Notes on ItalyCarey & Lea, 1831 - 328 sider |
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Side 26
... square called the place of Louis XV . with its beautiful bronze statue , is worthy of especial admiration . The horse struck me as being more elegant , spirited and natural , than any I had seen in Paris . It is the production of a ...
... square called the place of Louis XV . with its beautiful bronze statue , is worthy of especial admiration . The horse struck me as being more elegant , spirited and natural , than any I had seen in Paris . It is the production of a ...
Side 13
... square where the unfortunate Louis was beheaded , and where now a statue is erecting to his memory . Here are seen , around the palace - like edifices , called the Gardes Meubles , the beautiful stone bridge , recently orna- mented with ...
... square where the unfortunate Louis was beheaded , and where now a statue is erecting to his memory . Here are seen , around the palace - like edifices , called the Gardes Meubles , the beautiful stone bridge , recently orna- mented with ...
Side 17
... square towers , which are truly towering , being 200 feet high , appears more modern than the trussed body of the Gothic edifice . The grand cen- tral doorway , large enough for a castle - loaded elephant to enter , was closed . I had ...
... square towers , which are truly towering , being 200 feet high , appears more modern than the trussed body of the Gothic edifice . The grand cen- tral doorway , large enough for a castle - loaded elephant to enter , was closed . I had ...
Side 19
... square , a number of houses have been removed and seve- ral streets obliterated . Strangers are admitted into an im- mense gallery surrounding the vast central hall or exchange , into which , between columns , you look down ; or up to ...
... square , a number of houses have been removed and seve- ral streets obliterated . Strangers are admitted into an im- mense gallery surrounding the vast central hall or exchange , into which , between columns , you look down ; or up to ...
Side 21
... square feet . Between this and the outer cupola are four beautiful stair cases which lead to the top of the dome ; from which you have a most interesting view of Paris , at an elevation of three hundred feet from the base , which is ...
... square feet . Between this and the outer cupola are four beautiful stair cases which lead to the top of the dome ; from which you have a most interesting view of Paris , at an elevation of three hundred feet from the base , which is ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
admire altar ancient antique appeared arches artists Baths of Titus beautiful brick bronze building carriages cathedral ceiling celebrated chapel church colossal colour columns contains covered crowd curious dark decorated delightful descended distant dome Domenichino door drapery edifice elegant entered excellent executed exhibition feet figures filled finished Florence fresco front gallery garden grand ground Guercino hall head houses hundred immense Italy light look Luca Giordano Madonna magnificent marble Marseilles Michael Angelo mosaic mountain Naples occupied ornamented painters palace Paris passed Paul Veronese pavement Peter's petticoat breeches piazza Pincian hill Pompeii portraits possesses racter Raphael REMBRANDT PEALE rich road rocks Rome rooms sculpture seats seen shops side singular splendid spot square statues stone strangers streets style surrounded taste temple terrace Tintoretto tion Titian trees various vases vast Venice villages walk walls whilst whole winding
Populære avsnitt
Side 107 - ... heaps, and has not for some time composure enough to examine his riches. Its ceilings richly painted in fresco — its pictured pavements of ancient mosaic — its magnificent gates of bronze — its polished columns of ancient porphyry, the splendid spoils of the ruins of Imperial Rome, — its endless accumulation of Grecian marbles, Egyptian granites, and Oriental alabasters, the very names of which are unknown in Transalpine lands, — its bewildering extent, and prodigality of magnificence,...
Side 2 - Marvin of the said district, hare deposited in this office the title of a book, the right whereof they claim as Proprietors, in the words following, to wit: " Speeches and Forensic Arguments. BY DAICIEL WEBSTER.
Side 5 - The idea that my dreams of Italy were never to be realized seemed to darken the cloud which hung over the prospect of death itself.
Side 91 - ... body drinks wine, and to offer water to a beggar would be an insult. It is only used occasionally with lemons in hot weather. At a late hour in the evening, in many streets, may be heard the noise of Bacchanalian merriment, proceeding from some deep cavernous chamber, which, seen by lamp-light, shows nothing but coarse plastered walls, a greasy brick pavement, and benches and tables, around which, in the absence of all other comforts, the most miserable enjoy their principal, or only meal of...
Side 67 - TRANSFIGURATION, by Raphael ; and the COMMUNION OF ST JEROME, by Domenichino.
Side 76 - ... provinces with ruins, and operating, even in the bed of the primeval oceans. The speculation seemed, however, to claim quite as much affinity with poetical, as with philosophical conceptions, and, it was not till the middle of the last century, that the subject of extinct volcanos began to be investigated with accuracy and skill. The much disputed...
Side 138 - He modeled in clay numerous spirited compositions which he was obliged to destroy for want of the funds which were necessary to put them into marble or even plaster of Paris: and it was owing to the taste, judgment, and liberality of an English gentleman, that he was at last enabled to execute his first work in stone. In his work shop we were shown a basso relievo to the memory of his patron, who is represented supplying the lamp of genius with oil.
Side 2 - District of Pennsylvania^ to wit; Be it remembered, that, on the eleventh day of January, the fiftieth year of the Independence of the United States of America, AD 1826.