The traveler was active; he went strenuously in search of people, of adventure, of experience. The tourist is passive; he expects interesting things to happen to him. He goes 'sight-seeing.'
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The traveler sees what he sees, the tourist sees what he has come to see.
Certainly, travel is more than the seeing of sights; it is a change that goes on, deep and permanent, in the ideas of living.
A traveller on foot in this country seems to be considered as a sort of wild man or out-of-the way being, who is stared at, pitied, suspected, and shunned by everybody that meets him.
I am sure that no traveler seeing things through author spectacles can see them as they are.
It's a well known thing that ordinary perceptions can have a strange aspect when one is travelling.
The true traveller is the one urged to move about for physical, aesthetic, intellectual as well as spiritual reasons.
It is part of the photographer's job to see more intensely than most people do. He must have and keep in him something of the receptiveness of the child who looks at the world for the first time or of the traveler who enters a strange country.
Traveling is seeing; it is the implicit that we travel by.
The attention of a traveller, should be particularly turned, in the first place, to the various works of Nature, to mark the distinctions of the climates he may explore, and to offer such useful observations on the different productions as may occur.
When the traveler goes alone he gets acquainted with himself.