In former clays the coasts of Britain were often
ravaged by the adventurous arms of the Scandinavian Vikings, whose
war-galleys were for three centuries the scourge and the terror of
Europe. Olaf of Norway, in one of his plundering expeditions,
destroyed London Bridge, and little more than six centuries have
elapsed since the Orkney and Shetland Isles, the counties of
Caithness and Sutherland, the Hebrides, and the western coast of
Scotland from Cape Wrath to the Mull of Can tire, were subject to
the sway of the Norwegian crown. Traces of that rule yet remain in
the common speech of the Shetlanders, among whom nearly two hundred
words of Norwegian origin are still in ordinary use. No one,
therefore, acquainted with the history of the past, can fail to look
upon Norway with a lively interest from the stirring historical
associations which yet linger around her; and, when to these are
added the beauty, variety, and grandeur of her mountains and fiords,
it must be admitted that a voyage to the home of the ancient
sea-kings, and the cradle of that stalwart Norman race which gave a
king and a nobility to England, presents attractions of no ordinary
kind. Such a voyage too is easily accomplished during the summer
season, even in a vessel of very moderate dimensions, though we
should not exactly like to attempt it in an eight-tonner like the
lively little Pet, which twice bore her clever and adventurous owner
from England to the Baltic. Only a narrow sea separates the Shetland
Islands from the opposite coasts of Europe, and no better point of
departure can be selected for a yacht-cruise to Norway than the safe
and spacious harbour of Lerwick, from which, on a bright July
morning, we set sail, bound for the mouth of the Bommel Fiord. Our
vessel was a stout cutter of thirty-five tons, a capital sea-boat,
manned by four hands and a steward, and carrying besides, her owner
and three friends, amply provided with fishing-rods, rifles,
sketching materials, and other requisites for making the most of a
short visit to “Gamle Norge."
It was eight o’clock when we took our departure, and,
although we had a fresh and favourable breeze, many hours elapsed
before we lost sight of the magnificent promontory of Noss Head,
which rises abruptly 700 feet above the waves of the northern ocean.
At nine next morning we were in sight of the rocky island of Udsire,
conspicuous from its twin red-painted light-towers. On getting close
to the island, we hove to, and hoisted the signal for a pilot, and
soon observed a small fragile skiff sailing out from the island to
board us. There was a heavy sea running, and, in the trough of the
waves, we could see nothing but the top of her mast. The pilot was a
remarkably good-looking young fellow, with fair hair, bright
complexion, and tall athletic figure. After taking him 011 board, we
stood away for the Boiiimel Fiord, the entrance to which is guarded
on either side by low barren rocks, one hundred acres of which would
scarcely feed a single sheep. With the exception of this utter
sterility, the general aspect of the scenery at this point much
resembles that of a sea-loch in the Western Highlands of Scotland.
As we advanced, however, the landscape improved ; clean wooden
cottages with tiled roofs w^ere perched among the rocks, and grass
and trees began to appear. We passed several gaudily-painted vessels
descending the fiord. One of them, in a coat of green, black, and
yellow, all of the brightest tints, and carrying every sail set, was
yet a most picturesque-looking craft, and would have delighted a
painter’s eye.
Near the snug little village and harbour of
Mosterhaven (above which the fiord assumes the name of Hardanger),
we observed a most primitive-looking lighthouse built of wood,
painted white, and with a tiled roof, perched upon a cliff but
little elevated above the level of the fiord. Close to Mosterhaven
our pilot landed, and we procured another who was to convey us first
to Bondhus on the Moranger Fiord, and afterwards to Vik, at the head
of the Hardanger. The pilot who brought us from Udsire to
Mosterhaven, a distance of twenty-seven miles, had inherited a
double portion of the plundering propensities of his piratical
ancestors. He had the assurance to demand £2 for his four hours’
work, and we ultimately succeeded in beating him down to 7½ dollars,
an exorbitant sum for all that he had done. Like most of the
Norwegian pilots, he asked for “schnapps” the moment he came on
board, and tossed off a glass of strong Scotch whisky as if it had
been water. His successor was an old man, still hale and active,
apparently about sixty years of age, but, according to his own
account, seventy-five, with a face whose skin, in colour and
texture, resembled old parchment from constant exposure to the
weather. He wore a sou’-wester hat, an old patched jacket, trousers
of coarse gray stuff, and a waistcoat of pilot cloth, over which the
trousers were buttoned, and he brought with him a bag made of coarse
sacking which contained his pea-jacket and other articles of
clothing.
