Gare \Gare\, n. [Cf. {Gear}.] Coarse wool on the legs of sheep. --Blount.
Claude Monet poked about the Gare Saint-Lazare with a special permit and, judging by one wonderful painting at Orsay, stood blithely on busy tracks to brush the bluish smoke right onto his canvas.
The Gare de Lyon, on the right bank of the Seine River, is the largest of six major train stations in Paris, covering nearly 15 acres.
Certainly there is a real sense of arrival at Waterloo, which is in marked contrast to the very low-key atmosphere at the Gare du Nord. What was the competition for this 'Building of the Year' award?
The fire started at about 3:30 a.m. on the fourth floor of the Hotel St. Vincent de Paul on rue d'Hauteville, in a run-down neighborhood a few blocks from the Gare du Nord train station.
They include such famous plums as Manet's 'Balcony', Monet's 'Gare St Lazare', Renoir's 'Bal du moulin de la Galette' and his most delicious nude, who sits in dappled sunlight beneath the trees.