Letters of a TravellerD. Appleton, 1859 - 277 páginas |
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Página 12
... seemed , for though the exhibition had already lasted a fortnight , there was nothing faded or withered ; every blossom and leaf was as fresh as it could have been in its native bed . The tropical flowers themselves seemed not to miss ...
... seemed , for though the exhibition had already lasted a fortnight , there was nothing faded or withered ; every blossom and leaf was as fresh as it could have been in its native bed . The tropical flowers themselves seemed not to miss ...
Página 27
... seemed as if the fo- liage must tremble and turn with the wind . In the north they slay animals for their fur ; but the Swiss finds a substitute for fur in the skins of the birds which haunt his lakes . There were numerous samples of ...
... seemed as if the fo- liage must tremble and turn with the wind . In the north they slay animals for their fur ; but the Swiss finds a substitute for fur in the skins of the birds which haunt his lakes . There were numerous samples of ...
Página 33
... seemed pleasant , and where the air of the sea breathed upon us with a refreshing coolness , our journey was through an arid and almost shadeless country . Frontignan , famed for its grapes , as the delicious varieties which bear its ...
... seemed pleasant , and where the air of the sea breathed upon us with a refreshing coolness , our journey was through an arid and almost shadeless country . Frontignan , famed for its grapes , as the delicious varieties which bear its ...
Página 39
... seemed to me incredibly short , and then went off to Toulouse in the night . The English who come here do not stay long , but look at what is remarkable and depart . Our party have not been so faithful to the duty of sight- seeing ...
... seemed to me incredibly short , and then went off to Toulouse in the night . The English who come here do not stay long , but look at what is remarkable and depart . Our party have not been so faithful to the duty of sight- seeing ...
Página 45
... seemed to have more work on their hands than they were able to perform , and the comfort and convenience of the guests suffered no little in consequence . I had occasion to observe , in passing through the streets , that the women were ...
... seemed to have more work on their hands than they were able to perform , and the comfort and convenience of the guests suffered no little in consequence . I had occasion to observe , in passing through the streets , that the women were ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Alameda Algiers Alicante Arab Bagnères de Bigorre Basque Bayonne beautiful Briviesca broad brought building built bull bull-fight Burgos called CANTABRIAN MOUNTAINS caps carriage Cartagena Castile Castilian cathedral chapel chulos church cloak Cloth coachman color crowd dark Don Pedro donkeys dressed entered eyes floor French fruit Full calf gentleman Gilt edges green Grenada ground groves Half calf hill horses hour houses journey ladies letter lofty look Luchon lying Madrid Malaga massive Miranda de Ebro Moorish morning mosque mountains mules Murcia night o'clock Old Castile Oran party passed planted pleasant priests provinces Pyrenees road rocks Rome rooms rows San Sebastian seats seemed seen shouted side sight Spain Spaniards Spanish steamer stone stood streets summit Swiss thing told took town travelling trees Urumea valley village Vitoria walk walls wind woman women young
Pasajes populares
Página 279 - Russia. Trans, from the French. Thick 12mo. Cloth, 1 25 Dew's Digest of Ancient and Modern History. Svo. Cloth, 2 00 Don Quixote de La Mancha.
Página 149 - Of the people of the country I ought to carry away a most favorable impression, if such an impression could be produced by unwearied endeavors, with apparently no motive but simple benevolence, to make our stay agreeable. The American minister, Mr. Dodge, is very attentive to the convenience of his countrymen, and a great favorite -with such of them as come to Madrid. He is on excellent terms also with the people of the country, and has done, what I think few of his predecessors have taken the trouble...
Página 257 - Men who would never have thought of buying a picture or a statue at home, are infected by the contagion of the place the moment they arrive. No talk of the money market here; no discussion of any public measure; no conversation respecting new enterprises, and the ebb and flow of trade; no price current, except of marble and canvas; all the talk is of art and artists. The rich man who, at home, is contented with mirrors and rosewood, is here initiated into a new set of ideas, gets a taste, and orders...
Página 279 - Captain Canot ; or, Twenty Years of a Slaver's Life, Edited by Brantz Mayer. 1 vol. 12mo. Illustrated. Cloth, 1 25 Chapman's Instructions to Young Marksmen on the Improved American Rifle, 16mo.
Página 175 - The only narcotic in which the Spaniards indulge to any extent is tobacco, in favor of which I have nothing to say; yet it should be remembered, in extenuation, that they are tempted to this habit by the want of something else to do; that they husband their cigarritos by smoking with great deliberation, making a little tobacco go a great way, and that they dilute its narcotic fumes with those of the paper in which it is folded. With regard to the use of wine, I can confirm all that has been said...
Referencias a este libro
Between History and Romance: Travel Writing on Spain in the Early Nineteenth ... Gifra-Adroher, Pere Vista de fragmentos - 2000 |
Between History and Romance: Travel Writing on Spain in the Early Nineteenth ... Gifra-Adroher, Pere Vista previa limitada - 2000 |