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Show 364 Early Western Travels [ VoL 36 seemed to have burst. A few hundred yards from the spot on which I stood a huge elm had been blasted by the lightning; and its enormous shaft towering aloft, torn, mangled, shattered from the very summit to its base, was streaming its long ghastly fragments on the blast. The scene was one startlingly impressive; one of those few scenes in a man's life the remembrance [ 119] of which years cannot wholly efface; which he never forgets. As I gazed upon this giant forest- son, which the lapse of centuries had perhaps hardly sufficed to rear to perfection, now, even though a ruin, noble, that celebrated passage of the poet Gray, when describing his bard, recurred with some force to my mind: in this description Gray is supposed to have had the painting of Raphael at Florence, representing Deity in the vision of Ezekiel, before him: " Loose his beard and hoary hair Stream'd, like a meteor, to the troubled air," & c. A ride of a few hours, after the storm had died away, brought me to the pleasant little town of Mt. Vernon. 11' This place is the seat of justice for Jefferson county, and has a courthouse of brick, decent enough to the eye, to be sure, but said to have been so miserably constructed that it is a perilous feat for his honour here to poise the scales. The town itself is an inconsiderable place, but pleasantly situated, in the edge of a prairie, if I forget not, and in every other respect is exactly what every traveller has seen a dozen times elsewhere in Illinois. Like Shelbyville, it is chiefly noted for a remarkable spring in its vicinity, said to be highly medicinal. How this latter item may stand I know not, but I am quite sure that all of the pure dement it was my own disagreeable necessity to partake of during ** Mount Vernon, a village seventy- seven miles southeast of St. Louis, was chosen as the seat of justice for Jefferson County, when the latter was organised in 1818.- ED. |