Above Mosterhaven the landscape becomes finer and
more varied: the broad bosom of the fiord is dotted over with
islands; innumerable bays and creeks indent its shores; small
hamlets and villages nestle in all the more sheltered and fertile
spots ; the hills and crags are fringed with wood, and high mountain
peaks and snow-crowned ridges begin to appear in the background. The
distance from Mosterhaven to the village of Bondhus at the head of
the Moranger Fiord is about fifty miles, and at the point where that
fiord diverges from the Hardanger, the scenery is particularly grand
and impressive. A green wooded promontory stretches almost across
the opening of the Moranger, so that entrance seems at first sight
impossible. On this promontory stands the small village of iEnaes,
while beyond, steep mountains shoot boldly up from the fiord with
scarped and furrowed sides, but with trees springing from every
ledge where a little soil supplies nourishment for their roots. On
the same side, and a little above iEnaes, is a very lofty and
precipitous rock-face dipping sheer down into the fiord; and about a
mile farther up a most magnificent waterfall, clothing a vast crag
with a flowing drapery of snowy foam. We estimated its height at
about 300 feet, and its breadth at the widest part at 200. It rushes
over the cliff from amidst a fringe of foliage in three separate
streams perpendicularly for the first 150 feet, and then dashes into
the fiord over a long steep slope of jagged rocks. The lower fall
spreads out to a great breadth, and brightens the dark cliff with
wreaths and whirls of sparkling foam, which find rest at length
after their vexed career in the green waters of the Moranger. The
vast water-power here developed has been turned to some account by
the Norwegians. The lower fall is divided into two portions by a
green promontory which juts out into the fiord, and 011 this stands
a rude and primitive sawmill with stone foundations, but built of
wood and roofed with shingles. Near it is a still ruder and smaller
mill—something like those still in use in Shetland—moved by a small
horizontal wheel placed under the shed in which the mill-stones
work. Passing iEnaes and its magnificent waterfall, we continued our
course up the Moranger, and soon opened on our right the village of
Bondhus with its narrow valley closed in by steep mountains, between
two of which lies the glacier of Bondhus, rifted and seamed by
chasms and crevices, and with the blue gleam of its ice catching the
eye, and marking it out from the adjoining snowfield of the
Folgefonde. Our pilot, unfortunately, turned out a thorough
impostor. He had never been up the Moranger Fiord, and, instead of
anchoring at Bondhus, took us up to Fladbo at the head of the other
branch of the Moranger, and then gave orders to let go the anchor
close to the shore,011 which a pretty stiff breeze was blowing at
the time. The result was that we got no bottom with forty fathoms of
chain out, and were nearly driven on shore owing to his ignorance
and presumption. A Norwegian obligingly rowed out from Fladbo, and
told us there was no anchorage, and that we had already passed
Bondhus, a fact which seemed greatly to astonish our pilot, but,
after the specimen we had had of his knowledge of the Moranger, it
was impossible to trust him to bring us to at Bondhus, so we
determined to retrace our course to the Hardanger, with which he
seemed somewhat better acquainted. It was a beautiful calm evening
when we reentered the Hardanger, and the view looking back towards
the mountains around AEnaes was very striking. One dark conical mass
in particular stood boldly forward, with its sharp peak streaked
with patches of snow, while behind rose a noble mountain range
sweeping round in a grand curve, its summits clothed with heavy
masses of snow. Here we were becalmed for nearly twelve hours, and
then, getting a favourable breeze, rapidly passed the pretty
villages of Jondal and Strande-barm, and, at Vikor, entered a long
reach of the Hardanger, which had all the appearance of a large
inland sea. There is a good deal of sameness in this part of the
scenery, but still it is very picturesque and pleasing. Green swells
of land, generally well wooded, rising from sweet pastoral valleys;
and, beyond these, steep crags and lofty summits with specks of snow
brightening the dulness of their gray peaks.
A little above Yikor, on the same side of the fiord,
is a splendid waterfall, several hundred feet in height, and with a
great body of water. It is almost buried in foliage, and its white
foaming stream contrasts finely with the green clothing of the
mountain-side. We heard the roar of this cataract long before we
came abreast of it. It is the third grand waterfall pouring into the
Hardanger; as, besides that near AEnaes, there is another above
Yondal, not far from the spot where a magnificent range of
precipices of dark purple rock overhang the deep waters of the
fiord. Waterfalls, indeed, form a principal feature in the landscape
of the Hardanger; for, in addition to the three principal falls,
innumerable minor cascades —from the tiny thread of foam lost in
mist before it reaches the bottom of the rock up to the size of the
Fall of Foyers—lend their tribute to its waters. Many of the houses
along the banks of the fiord are fantastically painted, generally in
the brightest colours. We observed one, the front of which was
painted white, the roof red, and the gable end red with a white line
around it; another had the upper story red and the under white; and
many were entirely red. There is not much level ground; but every
available space is taken advantage of for building or farming. The
want of animal life on the Hardanger is very striking. We saw but
few birds, and these were so shy that they would scarcely let us get
within rifle-shot.
Near the pretty village of Utne, one of the sweetest
spots on the Hardanger, the fiord takes a sharp and sudden bend to
the south, and the scenery increases in boldness and beauty. Utne,
with its clean, brightly - painted wooden houses, occupies a
beautiful situation at the mouth of a green wooded valley on the
south-eastern shore of the fiord. Opposite to it is the opening of
the Eide Fiord, and above it that of the Sor Fiord, two branches of
the great Hardanger, the last of which stretches away to the
glaciers and snowfields of the Folgefonde, one of the mightiest
accumulations of ice and snow in Norway. We were much amused this
morning by our aged Palinurus. After a capital breakfast on beef,
biscuits, and coffee, he asked for tobacco; and, on being offered
some Latakia, seized a handful that would have filled half a dozen
pipes, and deliberately crammed it into his mouth. Certainly for a
man of seventy-five he had a wonderful digestion.
