[Barn and the Pyrenees by Louisa Stuart Costello]@TWC D-Link bookBarn and the Pyrenees CHAPTER II 9/12
and the Pont-Long." It must be confessed that it is seldom in any part of our _cold climate_ that we have the power of such an exhibition in the streets.
It is reserved for the invalids who fly to the South of France to avoid a severe winter. "23rd Dec.1840.A great deal of snow has fallen between Bayonne and Peyrehorade: the road is become almost impassable." But I must continue the winter as I found it at Pau in 1842 and 1843. December, with intervals of two days' wind and rain, was extremely pleasant, bright, and clear, and the days very long; for till half-past four one could see to write or read: a circumstance which does not often occur in England during this month.
Christmas Day differed but little from many I have known at home: pleasant, bright, sunny, and clear; rather cold, but more agreeable, from its freshness, than the unnatural heat which sometimes accompanies the sun.
All the accounts from England proved that the weather was precisely the same.
For the two next days, it was fine and very cold, with a high, _easterly_ wind; two days warm and pleasant; then succeeded a sharp frost and bright sun; and December closed, dull, cold, and dark. January began cold, sharp, and gusty--some days biting, and some black and foggy; and from the 5th to the 12th it blew a perfect hurricane, with thunder, one fine day intervening, and occasionally a few bright hours in the course of some of the days.
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