The Miscellaneous Works of Joseph Addison, 第 4 巻D. A. Talboys, 1830 |
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... Italian governments would be insupportable . There are at St. Remo many plantations of palm trees , though they do not grow in other parts of Italy . We sailed from hence directly for Genoa , and had a fair wind that carried us into the ...
... Italian governments would be insupportable . There are at St. Remo many plantations of palm trees , though they do not grow in other parts of Italy . We sailed from hence directly for Genoa , and had a fair wind that carried us into the ...
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... road is much more difficult than that over mount Cennis . The Genoese are esteemed extremely cunning , industrious , and inured to hardship above the rest of the Italians ; which was likewise the character of REMARKS ON ITALY .
... road is much more difficult than that over mount Cennis . The Genoese are esteemed extremely cunning , industrious , and inured to hardship above the rest of the Italians ; which was likewise the character of REMARKS ON ITALY .
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Joseph Addison. of the Italians ; which was likewise the character of the old Ligurians . And indeed it is no wonder , while the barrenness of their country continues , that the manners of ... Italians; which was likewise the character ...
Joseph Addison. of the Italians ; which was likewise the character of the old Ligurians . And indeed it is no wonder , while the barrenness of their country continues , that the manners of ... Italians; which was likewise the character ...
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... their waters very troubled and muddy , whereas the Tesin is only an outlet of that vast lake which the Italians now call the Lago Maggiore . I saw between Pavia and Milan the convent of Carthusians 12 REMARKS ON ITALY .
... their waters very troubled and muddy , whereas the Tesin is only an outlet of that vast lake which the Italians now call the Lago Maggiore . I saw between Pavia and Milan the convent of Carthusians 12 REMARKS ON ITALY .
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... Italian genius , they have spent more money on pictures than on books . Among the heads of several learned men I met with no Englishman , except bishop Fisher , whom Henry the eighth put to death for not owning his supremacy . Books are ...
... Italian genius , they have spent more money on pictures than on books . Among the heads of several learned men I met with no Englishman , except bishop Fisher , whom Henry the eighth put to death for not owning his supremacy . Books are ...
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Æneid Alps ancient antiquities Antoninus Pius arch arms atque Aurelius beautiful Campania canton of Berne church Claudian commonwealth convent dominions DRYDEN duke emperor famous figure formerly French Gaul Geneva Genoa Genoese give grotto hands inhabitants inscription island Italians Italy kind king lake lies looks Lucius Verus marble Marcus Marcus Aurelius medals mentioned Mevania Milan miles Misenus mole monument mountains multitude Naples natural neighbouring noble notwithstanding observed occasion old Roman palace particular passed pieces pillars poets pope port present prince probably quæ Ravenna reason represented republic rest rich Rimini rise river rocks Roman catholic Rome ruins seen side Silius Italicus stands statues stone stood Switzerland taken notice temple Teverone thousand town triumphal arch Tyrol undas vapour vast Venetians Venice verse Virgil whole winds wonder wood
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95 ページ - Within a long recess there lies a bay : An island shades it from the rolling sea, And forms a port secure for ships to ride : Broke by the jutting land on either side, In double streams the briny waters glide...
154 ページ - The Palatine, proud Rome's imperial seat, (An awful pile!) stands venerably great: Thither the kingdoms and the nations come, In supplicating crowds to learn their doom; To Delphi less th...
33 ページ - ... among billows, thrown up and down by tempests, deaf to hearing, dumb to speech, and terrible to behold: notwithstanding, I say, these natural disadvantages, the Divine Greatness shows itself in you after a very wonderful manner. In you are seen the mighty mysteries of an infinite goodness. The holy scripture has always made use of you, as the types and shadows of some profound sacrament.
75 ページ - It was indeed the most proper place in the world for a fury to make her exit, after she had filled a nation with distractions and alarms; and I believe every reader's imagination is pleased when he sees the angry goddess thus sinking, as it were, in a tempest, and plunging herself into hell, amidst such a scene of horror and confusion.
1 ページ - We were here shown at a distance the Deserts, which have been rendered so famous by the penance of Mary Magdalene, who, after her arrival with Lazarus and Joseph of Arimathea at Marseilles, is said to have wept away the rest of her life among these solitary rocks and mountains. It is so romantic a scene, that it has always probably given occasion to such chimerical relations...
135 ページ - And rolled his yellow billows to the sea. About him, and above, and round the wood, The birds that haunt the borders of his flood, That bathed within, or basked upon his side, To tuneful songs their narrow throats applied.
210 ページ - At one side of the walks you have a near prospect of the Alps, which are broken into so many steps and precipices, that they fill the mind with an agreeable kind of horror, and form one of the most irregular misshapen scenes in the world.
130 ページ - The nurse of great ^Eneas' infancy. Here rest thy bones in rich Hesperia's plains : Thy name ('tis all a ghost can have) remains. Now, when the prince her fun'ral rites had paid, He plough'd the Tyrrhene seas with sails display 'd.
75 ページ - Amsanctus is the name, Below the lofty mounts : on either side Thick forests the forbidden entrance hide : Full in the centre of the sacred wood An arm arises of the Stygian flood; Which, breaking from beneath the bellowing sound, Whirls the black waves and rattling stones around.
75 ページ - Which, breaking from beneath with bellowing sound, Whirls the black waves and rattling stones around. Here Pluto pants for breath from out his cell, And opens wide the grinning jaws of hell.