without any of the salient or re-entering angles which form the characteristic features of our mod ern artillery fortifications. At present it is used simply as a promenade. It is about twenty-five to thirty-five feet across the top, from fifteen to twen ty feet high, and as it was long ago planted with a row of Lindens on each side, whose branches now meet overhead in a graceful arch, it forms a cool shady avenue in summer, and a dry warm walk in winter. Go when you will, in morning, afternoon or evening, you will be sure of meeting promenaders out for a stroll; grave baldheaded professors taking a few moments relaxation from their dusty manu scripts or mysterious laboratories; gay Corp-stu denten in knots of three or four, gaudy in their top boots and bright colored caps, each carrying the inevitable cane and followed by the never missing dog; this, by the way, may vary from the most graceful grayhottnd to the most despicable cur imaginable. The German maiden is also there ; plain featured, but with a clear, fair com plexion, erect and heart/ she walks briskly along, looking neither to the right nor to the left. In fact it is, in daylight, the Broadway, or Piccadilly of Goettingen. Should one, however, take a stroll along its summit on some pleasant summer evening, he would, unless perfectly oblivious to the sweet warbling of the nightingale, or the cooing of the dies/ madchcn (serving-girl) and her favorite sol dier, or the soft murmur of a student as he moves along with the girl of his choice, certainly come to the conclusion that the old Wall had become a work for Love instead of for War. The valley of the Leine has always been a great thoroughfare between the seaports of north Ger many, and the regions of central Germany, Fran conia and Thuringia. Especially during the Mid dle Ages was it the important highway used by the caravans engaged in carrying the ever growing commerce of Hamburg, Bremem etc. down into the central Provinces. On this acccount the country, both north and south ofGoettingen, soon became a territory fruitful in its production of robber counts who outranked each other only in the number and THE FREE LANCE. strength of retainers which each one was able to sup port. The homes of these robber bands were the cas tleswhich raised their frowning battlements along the high hills that lines the valley ; these were so placed that the approach of a caravan could be sig nalled by lights from one great tower to the other. The ruins of many of these robber strongholds in terest the eye of the tourist as he passes up the Leine on the Hanover-Cassel railway ; and espe cially does one of interest come into view as he ap proaches Goettingen. This ruin,called thePlesse, rises out of a thick forest on a detached spur of the eastern ridge, and overlooks the plains from an el evation of several hundred feet. The outer walls of the castle are, in most places still standing, and the general grand plan can be easily recognized. The two old towers are almost intact and offer from their summits a magnificent view of the sun ny valley below and the long high western ridge directly opposite. In some part of almost each of these ruins a restaurant is to be found where lun cheon and a great mug of beer can be obtained, to refresh the student or tourist who has left the beat en path and climbed the rocky hillside to inspect the landmarks of bygone days.. Pedestrian excur sions to such places form a very pleasant feature of student life at Goettingen. The city itself may be divided into two parts: the Alstadt or old town, which lies within the Wall, and the Neustadt or portion which has in later years grown up outside the old ramparts. The streets of the older part are for the most crooked and narrow, but the newer portions are spaciously and regularly built. The population of about 18,000 people finds employment in the produc tion of cotten and woolen goods, the manufacture of fine physical and mathematical instruments, and in catering to the wants of the many students gathered within its bounds. The Englishman or American who visits a Ger man University town for the first time will scarce ly realize the fact that it is the seat of a great insti tution of learning. One sees no visible signs of the University, no chapel, no large buildings, whether