforded evidence of the gay crowds which had but lately thronged them; now, they vie with the surrounding mountains in a solitude which is painfully oppressive. For a couple of days the Hot Springs was an exception to this remark, being the scene of a large sale of personal property, the premi
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