Beyond the opening of the Sor Fiord the Hardanger
again stretches in a north-eastern direction, which it maintains as
far as Vik. The view up the Sor Fiord is superb; a narrow reach of
water trending away for miles between snowcapped mountains, those on
the southern side being crowned with the eternal snows of the
Folgefonde. Passing the entrance of the Sor Fiord, we stretched away
for our destination, the village of Vik, still ten or twelve miles
distant. On either side of us were lofty mountains, those on the
southern shore precipitous and barren, and those on the opposite
bank sloping up in a succession of rocky terraces thickly clothed
with wood. The weather on the Hardanger is very variable: calms and
breezes from every point of the compass succeeding each other with
startling suddenness. Towards its termination the fiord divides into
three branches; the most northerly leading to Ulvik, the middle to
Ose, and the most southern and principal to Vik, one of the post
stations on the road from Bergen to Christiania. That part of the
Hardanger Fiord which extends from Odde at the head of the Sor Fiord
to Vik is in shape almost a crescent about thirty miles in length.
From Odde by land across the snowfields of the Folgefonde to Bondhus
at the head of the Moranger Fiord is only twelve miles, and yet the
distance by water cannot be less than sixty miles, which may give
some idea of the extent to which the Hardanger and its various
branches and windings indent and diversify the surface of the
country.
Shortly before reaching Vik, we obtained a splendid
view up the dark and narrow gorge of the Seimadal, the distance
being filled up by the snowy coronal of the Hallens Jokelen, upwards
of 5000 feet high.
We cast anchor at Yik on the 19th of July, just
forty-eight hours after we had entered the Bommel Fiord. We were
anchored about a cable’s length from the shore in twenty-five
fathoms. The great difficulty in the Hardanger is to find anchorage,
owing to the extreme depth of the water, varying from 100 to 200
fathoms, even quite near the shore. The inn at Vik stands close to
the water’s edge, and (for Norway) is clean and comfortable, though
those travellers who expect carpeted rooms, cushioned chairs and
sofas, and the other luxuries of civilised hotels, would probably
consider its accommodation very contemptible. A little farther
inland are the village of Eidfiord, and a quaint old church said to
have been built long ago by a Norwegian lady as an expiation for
having murdered her husband. The approach to the village leads
across a narrow plain studded with stunted birch trees, then there
is a short ascent and another level dotted over with the same scanty
vegetation. These flats, about a mile and a half wide, are hemmed in
on each side by lofty and precipitous mountains, whose summits,
however, are rather lumpy and rounded in outline. Across the valley
stretches transversely an enormous mound, three or four hundred feet
high, which appears to have once formed the terminal moraine of a
glacier. It is now clothed with birch and fir trees, and cut through
by the deep and rapid torrent which rushes from the lake of Ssebo
into the Hardanger Fiord.
In the evening five young Cantabs arrived at the inn,
having just returned from an excursion to the Voring Foss, the
finest waterfall in Europe. They told us that they had travelled
overland from Christiania, boating and walking most of the way. They
complained bitterly of the difficulty of getting sufficient food,
and assured us that but for their fishing-rods they must have been
nearly starved. We invited them on board, and set before them a cold
round of beef and sundry bottles of Bass’s ale, and certainly the
way in which they disposed of both meat and drink bore ample
testimony to the justice of their complaints, and gave an appalling
idea of the poverty of Norwegian fare. The round never recovered
that onslaught. Afterwards, we all enjoyed a sociable smoke on deck,
and parted late in the evening; they to go 011 early next morning to
Odde, at the head of the Sor Fiord, and thence across the snows of
the Folgefonde to the glacier of Bondhus, and we to prepare for an
equally early start to the Yoring Foss.
At half-past five next morning we commenced
operations by a plunge into the cold green waters of the Hardanger
from the deck of the cutter, while two of our acquaintances of the
preceding evening were taking a “header” from the end of the wooden
quay near the hotel, much to the astonishment and admiration of an
assembled knot of Norwegians.
At half-past six we started for the Yoring Foss, each
of us having a guide and a pony; and, after a pleasant ride of a
mile, reached the beautiful lake of Sasbo, where we embarked in one
boat, while our guides and ponies got into another and heavier one.
AYe were most fortunate in a day; the sky was bright and almost
cloudless, and the sun warm without being scorching. The huge mass
of the moraine cut through by the impetuous torrent of the Lundaro
Ely stretches across the northern extremity of the lake; on either
side lofty and very steep mountains dip sheer down into the clear
waters, so that all passage except by boat is impracticable. Near
the village of Seebo the hills on the west side of the lake form a
smooth wall of rock, where not a single tree can find a
resting-place.
