[Barn and the Pyrenees by Louisa Stuart Costello]@TWC D-Link book
Barn and the Pyrenees

CHAPTER V
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Their remains wore conveyed to England, and interred there at Witham, in the county of Essex." The account given me of the manner in which the accident occurred was, that Mr.and Mrs.Pattison visited the lake from Cauteretz in _chaises a porteurs_, and that Mr.Pattison went first of all alone in the boat, having vainly urged his wife to accompany him: after pulling some distance out, he paused, and, by his voice and gestures, intimated how charmed he was with the effect; he then returned to the shore, and overcame Mrs.Pattison's repugnance to enter the boat.

She stepped in, and he again rowed about half a mile, when suddenly he was seen by the men on shore to rise in the boat, and in an instant it was overset, and both were plunged in the lake.

Mr.Pattison sunk at once, but his wife's clothes buoyed her up for a considerable time; ineffectually, however, for none of the bearers of the _chaises a porteurs_ could swim; her cries were in vain, and she, too, perished.

How the accident arose, none can tell, and a mystery must for ever hang over the fatal event.
On seeing the wretched apology for a boat, which is still used by the fisherman who keeps a little _auberge_ beside the lake, and is the same in which the sad catastrophe occurred, no one can be surprised that an accident should have happened; the only wonder is that it did not founder altogether, for it is little better than the trunk of a tree hollowed out, and turned adrift to take its chance of sinking or floating.

Into this crazy contrivance I had no desire to venture, the lake appearing too cold for an impromptu bath.
Reluctantly, from hence, as from every other spot which I visited in the Pyrenees, I turned away, longing to have ascended the Vignemale, but knowing too well how few were the days allotted to my mountain excursion.
We returned by the same route to Pierrefitte, and then bid adieu to the sublimities of the _Hautes Pyrenees_; for, beautiful as the country is at the foot of the mountains, its beauty is tame, and produces, comparatively, little effect on the mind until time has effaced the first impression.


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