Travelling Sketches in the North of Italy, the Tyrol, and on the RhineLongman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, 1832 - 256 pages |
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... to Venice . 142 The Sea - Cybele . 158 The Valley of the Adige 182 The Pass of the Brenner The City of the Mountains The Valley of the Inn The Banks of the Rhine 195 229 245 252 • PLATES , FROM DRAWINGS BY CLARKSON STANFIELD , ESQ .
... to Venice . 142 The Sea - Cybele . 158 The Valley of the Adige 182 The Pass of the Brenner The City of the Mountains The Valley of the Inn The Banks of the Rhine 195 229 245 252 • PLATES , FROM DRAWINGS BY CLARKSON STANFIELD , ESQ .
Page 9
... mountains . We had here an opportunity of performing a feat of pedestrianism which would be difficult in England —that is , outstripping the speed of the coach by some miles . The peasant - girls in their straw hats , with the great ...
... mountains . We had here an opportunity of performing a feat of pedestrianism which would be difficult in England —that is , outstripping the speed of the coach by some miles . The peasant - girls in their straw hats , with the great ...
Page 10
... single garden . Descending the hills above Dole a very magnificent picture bursts upon the view . The ancient city stands in a plain so extensive that the THE MOUNTAINS . 11 Jura mountains , which are its 10 TRAVELLING SKETCHES .
... single garden . Descending the hills above Dole a very magnificent picture bursts upon the view . The ancient city stands in a plain so extensive that the THE MOUNTAINS . 11 Jura mountains , which are its 10 TRAVELLING SKETCHES .
Page 11
Leitch Ritchie. THE MOUNTAINS . 11 Jura mountains , which are its barrier , look like inconsiderable hills , and the summit of Mont Blanc , which is faintly sketched in the distance , may be mistaken for a thin cloud resting on the ...
Leitch Ritchie. THE MOUNTAINS . 11 Jura mountains , which are its barrier , look like inconsiderable hills , and the summit of Mont Blanc , which is faintly sketched in the distance , may be mistaken for a thin cloud resting on the ...
Page 13
... mountains ; and the shadows of the dusk , like guilty spirits , have fled howling to their caves . Our heretofore associations of moonlight are utterly destroyed , and not Shakspeare's self could build them up again . By this moonlight ...
... mountains ; and the shadows of the dusk , like guilty spirits , have fled howling to their caves . Our heretofore associations of moonlight are utterly destroyed , and not Shakspeare's self could build them up again . By this moonlight ...
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Common terms and phrases
abyss Alps appearance arcade arch arms ascend avalanche Bavarians beautiful Botzen Bregenz bridge Brieg called capitaine castle church cliffs clouds colour columns dark descend distance edifice effect Engraved feet Francesco gallery Geneva glaciers half head heart heaven height hills hundred idea imagination Innsbruck Italian Italy Jura lady Lago Maggiore lake Lake Constance leagues Lelia Leonore light Lombard-Venetian Lombardy look magnificent marble Martigny midst Milan Mont Blanc Monte Rosa mountains nature Niccoli night opposite ourselves Painted palace pass Piazza picture picturesque plains present ravine Rhone rising river road rock Roman round route ruins rushed Saint Mark Saltine scene scenery seemed seen Sesto Calende side Simplon situation snow sometimes spot Stanfield steep Sterzing storm suddenly summit surmounted TABLE D'HÔTE Temple thing thousand torrent town traveller Trostburg Tyrol Tyrolese Valais Valley Venice Verona Victorine village voice walls whole wild wind
Popular passages
Page 11 - With the silent Bushboy alone by my side, Away, away, in the wilderness vast Where the white man's foot hath never passed, And the quivered Coranna or Bechuan Hath rarely crossed with his roving clan, — A region of emptiness, howling and drear, Which man hath abandoned from famine and fear...
Page 12 - Is the pilgrim's fare by the salt lake's brink : A region of drought, where no river glides, Nor rippling brook with osiered sides ; Where sedgy pool, nor bubbling fount, Nor tree, nor cloud, nor misty mount, Appears to refresh the aching eye ; But the barren earth, and the burning sky, And the blank horizon, round and round, Spread — void of living sight or sound.
Page 76 - Francesco's heart bled while he thought of the sufferings of the sick and delicate girl on such a night, in such a place ; and his blows fell desperately on the stubborn rock. He was now at a little distance from the spot where she sat, and was just about to beg her to bring the light nearer, when she spoke again. " Make haste — make haste !" she said, " the time is almost come — I shall be wanted — I am wanted — I can stay no longer — farewell!
Page 66 - ... confusion with which he turned away his head ; and, what perhaps was as valuable as either even to the gentle Lelia, there was admiration, deep and devout, in those brilliant eyes that had quailed beneath hers. The youth was as beautiful as a dream ; and his voice ! — it was so clear, and yet so soft — so powerful, yet so melodious ! It haunted her ear like a prediction. It was a week before she again saw this Apollo of her girlish imagination. It seemed as if in the interval they had had...
Page 79 - She leant her back against the rock ; one hand was pressed upon her heart, like a person who shrinks with cold; and in the other she held the lamp, the flame of which had expired in the socket. Francesco threw himself on his knees at one side, and the old man at the other, while a light, as strong as day, was shed by the torches upon the spot. She was dead — dead — stone dead ! After a time, the childless old man went to seek out the object of his daughter's love ; but Francesco was never seen...
Page 64 - ... compass. The only fence of 'the garden at this place was a belt of shrubs, which enriched the border of the deep ravine it overlooked. At the bottom of this ravine flowed the river, rapid and yet sullen ; and beyond, scarcely distant two hundred yards, a range of precipitous cliffs shut in the horizon. The wild and desolate aspect of the scene was overshadowed and controlled, as it were, by the stern grandeur of these ramparts of nature ; and the whole contributed to form such a picture as artists...
Page 60 - Switzerland at one time ran through the Valley of Anzasca; and it was once my fortune to be detained all night at a cottage in one of its wildest defiles, by a storm which rendered my horses ungovernable. While leaning upon a bench, and looking with drowsy curiosity towards the window — for there was no bed except my host's, of which I did not choose to deprive him — I saw a small faint light among the rocks in the distance. I at first conceived that it might proceed from a cottage-window ; but,...
Page 76 - ... on fortune and casualty, Lelia betook herself to the altars and gods of her people ! Saints and martyrs were by turns invoked ; vows were offered up, and pilgrimages and religious watchings performed. Then came dreams and prodigies into play, and omens, and auguries. Sortes were wrested from the pages of Dante, and warnings and commands translated from the mystic writings of the sky — " The stars, which are the poetry of heaven.
Page 11 - Hath rarely crossed with his roving clan : A region of emptiness, howling and drear, Which Man hath abandoned from famine and fear ; Which the snake and the lizard inhabit alone, With the twilight bat from the yawning stone ; Where grass, nor herb, nor shrub takes root, Save poisonous thorns that pierce the foot...
Page 70 - Lelia fell on her father's neck, and sobbed aloud. So long and bitter was her sobbing that the formality of the party was broken, and the circle narrowed anxiously around her. When at last she raised her head, it was seen that her cheeks were dry, and her face as white as the marble of Cordaglia. A murmur of compassion ran through the bystanders ; and the words "poor thing! — still so delicate! — old hysterics!