In Notebooks and Journals - Vol II, under the note for Allerheiligen is a note "C went down & visited the waterfalls." I suspect he was referring to the Büttensteiner Waterfalls, known today as the All Saints Waterfalls. Can anyone verify this? From Wikipedia: "The waterfalls belonged for centuries to All Saints' Abbey, the ruins of which are only a few hundred metres away. Because they lie in a deeply incised and narrow valley, they were inaccessible for a long time. Not until the early 19th century were they discovered with the aid of ladders. In 1840 the forestry authorities built a path that enabled access to the falls via several flights of steps and bridges. Because it receives so many visitors it has had to renovated several times already." They are mentioned in Baedeker's guidebook which was reportedly used by Twain. -- There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy. http://bscottholmes.com