Ssebo is situated at the southern extremity of the
lake, on a level alluvial plain where good crops of rye and potatoes
are grown. This plain presents its longest side to the water, and
gradually narrows inland until terminated by the precipices that
overhang the gloomy pass of Hjelmodalen, fit antechamber to the
perpetual snows of the Hardanger Fjeld : through this gorge the
Hjelmode Elv flows down to the lake of Ssebo, into which it falls on
one side of the valley, while on the other runs the Lundaro Elv,
which forms the Voring Foss. The view of the plain and village as we
approached them from the lake was very striking: everywhere darkened
by the long shadows of the mountains, except where a narrow belt of
bright sunshine gilded the meadows close to the water. A little
beyond Srebo we passed a second moraine similar to that at Yik, but
on a smaller scale, and several of the rocks that we passed in the
course of the day are what are termed roches moutonnees, bearing
evident traces of glacier action. After crossing this moraine, we
entered a narrow but grand rocky defile, which extends for several
miles in an easterly direction to the foot of that steep and lofty
ascent which leads up to the level of the Yoring Foss. Proceeding up
this for some miles, we came to a wooden bridge of a very
picturesque but exceedingly shaky description, which spans the
river, here both deep and rapid. It is not above four feet wide, and
there is not the slightest vestige of a parapet. Here we dismounted
; the ponies were driven across singly by the guides, and we
followed. Two and a half hours from Yik brought us to the little
village of Veita, built close to the torrent; and another half-hour
to a smaller hamlet, beyond which the path becomes exceedingly bad,
being covered with large stones and long slippery slopes of smooth
rock, and in some places so steep that regular steps have been cut,
up which our Norsk ponies scrambled like cats. On either side huge
blocks of stone detached from the adjacent mountains hem in the
path. Some of these are of enormous size, probably 100 feet square.
On emerging from these rocky masses, we found
ourselves on a narrow strip of meadow-land, at whose upper extremity
the river takes a sudden bend, and seems to be swallowed up in the
jaws of a narrow pass formed by perpendicular walls of rock,
shooting up to a great height from the water’s edge, so that farther
progress by its banks becomes impossible. We now began to wonder how
or where we were to proceed; for on our left were the river and
precipices, while, right in front, an excessively steep
mountain-slope called the Maabuberg, at least 1200 feet high, seemed
to forbid farther advance, at least to mounted travellers. But there
are no limits to the endurance and activity of Norwegian ponies; and
whoever wishes to know what they are capable of performing, and how
perfectly sure-footed they become, should go to Vik and ride from
thence to the Voring Foss on the back of one. Cats are nothing to
them; and I have no doubt that one of them might be safely ridden to
the top of Ben Nevis, rough, stony, and steep as the latter part of
that ascent certainly is.
We soon found that the road to the Foss lay by the
mountain-face in front of us. A rougher path can scarcely be
imagined; it is, however, the only very steep ascent between Vik and
the Voring Foss. One of our party dismounted and walked up, beating
his mounted companions by twenty minutes. The ascent of the
Maabuberg occupies nearly an hour, but the fatigue is amply repaid
by the extensive prospect commanded from its summit. On gaining the
top we entered upon a level mossy table-land covered with the common
and dwarf birch, and with bushes of the crow- and cloud-berry, from
which we had a fine view of the gleaming snowfields of the lofty
Jokelen. After riding along this plateau for some miles, our guides
conducted us to some shepherds’ huts, a little beyond the Voring
Foss, and 2150 feet above the level of the Hardanger. Here we saw
our ponies stabled, and afterwards entered the principal Saeter,
which boasted of two tolerable apartments. In one of these were hung
up a collection of pictures such as we give to children, and an
absurd pencil-drawing of some distinguished personage all frogs and
frock-coat, but with most ridiculously diminutive legs and feet. We
asked for some milk, which was brought to us in a large wooden bowl
about eighteen inches in circumference and half as much in depth.
This was accompanied by three wooden spoons—one for each of us; and
a sheet of fladbrod, as the ordinary bread of the country is
termed. Fladbrod resembles in colour and thickness coarse brown
packing paper, and possesses about an equal amount of nourishment.
It is baked of rye meal in huge circular cakes, which are first
folded across, and then a second time folded, and in this form it is
kept and sold. For the milk and fladbrod we paid an ort, or 10d. in
our money. On leaving the Saeter we found our guides busily engaged
in supping sour milk curds from a great wooden bowl, round which
they were sociably seated. We left them eno;ao;ed in this
interesting occupation, and proceeded to a little distance in order
to sketch the Saeter. The fine arts soon proved a formidable
antagonist to the curds, and wre were speedily surrounded by all the
guides, and the whole population of the Saeter, who watched and
criticised our drawings with every appearance of the greatest
interest. Our sketching finished, we lost no time in hastening to
the Yoring Foss, which is about a mile below the Saeters, and is
easily distinguishable from a considerable distance by the light
column of glittering foam that is for ever wreathing upwards from
the abyss. The river appeared to us about as large as the Clyde at
Lanark, and, a little above the great cataract, there is a lofty and
beautiful cascade which anywhere else would be considered
magnificent ; but here it only serves as a foil to the great Yoring
Foss. The point from which you see the fall is at least 150 feet
above the spot whence the river precipitates itself into the boiling
pool beneath, while the perpendicular crag opposite, crested with
stunted birch trees, rises as much above where you stand. From its
summit rushes a slender thread of foam to add its tiny tribute to
the fathomless abyss 1200 feet below, from which a thin smoke of
spray is perpetually floating up and overhanging the great cataract
with a dewy curtain, while the dripping rocks opposite the falling
waters reflect the dazzling and varied hues of a beautiful rainbow.
