/pedant mode onAnd the train which captured the imagination, for sure, but with the most misleading names ever assigned a train - it didn't get within cooee of the Orient, never leaving Europe, and initially disgorging its passengers to make the last leg into present day Istanbul by boat from Romania. Istanbul is - to be sure a city in Europe *and* Asia - but the railway station was absolutely in Europe and a long way away from the Orient.
Bit like us in Oz calling the Sydney-Perth train the Scandanavian rather than the Indian Pacific.
/pedant mode off.
I would disagree. "The Orient" is Asia, and Asia begins at the Bosporus, about a block from the train tracks. I don't know where the station was 100 years ago, but I doubt it was more than a walking distance from the ferry terminal. According to Wikipedia, one of the tunnels and one of the three bridges have railroad tracks now, but that is relatively recent. When you are coming from Paris, a few blocks is NOT "a long way."
/pedant mode off