Roba Di Roma, Volume 1Chapman & Hall, 1864 - Rome (Italy) |
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Page 8
... means prompted by purely religious motives , though , undoubtedly , such considerations have some weight with them , the common peasantry being religiously in- clined , and often making pilgrimages simply from a sense of duty and ...
... means prompted by purely religious motives , though , undoubtedly , such considerations have some weight with them , the common peasantry being religiously in- clined , and often making pilgrimages simply from a sense of duty and ...
Page 11
... means confined to the Roman States . Sometimes they stray as far away as Paris is , " and , wandering about in that gay capital , like children at a fair , play in the streets for chance sous , or stand as models to artists , who ...
... means confined to the Roman States . Sometimes they stray as far away as Paris is , " and , wandering about in that gay capital , like children at a fair , play in the streets for chance sous , or stand as models to artists , who ...
Page 12
... means the only street - musicians in Rome , though they take the city by storm at Christmas . Every day under my window comes a band of four or five , who play airs and con- certed pieces from the operas , —and a precious work 12 ROBA ...
... means the only street - musicians in Rome , though they take the city by storm at Christmas . Every day under my window comes a band of four or five , who play airs and con- certed pieces from the operas , —and a precious work 12 ROBA ...
Page 25
... means for it are obtained . The general , popular idea , that an Italian is quarrelsome and ill - tempered , and that the best are only bandits in disguise , is quite a mistake ; and when studied as they exist out of the track of travel ...
... means for it are obtained . The general , popular idea , that an Italian is quarrelsome and ill - tempered , and that the best are only bandits in disguise , is quite a mistake ; and when studied as they exist out of the track of travel ...
Page 29
... mean little osterie or bettole . The door was ajar , and peeping in he beheld a gallant company of roysterers of the same profession as Beppo , with porters , and gentlemen celebrated for lifting in other ways . They were gathered round ...
... mean little osterie or bettole . The door was ajar , and peeping in he beheld a gallant company of roysterers of the same profession as Beppo , with porters , and gentlemen celebrated for lifting in other ways . They were gathered round ...
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Common terms and phrases
actors admirable amphitheatre ancient arena audience baiocchi baiocco beasts beautiful Befana beggars bell Beppo Cæsars caffè called Campagna cards carriage carried celebrated charming church Civita Vecchia Colosseum contadini Contrabandistas costume cried crowd custom dance door dreams dressed emperor epigrams Etruscan eyes festa festival flowers French friends garden give gladiators Gobbo grapes guitar hand head heard honour Italian Italy lecco look lottery Madonna mandoline Marforio Naples never night noble numbers once opera osteria palace pantomime Pasquin pass passion peasants performed persons Piazza picturesque play player Pope priest prize Pulcinella Roman Rome round ruins saltarello scream scudi seats seems seen shadow side Signore sing sometimes song spectacle stage stand story strangers streets Suetonius takes place terno theatre thousand ticket town travertine Tuscany velarium villas vines voice walls wild wine women wonderful
Popular passages
Page 76 - O gentle sleep, Nature's soft nurse, how have I frighted thee, That thou no more wilt weigh my eyelids down...
Page 214 - Sometimes it seems to us in our despair that as it was in the beginning, it is now, and ever shall be ! Is it because the true prophet worships Truth, whilst the priest too often worships Form?
Page 190 - While stands the Coliseum, Rome shall stand; When falls the Coliseum, Rome shall fall; And when Rome falls — the World.
Page 246 - Mercator metuens otium et oppidi Laudat rura sui ; mox reficit rates Quassas indocilis pauperiem pati. Est qui nee veteris pocula Massici Nee partem solido demere de die Spernit, nunc viridi membra sub arbuto Stratus, nunc ad aquae lene caput sacrae.
Page 56 - So, too, at Rome, the Emperors become as familiar as the Popes. Who does not know the curly-headed Marcus Aurelius, with his lifted brow and projecting eyes — from the full, round beauty of his youth to the more haggard look of his latest years ? Are there any modern portraits more familiar than the severe, wedge-like head of Augustus, with his sharp-cut lips and nose, — or the dull phiz of Hadrian, with his hair combed down over his low forehead, — or the vain, perking face of Lucius Verus,...
Page 53 - Shepherds guard their flocks far away, reposing under palm-trees or standing on green slopes which glow in the sunshine. The distances and perspective are admirable. In the middle ground is a crystal fountain of glass, near which sheep, preternaturally white, and made of real wool and cottonwool, are feeding, tended by figures of shepherds carved in wood. Still nearer come women bearing great baskets of real oranges and other fruits on their heads. All the nearer figures are full-sized, carved in...
Page 63 - Eustachio, — and a curious spectacle it is. The Piazza itself (which is situated in the centre of the city, just beyond the Pantheon), and all the adjacent streets, are lined with booths covered with every kind of plaything for children. Most of these are of Roman make, very rudely fashioned, and very cheap ; but for those who have longer purses, there are not wanting heaps of German and French toys. These booths are gaily illuminated with rows of candles and the...
Page 225 - O, the motions that I, Lanthorn Leatherhead, have given light to, in my time, since my Master Pod died ! Jerusalem was a stately thing, and so was Nineveh, and the City of Norwich, and Sodom and Gomorrah...
Page 237 - ... other studies of the curriculum? We must grant the obvious intimate connection between ability to secure meaning from the printed page and the power to enter into an experiencing of literary material. Reading includes literary experiencing and the latter unquestionably works to improve the former; but there is all the difference between the two that there is between practicing scales and playing a piece of music, between developing platform ease and swaying an audience, between learning conjugations...
Page 5 - Every Englishman carries a Murray for information and a Byron for sentiment, and finds out by them what he is to know and feel at every step. Pictures and statues have been staled by copy and description, until everything is stereotyped, from the Dying Gladiator, with his "young barbarians all at play...