Page 59.--[Beuggen], a town on the Rhine below Säkkingen. The ancient building of the Teutonic order is still standing, and is used now by the Moravians as an institute for children.

Page 71.--The [ Wiese], a river coming from the Feldberg and flowing into the Rhine a little below Basel. The beautiful valley of the clear rapid river is now much visited, as there is a railroad as far as the town of Zell. This region has become classic through the poet Hebel, who wrote in the Allemannic idiom, still generally spoken in this whole region. At Hausen, the station before Zell, where he was born, a monument has been erected to him. There is also at Schopfheim, the station below Hausen, on a hill called Hebelshoehe, a bust of the poet The women of this region are remarkable for their large singular-looking caps, to which Scheffel alludes.

Page 76.--This gravel bank, called [ Field of Fridolinus], is still seen in the Rhine, opposite the castle Schoenau.

Page 80.--[Hallau], a village not far from the railroad station Neuhausen, the stopping-place for visiting the falls of the Rhine. The red wine grown there is still very celebrated.

--[The Hohe-Randen], a mountain to the north of Schapfhausen.

Page 85.--[Theuerdank], a German poem of the beginning of the 16th century, written by Melchior Pfinzing, the secretary of the Emperor Maximilian, who had planned and sketched the poem himself.

Page 101.--[Grenzach], the first German village going from Basel, on the railroad to Säkkingen and Constanz. It is celebrated for the wine grown there.

Page 104.--The [ Frickthal], in the Swiss canton Aargau, nearly south of Säkkingen.

Page 105.--[Schinznach], a village in the canton Aargau, much visited on account of its hot sulphur springs. In the neighbourhood are the ruins of the castle of Hapsburg, the cradle of the imperial house of Austria.

Page 109.--[The mountain lake]. See note to page 17.