A Handbook for Travellers in Sicily: Including Palermo, Messina, Catania, Syracuse, Etna, and the Ruins of the Greek TemplesJ. Murray, 1864 - 524 pàgines |
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A Handbook for Travellers in Sicily: Including Palermo, Messina, Catania ... George Dennis Visualització completa - 1864 |
A Handbook for Travellers in Sicily: Including Palermo, Messina, Catania ... George Dennis,John Murray (Firm) Visualització completa - 1864 |
A Handbook for Travellers in Sicily: Including Palermo, Messina, Catania ... George Dennis,John Murray (Firm) Visualització completa - 1864 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
adorned aisle Alcamo altar altarpiece ancient antiquity Antonio Gagini apse architecture ascend beautiful beneath Calascibetta called Caltagirone Caltanisetta Carthaginians Castelvetrano castle Catania cathedral Cefalù century chapel church cliffs coast colour columns contains convent Count Roger crater crest cross door Doric erected eruption Etna façade Fazello figures Fiume foliage frescoes Gagini gate Giovanni Girgenti Giuseppe Greek ground height Himera Hotel inhabitants inscription island King lava Lentini Lilybæum Locanda lofty Madonna marble Maria masonry ment Messina Messrs miles Monte mosaics mountain Norman Novelli painted palace Palazzo Palermo Paternò Piazza picture picturesque plain port Porta relief remains rises road rock Roman ruins saint Santa Saracenic Sciacca Segeste Selinus shore Sicilian Sicily side slopes spot square stands statue steep Strada stream style summit Syracuse tains tarì temple theatre tion tombs tower town transept Trapani traveller Troina valley vault village Virgin walls
Passatges populars
Pàgina 103 - twould a saint provoke" (Were the last words that poor Narcissa spoke), " No, let a charming chintz, and Brussels lace Wrap my cold limbs, and shade my lifeless face : One would not, sure, be frightful when one's dead — And, Betty, give this cheek a little red.
Pàgina 411 - Etna are the multitude of minor cones which are distributed over its flanks, and which are most abundant in the woody region. These, although they appear but trifling irregularities when viewed from a distance as subordinate parts of so imposing and colossal a mountain, would, nevertheless, be deemed hills of considerable altitude in almost any other region.
Pàgina 20 - LANGE, Proprietor. This Hotel is in the best situation of the town. near the Promenade, the King's Theatre, the Museum, &c.; it is most elegantly furnished, and offers good accommodation for all classes of travellers.
Pàgina xxvi - Girgenti the ridge visible to the mariner from afar is still crowned by a long line of fabrics, presenting to the eye a considerable mass and regularity of structure, and the town is near and visible; yet that town is so entirely the mere phantom of its former glory within its now shrunken limits, that instead of disturbing the effect, it rather seems to add a new image and enhance it. The temples enshrine a most pure and salutary principle of art, that which connects grandeur of effect with simplicity...
Pàgina 411 - Yet it ranks only as a cone of the second magnitude amongst those produced by the lateral eruptions of Etna.
Pàgina xii - ... leaves of terrestrial plants also, such as the laurel, myrtle, and pistachio, of species indigenous to Sicily, have been detected in the oldest subaerial tuffs. At first the cone of Trifoglietto, and probably the lower part of the cone of Mongibello, was built up ; still later the cone...
Pàgina 439 - We may suppose, that, at the commencement of the eruption, a deep mass of drift snow had been covered by volcanic sand showered down upon it before the descent of the lava. A dense stratum of this fine dust mixed with...
Pàgina 197 - In the cathedral of Girgenti, in Sicily, the slightest whisper is borne with perfect distinctness from the great western door to the cornice behind the high altar, a distance of 250 feet. By a most unlucky coincidence, the precise focus of divergence at the former station was chosen for the confessional.
Pàgina 509 - It appears to be an agitated water, of from seventy to ninety fathoms in depth, circling in quick eddies. It is owing probably to the meeting of the harbour and lateral currents with the main one, the latter being forced over in this direction by the opposite point of Pezzo.