قراءة كتاب With the World's Great Travellers, Volume 4

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‏اللغة: English
With the World's Great Travellers, Volume 4

With the World's Great Travellers, Volume 4

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2
The Midnight Sun Langley Coleridge 229 In the Russian Capital Samuel S. Cox 236 A Visit to Finland David Ker 246 Moscow in 1800 Edward Daniel Clarke 257 A Russian Sleigh Journey Frederick Burnaby 267

List of Illustrations

VOLUME IV

The Cologne Cathedral Frontispiece
Louvre Museum, Apollo Gallery 12
St. Gotthard Railway (Viaduct and Tunnel) 28
Arch of Titus, Rome 38
The Famous Bridge of the Rialto, Venice 46
The Church of St. Mark, Venice 74
Acropolis at Athens, Greece 84
Corinth, Greece 96
The Lion Monument, Lucerne 114
Kleine Scheidegg (The Jungfrau) 124
A Typical Dutch Windmill 134
The Waterloo Pyramid 144
The Town and Castle of Heidelberg 160
Innsbruck, Theresa Street 186
Budapest 212
Moscow 258

WITH THE WORLD’S GREAT TRAVELLERS.


THE WORLD’S GREAT CAPITALS OF TO-DAY.

OLIVER H. G. LEIGH.


Paris, Amsterdam.

Paris, pleasure capital of the world, the ideal cosmopolitan city, a thousand different delights for a thousand different tastes, is as fascinating to the scholar and bookworm as to the tourist and the belle of fashion. The weary old world would die of melancholy if the light of gay Paris were to go out. Lutetia, as the Romans called the ancient town, is still the merry child in the family of nations. Fortune gave it favors without stint. Emperors and kings delighted to adorn it with a lavishness equalled by the lasting splendor of their gifts. Art and learning, the genius of ecclesiasticism and the desire for popular enjoyment, contributed the venerable edifices and their priceless treasures, and dowered the modern city with the heirlooms of many centuries. Notre Dame rose eight hundred years ago from the ruins of a fourth-century church. A few years ago were discovered the foundations of an amphitheatre capable of seating ten thousand people as far back as the year 350, when the city’s population must have been at least twice that number. No wonder all the world gathers periodically at this natural centre of everything that can make a city a miniature world in itself, for in the Paris of to-day stand side by side monuments and memorials of antiquity, and the grandest triumphs of latter-day genius in a profusion that bewilders the eye and the mind. It is as though the genii of all time and all peoples had conspired to shower their fairest gifts upon the favored spot of earth round which the drama of the ages has enacted its tremendous tableaux.

A run through its history must be the first item in the programme of the traveller who wishes to take with him his best pair of eyes. Then he will find the old gray stones turn into glass to let him see into the hidden glory behind. The lesser charms of the pretty city are palpable to any child. Yet it is impossible to look at the building or

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