By a little scrambling a spot may be reached from which the Yoring
Foss is visible in all its unrivalled splendour. Where the waters
first rebound from the precipice, they are whirled out in wreaths of
spray, their edges just tinged with the most delicate and tender
colours, fining away as they extend till they melt into air, and
ceaselessly revolving in circles of snowy foam till lost in the
profound gulf 900 feet below. The purity, the matchless beauty, of
these wheels as of white fire no words can describe, nor sketch
adequately portray. The Voring Foss is the very poetry and
perfection of waterfalls, and, alone, amply repays the fatigue and
expense of a voyage to Norway.
In the afternoon we rode back across the tableland to
the summit of the Maabuberg, and, in the descent of the steep and
rough zigzags, our ponies displayed their sure-footedness even more
conspicuously than during the previous ascent. We reached Vik at six
o’clock, having been away for upwards of eleven hours. Even with the
aid of ponies and boats no one should attempt the excursion to
Voring Foss who is not prepared for at least two hours’ hard
walking. We found the charges at Vik extravagant, having to pay for
our three guides and ponies 32s. Provisions were also dear: for eggs
we paid 9d. a dozen, butter 10d. a pound, and jiadbrod 1½d. a cake,
which, reckoning by weight, is considerably more than the price of
the best wheaten bread in Great Britain.
Next day the weather was very bad: the mountains
around were either entirely veiled in clouds, or partially obscured
by floating wreaths of gray mist, while the rain poured in torrents.
In the evening, however, there was a startling change : the rain
ceased, but it blew half a gale of wind right on shore, and, to our
consternation, we found that our anchor was not holding, and that we
were rapidly drifting on the rocky beach We turned all hands up, got
sail on the yacht, and were obliged to beat her out into the fiord
through the darkness and in the teeth of the gale. We had got so
close in-shore that we had scarcely room to stay the vessel, and had
anything gone wrong when the helm was put down, nothing could have
saved us from driving on the beach. After gaining a good offing, we
again came to anchor off Vik, but considerably farther from the
shore, and with plenty of chain out, and rode safely till the
morning. AVe found that the cause of our former mishap had been the
chain cable getting foul of the anchor - stock. “All’s well that
ends well,” but we certainly made a narrow escape from leaving our
smart little cutter to serve as a perpetual model for the
boat-builders of Vik.
Early next morning we bade adieu to Vik, and sailed
for Bergen : the wind was, however, unfavourable, and we had a
tedious voyage down the Hardanger. On leaving it, we entered a
perfect labyrinth of rocky islands, through which we were to thread
our way to Bergen. Most of these are deeply indented by bays and
creeks, and, in general, very barren, though, here and there, a few
trees and bushes of purple heather break the gray monotony of their
surface. The navigation of the numerous and winding channels that
surround them is intricate and perplexing, and the white-painted
wooden lighthouses perched upon commanding heights are here
absolutely indispensable. Near Bogholm Sound we had a magnificent
sunset; a cloudless sky of gold and crimson, against which the fine
mountains around Bergen seemed of the deepest purple. The graceful
peak of the Lyder-horn and the lofty range of the Lovstakken were
especially conspicuous.
The voyage from Yik to Bergen occupied two days, and
early on the morning of the third we came to anchor at the entrance
of the merchant harbour not far from the quay and custom-house, in
the midst of a crowd of shipping, French, German, English, and Norsk,
the most curious being the “Jagts” from the northern fisheries,
large vessels with a single mast, a huge square-sail, and crews of a
dozen men each. They are low amidships, curve upwards at the bow and
stern, and the prow rises eight or ten feet above the deck. Bergen
is undoubtedly one of the most picturesque towns in Europe. There is
such variety of colour and outline, such narrow streets, such quaint
old wooden houses with balconies and projecting roofs, sometimes
built upon quays rising sheer from deep water, sometimes overhanging
short narrow canals which run up from the harbour, and admit of
vessels lying between the houses. Then there are the tall old tower
of Haco and the ancient palace of the kings of Norway, recalling the
days when Bergen was a capital,—the dark gray castle of
Fredericksburg on the opposite height,—the long and lofty range of
wooden warehouses which once received rich merchandise from all
parts of the world when Bergen was one of the five chief ports of
the Hanseatic League,—the varied and ever-changing character of the
shipping in the harbour, —the fine curve and graceful outline of the
mountains that half encircle the city, and the bold sweep of the
deep and sheltered waters that bring the commerce of distant lands
to her threshold— all combining to form a picture equally delightful
from its natural beauty and romantic associations with the past.
