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قراءة كتاب Florence and Northern Tuscany with Genoa With Sixteen Illustrations in Colour by William Parkinson and Sixteen Other Illustrations, Second Edition

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‏اللغة: English
Florence and Northern Tuscany with Genoa
With Sixteen Illustrations in Colour by William Parkinson and Sixteen Other Illustrations, Second Edition

Florence and Northern Tuscany with Genoa With Sixteen Illustrations in Colour by William Parkinson and Sixteen Other Illustrations, Second Edition

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">VIEW FROM THE UFFIZI

  • ON THE ROAD
  • BADIA A SETTIMO
  • PONTE VECCHIO
  • LOGGIA DE' LANZI
  • PIAZZA DEL DUOMO
  • OR SAN MICHELE
  • THE FLOWER MARKET, FLORENCE
  • CHIOSTRO DI S. MARCO
  • S. MARIA NOVELLA
  • OGNISSANTI
  • VIA GUICCIARDINI
  • PONTE VECCHIO
  • THE BOBOLI GARDENS
  • COSTA DI S. GIORGIO
  • OUTSIDE THE GATE
  • IN MONOTONE

    A MAP OF THE CITIES OF NORTHERN TUSCANY

    A MAP OF THE CITIES OF NORTHERN TUSCANY


    I. GENOA

    I

    The traveller who on his way to Italy passes along the Riviera di Ponente, through Marseilles, Nice, and Mentone to Ventimiglia, or crossing the Alps touches Italian soil, though scarcely Italy indeed, at Turin, on coming to Genoa finds himself really at last in the South, the true South, of which Genoa la Superba is the gate, her narrow streets, the various life of her port, her picturesque colour and dirt, her immense palaces of precious marbles, her oranges and pomegranates and lemons, her armsful of children, and above all the sun, which lends an eternal gladness to all these characteristic or delightful things, telling him at once that the North is far behind, that even Cisalpine Gaul is crossed and done with, and that here at last by the waves of that old and great sea is the true Italy, that beloved and ancient land to which we owe almost everything that is precious and valuable in our lives, and in which still, if we be young, we may find all our dreams. What to us are the weary miles of Eastern France if we come by road, the dreadful tunnels full of despair and filth if we come by rail, now that we have at last returned to her, or best of all, perhaps, found her for the first time in the spring at twenty-one or so, like a fair woman forlorn upon the mountains, the Ariadne of our race who placed in our hand the golden thread that led us out of the cavern of the savage to

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