Page:The grand tour in the eighteenth century by Mead, William Edward.djvu/471

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NOTES

PAGE
92. 4. Northall, Travels through Italy, pp. 196, 197.
5. Grand Tour, iii, 92.
6. But even Sharp admits that not every district was hopelessly bad. "In Savoy, amongst the Alps, we were often astonished at the excellence of their diet; so great is the disparity betwixt French and Italian cooks, on the Savoy and the Loretto roads." Letters from Italy, p. 46.
7. Burnet, Travels, p. 85.
93. 1. Misson agrees with Burnet: "The inns in the little towns, especially on certain roads, are very ill furnish'd with provisions. The first course, which they call the Antipasto, is a dish of giblets boil'd with salt and pepper, and mix'd with whites of eggs. After which course, come one after another of different ragous. Between Rome and Naples the traveller is sometimes regal'd with buffalos and crows; and he's a happy man that can meet with such dainties." New Voyage to Italy, ii2, 392.
2. Letters from Italy, ii, 58, 59.
3. Manners and Customs of Italy, ii, 199.
4. Smith, Tour on the Continent, ii, 318.
94. 1. To this day the butter for Sicilian hotels is mainly imported from northern Italy.
2. Two bajocchi were equal to an English penny.
3. Coghlan, Hand-Book for Italy (1847), p. 309.
4. Manners and Customs of Italy, ii, 202.
5. Starke, Letters from Italy, ii, 344.
6. Ibid., ii, 336.
7. Ibid., ii, 53.
8. Ray, Travels, in Harris's Collection of Voyages and Travels, ii, 661.
9. Autobiography, ii, 411.
95. 1. Moore, View of Society and Manners in France, etc., p. 225.
2. Tour through Germany, (1792), p. 82.
3. Nugent, Grand Tour, ii, 246.
4. Ibid., ii, 337.
96. 1. Ibid., ii, 211.
2. Letters from Italy, ii, 217.
3. Ibid., ii, 253.
4. Tour through Germany, p. 370.
5. Travels through Germany, p. 225.
97. 1. Nugent, Grand Tour, ii, 80, 81.
2. Letters, i, 200.
3. Ibid., i, 222.
4. Riesbeck, Travels through Germany, p. 209.
98. 1. View of Society and Manners in Italy, i, 3.
2. Nugent, Grand Tour, ii, 419.
3. All the road from Heidelberg to Nuremberg "straw was commonly our bed." Misson, New Voyage to Italy, i1, 126.
4. "Invalids who travel through Germany should take a small warming-pan with them." Starke, Letters from Italy, ii, 188.
5. Nugent, Grand Tour, ii, 67.

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