Page:Memoir and correspondence of Caroline Herschel (1876).djvu/48

 "The next day the mistress of the inn lent me a hat of her daughter's—mine was blown into one of the canals of Holland, for we had storms by land as well as at sea—and we went to see St. Paul's, the Bank, &c., &c. Mem: only the outside, except of St. Paul's and the Bank, and we were never off our legs, except at meals in our inn. Towards evening we went to the West of the town, where, after having called on Despatch Secretary Wiese and his lady (Mr. Wiese conducted our correspondence with Hanover) we went to the inn, from whence we at ten o'clock in the evening started by the night coach for Bath on the 28th of August. . . . . After taking some tea I went immediately to bed, and I did not awake till the next day in the afternoon, when I found my brother had but just left his room. I for my part was, from the privation of sleep for eleven or twelve days (not having above twice been in what they called a bed) almost annihilated."

The only allusion to this journey in Sir W. Herschel's Journal is the brief entry: "August 16, 1772. Set off on my return to England in company with my sister."