Travels Through Germany: Containing Observations on Customs, Manners, Religion, Government, Commerce, Arts, and Antiquities. With a Particular Account of the Courts of Mecklenburg. In a Series of Letters to a Friend, by Thomas Nugent, ... Embellished with Elegant Cuts ... In Two Volumes. ...Edward and Charles Dilly, 1768 - 395 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 75
Page 6
... German coaft is 336 English miles . From Thursday the 14th , till Sunday the 17th , the wind proved variable . But early the 17th in the morning it blew full north ; when we began to make a confiderable progress , and between five and ...
... German coaft is 336 English miles . From Thursday the 14th , till Sunday the 17th , the wind proved variable . But early the 17th in the morning it blew full north ; when we began to make a confiderable progress , and between five and ...
Page 17
... German ocean . This river is navigable for large fhips higher than any other in Eu- rope ; veffels of three or four hundred tuns coming up as far as Hamburg , which is feventy English miles from the fea . For facilitating and fecuring ...
... German ocean . This river is navigable for large fhips higher than any other in Eu- rope ; veffels of three or four hundred tuns coming up as far as Hamburg , which is feventy English miles from the fea . For facilitating and fecuring ...
Page 19
... German miles . Soon after we paffed by the town of Gluckstadt on the left , belonging to the king of Denmark , and by feveral iflands , till we came to Belenbar , a small village within two miles of the town of Stade , when the tide ...
... German miles . Soon after we paffed by the town of Gluckstadt on the left , belonging to the king of Denmark , and by feveral iflands , till we came to Belenbar , a small village within two miles of the town of Stade , when the tide ...
Page 20
... German mile in length , from hence to the neighbouring town of Krempe . Some of the flat ground this way is lower than the Elbe at high water , and is agreeably diversified with kitchen gardens , orchards , canals , and dykes , like ...
... German mile in length , from hence to the neighbouring town of Krempe . Some of the flat ground this way is lower than the Elbe at high water , and is agreeably diversified with kitchen gardens , orchards , canals , and dykes , like ...
Page 27
... German ocean . In its form it is almoft circular , and near five miles in circumference ; containing about 118,000 inha- bitants . It is built partly on iflands , and partly on the continent of the north fide of the Elbe , which brings ...
... German ocean . In its form it is almoft circular , and near five miles in circumference ; containing about 118,000 inha- bitants . It is built partly on iflands , and partly on the continent of the north fide of the Elbe , which brings ...
Other editions - View all
Travels Through Germany: Containing Observations on Customs, Manners ... Thomas Nugent No preview available - 2013 |
Travels Through Germany: Containing Observations On Customs, Manners ... Thomas Nugent No preview available - 2023 |
Common terms and phrases
agreeable alfo alſo anno anſwer baron Dewitz beſt Brandenburg Burevinus burg buſineſs Butzow captain chearful church confiderable converfation counſellor court cuftom dine duke of Mecklenburg duke of Saxony duke's dutchy of Mecklenburg Elbe elegant Engliſh Epinus eſpecially faid fame feems fenate fervant ferved fervice feven feveral fhall fhew fhips fhort fhould fide fignifies fince firft firſt fituation fmall fome foon ftands ftill fubject fuch gentleman German greateſt Guftrow Hamburg handfome Henry the Lion hiftory himſelf honour houfe houſe infcription itſelf king king of Denmark lady laft lenburg Lower Saxony Lubeck madam Meck Mecklen miles moft moſt muſt myſelf obferved Obotrites occafion perfon pleaſant pleaſed pleaſure prefent prince princefs profeffor raiſed Ratzeburg refidence refpect reft river Roftock Schwerin ſeems ſeveral ſhe ſmall ſpent ſtate ſtreets Strelitz themſelves theſe thofe thoſe town univerſity uſe Vandalia Venedic Warnow whofe Wifmar
Popular passages
Page 134 - Liberty, thou goddess heav'nly bright ! Profuse of bliss, and pregnant with delight ! Eternal pleasures in thy presence reign, And smiling Plenty leads thy wanton train ; Eas'd of her load Subjection grows more light, And Poverty looks cheerful in thy sight ; Thou mak'st the gloomy face of nature gay, Giv'st beauty to the sun, and pleasure to the day.
Page 143 - Then cheers his heart with what his fate affords, And chants his sonnet to deceive the time, Till the due season calls him to repose : Thus I...
Page 171 - ... was behind, Megara before me ; Piraeus on the right, Corinth on the left ; all which towns, once famous and flourishing, now lie overturned, and buried in their ruins : upon this sight I could not but think presently within myself, alas ! how do we poor mortals fret and vex ourselves, if any of our friends happen to die, or to be killed, whose life is yet so short, when the carcasses of so many noble cities lie here exposed before me in one view...
Page 289 - And cluftring grapes with purple fpread. The faireft of his fruit he ferves, Priapus, thy rewards : Sylvanus too his part deferves* Whofe care the fences guards. Sometimes beneath an ancient oak, Or on the matted grafs he lies ; No God of fleep he need invoke ; The ftream that o'er the pebbles flies With gentle (lumber crowns his eyes.
Page 289 - HOR. Epod. Ode II. •HAPPY the man, whom bounteous gods allow With his own hands paternal grounds to plough ! Like the firft golden mortals happy, he, From bufinefs and the cares of money free! No human ftorms break off at land his fleep ; No loud alarms of nature on the deep : ' From all the cheats of law he lives fecure, Nor does th...
Page 170 - When th' humble roof Anchifes' fon explor'd Of good Evander, wealth-defpifing king, Amid the thickets : fo revolves the fcene ; So time ordains, who rolls the things of pride From duft again to duft. Behold that heap Of...
Page 289 - Despise a mean but safe retreat ; I'll ne'er contrive my own undoing, Nor stoop so low as to be great ' The faithless court, the pensive 'change, What solid pleasures can they give? Oh let me in the country range, 'Tis there we breathe, 'tis there we live. ' The beauteous scene of lofty mountains, Smiling valleys, murmuring fountains, Lambs in flowery pastures bleating, Ecclios our complaints repeating ; Birds in cheerful!
Page 158 - Tfris fixes the situation of the Varini and the Angli, the former inhabiting that part of the Duchy of Mecklenburg which extends along the banks of the Warnow ; and the latter the remaining part of the country as far as Lubeck. Such a display of erudition was at first productive of surprise, but afterwards created a good deal of merriment; the company wishing Dr. Nugent joy, that Dr. B. had proved the Mecklenburghers and the Knglish to be one and the same nation.
Page 342 - Ambition in idleness, meanness mixed with pride, a desire of riches without industry, aversion to truth, flattery, perfidy, violation of engagements, contempt of civil duties, fear of the prince's virtue, hope from his weakness, but, above all, a perpetual ridicule cast upon virtue, are, I think, the characteristics by which most courtiers in all ages and countries have been constantly distinguished.
Page 143 - AS when a traveller, a long day paft In painful fearch of what he cannot find, At night's approach, content with the next cot, There ruminates...