Page:The grand tour in the eighteenth century by Mead, William Edward.djvu/130

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EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY INNS

of a landlord chooses to have it so. It is true; in the cities you are accommodated in a genteeler way. There is no disputing with a Dutch innkeeper, either about the reckoning or any other particular; if you find fault with his bill (tho' properly speaking they make no bills, but bring in the reckoning by word of mouth) he will immediately raise it, and procure a magistrate to levy his demands by force."[1]

Strangers making a longer stay than the ordinary transient guest found their advantage in taking private lodgings, which at The Hague cost about the same as in London, and commonly permitted the lodger to board in the same house at a moderate expense.[2]

102

  1. Grand Tour, i, 222.
  2. Travels in France, p. 109.