Category: Travel Writing

Travels in France during the years 1814-15 Comprising a residence at Paris, during the stay of the allied armies, and at Aix, at the period of the landing of Bonaparte, in two volumes.

We passed through Kent in our way to France, on Sunday the first of May 1814. This day's journey was very delightful. The whole scenery around us,--the richness of the fields and woods, then beginning to assume the first colours of spring; the extent and excellence of the cult...

Chapters

16. CHAPTER V.

An Englishman never dreams of entering into conversation without some previous knowledge upon the point which is the subject of discussion. You will pass but few days in France...

9. CHAPTER VII.

It is difficult for any person who has never quitted England to enter into the feelings which every one must experience when he first finds it in his power to examine those pecu...

15. CHAPTER IV.

To one unacquainted with the present division of society, and the condition of each of its branches in France; to one who had only cast his eye, in travelling, over the immense...

11. CHAPTER IX.

When we left Paris, we took the road to Soissons and Laon, with a view to see the seat of war during the previous campaign, and examine the interesting country of Flanders. Afte...

13. CHAPTER II.

MONDAY, the 27th.--Having been employed the whole day in searching for furnished lodgings, I had no time to ride about and see the town. I shall describe it afterwards.--I saw,...

12. CHAPTER I.

IT was thought advisable, by the gentleman who is now about to commence his journal, to avoid making many remarks on the state of the country, or the manners of the inhabitants,...

14. CHAPTER III.

To trace, with accuracy, the effects of the revolution and of the military despotism of Napoleon on the kingdom of France, it would be necessary to attend to the following subje...

10. CHAPTER VIII.

IT is certainly a mistake to suppose, that the military power of France was first created by Napoleon, or that military habits were actually forced on the people, with the view...

7. CHAPTER V.

To those who have had the good fortune to see the pictures and statues which were preserved in the Louvre, all description of these works must appear superfluous; and to those w...

8. CHAPTER VI.

We do not by any means consider ourselves as qualified to enter fully into the interesting subject of the national character of the French; but we shall venture to state, in thi...

4. CHAPTER II.

To those whose attention had been long fixed on the great political revulsion which had brought the wandering tribes of the Wolga and the Don into the heart of France, and whose...

5. CHAPTER III.

With whatever sentiments a stranger might enter Paris at the time we did, his feelings must have been the same with regard to the monuments of ancient magnificence, or of modern...

6. CHAPTER IV.

St Cloud was the favourite residence of Bonaparte, and, from this circumstance, possesses an interest which does not belong to the other imperial palaces. It stands high, upon a...

3. CHAPTER I.

We passed through Kent in our way to France, on Sunday the first of May 1814. This day's journey was very delightful. The whole scenery around us,--the richness of the fields an...

2. CHAPTER I. Journey to Aix

1. CHAPTER I. Journey to Paris