... centuries pass by. Rude hands break open the granite lids of their sepulchres, to find tresses of yellow hair and fragments of imperial mantles, embroidered with the hawks and stags the royal hunter loved. The church in which they lie, changes with... Journal of the British Archaeological Association - Side 11av British Archaeological Association - 1906Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| John Addington Symonds - 1874 - 364 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie, changes with the change of taste in architecture and the manners of successive ages. But the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...mouldering dust beneath gloomy canopies of stone, that temper the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows. SYRACUSE AND GIRGENTI. THE traveller in... | |
| John Addington Symonds - 1880 - 404 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie changes with the change of taste in architecture and the manners of successive ages. But the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...mouldering dust beneath gloomy canopies of stone that temper the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows. SYRACUSE AND QIRGENTI. THE traveller in... | |
| John Addington Symonds - 1883 - 322 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie changes with the change of taste in architecture and the manners of successive ages. But the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...mouldering dust beneath gloomy canopies of stone that temper the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows. «7* SYRACUSE AND GIRGENTI. THE traveller... | |
| Ernest Gambier-Parry - 1889 - 352 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie changes with the change of taste in architecture and the manners of successive ages. But the huge stone arks remain unmoved...freight of mouldering dust beneath gloomy canopies of * Handbook of Architecture, vol. ii. stone, that temper the sunlight as it streams from the chapel... | |
| John Addington Symonds - 1898 - 406 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie changes with the change of taste in architecture and the manners of successive ages. But the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...mouldering dust beneath gloomy canopies of stone that temper the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows. SYRACUSE AND GIEGENTI THE traveller in Sicily... | |
| John Addington Symonds - 1898 - 408 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie changes with the change of taste in architecture and the manners of successive ages. But the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...mouldering dust beneath gloomy canopies of stone that temper the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows. SYRACUSE AND GIRGENTI THE traveller in Sicily... | |
| Edward Moore - 1899 - 426 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie changes with the change of taste in architecture, and the manners of successive ages. But the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...mouldering dust beneath gloomy canopies of stone that temper the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows.' 302 Rogi Rogi ANGEVIN. See infra. William... | |
| Esther Singleton - 1903 - 450 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie, changes with the change of taste in architecture and the manners of successive ages. But the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...mouldering dust beneath gloomy canopies of stone, that temper the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows. of o i, a < < o z o fc THE FORTRESS AND... | |
| Augustus John Cuthbert Hare, Welbore St. Clair Baddeley - 1905 - 244 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie changes with the change of taste and architecture and the manners of successive ages ; but the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows.' — /. A. Symonds. Next the northern side of the Duomo stands the ruined chapel of the Incoronata,... | |
| Will Seymour Monroe - 1909 - 536 sider
...loved. The church in which they lie changes with the change of taste and architecture and the manners of successive ages; but the huge stone arks remain unmoved,...the sunlight as it streams from the chapel windows." Because the Norman and German sovereigns of Sicily had thwarted the temporal ambitions of the popes... | |
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