Letters from an English Traveller, Volume 11780 |
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Page 4
... these are the reasons that made me change my opinion . He was forced to marry the queen ; and though he has never lived with her , the loves him , because he has always treated her with refpect , and has always fhewn her many little at ...
... these are the reasons that made me change my opinion . He was forced to marry the queen ; and though he has never lived with her , the loves him , because he has always treated her with refpect , and has always fhewn her many little at ...
Page 12
... ticulars of any evolution ; but the re- gularity and the quicknefs with which the Pruffian foldier performs every thing , aftonish the military of all other nations . ( The The battle ended , the imagination faw these pictures of [ 12 }
... ticulars of any evolution ; but the re- gularity and the quicknefs with which the Pruffian foldier performs every thing , aftonish the military of all other nations . ( The The battle ended , the imagination faw these pictures of [ 12 }
Page 13
Martin Sherlock. The battle ended , the imagination faw these pictures of Taffo : Pien tutto il campo è di spezzate lance , Di rotti fcudi e di troncato arnefe : Di fpade ai petti , alle fquarciate pance Altre confitte , altre par terra ...
Martin Sherlock. The battle ended , the imagination faw these pictures of Taffo : Pien tutto il campo è di spezzate lance , Di rotti fcudi e di troncato arnefe : Di fpade ai petti , alle fquarciate pance Altre confitte , altre par terra ...
Page 25
... these three verses he speaks of one of those gentlemen at his return : [ * Addreffed to Count Rottembourg . ] I cannot help here mentioning a story which I heard at Paris of a young German traveller . He had been told that the Venetian ...
... these three verses he speaks of one of those gentlemen at his return : [ * Addreffed to Count Rottembourg . ] I cannot help here mentioning a story which I heard at Paris of a young German traveller . He had been told that the Venetian ...
Page 29
... These are your children , feel what fathers feel : From all their bosoms , stabb'd without remorse , Streams your own vital flood , and ftains the mur d'rous fteel . As a good fhepherd , provident and wife , Defends his darling flock ...
... These are your children , feel what fathers feel : From all their bosoms , stabb'd without remorse , Streams your own vital flood , and ftains the mur d'rous fteel . As a good fhepherd , provident and wife , Defends his darling flock ...
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affemblies againſt alfo almoſt alſo amiable Anglois Ariofto artiſt aſked beau beautiful becauſe beſt Boileau Cardinal de Bernis Corregio coun Dante defirous écrit elogium Engliſh Engliſhman eſtabliſhed expreffion Extrait faid fame faults feems feen fent Ferney feveral fhew fhould fide firft firſt fituation fmall fome fond foul fovereign French Frenchman ftatue ftyle fubjects fublime fuch fuperior fure genius gout greateſt himſelf homme honour Horace houſe ideas intereſting Italian Italy itſelf King of Pruffia lefs LETTER Longinus merit moft moſt muſt myſelf Naples nation nature never octavo ouvrage paffages paffes paffing paffionately painting perfons picture pleaſe pleaſure poet poetry praiſe prefent prince proof publiſhes qu'il racters Raphael reafon refpect rife Rome ſee ſeen Shakspeare ſhall ſhe Sherlock Sir William Hamilton ſome ſpeak ſtriking Taffo tafte talents taſte thefe theſe thofe thoſe thouſand Titian travels truth underſtanding univerfe uſed verſes Vienna Voltaire whofe
Popular passages
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Page 27 - But, when the blast of war blows in our ears. Let us be tigers in our fierce deportment. For me, the ransom of my bold attempt Shall be this body on the earth's cold face ; But, if we thrive, the glory of the action The meanest soldier here shall share his part of.
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Page 71 - Magnificence, hypocrify, and fadnefs, reign here : the number of fine palaces, of beautiful churches, of fuperb fountains, of treafures of art, and venerable remains of antiquity, give an air of grandeur to Rome which is not found in any other country. < The want of public entertainments, the little population in proportion to the extent of the city, and its...
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Page 71 - Romans affeft, and the general drefs of the country, which is black. The habit of an Abbe is the court drefs ; and as it is alfo the cheapeft, every one wears it. ' Every court is the abode of...
Page 85 - Ro~ tonda as a work of antiquity never to be paralleled, faid, That he would not only build a dome equally large, but build it in the air ; and he afterwards made his affertion good.