Austria: Vienna, Prague, Hungary, Bohemia, and the Danube; Galicia, Styria, Moravia, Bukovina, and the Military Frontier |
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Page 29
... officers of state . I pressed him not the less to let me into the secret ; telling him that I took especial delight in knowing myself to be in the vicinity of any object of historical interest , because I felt within myself a particular ...
... officers of state . I pressed him not the less to let me into the secret ; telling him that I took especial delight in knowing myself to be in the vicinity of any object of historical interest , because I felt within myself a particular ...
Page 67
... officers , by whom they are kept to the present day under lock and key . Autographs of men celebrated in the history of Bohemia are likewise to be seen at this museum ; among many others , those of Huss and Zizka . The latter usually ...
... officers , by whom they are kept to the present day under lock and key . Autographs of men celebrated in the history of Bohemia are likewise to be seen at this museum ; among many others , those of Huss and Zizka . The latter usually ...
Page 69
... officers , from the Oberstburggraf to the Kreiscommissär , or commissary of the circle , is called the government of the country ( die böhmische Landesre- gierung ) , and nearly all these offices are filled by members of the old noble ...
... officers , from the Oberstburggraf to the Kreiscommissär , or commissary of the circle , is called the government of the country ( die böhmische Landesre- gierung ) , and nearly all these offices are filled by members of the old noble ...
Page 79
... officers of state , in whose hands is the ad- ministration of the lordship . This central government of the estate is called the " princely court chancery , " at the head of which are four " princely court counsellors . " These Bohemian ...
... officers of state , in whose hands is the ad- ministration of the lordship . This central government of the estate is called the " princely court chancery , " at the head of which are four " princely court counsellors . " These Bohemian ...
Page 81
... officer who holds the rank of captain . In this courtyard I paid my respects to one of the officers of the castle , and told him I wished to see as much as possible of the place . He asked me , with a smile , how many weeks I intended ...
... officer who holds the rank of captain . In this courtyard I paid my respects to one of the officers of the castle , and told him I wished to see as much as possible of the place . He asked me , with a smile , how many weeks I intended ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alps animals appeared Austrian Austrian empire Banat beautiful Bohemian Buda building Bukovina called Carpathians carriage castle cattle church colour convent Cracow Danube Dniester emperor Europe feet florins forest formerly Galicia garden German gipsies Grätz handsome hills honour horses hundred Hungarian Hungary Hussites inhabitants interesting Italian Jews kind king lady lake land Lemberg less Linz live look magnificent Magyar miles Military Frontier Moldavia Moravia mountains nations neighbouring never night nobility nobles officers Orsova passed patriots peasants Pesth picture plain Poland Poles Polish poor population Prague present pretty Prince Raab river road rock Roman round Rusniaks Russian salt seemed seen Servians side Slavonian soldiers sometimes stands stone Stuhlweissenburg Styria Syrmia Szegedin Temesvar Theiss thing thousand told town traveller Turkish Turks valley Vienna villages Vistula Walachian walls whole wild wine words young
Popular passages
Page 88 - Mrs., or rather Miss Manley, for she was never married, is best known as the authoress of the ' New Atalantis,' a scandalous work, which she published at the end of the seventeenth or the beginning of the eighteenth century.
Page 55 - The Lord hath made good his word, which he pronounced against us, to bring upon us great plagues, such as never happened under the whole heaven, as it came to pass in Jerusalem, according, to the things that were written in the law of Moses, that a man should eat the flesh of his own son, and the flesh of his own daughter.
Page 144 - Exactly in front of the niche the rock descended perpendicularly to an immense depth. At the back was another steep descent. Some fragments of rock formed a kind of bridge between the larger masses, but these were placed too high to be accessible to the little ones, and could only be available for their mother. The hunter rejoiced as he contemplated this position, and pressed upon the animals, whose escape seemed impossible. When the old one caught sight of him, and measured with a glance the...
Page 33 - Some of our young ladies, who think they have attained no mean proficiency in the art of embroidery, ought to come to Prague for the sake of looking at the work of the last princess of the house of Przemsyl. It is a piece of white linen, upon which are worked with threads of gold the most beautiful and delicate flowers and arabesques. The pattern is precisely the same on each side, and withal so accurate, and yet so fanciful, that one is never tired of admiring it. The pattern, moreover, is constantly...
Page 110 - ... advantage of eddies and a more gentle current. Thus then these wing dams, which are all extended more or less into the river, and some of them to the main channel, where no alternative is left for the boats passing up the river...
Page 55 - Therefore the Lord hath made good his word, which he pronounced against us, and against our judges that judged Israel, and against our kings, and against our princes, and against the men of Israel and Juda...
Page 219 - ... discover and expose offences of this description. Under these circumstances it cannot be but Mr. von Kossut should have many enemies, but he counts a far greater number of friends, the whole public of Hungary being on his side, and he is the favourite and the political hero of the day. His Hirlap is the oracle on all occasions, and during my stay in Pesth, whenever any public matter was discussed, I continually heard the eager inquiry, ' What does Kossut say of it ?' ' I looked with much interest...
Page 144 - ... was to be won. She then leaped down again to her little ones, and seemed to encourage them to attempt the leap. In vain the little creatures sprang and wounded their foreheads against the rocks that were too high for them, and in vain the mother repeated again and again her firm and graceful leap to show them the way. All this was the work of a few minutes, whilst the hunter had again advanced some steps nearer. He was just preparing to make the last effort when the following picture, which was...
Page 148 - ... on, and the pictorial announcements of estates for sale by lottery, when all the letters are composed of pictures of castles and rural views, and where every million is represented entwined with the elegant flowery wreath of hope, are really masterpieces in a psychological as in a xylographic point of view.
Page 60 - I am ready to give my testimony most unreservedly, and many an enraptured traveller has left us his books as living witnesses to the loveliness of the grandmothers and great-grandmothers of the present generation. The old chronicler, Hammerschmidt, and his contemporaries, dwell with equal pleasure on the sweet faces that smiled upon them in their days, and the picture-gallery of many a Bohemian castle is there to testify to the truth of their statements. One witness...