A Tour Through Sicily and Malta: In a Series of Letters to William Beckford, Esq. of Somerly in Suffolk, 2. köideR. Marchbank, 1780 |
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Page 16
... fituation of this city , where the air is exceedingly thin and cold , has perhaps been one reason why its inhabitants are fonder of wine than their neigh- bours in the valleys . The fame may be faid of the three nations I have mentioned ...
... fituation of this city , where the air is exceedingly thin and cold , has perhaps been one reason why its inhabitants are fonder of wine than their neigh- bours in the valleys . The fame may be faid of the three nations I have mentioned ...
Page 23
... fituation of his friend , ran to the tyrant , affuring him that he alone was the guilty perfon ; that it was entirely by his inftigation that Cariton had acted ; and begged that he might be put on the rack in the place of his friend ...
... fituation of his friend , ran to the tyrant , affuring him that he alone was the guilty perfon ; that it was entirely by his inftigation that Cariton had acted ; and begged that he might be put on the rack in the place of his friend ...
Page 58
... fituation of Agri- gentum must be one great caufe of its drunken- nefs . The Sicilians have always had the character of being very amorous , and furely not without reafon . The whole nation are poets , even the peafants ; and a man ...
... fituation of Agri- gentum must be one great caufe of its drunken- nefs . The Sicilians have always had the character of being very amorous , and furely not without reafon . The whole nation are poets , even the peafants ; and a man ...
Page 78
... fituation was the most irksome in the world ; the bed was fo low , that he had no room to move ; and when the great heavy lifeguard- man entered it , he found himfelf fqueezed down to the ground . He lay trembling and ftifling his ...
... fituation was the most irksome in the world ; the bed was fo low , that he had no room to move ; and when the great heavy lifeguard- man entered it , he found himfelf fqueezed down to the ground . He lay trembling and ftifling his ...
Page 158
... fituation of this city : Berofo fuppofes it to have flood , where Camarina was afterwards founded , and that this was only a corruption of its primi- tive name . But Guarneri , Carrera , and others , combat this opinion , and affirm ...
... fituation of this city : Berofo fuppofes it to have flood , where Camarina was afterwards founded , and that this was only a corruption of its primi- tive name . But Guarneri , Carrera , and others , combat this opinion , and affirm ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adieu Æneid affure againſt Agrigentum almoſt amongſt appear atmoſphere Bagaria beautiful believe beſt betwixt body Ceres comet confequence confiderable converfation difcovered diſtance dreffed entertainment Eryx eſteemed faid fame fays Fazzello feaſt fecond feems feen fent fentiments feven fhall fhew fhort fide fineſt fingular firſt fituation fize fmall fome fometimes foon ftill fubject fuch fuperior fuppofed fure furpriſed give greateſt heat herſelf himſelf horſes houſe increaſed iſland Italy juſt ladies laft laſt leaſt lefs likewife moft moſt mount Etna mountain muſt Naples never night nobility obferved occafion oppofite ourſelves paffed Pafqual Palermo perfon perfuaded Phalaris Pharat pleaſed pleaſure poffible prefent reafon reſpect Rofolia ſay ſcene ſeaſon ſee ſeems ſeen ſeveral ſhall ſhe ſhipping ſhould Sicilian Sicily Sirocc ſmall ſome ſpirits ſtands ſtill ſtory ſtreet ſuch temple thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thouſand told uſe viceroy whole
Popular passages
Page 12 - Pretty! in amber to observe the forms Of hairs, or straws, or dirt, or grubs, or worms ! The things, we know, are neither rich nor rare, But wonder how the devil they got there.
Page 66 - ... a nurfe with a child in her arms ; its back is exactly that of an infant } its face is that of a, wrinkled old woman, of ninety. For fome minutes...
Page 72 - hours in these niches. The bodies of the princes and first nobility are lodged in handsome chests or trunks, some of them richly adorned. These are not in the shape of coffins, but all of one width, and about a foot and a half or two feet deep.
Page 217 - And if these are in the smallest degree relaxed, or their elasticity diminished, how is it possible that their contractions and expansions can so readily obey the will as to produce these effects ? The opening of the glottis which forms the voice is extremely small, and in every variety of tone its diameter must suffer a sensible change; for the same diameter must ever produce the same tone. So wonderfully minute are its contractions and dilatations, that Dr. Keil, I think, computes that in some...
Page 12 - ... of the blind, though they might as well keep to themselves " Scott's thirty thousand copies sold," which must sadly discomfit poor Sou they's unsaleables.
Page 63 - ... no sort of resemblance in nature. He puts the head of a lion to the neck of a goose, the body of a lizard, the legs of a goat, the tail of a fox. On the back of...
Page 73 - ... excited by these venerable figures, you only consider this as a vast gallery of original portraits, drawn after the life, by the justest and most unprejudiced hand. It must be owned that the colours are rather faded : and the pencil does not appear to have been the most flattering in the world But no matter, it is the pencil of truth and not of a mercenary, who only wants to please. We were alleging too, that it might be made of very considerable utility to society; and that these dumb orators...
Page 63 - The amazing crowd of statues that surround his house, appear at a distance like a little army drawn up for its defence; but when you get amongst them, and every one assumes his true likeness, you...
Page 65 - Some of thefe are richly wrought with lapis lazuli, porphyry, and other valuable ftones ; their fine polifh is now gone, and they only appear like common marble ; the place of thefe beautiful tables he has fupplied by a new fet of his own invention, fome^ of which are not without their merit. Thefe are made of the fineft...
Page 183 - As soon as the fish have got into the hall, the fishermen, who stand sentry in their boats durjng the season, shut the outer door, which is no more than letting down a small piece of net, which effectually prevents the tunny from returning by the way they came. They then open the inner door of the hall, which leads to the second apartment, which they call the anti-chamber, and, by making a noise on the surface of the water, they soon drive the tunny fish into it.