The first point that we visited after landing was the
fortress of Fredericksburg which crowns a height rising steeply
above the custom-house. From this commanding position we obtained an
excellent idea of the city and neighbourhood. Bergen is built partly
upon a peninsula facing the north, and partly along the shores of
two deep bays on the east and west of this peninsula. The bay on the
east is the harbour for merchant ships, and that on the west for
vessels requiring repairs; the principal shipbuilding yards are
also on the west bay. To the south, an undulating well-wooded
country extends to the base of the mountains, upon whose slopes may
be seen the bright-looking; villas of the Bergen merchants. The
warehouses of the Hanse merchants and the castle of Haco extend
along the east side of the merchant harbour. Pictorially speaking,
there is too much of pure unbroken white in the buildings of Bergen
; but their picturesque shapes, steep roofs, and pointed gables in
some degree compensate for this defect. The houses are all built of
wood, painted, and, externally at least, kept scrupulously clean.
The streets are narrow and ill paved, and beside many of the houses
stands a water-barrel as a resource against fire, while at intervals
of 100 yards are sentry-boxes for the watchmen. The old and rude
system of water-barrels seems likely to be soon superseded by
fire-plugs; for in some of the streets we saw notices of the
position of those admirable safeguards for a wooden town. The last
fire destroyed 180 houses, and the spot where it raged may still be
distinguished by freshness of the tiles on the roofs of the houses
that have replaced those which were then destroyed. For the future,
all houses built in Bergen must be constructed of brick or stone;
and some of those which we saw in process of erection to the south
of the merchant harbour were in conformity with this new regulation.
Their construction is very curious: the inner shell is of wood,
above that is a rude sheathing of birch bark, and over all
a facing of brick sometimes coated with Roman cement.
With the exception of cigars, fish, and Norwegian
skiffs, everything is exceedingly dear, and Mr. Greig, the English
consul, informed us that, within his remembrance, prices had
increased threefold. For a coarse Norsk knife with carved wooden
handle, fifteen shillings were demanded, and for a small card-case,
also in carved wood, such as might have been purchased in
Switzerland for a couple of francs, we were charged nine shillings.
But, besides being the dearest, Bergen is also the rainiest of
Norwegian towns. We have been in a glen in the Island of Skye,
yclept Glen Sligachan (a perfect Shibboleth to English lips), in
which we were told that the oldest inhabitant could not remember a
day without a shower, and truly, judging from our five days’
experience, we can believe the same of Bergen. An umbrella and a
waterproof cloak are essentials; and whoever wishes to become what
Mr. Mantalini expressively terms “a dem’d moist unpleasant body” had
better go to Bergen and spend a week without them.
The fish-market, situated at the head of the merchant
harbour, is one of the most interesting sights of this ancient city;
and those who wish to see it to advantage ought to go about seven in
the morning when the fishing-boats come thronging in with their
scaly freight. The fish are brought to market alive by a very
ingenious contrivance. Each fishing-boat tows along by a cord
attached to it a small, flat-bottomed, boatshaped receptacle, in
which the fish are placed; and the sides of this are pierced with
holes, through which the water flows freely, so that it is almost
entirely submerged as it is towed astern with its living burden. In
going to the fish-market, we passed in front of the lofty white
warehouses once the property of the merchants of the I lanseatic
League. A perfect fleet of fishing-boats, ranged in two tiers, lay
alongside the quay in front of them; and, close to its edge, stands
a row of tall, upright, mast-like posts painted green, with long
black poles slung across them, one end of which admits of being
lowered into vessels lying alongside the wharf, when, by
hauling on the other end, any article attached may be easily raised
and deposited on the quay. It was curious to see these rude and
ancient substitutes for the crane and windlass still standing in the
middle of the nineteenth century.
On reaching the fish-market we found our selves in
the midst of a perfect babel of tongues, bargaining, chaffering, and
abusing, with a volubility and energy worthy of Billingsgate. The
market and its neighbourhood offer great attractions to the artist.
Several of the adjacent buildings are curious and characteristic,
many fine studies of costume present themselves, and some of the
picturesque Loffoden galleys are generally moored close by. These
vessels sometimes bring to Bergen a cargo of wood piled up till it
is almost half - mast high, and are said occasionally to take back
with them a cargo of coffins, using them as packing-cases during
their homeward voyage. From the fish-market we continued our walk
until we reached the shores of an inland lake connected with the
harbour by a narrow canal, and surrounded by pleasant walks and
wooded slopes, with the villas of the Bergen merchants peeping out
from among the foliage. It is a beautiful spot, and presents a
charming combination of wood and water; yet that large yellow
building which arrests the eye by its size and beauty of situation
calls up saddening associations, for it is the Hospital for Lepers,
leprosy being a disease, unfortunately, still prevalent in Bergen.
