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Howitt, Anna Mary
An art-student in Munich: in two volumes (Band 2) — London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1853

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.62134#0173
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A GREAT FIRE AT NIGHT.

165

and goods hastily collected together, in awful alarm, and
snatched from the fury of the devouring tyrant. A stream
of bewildered folk hurried along through the middle of the
street; they heeded nothing as they blindly pressed forward
between the rows of stationary spectators. Here came a
man in his dressing-gown, his cap drawn over his face, a
hunting-pouch crammed with the most heterogeneous
articles slung round his shoulders, and in either hand a
terrified little girl. Here a husband bore along in his arms
his sick wife, her fainting form wrapt round with a large
cloak. Now a young girl ran along, wringing her hands
and crying aloud. Beds and bedding, tables, chairs, ward-
robes, pictures, baskets of books, clothes, papers, um-
brellas, are borne past. Here comes a cart of cheese ; here
come again beds and bedding, ad injinitum. Here comes
a little lad carrying with care a canary, which flutters
wildly in its pretty cage; here come two students with
their music books, a violin, a mass of manuscript, learned-
looking books and swords, laid upon a little sledge. Here
comes an easel, here a huge canvas, here a baby in its
cradle, here an old blind woman led by a little child; here
again comes bedding, bedding, bedding ! Now huge, splen-
did mirrors, now kitchen utensils, and now a wagon loaded
with sofas, chairs, boxes, heaped up madly ! All is confu-
sion, bewilderment. There are heaps of furniture piled up
in the streets; there are carts and there are drays with
huge tuns rolling, thundering along; there are shouts,
murmurs. “ The whole quarter will be burnt down I” cries
a man in a hollow voice. The heavens flush and glow;
sparks fly around in thick showers. We try to approach yet
nearer to the burning houses, but again are driven back by
the soldiers. Again we enter the court-yard which I have
already mentioned. The Staats Geldude (Government
building) is untouched, but the roof of the brewery has
 
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