[At Home And Abroad by Margaret Fuller Ossoli]@TWC D-Link book
At Home And Abroad

CHAPTER VII
3/23

The two little girls were as pretty representatives of Allegro and Penseroso as one would wish to see.
I had been wishing that a boat would come in to take me to the Sault St.Marie, and several times started to the window at night in hopes that the pant and dusky-red light crossing the waters belonged to such an one; but they were always boats for Chicago or Buffalo, till, on the 28th of August, Allegro, who shared my plans and wishes, rushed in to tell me that the General Scott had come; and in this little steamer, accordingly, I set off the next morning.
I was the only lady, and attended in the cabin by a Dutch girl and an Indian woman.

They both spoke English fluently, and entertained me much by accounts of their different experiences.
The Dutch girl told me of a dance among the common people at Amsterdam, called the shepherd's dance.

The two leaders are dressed as shepherd and shepherdess; they invent to the music all kinds of movements, descriptive of things that may happen in the field, and the rest are obliged to follow.

I have never heard of any dance which gave such free play to the fancy as this.

French dances merely describe the polite movements of society; Spanish and Neapolitan, love; the beautiful Mazurkas, &c.


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