London at the End of the Century:A Book of Gossip
a Beckett, Arthur William
1900
THE PARISIAN PART OF THE LONDON DISTRICT.
A CHAPTER or two back I had the pleasure of showing how a trip to could be easily managed within the space of three clear days. It has occurred to me that I might say a little more, once again adopting the theory of the journalists that the French capital is a part of the London district. I will imagine the travelling over. I have braved the passage between England and France and have reached the Gare du Nord after a long and fatiguing railway journey. It is the early morning, and in the coming daylight I can see the well-known hoarding that advertises on the sides of houses the sartorial generosity of the Where shall I go? No doubt I have decided already, and have told the sleepy coachman of my voiture to make for the If I have been ultra wise I shall have written to the hostelrie in the Boulevards des Capucines and | |
324 | commanded my room. It is the safest thing to do. I know of nothing more mortifying than to be sent away from the doors of an hotel on the score that there is no accommodation. You feel rather like my friend Mr. J. L. Molloy's - But the vagrant in the song has this pull over you-he was not encumbered with luggage, and had not to settle up with a sometimes insolent and invariably surly coachman at the end of his peregrinations. |
