The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 5


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this question, little Doctor Ponnonner committed himself in a very  
extraordinary way.  
"Look at our architecture!" he exclaimed, greatly to the indignation of  
both the travellers, who pinched him black and blue to no purpose.  
"Look," he cried with enthusiasm, "at the Bowling-Green Fountain in New  
York! or if this be too vast a contemplation, regard for a moment the  
Capitol at Washington, D. C.!"--and the good little medical man went  
on to detail very minutely, the proportions of the fabric to which he  
referred. He explained that the portico alone was adorned with no less  
than four and twenty columns, five feet in diameter, and ten feet apart.  
The Count said that he regretted not being able to remember, just  
at that moment, the precise dimensions of any one of the principal  
buildings of the city of Aznac, whose foundations were laid in the night  
of Time, but the ruins of which were still standing, at the epoch of  
his entombment, in a vast plain of sand to the westward of Thebes. He  
recollected, however, (talking of the porticoes,) that one affixed to  
an inferior palace in a kind of suburb called Carnac, consisted of a  
hundred and forty-four columns, thirty-seven feet in circumference, and  
twenty-five feet apart. The approach to this portico, from the Nile,  
was through an avenue two miles long, composed of sphynxes, statues, and  
obelisks, twenty, sixty, and a hundred feet in height. The palace itself  
(
as well as he could remember) was, in one direction, two miles long,  
and might have been altogether about seven in circuit. Its walls were  
48  
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