| John Cam Hobhouse Baron Broughton - 1818 - 396 Seiten
...villas and their evergreen shrubberies. The gate of the city is seen immediately on crossing the river at the end of a vista two miles in length ; and the...unsullied lustre and exhilarating warmth from the rams of autumn to the tempests of the vernal equinox. What has been said and sung of the tepid winter... | |
| John Cam Hobhouse Baron Broughton - 1818 - 396 Seiten
...road winding up the Pincian mount, and enjoy from that eminence the view of a city, which, whateT^r may be the faults of its architectural details, is,...seasons, preserves an unsullied lustre and exhilarating * Donatus prefers the site, the streets, and as far as the church of St. Peter's is considered, the... | |
| John Cam Hobhouse Baron Broughton - 1818 - 596 Seiten
...he may have been chilled by the rigours of a Lombard sky, he is no sooner in the plain of the Tyber, than his spirits expand in an atmosphere, which, in...rains of autumn to the tempests of the vernal equinox, \yhat has been said and sung of the tepid winter of Italy, is not intelligible to the north of Rome... | |
| John Wilks - 1822 - 546 Seiten
...he may have been chilled by the rigours of a Lombard sky, he is no sooner in the plain of the Tyber, than his spirits expand in an atmosphere, which, in many seasons, preserves an unsullied lustre and exhilirating warmth from the rains of autumn to the tempests of the vernal equinox. What has been said... | |
| Josiah Conder - 1831 - 532 Seiten
...to give brilliancy to the magnificent prospect below. In many seasons, ' the atmosphere preserve!i an unsullied lustre and exhilarating warmth, from...Italy, is not intelligible to the north of Rome.... Rome had fallen when Kutilius said of her climate, " yere tuo nunjuam mulceri desinit annus Delicituque... | |
| Josiah Conder - 1831 - 480 Seiten
...Hobhouse remarks, to give brilliancy to the magnificent prospect below. In many seasons, ' the atmosphere preserves an unsullied lustre and exhilarating warmth,...winter of Italy, is not intelligible to the north of Kome.... Rome had fallen when Rutilius said of her climate, " yere tuo nunqunm mufceri desinit annus... | |
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