On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
14 A STKOIil* THROUGH BEBIilKT.
-
II.—A STROLL, THROUGH BERLIN.
-
" ' ' ¦ ..» _ Part I.
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
» ^ Between The Subject Medical Of Fever...
able le to who appreciate htto the a man value to of be sanitary on the side reform of reform . Tiie , are educated often
peop extremel , y indifferent oug , about , it . Their own houses are tolerably comfortable and more or less drainedand to enter into an energetic
, contest with publicans and builders for the sake of public improvementswould require a strength of conviction and an amount of
encourag public , sp ing irit all not classes often in found the lazy . The and sp ignorant irit of lies notion is that constantl fever y to the
acid manifest dience and pestilence exists to fact His subj will that exist ect . to they They hy conditions the are exist will the , as which of inevitable _poisonings God man , in has attendants by contradiction it ars in enic his on or power prussie disobe to
of water app his ly or poisoned own to , act rem with not ove . that sewer In of either gas som , e the case occult consequenc , whether and mali e he is gnant takes clearl agency y arsenic the result , dis , or
-, posing his fate in an arbitrary manner .
14 A Stkoiil* Through Bebiilkt.
14 A STKOIil * THROUGH _BEBIilKT .
Ii.—A Stroll, Through Berlin.
II . —A STROLL , THROUGH BERLIN .
" ' ' ¦ ..» _ Part I.
" ' ' ¦ . _. » _ Part I .
The Russians would seem to be frequent travellers on the railroad from Hamburgh to Berlin ; each time that I have been upon itit
has been in company with natives of that country , and on the , present occasion there are two ladies from the neighbourhood of
Moscow , who have been to Hamburgh to purchase agricultural machines for the improvement of their estate , and are now on their
sits way a to Hamb Berlin h to lad consult y reading a p the hysician Freysch there utz . newspaper In another which corner she
presently hands urg over to me , pointing out for my , perusal an article on Louis Napoleon , certainly as free-spoken as anything *
in the columns of the Times , and observing in an exultant tone that it was something like liberty that was enjoyed in Hamburgh ,
when the press could write thus . I was more pleased with the remark than even with the articlefor it has been rarely indeed
that I have found any interest manifested , by German ladies in matters of this nature ;
The Russians were very chatty and friendly , but had as much curiositand showed it as unreservedly as any American backwoods _^
man , inquiring y most freely into lb > oth my antecedents and my
intentions . One certainly needs to extract as much amusement as possible from one ' s company on this journey , for the scenery , after
the immediate environs of Hamburgh are passed , is most mono-,
-
-
Citation
-
English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), March 2, 1863, page 14, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_02031863/page/14/
-