The Bravo: A Venetian Story, 第 1 卷H. Colburn and R. Bentley, 1831 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 41 筆
第 ii 頁
... interests of humanity , is still a desideratum in literature . In nations which have made a false commencement , it would be found that the citizen , or rather the subject , has extorted immunity after immunity , as his growing ...
... interests of humanity , is still a desideratum in literature . In nations which have made a false commencement , it would be found that the citizen , or rather the subject , has extorted immunity after immunity , as his growing ...
第 iv 頁
... interests and ex- tended territorial possessions , are much less likely to be their subjects than the inhabitants of a single town or county . If to this defi- nition we should add , as an infallible test of the genus , that a true ...
... interests and ex- tended territorial possessions , are much less likely to be their subjects than the inhabitants of a single town or county . If to this defi- nition we should add , as an infallible test of the genus , that a true ...
第 11 頁
... interest - except the calamity which befel Pietro . Thou rememberest Pietrillo ? he who crossed into Dalmatia with thee once , as a supernumerary , the time he was suspected of having aided the young Frenchman in running away with a ...
... interest - except the calamity which befel Pietro . Thou rememberest Pietrillo ? he who crossed into Dalmatia with thee once , as a supernumerary , the time he was suspected of having aided the young Frenchman in running away with a ...
第 19 頁
... interest . ' Twas the wan- dering but wary glance , which men , who have much reason for distrust , habitually cast on a multitude . It turned , with the same jealous keenness , on the face of the next it encoun- tered , and by the time ...
... interest . ' Twas the wan- dering but wary glance , which men , who have much reason for distrust , habitually cast on a multitude . It turned , with the same jealous keenness , on the face of the next it encoun- tered , and by the time ...
第 55 頁
... interest we agreed on . " " " Twould be christian justice ! but what would become of thy matter of gravity the while , Gino , and of thy haste to enter on its performance ? " " Thou sayest truly , girl . Duty , above all other things ...
... interest we agreed on . " " " Twould be christian justice ! but what would become of thy matter of gravity the while , Gino , and of thy haste to enter on its performance ? " " Thou sayest truly , girl . Duty , above all other things ...
常見字詞
66 Signore affair Agata Annina answered Antonio art thou bark beauty Bella Sorrentina beneath betrayed boat Bravo Bridge of Sighs Bucentaur Calabrian canals Carmelite cast companion concealed countenance crowd Dalmatia doge Doge's palace Don Camillo Monforte Donna Florinda Donna Violetta Dost thou Duca duty Eccellenza face father favour feelings feluca fisherman fortune Gino Giudecca glance glided gondolier hand happy hath honour hour interest jacket Jacopo justice known Lagunes less Lido look manner Mark mask master Neapolitan never noble observed padrone palace passed patricians Piazzetta pleasure port prince prize quay regatta republic Rialto San Marco San Teodoro secret seen senate sequins shew shouts signet Signor Gradenigo Signor Roderigo stranger struggle thee thine Thou art Thou hast thou knowest thou sayest thou wilt thou wouldst throng thy errand tion truth uttered Venetian Venice voice waterman young youth
熱門章節
第 1 頁 - I STOOD in Venice, on the Bridge of Sighs ; A palace and a prison on each hand : I saw from out the wave her structures rise As from the stroke of the enchanter's wand : A thousand years their cloudy wings expand Around me, and a dying Glory smiles O'er the far times, when many a subject land Look'd to the winged Lion's marble piles, Where Venice sate in state, throned on her hundred isles...
第 114 頁 - Antony and Cleopatra. THE silent movement of the hearse-like gondola soon brought the fair Venetian and her female Mentor to the water-gate of the noble, who had been intrusted, by the senate, with the especial guardianship of the person of the heiress. It was a residence of more than common gloom, possessing all the solemn but stately magnificence which then characterized the private dwellings of the patricians in that city of riches and pride.