A Tramp Trip: How to See Europe on Fifty Cents a DayThe first-class tourist may see the beauties of a country's landscapes and scenery from the window of a palace-car, but his vision goes no further--does not penetrate below the surface. To know a country one must fraternize with its people, must live with them, sympathize with them, win their confidence. High life in Europe has been paid sufficient attention by travellers and writers. I was desirous of seeing something of low life; I donned the blouse and hobnailed shoes of a workman, and spent a year in a "Tramp Trip" from Gibraltar to the Bosporus. Some of my experiences have been related in letters to the New York World, the Philadelphia Press, the St. Louis Republican, and other American newspapers, and in my official report to the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, Department of the Interior, Washington, D.C., on the condition of the laboring classes in Europe. While the following pages contain some of those newspaper letters, the greater portion is now in print for the first time. -- Preface. |
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American Appian asked beautiful beer began black bread Bulgarian cents a day church Cloth coffee Constantinople cost of living Danube dervishes dollars door dress Earnings Edges and Gilt England English Europe eyes face father feet fellow five floor French gazed German Gilt Tops girl gondola Grimsel Pass Half Calf hand head horses hour hundred Italian Italy J. A. Symonds JOHN LOTHROP MOTLEY knapsack labor lady land LEE MERIWETHER looked miles milk morning Moscow mosque mountain Naples night nose palace Paris passed passport peasant pedestrian Pompeii Pontine Marshes Professor R. W. Church rent Rome Russian seemed Sheep side signore sleep soldiers Stamboul stared steerage stopped streets stroll Switzerland tariffs thirty thousand took tourist town tramp trip Turk Turkish twenty Uncut Edges Venice village vols wages walk walls window women
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Page 158 - Far along, From peak to peak, the rattling crags among Leaps the live thunder! Not from one lone cloud, But every mountain now hath found a tongue, And Jura answers, through her misty shroud, Back to the joyous Alps, who call to her aloud!
Page 260 - This monument is the result of an appeal in The Christian World newspaper to the boys and girls of England for funds to place a suitable memorial upon the grave of Daniel De Foe.