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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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" Squares" or shrubberies , a feature peculiar to Britain , but it lias not got ^ a piazza or ) place , such as the cities of the continent can boast . ' Lacking thi&it lacks one of the finest
fe&tttres of a great city . And it is not merely as an area for the display of architecture that such a place is wanted ; it is a noble sight in itself . The traveller from the
open squares of Madnd or Paris ; from the classic , mouldering Eternal City , shrunken within its walls , with the majestic ruins standing in the
gap ; from its Piazza di Sp&gna , and the striking Sealinata , or the palace-bound expanse of the Piazza Navona ; from the cheerful breadth of
Santa Maria Maggiore , with its yellow gravel , in Florence the Fair , or the smooth stone floor of the Piazza del Grandticja , * finds himself in London perpetually moving straight forward in a bounded line ; and longs in vain for some
open space to breathe his eyes in . The nearest approach we have to such a place is in Gray ' s Inn New Square ; but tllfere is a moral monotony of the driest kind in knowing that it is surrounded by
rid-* In this square , standing in one of the arches of the Loggia , "is Benrenuto Cell 1111 * 3 famous and most graceful statue of Perseus , the foot of which coat , him $ o much pairt and rage in the casting . John of Bologna ' s Rape of the Sabfrte * , in living marble , white as a lily , stands in another : arch ^ with & high relief-on'ite pedestal * . Within the Loggia are ieveral antiques . In the middle of , the epaoe stands a fine fountain / with statues about it . Near it Js an equestrian status of Cosmo the Great , not Unlike the statue of Charles I . in style , but ! much Nobler ; with a bronze inscription ; and three ftigh reliefs of his histoiy on the pedestali At th 0 M fffiP ? ^ JPJ ? ^¦ K Wt ' ¦ H * e g . ^* l ^ ¦ ¦ fei !^ W ^ **• »*) i <**«** " «• Jt Michelangelo and Bandinelli . Ana all these have remained sacred to the Florentines , though trusted to them without ^ uard br' protection , inviolate to hand or foot ; for the inhabitants of Firenzo la Bella have learnt respect from their familiarity with the precious monuments of art *
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thing bufr lawyers , and th ^ unornate uniformity of $ he | r dweliiiigs . it'i ^ -p ^ id ^ ^ p thoroughfare for cjarriag ^ i atill lies , out 6 f tKe way ' foV tfe majoirity of f ^ t-pa ^ seiigei « The sathe reriiarks apj ^^ to the open space in the jTemjile . The space in front 6 $
W&afcmmster Hall is tin ^ vin ( neglected , and choked ^ jrp with cabs and coachfesf , ancl more like a bit of . W $ t $ ground . ^
Now there is Twifelgatr Square not yet enclosed ;[ itis in a central part , and commuhicjites with matiy streeis ; and what could be better tliah
to make it supply th ^< chief defect remaining ii ^ thie elements of a great city ? Thfere is to be a fountain . Gopdt ; a fountain is ai handsome obj ec t . But let it be of a good design , and copiotis in its
streams ; not like the miserable little squirtinjg things occasionally found in , the obscure recesses of London . Let it be a noble building : of
moving waters , fit to stand in such a place , and subserye to the commemoration of Britain's power and one of her greatest heroes . But above all , let ttiie place be kej 31 open ; a shiruti-
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Tirqfalgdr Square . & 4 I
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No . 382—IV . S
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 1, 1837, page 241, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1836/page/17/
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