A Month in NorwayJ. Murray, 1853 - 160 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 9
... half an English mile in width . There seems to be a very general uneasiness amongst the men in the Norwegian service - judging from the opinions of those with whom I have had opportunities of talking - as to the designs of Russia upon ...
... half an English mile in width . There seems to be a very general uneasiness amongst the men in the Norwegian service - judging from the opinions of those with whom I have had opportunities of talking - as to the designs of Russia upon ...
Page 13
... half as far in a day as you can go with relays of hired horses ; and you would want , in case of accidents happening , a more extended acquaintance with the language than English summer tourists are likely to trouble themselves to ...
... half as far in a day as you can go with relays of hired horses ; and you would want , in case of accidents happening , a more extended acquaintance with the language than English summer tourists are likely to trouble themselves to ...
Page 16
... of small money : one dollar notes , marks , half marks and skillings are the best denominations to carry , taking care to have plenty of the last . Chap . II . START FOR BERGEN . 17 CHAPTER 16 Chap . I. A MONTH IN NORWAY .
... of small money : one dollar notes , marks , half marks and skillings are the best denominations to carry , taking care to have plenty of the last . Chap . II . START FOR BERGEN . 17 CHAPTER 16 Chap . I. A MONTH IN NORWAY .
Page 30
... half to two hours : " perhaps it would be safe to say that when you are told that you will get your horses , your dinner , or your boat , " strax , " you must take it to mean " in not less than an hour , and probably more , " and be ...
... half to two hours : " perhaps it would be safe to say that when you are told that you will get your horses , your dinner , or your boat , " strax , " you must take it to mean " in not less than an hour , and probably more , " and be ...
Page 50
... half a century ago . Quarrels , decided by a regular set - to with the knives , were terribly common among the peasantry . Before one of these encounters began , a pine - log was brought out , and each intending combatant drove his ...
... half a century ago . Quarrels , decided by a regular set - to with the knives , were terribly common among the peasantry . Before one of these encounters began , a pine - log was brought out , and each intending combatant drove his ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards arch barren beautiful believe Bergen boat boatmen bonder bottle called carriole Chap Christiania Christiania Fiord church coast comfortable costume dinner districts dollar Dovre Fjeld drive England English miles Evanger fancy fern Fille Fjeld Fiord fish forbud papers Funen gentleman gneiss Gudvangen Guldebrandsdal half harbour hills Holstein Hönefoss Hôtel du Nord hour Husum journey Kiel lady lake land Lapps Laurgaard Leirdalsören Lille-Hammer looking Miösen morning mountain night Nordland Norsk Norway NORWEGIAN CONSTITUTION Norwegian peasant Nystuen Odnaes passed peasantry peculiar plenty portmanteau post stations post-station pretty reindeer road rock rocky round runs Russia sail scenery schnapps seemed ship side skaal skydskarl Sneehætte Sogne songs sort stage steamer steep stockfish Storthing straps strax style Sweden Swedish Swiss things tiania tion told town traveller Trondhjem valley Vand Vossevangen voyage weather wild wood wooden
Popular passages
Page 133 - The Reaper said, and smiled ; "Dear tokens of the earth are they, Where he was once a child. "They shall all bloom in fields of light, Transplanted by my care, And saints upon their garments white, These sacred blossoms wear.
Page 116 - A cry that shiver'd to the tingling stars, And, as it were one voice, an agony Of lamentation, like a wind, that shrills All night in a waste land, where no one comes, Or hath come, since the making of the world. Then murmur'd Arthur, 'Place me in the barge,
Page 105 - ... the comparative antiquity of Gothic edifices. The Norman arch, in its most florid style, is here connected with the Saxon in its most simple and massive form, in a building where the known date of the portions containing this admixture is more ancient than the ascertained date of those English edifices from which the theory is derived.
Page 105 - ... transept is a fine specimen of both. But this simple massive style is mixed with light pointed arches, adorned with grotesque heads, flowers, and all the variety of ornaments which are usually considered peculiar to a much later period of Gothic architecture ; but here the two styles are evidently coeval. It shakes the theory of the Saxon and Norman, the round and pointed arch having been used exclusively in particular and different centuries, and affording ground to determine the comparative...
Page 142 - It was in this house that the men who framed the eminently successful Norwegian constitution met in the spring of the year 1814, after the Norwegian nation had declared its independence, and then set to work to draw up what has hitherto proved the most successful and most lasting of all constitutions ever turned out on a, sudden, spick and span new as this was.
Page 41 - In ordinary engineering, difficulties are avoided if possible — if impossible to avoid, overcome ; but in Norwegian road-making it would actually seem as if difficult places were sought for, not to overcome, but to come over. The directions for laying out a true Norwegian country road would run somewhat in this way: —
Page 142 - The conference or council wherein this great and successful work was accomplished sat just four days ! In four days a meeting of practical and earnest men created what learned philosophers and theoretical statesmen have invariably miserably failed in producing, a lasting working constitution.
Page 14 - With ladies perhaps it would be desirable to take one ; but a party of two or three men will find themselves more independent, more in the way of coming into personal contact with the peasantry, see more of their hospitable customs, and...
Page 125 - The pleasure of looking on this fertile scene was entirely taken away for me. I had fancied from our limited experience that the Norwegian peasantry were such independent, noble, manly fellows, that the discovery of this nest of beggars was a grievous disappointment — almost the only one that Norway gave me.