Bradshaw's illustrated travellers' hand book in [afterw.] to France, Edição 1GALE RES, 1855 - 336 páginas Adapted to All the Railway Routes; with a Short Itinerary of Corsica, and Guide to Paris: With a Short Itinerary of Corsica, and Guide to Paris. With Maps, Town Plans, and Illustrations |
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Página xlix
... Crossing this bridge , and approaching the Louvre , the traveller will perceive a small church on the right , St. Germain l'Auxerrois , the portal of which is considered remarkably fine . The great object of attraction , however , is ...
... Crossing this bridge , and approaching the Louvre , the traveller will perceive a small church on the right , St. Germain l'Auxerrois , the portal of which is considered remarkably fine . The great object of attraction , however , is ...
Página lxxx
... crossed by a bridge of five arches , and the village of Clichy passed on the left ; after which the railroad enters Paris by Les Batignolles , passing through two tunnels under the Place de l'Europe , and crossing on a bridge over the ...
... crossed by a bridge of five arches , and the village of Clichy passed on the left ; after which the railroad enters Paris by Les Batignolles , passing through two tunnels under the Place de l'Europe , and crossing on a bridge over the ...
Página 3
... crossed by a suspension bridge , is La Roche Guyon , with the Norman tower and chapel of an old castle , taken by the English , 1418 ; below which is the more modern seat of the Rochefoucaulds , where they shew the bed , portrait , and ...
... crossed by a suspension bridge , is La Roche Guyon , with the Norman tower and chapel of an old castle , taken by the English , 1418 ; below which is the more modern seat of the Rochefoucaulds , where they shew the bed , portrait , and ...
Página 6
... crossed , as built , 1626 , by Friar Nicholas . Further up is the Pont d'Orleans , between Quais de Paris and Grand Cours , built 1811-31 , by Lunasson , of six stone arches , ( the 2nd and 5th each 102 feet span ) , resting in the ...
... crossed , as built , 1626 , by Friar Nicholas . Further up is the Pont d'Orleans , between Quais de Paris and Grand Cours , built 1811-31 , by Lunasson , of six stone arches , ( the 2nd and 5th each 102 feet span ) , resting in the ...
Página 9
... crossed by a via- duct of eight arches , 82 feet high . The railway to Dieppe ( see Route 2 ) turns off to the north - east a little beyond , up the valley of the stream , near which you come to Notre Dame - des - Champs tunnel ( 7218 ...
... crossed by a via- duct of eight arches , 82 feet high . The railway to Dieppe ( see Route 2 ) turns off to the north - east a little beyond , up the valley of the stream , near which you come to Notre Dame - des - Champs tunnel ( 7218 ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Bradshaw's Illustrated Travellers' Hand Book in [Afterw.] to France George Bradshaw Pré-visualização indisponível - 2016 |
'Bradshaw's Illustrated Travellers' Hand Book in France George Publisher of the Rail Bradshaw Pré-visualização indisponível - 1856 |
Bradshaw's Illustrated Travellers' Hand Book In [afterw.] To France George Bradshaw Pré-visualização indisponível - 2019 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
9 kil abbey ancient arches Avignon barracks baths beautiful bishop Bordeaux built Cæsar called canal capital of department carved cathedral century chapel Charles château Coaches Conveyances Cours d'Or Golden Dame Duke east eaux-de-vie English feet high feet long forest fortified founded France French further gardens gothic gothic church Grand Henry Henry IV hill hospital Hôtel Hôtel de Ville Hotels-De houses Isère joins linen Lion Loire Louis XIII Louis XIV Lyons marble Marseilles miles Mont mountains museum Napoleon native old castle old château old church palace palais de justice Paris pass pillars Pont Population port préfecture pretty promenade public library Quai rail railway Rhône river road rock roman Rouen round Route 24 ruined Saône seat souls sous-préfecture sous-préfecture in department south-west spire spot stands station steamer stone streets style suspension bridge theatre Toulouse tower Trade in wine valley walls
Passagens conhecidas
Página xxxi - Les mois de l'année janvier, January février, February mars, March avril, April mai, May juin, June juillet, July août, August septembre, September octobre, October novembre, November décembre, December Les jours de fête fêter v., to celebrate a holiday; bonne fête!
Página xix - ... humors. It is the best of all constitutional remedies for mind and body, although it acts but slowly on the whipcord nerves of the English. It is good for the brains and the stomach.- It invigorates the imagination, loosens the blood and makes it leap through the veins, dispels the nebulous mass of the stay-at-home animal, and, liberating the spirit from its drowsy weight of prejudices, sends it rebounding back, lighter and brighter than ever, with the fresh morning beams throbbing in its pulses....
Página xxxi - Days of the week: lundi (Monday), mardi (Tuesday), mercredi (Wednesday), jeudi (Thursday), vendredi (Friday), samedi (Saturday), dimanche (Sunday...
Página lxxv - Bartholomew," was passed from man to man. But out spake gentle Henry, "No Frenchman is my foe: "Down, down, with every foreigner, but let your brethren go.
Página lvii - Académie française. — Académie des inscriptions et belles lettres. — Académie des sciences. — Académie des beaux arts. — Académie des sciences morales et politiques, quai de Conti , 23, à Paris.
Página lxvi - London consists in the greater purity and dryness of. the atmosphere, its freedom from smoke and fog, and in the weather being less variable from day to day. The summers are hotter, and the winters equally cold if not colder. The average quantity of rain which falls throughout the year is about as great in the one as in the other capital. It would not, therefore, be advisable to select Paris as a winter residence for delicate invalids, or those whose cases require attention to climate. It agrees,...
Página xix - With what curiosity he peers into shop-windows and bazaars ; with what vivacity, wondering se cretly all the while at his miraculous accession of gusto, he criticises picture-galleries and museums ; how vigorously he hunts through royal parks and palaces to collect gossip for the table d'hote; how he climbs lofty steeples and boasts of his lungs; what mountains of ice he devours in the heat of the day ; what torrents of lemonade gazeuse or Seltzer water he swallows ; what a dinner he makes amidst...
Página xxxv - I le second, la seconde, le, la deuxième, te troisième, the third. le quatrième, the fourth. le cinquième, the fifth. le sixième, the sixth. le septième, the seventh. le huitième, the eighth. le neuvième, the ninth. le dixième, the tenth. le onzième, the eleventh.
Página xviii - ... Out of England, he is out of his element. He misses the unmistakeable cookery, the rugs and carpets, the bright steps and windows, the order, decorum, the wealth and its material sturdiness. He comes out of his fogs and the sulphurous atmosphere of his sea-coal fires, into an open laughing climate. His ears are stunned with songs and music from morning till night; every face he meets is lighted up with enjoyment; he cannot even put his head out of the window without seeing the sun.
Página xx - I observe that few English shine in conversation with the French. There is a lightness and brilliancy, a sort of touch and go, if I may say so, in the latter, seldom, if ever, to be acquired by strangers. Never dwelling long on any subject, and rarely entering profoundly into it, they sparkle on the surface with great dexterity, bringing wit, gaiety, and tact, into play. Like summer lightning, French wit flashes frequently, brightly and innocuously, leaving nothing disagreeable to remind one of its...