By the Ionian SeaChapman and Hall, Limited, 1921 - Broj stranica: 203 |
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Alaric Albergo amid ancient asked Aspromonte beauty began Bruttii Busento Calabria called carriage Cassiodorus Catanzaro coloured Concordia Cosenza Cotrone course Crati Croton dark dazio delightful Don Pasquale Esaro eyes face fellow felt flowing François Lenormant Galæsus garden gaze Gialtrezze Goth Greek heard heights hills hostess hour houses interest Ionian Sea Italian Italy journey knew labour landscape Lenormant looked Magna Græcia meal Metaponto Metapontum minutes Mons Moscius morning mountain museum Naples never night noble once Paola passed Pellena picture pleasant Plutino portmanteau promontory railway station rain Reggio river road Roman Rome ruins San Sostene scene Sculco seemed shore Signor smile soil soon sound southern Squillace stone stood street sunshine Sybaris tain talk Taranto Tarentum things thought to-day took town train traveller trees turned valley voices walk wall weather Whilst wind wine wonder
Popularni odlomci
Stranica 61 - I watched it for an hour or more from the terrace-road of the island town. An exquisite after-glow seemed as if it would never pass away. Above thin, grey clouds stretching along the horizon a purple flush melted insensibly into the dark blue of the zenith. Eastward the sky was piled with lurid rack, sullen-tinted folds edged with the hue of sulphur. The sea had a strange aspect, curved tracts of pale blue lying motionless upon a dark expanse rippled by the wind. Below me, as I leaned on the sea-wall,...
Stranica 65 - What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild fowl? MALVOLIO That the soul of our grandam might haply inhabit a bird. Clown What thinkest thou of his opinion? MALVOLIO I think nobly of the soul, and no way approve his opinion.
Stranica 147 - Catanzaro, the tone of conversation was incomparably better than that which would rule in a cluster of English provincials met to enjoy their evening leisure. They did, in fact, converse — a word rarely applicable to English talk under such conditions; mere personal gossip was the exception; they exchanged genuine thoughts, reasoned lucidly on the surface of abstract subjects. I say on the surface; no remark that I heard could be called original or striking; but the choice of topics and the mode...
Stranica 13 - Every man," he says somewhere, "has his intellectual desire; mine is to escape life as I know it, and dream myself back into that old world which was the imaginative delight of my boyhood.
Stranica 147 - ... with exclamations of approval from those who listened. No, it is not merely the difference between homely Anglo-Saxon and a language of classic origin; there is a radical distinction of thought. These people have an innate respect for things of the mind, which is wholly lacking to a typical Englishman. One need not dwell upon the point that their animation was supported by a tiny cup of coffee or a glass of lemonade; this is a matter of climate and racial constitution; but I noticed the entire...
Stranica 188 - ... will be stained red from veins of young and old. That sweet and sounding name of patria becomes an illusion and a curse ; linked with the pretentious modernism, civilization, it serves as plea to the latter-day barbarian, ravening and reckless under his civil garb. How can one greatly wish for the consolidation and prosperity of Italy, knowing that national vigour tends more...
Stranica 178 - Ha, ha! Cassiodorio! Ha, ha, ha!" I asked him what he meant, and found that he was merely delighted to hear a stranger unexpectedly utter a name in familiar local use. He ran out from the cave, and pointed up the valley; yonder was a fountain which bore the name "Fontana di Cassiodorio.
Stranica 13 - ... into that old world which was the imaginative delight of my boyhood. The names of Greece and Italy draw me as no others ; they make me young again, and restore the keen impressions of that time when every new page of Greek or Latin was a new perception of things beautiful. The world of the Greeks and Romans is my land of romance ; a quotation in either language thrills me strangely, and there are passages of Greek and Latin verse which I cannot read without a dimming of the eyes, which I cannot...
Stranica 192 - Alone and quiet, I heard the washing of the waves ; I saw the evening fall on cloud-wreathed Etna, the twinkling lights come forth upon Scylla and Charybdis; and, as I looked my last towards the Ionian Sea, I wished it were mine to wander endlessly amid the silence of the ancient world, to-day and all its sounds forgotten.
Stranica 107 - di morti (stone dead), a pathos in her aspect and her words took hold upon me; it was much as if some heavy-laden beast of burden had suddenly found tongue, and protested in the rude beginnings of articulate utterance against its hard lot. If only one could have learnt, in intimate detail...