Our Cruise in the Undine: The Journal of an English Pair-oar Expedition Through France, Baden, Rhenish Bavaria, Prussia, and BelgiumJ. W. Parker and son, 1854 - 156 pages |
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Page 3
... course , and do all that was necessary in regard of the boat before starting . In the following pages , the writer makes no attempt at flowing language , or even a description of the beauties of scenery ; they contain essentially what ...
... course , and do all that was necessary in regard of the boat before starting . In the following pages , the writer makes no attempt at flowing language , or even a description of the beauties of scenery ; they contain essentially what ...
Page 4
... course , carried our real names . One- the Professor , as we called him ( though it was no easy matter to find a soubriquet for that dis- tinguished personage ) , was to have the entire charge and management of the funds , the pro ...
... course , carried our real names . One- the Professor , as we called him ( though it was no easy matter to find a soubriquet for that dis- tinguished personage ) , was to have the entire charge and management of the funds , the pro ...
Page 18
... course of the evening the crew of the ' Vil- lida'joined us ; a very pleasant set of men , rather too excitable for steady work , but , like the members of the English club , they seem embued with a spirit of generous emulation , though ...
... course of the evening the crew of the ' Vil- lida'joined us ; a very pleasant set of men , rather too excitable for steady work , but , like the members of the English club , they seem embued with a spirit of generous emulation , though ...
Page 19
... course , two dead weights in the boat . But we must hasten our departure from Paris , for the Professor can only be absent from England during six weeks , and we have a plenty of work cut out for that time . We begged our friend Arthur ...
... course , two dead weights in the boat . But we must hasten our departure from Paris , for the Professor can only be absent from England during six weeks , and we have a plenty of work cut out for that time . We begged our friend Arthur ...
Page 26
... course was more monotonous , as far as con- cerns the scenery in our immediate neighbourhood : the canal often runs for miles without a bend or turn of any kind ; then we have high stiff banks with a road or pathway on the top , and on ...
... course was more monotonous , as far as con- cerns the scenery in our immediate neighbourhood : the canal often runs for miles without a bend or turn of any kind ; then we have high stiff banks with a road or pathway on the top , and on ...
Other editions - View all
Our Cruise in the Undine: The Journal of an English Pair-Oar Expedition ... Edmund George Harvey No preview available - 2013 |
Our Cruise in the Undine: The Journal of an English Pair-Oar Expedition ... Edmund George Harvey No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
Anglais appearance arrived ashore Asnières auberge bank barge bargees bateau beautiful Béguinage Belgium Besançon Bingen Bingen-loch Boppard Breysach bridge Bruges canal Captain and Professor carried Cathedral Cheaper Edition club Coblentz Cologne colour commenced costume CÔTE D'OR course crew cruise Dijon dinner discovered distance Doctor douaniers Doubs éclusier endeavour England English expedition feet float four-oar francs French friends gentlemen German Ghent going half Heidelberg hills hour JEAN DE L'OSNE Kembs knapsacks l'eau L'IMPARTIAL laissez-passer learnt length locks London Mannheim miles morning Napoleon Neckar night oars Oberwesel Ostend OUTWARD BOUND pair-oar Paris Parker passing perhaps petit pulled race reached RHEIN Rhin Rhine Rhône river rock rowlocks Rudesheim Saône scenery SCHLÄGER SCHLAGER FECHT seemed shallow side steamer stopped Strasburg stream tion told took town travelling Undine vapeur village Vosges voyage walk Water Lily West Strand wine wished
Popular passages
Page 138 - IN the ancient town of Bruges, In the quaint old Flemish city, As the evening shades descended, Low and loud and sweetly blended, Low at times and loud at times, And changing like a poet's rhymes, Rang the beautiful wild chimes From the Belfry in the market Of the ancient town of Bruges.
Page 132 - Ghent is said to have contained 80,000 men capable of bearing arms. The number of weavers then amounted to 40,000 ; and they alone could furnish 18,000 fighting men out of their corporation. A custom derived from that period still exists in the town : — A bell was rung at morning, noon, and evening, to summon the weavers to their work and meals ; while it tolled, the drawbridges over the canals could not be raised for the passage of vessels ; and other persons were even enjoined not to go out into...
Page 22 - Or stretch'd on the beach, or our saddles spread As a pillow beneath the resting head, Fresh we woke upon the morrow : All our thoughts and words had scope, We had health, and we had hope, Toil and travel, but no sorrow.
Page 156 - The Merchant and the Friar; or, Truths and Fictions of the Middle Ages. By Sir F.
Page 114 - ... this noble river ! And right it is; for, of all the rivers of this beautiful earth, there is none so beautiful as this. There is hardly a league of its whole course, from its cradle in the snowy Alps to its grave in the sands of Holland, which boasts not its peculiar charms. By...
Page 114 - ... no other part of its course does it fill an ampler channel or roll along with more impetuous rapidity. It enters the Lake of Constance turbid with the impurities of the glacier torrents which feed it. It emerges crystalline in purity, and deliciously green in colour. Well may Longfellow exclaim : " O the pride of the German heart in this noble river! And right it is, for of all the rivers of this beautiful earth there is none so beautiful as this.
Page 155 - Brampton Rectory: or, the Lesson of Life. Second Edition. 8s. 6d. Compton Merivale: another Leaf from the Lesson of Life. By the Author of Brampton Rectory . 8s.
Page 114 - The Rhine ! the Rhine ! a blessing on the Rhine !" O, the pride of the German heart in this noble river ! And right it is ; for, of all the rivers of this beautiful earth, there is none so beautiful as this. There is hardly a league of its whole course, from its cradle in the snowy Alps to its grave in the sands of Holland, which boasts not its peculiar charms.