With slow, reluctant, amorous delay," he leaves this paradise of taste ; and, although he has learned to prize more highly than ever the political and religious privileges of his own free land, still, when he calls to mind the proud Memories which have... Rome: as Seen by a New-Yorker in 1843-4 - الصفحة 205بواسطة William Mitchell Gillespie - 1845 - عدد الصفحات: 216عرض كامل - لمحة عن هذا الكتاب
| 1846 - عدد الصفحات: 722
...elements and their effects, which petvaAes «5 ' With slow, reluctant, amorous delay,' he leaves the paradise of taste, and, although he has learned to...privileges of his own free land, still, when he calls i to mind the proud memories which have been inherited by the Romans — the bounties lavished by nature... | |
| Martin John Spalding - 1855 - عدد الصفحات: 698
...Pag* 153. effects, which pervades all ranks. ' With slow, reluctant, amorous delay,' he leaves the paradise of taste, and, although he has learned to...and what they may again be, and, beyond, all doubt, eventually will be — he is tempted to exclaim, in imitation of Alexander to Diogenes : ' If I were... | |
| Martin John Spalding - 1894 - عدد الصفحات: 454
...Pago I68. effects, which pervades all ranks. ' With slow, reluctant, amorous delay,' he leaves the paradise of taste, and, although he has learned to...and what they may again be, and, beyond, all doubt, eventually will be — he is tempted to exclaim, in imitation of Alexander to Diogenes : ' If I were... | |
| William L. Vance - 1989 - عدد الصفحات: 538
...and grace" of their land, their language, and their artistic heritage. Gillespie has learned in Rome "to prize more highly than ever the political and religious privileges of his own free land," yet when he recalls what the Romans have been, "and what they may again be, and, beyond all doubt,... | |
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