Bradshaw's illustrated hand-book for travellers in Belgium, on the Rhine, and through portions of Rhenish Prussia, Volume 301853 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 82
Page xvii
... principal London Bankers , and form a very safe and convenient kind of Letters of credit . The arrangements for cashing them in the various countries through which the traveller may have to pass are very simple and efficient ...
... principal London Bankers , and form a very safe and convenient kind of Letters of credit . The arrangements for cashing them in the various countries through which the traveller may have to pass are very simple and efficient ...
Page xxvii
... principal Exports are the productions of its flourishing agriculture and numerous manufactures , such as corn , coal , oil , lace , woollen and cotton cloths , linen , canvas , arms , cutlery , iron rails , and ironmongery . The average ...
... principal Exports are the productions of its flourishing agriculture and numerous manufactures , such as corn , coal , oil , lace , woollen and cotton cloths , linen , canvas , arms , cutlery , iron rails , and ironmongery . The average ...
Page xxviii
... principal commercial towns on one side with the sea , and on the other with the frontier of France and Prussia . In this respect Belgium is most favourably situated for the experiment of a general system of railroads . It is compact in ...
... principal commercial towns on one side with the sea , and on the other with the frontier of France and Prussia . In this respect Belgium is most favourably situated for the experiment of a general system of railroads . It is compact in ...
Page 2
... principal Gate , built in 1635 by Cardinal Richelieu , and figured by Hogarth in his celebrated picture , is worth a short inspection . The Hôtel de Guise will also interest the Eng- lish traveller , as having been the place where Henry ...
... principal Gate , built in 1635 by Cardinal Richelieu , and figured by Hogarth in his celebrated picture , is worth a short inspection . The Hôtel de Guise will also interest the Eng- lish traveller , as having been the place where Henry ...
Page 5
... principal towns in the north of France . The streets are large , and finely built . Under the name of Cortoriacum it existed in the time of the Romans . The first cloths were made here in 1268 , and two hundred years afterwards it In ...
... principal towns in the north of France . The streets are large , and finely built . Under the name of Cortoriacum it existed in the time of the Romans . The first cloths were made here in 1268 , and two hundred years afterwards it In ...
Common terms and phrases
Abbey altar ancient Antwerp architecture Baden Baths beautiful Belgium BRADSHAW'S branch bridge Bruges Brussels building built canal castle Cathedral celebrated centre century chapel Charleroi Château choir Church of St CLASS HOTEL Coblenz Cologne comfort contains Counts of Flanders crosses Dinant Duke Dutch East Flanders Emperor English erected established excellent excursion Families feet high formerly France French Garden German Ghent Gothic GRAND HOTEL Hall handsome hill Holland inhabitants left bank Liége magnificent Mannheim Mayence Meuse miles moderate charges monument Moselle mountains Museum Namur Omnibus opposite Ostend paintings Palace passes Pension picturesque population Prince Promenade Proprietor Prussia rail Railway Station remarkable residence Rhine right bank river road rock Roman Rooms Route Royal Rubens ruins Saloons Scheldt side situated Spires splendid statue Steamers Strassburg streets style Table d'Hôte Theatre tion tower town traveller Trèves valley village visitors wine
Popular passages
Page 83 - The castled crag of Drachenfels " \ Frowns o'er the wide and winding Rhine, Whose breast of waters broadly swells Between the banks which bear the vine, And hills all rich with blossom'd trees, And fields which promise corn and wine, And scatter'd cities crowning these, Whose far white walls along them shine, Have strew'da scene, which I should see With double joy wert tkou with me.
Page 32 - Ere evening, to be trodden like the grass Which now beneath them, but above shall grow In its next verdure, when this fiery mass Of living valour, rolling on the foe And burning with high hope, shall moulder cold and low.
Page 79 - And there they stand, as stands a lofty mind, Worn, but unstooping to the baser crowd, All tenantless, save to the crannying wind, Or holding dark communion with the cloud.
Page xxiv - Rubens stands in the esteem of the world is alone a sufficient reason for some examination of his pretensions. His fame is extended over a great part of the Continent, without a rival: and it may be justly said that he has enriched his...
Page 71 - As it flows down from the distant ridges of the Alps, through fertile regions into the open sea, so it comes down from remote antiquity, associated in every age with momentous events in the history of the neighbouring nations.
Page xxiv - ... left, but by what some would think a more solid advantage, — the wealth arising from the concourse of strangers whom his works continually invite to Antwerp.
Page 189 - Kursaal, and Casino, nearest to the sea. It is patronised by the nobility and gentry, and frequently has the honour of receiving princely yisitors.