MOSCOW, BUDAPEST, LONDON Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis | ||
BUDA PEST
[DEAR CHAS: May 8th, 1896.]
I have just returned from the procession of the Hungarian Nobles. It was even more beautiful and more interesting than the Czar's entry than which I would not have believed anything could have been more impressive — But the first was military, except for the carriages, which were like something out of fairyland — to-day, the costumes were all different and mediaeval, some nine hundred years old and none nearer than the 15th Century. The mis en scene was also much better. Buda is a clean, old burgh, with yellow houses rising on a steep green hill, red roofs and towers and domes, showing out of the trees — It is very high but very steep and the procession wound in and out like a fairy picture — I sat on the top of the hill, looking down it to the Danube, which separates Buda from Pest — The Emperor sat across the square about 75 yards from our tribune in the balcony of his palace. We sat in the Palace yard and the procession passed and turned in front of us — There were about 1,500 nobles, each dressed to suit himself, in costumes that had descended for generations — of brocade, silk, fur, and gold and silver cloth — Each costume averaged, with the trappings of the horse, 5,000 dollars. Some cost $1,000, some $15,000. Some wore complete suits of chain armor, with bearskins and great black eagle feathers on their spears just as they were when they invaded Rome — Others wore gold chain armor and leopard or wolf skins and their horses were studded
I leave here Wednesday and reach Paris Friday morning the eleventh — You must try to meet me at the Cafe de la Paix at half past nine — Wait in the corner room if you don't wish to sit outside and as soon as I get washed I will join you for coffee. It will be fine to see you again and to be done with jumping about from hotel to hotel and to be able to read the signs and to know how to ask for food. Russian, German and Hungarian have made French seem like my mother tongue —
DICK.
MOSCOW, BUDAPEST, LONDON Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis | ||