Young ItalyJ.W. Parker, 1850 - 313 pages |
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admirable Antibes appeared arms arrested arrived Austria beautiful bless broken Cannes Cardinal carriage Catholic character charity Christian church Civita Vecchia countenance crowd danger Emperor Europe evil excitement exclaimed expression faith favour feeling France François French Frosinone gallery gates gaze glorious guard hand happy head heart hill Holiness honour hope imagined Italian Italy King light lived Lombardy looked Lord Minto Lord Palmerston Melvius ment Michel Ange mind minister Monte Casino Monte Cavallo morning motu proprio Naples never night noble palace pale papal passed Peter's Piedmont Pio Nono Piola political Pontiff Pope possess present priests Prince Teano prisoners Quirinal remembered reply republic republican Roman Roman republic Rome rose Rossi round ruins Saint scene sovereign spot stood strange streets Teano thought tion told trembled triumph troops Velletri voice whole wild young YOUNG ITALY
Popular passages
Page 156 - And as they bound him with thongs, Paul said unto the centurion that stood by, Is it lawful for you to scourge a man that is a Roman, and uncondemned ? 26 When the centurion heard that, he went and told the chief captain, saying, Take heed what thou doest ; for this man is a Roman.
Page 28 - dear friends, sweet friends, let me not stir you up to any sudden flood of mutiny," &c. ; and all that can be said is, that the king, when he undertook this ill-timed expedition, certainly thought that, if England would not interfere in his behalf, she could at least ward off any possible evil consequences of such a monstrous aggression.' — (p. 28.) He is perfectly right when he states that the Austrian rule had not been unpopular with the peasantry of Lombardy, but he is wrong, we think, when...
Page 77 - Quels sont les obstacles , les dangers qu'il rencontre ? le danger stationnaire et le danger révolutionnaire. Il ya, chez lui et en Europe, des gens qui veulent qu'il ne fasse rien , qu'il laisse toutes choses absolument comme elles sont. Il ya, chez lui et en Europe, des gens qui veulent qu'il bouleverse tout , qu'il remette toutes choses en question, au risque de se remettre en question lui-même, comme le souhaitent au fond ceux qui le poussent dans ce sens.
Page 251 - Quel monte, a cui Cassino è nella costa, Fu frequentato già in su la cima Dalla gente ingannata e mal disposta. Ed io son quel che su vi portai prima Lo nome di colui che in terra addusse La verità, che tanto ci sublima; E tanta grazia sovra me rilusse, Ch' io ritrassi le ville circostanti Drill' empio culto che il mondo sedusse.
Page 10 - The powers consequently declare, that Napoleon Bonaparte has placed himself without the pale of civil and social relations, and that as an enemy and disturber of the tranquillity of the world, he has rendered himself liable to public vengeance.
Page 10 - Buonaparte has placed himself out of the pale of civil and social relations, and that, as the general enemy and disturber of the world, he is abandoned to public justice.