Notes Abroad and Rhapsodies at Home, Volume 1Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longman, 1837 - Europe |
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Page 9
... rendered my book so dis- tasteful to the jesuits of all sects . Whether they will claim the first - mentioned critic as an honour to their fraternity , I doubt , he being too clumsy a bungler in his craft . Censure I did not deprecate ...
... rendered my book so dis- tasteful to the jesuits of all sects . Whether they will claim the first - mentioned critic as an honour to their fraternity , I doubt , he being too clumsy a bungler in his craft . Censure I did not deprecate ...
Page 39
... rendered as prominent as possible , and pencilled up in their flagitious details , with a relish as manifest as it is culpable . When such lessons are permitted to be publicly promulgated , no wonder that libertinism and conjugal ...
... rendered as prominent as possible , and pencilled up in their flagitious details , with a relish as manifest as it is culpable . When such lessons are permitted to be publicly promulgated , no wonder that libertinism and conjugal ...
Page 43
... rendering more and more indistinct that petty , every - day character which is diametrically opposite to the imaginative , the poetical , the romantic . We are living actors on the stage , are too close to the see too much of its coarse ...
... rendering more and more indistinct that petty , every - day character which is diametrically opposite to the imaginative , the poetical , the romantic . We are living actors on the stage , are too close to the see too much of its coarse ...
Page 44
... rendered instruments of sordid specu- lation , rapacious scheming , or wholesale gambling . Mere money - getting is , I am afraid , at the bottom of not a few of the speculations which make so much noise ; or , if I am wrong in so ...
... rendered instruments of sordid specu- lation , rapacious scheming , or wholesale gambling . Mere money - getting is , I am afraid , at the bottom of not a few of the speculations which make so much noise ; or , if I am wrong in so ...
Page 61
... rendered maim , vapid , and tasteless . All the poetic colouring , all poetic illusion is destroyed ; and an air , not of nature , but of cold , gross reality , substituted for the instructive life of the poet's creations . His pictures ...
... rendered maim , vapid , and tasteless . All the poetic colouring , all poetic illusion is destroyed ; and an air , not of nature , but of cold , gross reality , substituted for the instructive life of the poet's creations . His pictures ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration admit adorned altar altogether amusement ancient antique appear arches architect architecture artist Athenæum beauty Bergamo better Brescia building Cadenabbia called cathedral Catholic Catholicism Catullus certainly character church of San columns compared considered consists Corinthian Corinthian order cornice criticism degree display Duomo edifice English entablature erected exceedingly exhibit façade fancy favour figure front gable Galeazzo Alessi gallery Gothic Gothic architecture honour imagine Ionic order Italian Italy John Bull kind La Scala ladies least Lecco less literature lofty Lombard look marble matter means ment merit Milan modern moral noble numerous observed occasion opinion ornament Padua painting palace Palazzo Palladio particularly pass Paul Veronese peculiar pediment perhaps piece pilasters portico possess present pretend regard religion remarkable rendered respect Roman saints scene sculpture seems side statues streets style suppose taste theatre thing tolerably Trieste truth Verona Vicenza villa whole writer
Popular passages
Page 35 - I thought so ; but know that speaking well of all mankind is the worst kind of detraction ; for it takes away the reputation of the few good men in the world by making all alike.
Page 4 - A mind well skilled to find or forge a fault, A turn for punning, call it Attic salt ; To JEFFREY go, be silent and discreet, His pay is just ten sterling pounds per sheet : Fear not to lie...
Page 21 - As shallow streams run dimpling all the way. Whether in florid impotence he speaks, And as the prompter breathes, the puppet squeaks; Or at the ear of Eve, familiar toad, Half froth, half venom, spits himself abroad, In puns, or politics, or tales, or lies, Or spite, or smut, or rhymes, or blasphemies...
Page 24 - Bertram, et id omne genus, viz., that of ministering to the depraved appetite for excitement, and, though in a far less degree, creating sympathy for the vicious and infamous, solely because the fiend is daring. Not twenty lines of Scott's poetry will ever reach- posterity ; it has relation to nothing.
Page 231 - Sopra gli altari e su le chiese, a gara Le giuste fiamme lor tutte saettano. O pittori, o pittori, il ciel prepara Forse al vostro fallir le pene ultrici, E la tardanza ad aggravarle impara. Da voi di zelo e di pietà mendici, Ne' dì festivi a lavorar s'indugia, E si lascian le messe ei sagri offici.
Page 220 - I marked her increased agitation : I saw her cheeks flush, her eyes glisten, her bosom flutter, as if with sighs, I could not overhear, till at length, overpowered with emotion, she turned away her head, and covered her eyes with her hand.
Page 230 - Più talvolta non v' è che almen sia casta; Che per i Tempj la pittura insana La Religion col puttanesmo impasta. O quanti Arrelli in quest' età profana Di Numi in cambio nelle sacre tele Dipingono il bardassa, e la puttana! Onde tradito poi lo stuol fedele Con scellerata, e folle idolatria Porge i voti all'Inferno, e le querele. Che d'un Angelo in vece e di Maria, D'Ati il volto s'adora , e di Medusa , L'effigie d'un Radilo , o d' un
Page 223 - ... Every lady would regard it as a personal insult to be asked to witness such an exhibition. In America, again, where respect for the female sex is carried to a much greater extent than in Great Britain, or perhaps in any other country, the female dancer — even were she Taglioni...
Page 101 - Their elevations enchant you, not by the length and altitude, nor by the materials and sculpture, but-the consummate felicity of their proportions, by the harmonious distribution of solid and void, by that happy something between flat and prominent, which charms both in front and profile; by that maestria which calls in columns, not to encumber but to support, and reproduces ancient beauty in combinations unknown to the ancients themselves.
Page 223 - It certainly displays a science and a facility of evolution, of which no one who has not seen it can form any conception ; but when the dancers are females, it is not the best means which could be employed to inspire notions of delicacy in the minds of those ladies who are among the spectators. How they can, not only witness it without a blush mantling their cheeks, but talk of it in terms of unqualified admiration to their acquaintances of the other sex, must appear passing strange to those who...