The work has been arranged in eight tours, with Liverpool and London as the two starting-points, and each route following the lines upon which the sightseer generally advances in the respective directions taken.
The modern sightseer finds, as probably Milton found, much more of interest in the two latter, which lie south of Fleet Street, than in all the others combined.
A little to the left of Crosby Hall, through a low gateway, the sightseer passes from the noisy thoroughfare into a quiet court.
As the sightseer passes from the jostle and turmoil of the thoroughfare, he is transported in a moment into a silence and seclusion that remind one of a Puritan Sabbath.
Lorenzo are not far off, and the sightseer in this city of "magnificent distances" is grateful to the providence which has placed the three most interesting churches in Naples within a comparatively circumscribed area.
Seldom, indeed, has the sightseer at Barcelona to put his hand in his pocket.
The Stodgy Sightseer fumes, feeling that, while they are fiddling, his chops are burning.
In a living palace where the sightseer knows and feels that there are human beings everywhere, and that he is followed by scores of unseen eyes, the impression is almost unendurable.
This is the language of fact, which, very properly, leaves out of all account the Genius of the Place who sits at the gate nearest the new city and is with the sightseer throughout.
But, once inside, the sightseer stands in the heart of utter desolation--all the more forlorn for being swept up.
Inspector Val made a slight signal, and the sightseer came over and rang Mr. Gwynn's bell.
Over the way a man was sauntering, for all the world like a sightseerfrom out of town.