CONTENTS.
INTRODUCTORYNARRATIVE | ||
| Page | |
hamburg.—on trampto berlin | ||
berlin andleipsic.—on tramp tovienna | ||
vienna | ||
on tramp toparis | ||
paris | ||
Chapter |
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I. | hamburg | |
II. | altona.—a poet’s grave.—a danish harvest-home | |
III. | “magnificence.”—at church.—thelast headsman | |
IV. | workmen in hamburg | |
V. | plays andpiccadilloes.—“hamlet” ingerman | |
VI. | the german workman | |
VII. | hamburg to lübeck | |
VIII. | lübeck to berlin | |
IX. | berlin.—our herberge | |
X. | a street in berlin | |
XI. | police and people | |
XII. | the kreutzberg.—a prussian supper and carouse | |
XIII. | fair-time at leipsic | |
XIV. | down in a silver mine | |
XV. | a lift in a cart | |
XVI. | the turks’ cellar | |
XVII. | a taste of austrian jails | |
XVIII. | what my landlord believed | |
XIX. | an execution in vienna | |
XX. | a jail episode | |
XXI. | a walk through a mountain | |
XXII. | cause and effect | |
XXIII. | greece and her deliverer | |
XXIV. | the french workman | |
XXV. | licensed to juggle | |
XXVI. | père panpan | |
XXVII. | some german sundays | |
XXVIII. | more sundays abroad | |