
A seasoned traveler returns to the continent he once knew as a young man, hoping to measure the sweep of fifty years against the familiar streets of London, Paris, and beyond. He walks past the same stone façades, yet now sees railways threading the landscape, electric lights flickering in cafés, and the hum of telegraph wires stitching distant cities together. His reflections turn from the grandeur of former monarchs to the astonishing pace of scientific discovery—steamships, anesthesia, Darwin’s theories—each new marvel feeling both alien and inevitable. With a gentle humor, he wonders how a mind from the early nineteenth century would react to the modern world’s inventions and ideas.
Guided by a devoted companion, he charts a summer itinerary that takes him from the historic ruins of Stonehenge to the bustling ports of the Channel and the elegant boulevards of Paris. Along the way, he records the subtle shifts in social customs, the rise of new institutions, and the quiet astonishment of an elder who feels both visitor and relic. The narrative blends vivid travel sketches with thoughtful commentary, inviting listeners to share in a nostalgic yet forward‑looking exploration of a continent transformed.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (348K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Tonya Allen, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
Release date
2005-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1809–1894
A celebrated voice of 19th-century America, this physician-writer mixed wit, warmth, and sharp observation in poems and essays that made him a household name. He is especially remembered for the lively Breakfast-Table series and for "Old Ironsides," the poem that helped save the USS Constitution.
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