to Givet. WAULSORT. 19. Route, 227 the Rue Léopold leads to the S. (right) from the Grand’ Place. To the right, in the Grande Rue, is the old Hétel de Ville (17-18th cent.), containing some paintings by Wiertz, and farther on, to the left, at a little distance from the street, is the Palais de Justice (built in 4879). In the Rue Wiertz which leads to the right towards the Meuse is a monument, by De Haene (1908) to Wiertz (see above and p. 444), who was born at Dinant. About 5 min. from the Grand’ Place the Rue St. Michel diverges to the left, leading to the Jardin de Montfat (fine views), which contains the Grottes de Montfat (adm. 2 fr. ; visit of { hr.). From the interior of the caverns a spiral staircase leads up to the highest point of the garden (7 min. below the citadel). No. 29 in the Rue St. Michel (on the left) is the Casino (strangers admitted gratis), the terraced garden of which commands excellent views of the town and river. At the back of the church of Notre Dame are steps in the rock, 408 in number, leading to the Citadel, which was sold in 1879 to a private purchaser; it may be reached also by a footpath from the Rue St. Jacques in 12 minutes. It affords a picturesque “View of the valley of the Meuse from Bouvignes to Anseremme (adm. 50 ¢.; to the armoury, 410 c. extra), From the hill behind the citadel a path descends to the road to Ciney (p. 233). A little to the N. of Dinant is the Fonds de Leffe, a narrow rocky ravine with numerous water-mills, so-called after Leffe, the N. suburb of Dinant. From Dinant to Jemelle (Trou de Han, etc.), see R. 20; to Tamines, p. 221. Light railway to Florennes-Est, see p. 220. The railway to Givet continues to follow the left bank of the Meuse. On the right bank appear the houses of the suburb of Les Rivages, and (1 M. above Dinant) the bold pinnacle of rock called the Roche d Bayard (the name of the horse of the ‘Quatre Fils d’Aymon’, which left a hoof-mark here as it sprang over the valley, when pursued by Charlemagne). In the vicinity are quarries of black marble. Farther on we see the long viaduct of the Lesse valley railway and the village of Anseremme (p. 229), on the right bank. A short tunnel carries the railway through the cliffs of Moniat, beyond which we pass one of the finest points in the valley of the Meuse. Here, at the foot of wooded hills on the left bank of the river, is situated the Chateau of Freyr, the ancestral seat of the Beaufort-Spontin family, with well-kept gardens. Hasily accessible stalactite cavern in the vicinity. Opposite, precipitous rocks of grotesque shapes rise immediately from the river. 221/5 M. Waulsort (330 ft.; Hétel de la Meuse, R. 11/o-2, B. 4, D. 219-3, S. 13/4, pens. 41/o-5 fr.; Hét. Moderne, R. 2-3, D. 2, pens. 41/5-51/, fr.; Hot.-Pens. Martinot; Hét. de Waulsort), with a large chateau (formerly a Benedictine abbey) and fine garden. Op- posite is the Rocher du Chien and farther up are the scanty ruins of the castle of Thierry. — 26M. Hastigre-Lavaux (Hotel Brouet,