of various shapes, the river descending from west to east, and obstructed by a multitude of small islands, clumps of trees and myriads of rocks—the same river, at the lower end of the town, bending at right angles to the south and winding many miles in that direction, its polished surface caught here and there by the eye, but more frequently covered from the view by trees, among which white sails exhibit a curious and interesting spectacle; then again, on the opposite side, Manchester, built on a hill, which, sloping quickly to the river, opens the whole town to view, interspersed with flourishing poplars and surrounded to a great distance by green plains and stately woods,—all these objects falling at once under the eye constitute by far the most finely varied and most animated landscape I have ever seen."
The Valentine Museum, which was given to
the city by one of its most valued citizens, the
late Mann S. Valentine, contains archæological
specimens numbering more than one hundred
thousand, also an art collection and a number of
original works donated by his brother, Edward
V. Valentine, Virginia's talented sculptor. A
short walk brings you to the studio of this
artist, where, among many beautiful and interesting
figures, the chief interest centres in
the model for the recumbent statue of General
Robert E. Lee, the marble of which is in the
annex to the Episcopal Church in Lexington.