On our way back we visited several shops, in
particular that of Mr. F. Berger, a bookseller, whose shop is
situated not far from the cathedral. He is an accomplished linguist,
speaking English and German with fluency. We found him very civil
and attentive, and were introduced by him to the Bergen Athenaeum,
where we saw Punch, the Examiner, and the Illustrated
News. Strangers introduced by a member enter their names in a book
kept for that purpose, and are then entitled to the use of the rooms
for a fortnight free of expense. Afterwards we went to the Bergen
Museum, which contains a highly interesting collection of articles
connected with the natural history, antiquities, and fine arts of
Norway. We saw a splendid specimen of that noblest of the falcon
tribe, the gerfalcon of Norway, and of the capercailzie, male and
female, a fine lynx, the skeletons of several large bears, and a
great variety of fishes, reptiles, and minerals. There is also a
curious collection of ancient Norsk swords, axes, and armour, and
specimens of wood and stone covered with runic characters. Several
pairs of the snow - shoes or skates in common use were pointed out
to us. These are narrow flat pieces of wood, about eight feet in
length, tapering at each end, with a strap of leather to attach them
to the feet, and the face next the ground grooved. Those used by the
Laplanders are of unequal length, and the shorter of the two is
covered with reindeer-skin, in order to enable them to climb steep
acclivities. We were showm a beautifully-carved wooden bedstead of
the end of the sixteenth or beginning of the seventeenth century,
said to have belonged to a daughter of a king of Scotland.
Whether this legend be true or no, it is a most
elaborate and delicate piece of carving. The Museum contains many
pictures, most of them very bad, though often having great names
attached. Among them we observed a portrait of Jacob Jacobson
Drachenberg, the Old Parr of Norway, who lived 150 years; a good
landscape by Professor Dahl of Dresden; a smaller Italian scene by
the same artist, and a very noble outline drawing of a Pieta, worthy
of the best days of Italian art. But the two most interesting
pictures are by Jansen, a Norwegian priest, a pupil of the school of
Dusseldorf; the one representing the fair Ingeborge, the heroine of
Frithiofs Saga, with a falcon on her wrist, looking out upon the
sea, awaiting the return of her hero lover. The drawing is good, the
face beautiful, and, with the exception of a little hardness, the
colouring agreeable. The other picture represents one of the
Norwegian Vikings carrying off a Greek captive. The warm voluptuous
character of southern beauty is well expressed, and contrasts
strongly with the bright complexion and fair hair and beard of the
northern warrior. The drawing of the left arm of the young Greek is,
however, bad and feeble. We were informed that a new building is
shortly to be erected for the better accommodation and arrangement
of the curiosities of the Museum.
On a subsequent day we went to see the first
exhibition of the Prize Pictures (chiefly by native artists) of the
Bergen Art Union. This association was then quite in its infancy,
having subsisted for a single year only ; the annual subscription is
two dollars, and the largest sum as yet given for a picture has been
100 dollars. The prizes are decided, as with us, by ballot, and the
names of the prize-holders are affixed to the pictures they have
won. Several of the landscapes by native artists showed great
technical proficiency, and an attentive and loving study of nature;
and we have no doubt that many of them would bring in this country
twice the sum given for them in Norway. The exhibition did not
contain a single specimen of historical painting, but consisted
entirely of landscapes and tableaux tie genre. Among the native
artists we particularly noticed the landscapes of Mortens Muller and
Nils Muller, and of Ecker, a Norwegian long resident in the island
of Madeira. There was also a very promising picture, “Children at
play/’ by Bergslien, a Norsk peasant youth, whose genius for
painting induced some benevolent individuals to send him to study at
Dusseldorf, which appears to be the favourite school with Norwegian
artists.
On Sunday we attended afternoon service in the
Cathedral, which has no external beauty to boast of, and,
internally, is probably the ugliest church in Europe. It is a large
building, but there were not above thirty persons present during the
service, which lasted for about an hour. The officiating clergyman
was a fine-looking middle-aged man, and, like the Lutheran clergy in
general, wore a black gown and Geneva ruff. He possessed a splendid
voice, and read his sermon with great solemnity and effect. The
interior of the Cathedral is as white as whitewash and paint can
make it. There is a long and lofty nave with a wooden roof totally
devoid of mouldings or ornaments of any kind. This is divided from a
low aisle by three huge, ugly, octagonal pillars, with the shafts
whitewashed and the capitals painted black. The aisle is partially
filled up by several tiers of pews, exactly like the boxes in an
opera-house, and the central pew opposite the pulpit has red
curtains attached to it. The pulpit is a frightful wooden structure
some thirty feet high, which rises in successive stories and rests
against the centre of the wall of the nave, while below, it is
supported upon the head of a single unfortunate wooden angel, who
seems quite inadequate to sustain such a burden. Above the altar
rises a huge wooden canopy, in one compartment of which is a
painting of the Lord’s Supper, surmounted by a circular pediment,
above which is a crucifixion, the whole towering up almost to the
roof in elaborate and unmitigated ugliness. In front of the altar,
and within the altar railings, are two large brass lamps suspended
from the ceiling by black rods, ornamented with brass bells at
regular intervals ; and between these lamps hangs a colossal figure
with gilt wings and scanty drapery, resembling a figurante let down
from the flies of an opera-house rather than a respectable and
orthodox angel which we supposed it to represent. This figure may be
pulled up and lowered down by a ring attached to it, an operation
which we witnessed during the baptismal service, the water being
contained in a basin placed upon a wreath held by the outstretched
hand of the suspended angel. Facing the altar, at the opposite
extremity of the nave, is a large and powerful organ with a fine
full tone. It was very well played. Its exterior, however, is in
perfect keeping with the general hideousness which characterises the
interior of this extraordinary building. There are three parish
churches in Bergen—the Cathedral, the Kors Kirke, and the New
Church. After leaving the Cathedral we visited the last of these,
arriving just at the termination of the service. The congregation
was far more numerous than in the Cathedral, the passages were
strewed with twigs of juniper, and paint and whitewash seemed in as
great favour as in the Metropolitan church.
