The Idler in France by Countess of Marguerite Blessington
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page 1 of 352 (00%)
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THE IDLER IN FRANCE
By MARGUERITE GARDINER, THE COUNTESS OF BLESSINGTON 1841. CHAPTER I. NISMES. I have omitted to notice the route to this place, having formerly described the greater portion of it. I remarked a considerable improvement in the different towns we passed through: the people look cleaner, and an air of business has replaced the stagnation that used to prevail, except in Marseilles and Toulon, which were always busy cities. Nismes surpasses my expectations, although they had been greatly excited, and amply repays the long _détour_ we have made to visit it. When I look round on the objects of antiquity that meet my eye on every side, and above all on the Amphitheatre and _Maison Carrée_, I am forced to admit that Italy has nothing to equal the two last: for if the Coliseum may be said to surpass the amphitheatre in dimensions, the |
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