Pen and ink, approx. ? × ? cm (image only).
The editors of the
Library Edition
describe the image as a “sketch of a town in a large plain, with distant mountains”,
although they misidentify the drawingʼs position in
MS IX—at least, as presently found—ascribing
it to a position between the poem and prose of the
“St. Goar” section.
If accurate, that description would have placed the drawing on the verso page (43v) that precedes its current placement (44v)
(
Ruskin, Works, 2:360).
A mystery remains, however; for while this picture does present a mountain prospect, the scene is oddly lacking in
Heidelbergʼs most recognizable landmarks. There is no
Heidelberg Castle nestled against the mountainside,
no arched bridge across the river, no gothic cathedral tower (rather, a round dome is prominent). The mountain might be intended for
the
Heiligenberg, which rises above
Heidelberg,
but that mountain is rounded, unlike the sharp peaks shown in this picture. Also, the plain intervening between the high foreground of the picture
and the distant town seems exaggerated in its expansiveness, unless the scene depicts where the
Neckar River
emerges from the
Odenwald mountain range. There the river flows into a level plain toward
Mannheim, where it empties into the
Rhine.
In that case, the drawing would complement the lines of the poem describing how “towards the western day, /
Manheims towers softened lay”—but then the mountains shown behind distant
Mannheim would be wrong.
Perhaps
Ruskinʼs deletion of the word “mountain”, then, acknowledges that he based his vignette on a mistaken idea;
or perhaps more likely, this drawing is misplaced—a mistake that might have occurred when the manuscript was altered by injurious curation (see
Information Lost about the “Account” owing to Curatorial Treatment of Manuscripts;
and
Missing and Unidentified Drawings for the Composite‐Genre Illustrated Travelogue (MS IX) and Related 1833 Tour Sketches.
.