After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819 by Major W. E Frye
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page 25 of 483 (05%)
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description book. You wish to have my ideas on the subjects that most
strike me individually, and those you shall have; but it would be very absurd and presumptuous in me to attempt to give a _catalogue raisonné_ of buildings and pictures and statues, or to set up as a connoisseur when I know nothing either of sculpture, of architecture or painting; nor am I desirous of imitating the young Englishman, who, in writing to his father from Italy, described so much in detail, and so scientifically, every production, or staple, peculiar to the cities which he happened to visit, that he wrote like a cheese-monger from Parma, like a silk mercer from Leghorn, like an olive and oil merchant from Lucca, like a picture dealer from Florence, and like an antiquarian from Rome. BRUXELLES, May 10. The _Hôtel d'Angleterre_ where we are lodged is within four minutes walk from the finest part of the city, where the Parc and Royal Palace is situated. The Parc is not large, but is tastefully laid out in the Dutch style, and is the fashionable promenade for the _beau monde_ of Bruxelles. The women, without being strikingly handsome, have much grace; their air, manner and dress are perfectly _à la francaise_. A good café and restaurant is in the centre of one of the sides, and the buildings on the quadrangle environing the Parc, which form the palace and other tenements are superb. The next place I went to see was the _Hôtel de Ville_ and its tower of immense height. It is a fine Gothic building, but that which should be the central entrance is not directly in the centre of the edifice, so that one wing of it appears considerably larger than the other, which gives it an awkward and irregular appearance. On the Place or Square as we should call it, where the _Hôtel de Ville_ stands, is held the fruit and vegetable market, and a finer one or more plentifully supplied I never beheld. This |
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