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First Impressions of Cambridge

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2011

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Summary

“The sage council not being able to determine upon any plan for the building of their city, the cows, in a laudable fit of patriotism, took it under their peculiar charge; and, as they went to and fro from pasture, established paths through the bushes, on each side of which the good folks built their houses.”

Knickerbocker's New York.

“And round the cool green courts there ran a row

Of cloisters, branched like mighty woods,

Echoing all night to that sonorous flow

Of spouted fountain floods.”

Tennyson's Palace of Art.

Imagine the most irregular town that can be imagined, streets of the very crookedest kind, twisting about like those in a nightmare, and not unfrequently bringing you back to the same point you started from. Some of these tortuous lanes are without trottoirs, like the streets of old Continental towns; but it is more common to find a passage or short street all sidewalk—as we call what the English call causeway—without any carriage road. The houses are low and antique; sometimes their upper stories project out into and over the narrow pathway, making it still narrower; and their lower stories are usually occupied as shops—tailors and booksellers being the predominant varieties.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1852

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