A Classical Tour Through Italy An. MDCCCII... |
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Page 28
... authority shall direct , assume or resign the pomp and the circumstance of worship ; that ceremonies , in themselves unmeaning , signify just as much as those , who employ them , attach to them , and that Catholic as well as Protestant ...
... authority shall direct , assume or resign the pomp and the circumstance of worship ; that ceremonies , in themselves unmeaning , signify just as much as those , who employ them , attach to them , and that Catholic as well as Protestant ...
Page 107
... authority of the clergy : two causes , which , fortunately for , Europe , worked with increas- ing extent and energy , and successfully coun- teracted the prodigious efforts of ferocity , of barbarism , and of ignorance during the ...
... authority of the clergy : two causes , which , fortunately for , Europe , worked with increas- ing extent and energy , and successfully coun- teracted the prodigious efforts of ferocity , of barbarism , and of ignorance during the ...
Page 116
... authority on one side , rage of innovation on the other , would submit to no concession . The other object was the reformation of the church . Here its efforts were attended , if not with † Gibbon says of the council of Constance , that ...
... authority on one side , rage of innovation on the other , would submit to no concession . The other object was the reformation of the church . Here its efforts were attended , if not with † Gibbon says of the council of Constance , that ...
Page 117
... authority , even in Protestant countries ; such , for instance , as those relating to matrimony ; and where ad- mitted , their utility has been felt and acknow- ledged . Intrigue , without doubt , was not inactive at Trent : and where ...
... authority , even in Protestant countries ; such , for instance , as those relating to matrimony ; and where ad- mitted , their utility has been felt and acknow- ledged . Intrigue , without doubt , was not inactive at Trent : and where ...
Page 132
... and celebrated by poets , is founded on the au- thority of Silius and of Servius ; if indeed the descriptions of the former can , like Homer's , be considered as geographical authority . * However , it 132 Ch . II , CLASSICAL TOUR.
... and celebrated by poets , is founded on the au- thority of Silius and of Servius ; if indeed the descriptions of the former can , like Homer's , be considered as geographical authority . * However , it 132 Ch . II , CLASSICAL TOUR.
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Common terms and phrases
adorned alluded Alps altar ancient Ancona antiquity Apennines appearance appellation architecture army attention banks barbarian beautiful Belisarius Bologna Campus Martius Capitol castle cathedral Catullus celebrated century Cesena Christian church Cimbri classical Cremona decorations defile delightful edifices Emperors empire erected fertile French galleries glory Gothic grand halls hill honor immense inhabitants inscription Italian Italy lake latter Loreto magnificent Mantua marble ment miles Mincio modern Monte monuments mountains Narni neighboring noble object observed ornaments Padua paintings palaces Palladio Parma passed perhaps pillars plain plunder poet portico present principal quam rampart reader remains republic Rimini rise river road rock Roman Rome ruins scene scenery seat seems shade side spirit splendor statues steep style summit supposed taste temple theatre Tiber tion towers town traveller triumphal arch various vast vault Venetian Venice Verona Via Flaminia Vicenza village Virgil walls whole
Popular passages
Page 310 - I look for streams immortaliz'd in song, That lost in silence and oblivion lie, (Dumb are their fountains and their channels dry) Yet run for ever by the Muses' skill, And in the smooth description murmur still.
Page 350 - Ev'n the rough rocks with tender myrtle bloom, And trodden weeds send out a rich perfume. Bear me, some god, to Baia's gentle seats, Or cover me in Umbria's green retreats ; Where western gales eternally reside, And all the seasons lavish all their pride : Blossoms, and fruits, and flowers together rise, And the whole year in gay confusion lies.
Page 315 - Rome, and the destinies of mankind ; here appeared the warlike phantom, commissioned by the furies, to steel the bosom of the relenting chief, and...
Page 430 - I have seen the walls of Balclutha, but they were desolate. The fire had resounded in the halls; and the voice of the people is heard no more. The stream of Clutha was removed from its place by the fall of the walls. The thistle shook there its lonely head: the moss whistled to the wind. The fox looked out from the windows, the rank grass of the wall waved round its head. Desolate is the dwelling of Moina; silence is in the house of her fathers.
Page 120 - Amid these wilds the traveller cannot fail to notice a vast tract called the Slavini di Marco, covered with fragments of rock torn from the sides of the neighboring mountains by an earthquake, or perhaps by their own unsupported weight, and hurled down into the plains below. They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the road to a very narrow space.
Page 424 - A herdsman seated on a pedestal while his oxen were drinking at the fountain, and a few passengers moving at a distance in different directions, were the only living beings that disturbed the silence and solitude which reigned around. Thus the place seemed restored to its original wildness described by Virgil, and abandoned once more to flocks and herds of cattle. So far...
Page 107 - ... crosses which frequently mark the brow of a precipice, and th,e little chapels hollowed out of the rock where the road is narrowed; he will consider them as so many pledges of security; and rest assured, that, as long as the pious mountaineer continues to adore the 'Good Shepherd...
Page 410 - The Capitol was anciently both a fortress and a sanctuary. A fortress surrounded with precipices, bidding defiance to all the means of attack employed in ancient times; a sanctuary, crowded with altars and temples, the repository of the fatal oracles, the seat of the tutelar deities of the empire. Romulus began the grand work, by erecting the temple of Jupiter Feretrius...
Page 373 - This beautiful expanse of water, about a mile in breadth, fills the defile, and meanders between the mountains for some miles. The way to it from the fall, is by a path winding along the foot of the mountain, and leading to a cottage, where you may take a boat, and cross to a bold promontory opposite. There, seated in the shade, you may enjoy the view of the waters, of the bordering mountains, of the towns perched on their sides, the village Pie...
Page 421 - Palatine hill with the imperial residence glittering on its summit, and there by the Capitol, with its ascending ranges of porticos and of temples. Thus it presented one of the richest exhibitions that eyes could behold, or human ingenuity invent. In the midst of these superb monuments, the memorials of their greatness, and the trophies of their fathers, the Roman people assembled to exercise their sovereign power, and to decide the fates of heroes, of kings, and of nations. Nor did the contemplation...