. Scottish pictures, drawn with pen and pencil . <. Entrance to Fingals Cave. BY THE CLYDE, TO THE WESTERN COAST. FOR all Glasgow people, as was intimated at the close of the precedingchapter, the great holiday is down the Clyde. No city in GreatBritain, perhaps none in Europe, has such immediate access to sceneswhere the highest beauty of land and sea combines with every bracing andexhilarating quality of the atmosphere to minister health and , the coast, as it is familiarly called, is annually thronged byvisitors, and the broad waters of the estuary are crowded by one o
. Scottish pictures, drawn with pen and pencil . <. Entrance to Fingals Cave. BY THE CLYDE, TO THE WESTERN COAST. FOR all Glasgow people, as was intimated at the close of the precedingchapter, the great holiday is down the Clyde. No city in GreatBritain, perhaps none in Europe, has such immediate access to sceneswhere the highest beauty of land and sea combines with every bracing andexhilarating quality of the atmosphere to minister health and , the coast, as it is familiarly called, is annually thronged byvisitors, and the broad waters of the estuary are crowded by one of thefinest lleets of river steamers in the world. For several miles below Glasgow the river pursues a somewhat mono-tonous course between low banks, vast ranges of shipbuilding yards extendingfar beyond the city. The waters are muddy, and, it must be said, odoriferous,especially when churned by the paddles or the screw of some mighty no squeamish traveller arrange to leave Glasgow by a boat wherebreakfast is served between the city and G
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidscottishpictures00gree