... Amid these wilds the traveller cannot fail to notice a vast tract called the Slavini di Marco, covered with fragments of rock torn from the sides of the neighboring mountains by an earthquake, or perhaps by their own unsupported weight, and hurled... A Classical Tour Through Italy, An. MDCCCII - Strana 57autor/autoři: John Chetwode Eustace - 1817Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| John Chetwode Eustace - 1818 - 524 str.
...perhaps by their own unsupported weight and hurled down into the plains below. They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the -road...sometimes rising out of the crevices of the rocks, «ast a partial and melancholy shade amid the surrounding na'kedness and desolation. This scene of... | |
| John Chetwode Eustace - 1818 - 526 str.
...and cypresses scattered in the intervals, or sometimes rising out of the crevices of the rocks, jcast a partial and melancholy shade amid the surrounding...of ruin seems to have made a deep impression upon ithe wild imagination of Dante, as he has introduced it into the twelfth canto of the Inferno , ia... | |
| John Chetwode Eustace - 1837 - 426 str.
...spread over the whole valley, and ID some places contract the road to a very narrow space. A lew fin and cypresses scattered in the intervals, or sometimes...impression upon the wild imagination of Dante, as be has introduced it into the twelfth canto of the Inferno, in order to give the reader an adequate... | |
| Dante Alighieri - 1867 - 438 str.
...perhaps by their own unsupported weight, and hurled down into the plains below. They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the road...deep impression upon the wild imagination of Dante, ts he has introduced it into the twelfth canto of the Inferno, in order to give the reader an adequate... | |
| Dante Alighieri - 1867 - 782 str.
...perhaps by their own unsupported weight, and hurled down into the plains below. They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the road...rising out of the crevices of the rocks, cast a partial und melancholy shade amid the surrounding nakedness and desolation. This scene of ruin seems to have... | |
| Dante Alighieri - 1867 - 454 str.
...perhaps by their own unsupported weight, and hurled down into the plains below. They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the road...scattered in the intervals, or sometimes rising out of tfre crevices of the rocks, cast a partial and melancholy shade amid the surrounding nakedness and... | |
| William Adolphus Wheeler - 1881 - 602 str.
...perhaps by theirown unsupported weight, and hurled down into the plains below. They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the road to a very narrow space." jKustace, Such as that ruin is wlilch in the flank Smote. ' n thi-* side of Trent, the Adipe, Eillit... | |
| William Warren Vernon - 1894 - 718 str.
...perhaps by their own unsupported weight, and hurled down into the plains below. They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the road...partial and melancholy shade amid the surrounding desolation. This scene of ruin seems to have made a deep impression upon the wild imagination of Dante,... | |
| Dante Alighieri - 1895 - 464 str.
...perhaps by their own unsupported weight, and hurled down into the plains below- They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the road...made a deep impression upon the wild imagination of Bante, as he has introduced it into the twelfth canto of the Inferno, in order to give the reader an... | |
| Dante Alighieri - 1895 - 870 str.
...perhaps by their own unsupported weight, and hurled down into the plains below. They spread over the whole valley, and in some places contract the road...nakedness and desolation. This scene of ruin seems to have mate a deep impression upon the wild imagination of Dante, as he has introduced it into the twelfth... | |
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