On our way back, we spent some time in searching out
an apothecary, in order to get some medicine for one of our party
who had been taken ill at Bergen. We found that there were two
compounders of drugs, the one known by the sign of a swan, and the
other by that of a lion, suspended over their doors. We patronised
the latter; and, in spite of his formidable designation of “Love
Aphothek,” found him civil and attentive, and able to speak a little
English. Besides the two apothecaries, the health of the population
is watched over by sixteen doctors; and a diploma from the
University of Christiania is absolutely necessary before any one is
allowed to practise. Even a Swedish diploma will not do. None but
Norwegians, or at least those holding a Norwegian degree, are
permitted to kill or cure their fellow-citizens in Bergen.
Next day the rainy monotony of the weather was
diversified by a violent thunderstorm, and we were confined to our
cabin finishing sketches, writing up journals, and making
arrangements for our departure. The weather was somewhat better next
morning, and at eleven o’clock we started on our homeward voyage to
Lerwick by the mouth of the Ivors Fiord, which opens into the German
Ocean about eighteen miles from Bergen. The sky was comparatively
clear, and the views of the old Norwegian capital as we sailed away
were varied and beautiful. From a point about a mile to the north of
King Haco’s castle the appearance of the city is very picturesque.
The quaint irregular buildings of the old fortress rising from the
sheltered waters of the merchant harbour form a noble foreground,
while the twin spires of the German Church and those of the
Cathedral and Ivors Kirke group finely around them. Farther back is
the tall white range of the Hanseatic warehouses; and, along each
side and at the head of the merchant harbour, a perfect forest of
masts; while facing the old castle on the other side of the bay are
the white walls and spire of the New Church, the slopes behind it
covered by groups of picturesque and brightly-painted wooden houses,
above which frowns the ancient fortress of Fredericksburg. But,
perhaps, the most complete of all the sea views of Bergen is that
obtained from a point a short distance beyond the extremity of the
long peninsula which divides the two bays around which the town
extends. This view shows more of the city than any other, and its
various buildings form most picturesque and charming combinations.
Not far from Bergen, and looking almost like a long suburb, is the
pretty village of Nyhavn, built close to the sea along the foot of a
range of steep hills. It is a favourite summer resort of the
Bergenese.
On our way to the mouth of the Ivors Fiord, and while
sailing through its narrow and winding reaches, we passed many a
charming villa, many a sequestered parsonage house and church
peeping out from thick foliage, and many a sheltered bay and fishing
village built along the beach. Among the prettiest of these villages
are Strudhavn, Stargen, Bradholm and Klokervik; but, although every
spot of fertile ground is taken advantage of, here, as on the banks
of the Hardanoer, the general characteristic of the shores of the
fiord is extreme barrenness. At five o’clock we reached the beacon
on Mars ten Island off the mouth of the Ivors Fiord, where we parted
with our venerable pilot. They apparently provide for their old men
in Norway by teaching them to say “’Bout ship!” and then making
pilots of them. This old man seemed still more aged than our
invaluable Palinurus on the Moranger Fiord. He had lost most of his
teeth, and his hair and whiskers were quite white. Pilotage for our
small vessel during our short visit to Norway cost us considerably
more than £1 per day; and we had a learned discussion in the cabin
one forenoon whether the Norsk word lootz (pilot) might not be
derived from the Hindoo loot, meaning booty or plunder : a question
which we leave to the decision of more accomplished philologists.
After a stormy voyage of fifty-one hours against a
head wind and a heavy sea, we arrived safely at Lerwick, from which
we had taken our departure just a fortnight before. Of this period
nearly four days were occupied in the voyage out and home, and ten
days were spent in Norway, which serves to show how easily, and in
how short a time, some of the finest scenery in Europe may be
reached and enjoyed by those who do not suffer from seasickness, or
object to the confinement and limited accommodation of a small
vessel.
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