On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
were * in full bloom . We this fa y accomplished about forty ^ seven English miles , and did not reach Sarzana till nearly eight o ' clock at night . ****** * * * * * # 26 th . At Pisa . This is a well-built town ; and some of its streets ,
particularly the Quai along the north side of the Arno , are very fine ; but they have a sad , deserted appearance ; for this city , which is said to have had at one time 150 , 000 inhabitants , has now only 18 , 000 , —a melancholy instance of fallen grandeur . It possesses several public buildings , which are well worth seeing . The cathedral is celebrated for its pillars of granite and marble , and for its doors of brass . At the time when 1 entered it , there was
a friar in the pulpit , declaiming in a style which very much resembled that of the young priest whom I had heard at Genoa , but still more vehemently . Though I do not profess to be much of an Italian scholar , I understood a considerable part of what he said , and had no difficulty in discovering that he was preaching on the wickedness of those who are a stumbling-block to their neighbours— " Woe unto him by whom the offence cometh . " In the peroration , in recapitulating the modes of offence , he exclaimed in a very
loud voice , " Alfuoco tutti i libri infami /"—( To the fire with all infamous books !) But it is a great question , about which Christians are by no means agreed , what are libri infami ; and I have no doubt that this reverend father would consign to the flames many which I should regard as most orthodox and instructive . At the conclusion of the service , having first
seen the archbishop handed with much pomp into his old-fashioned state carriage , and then bestowing his benediction on the people as he drove off , I repaired to the Campo Santo , the most splendid and the most classical of cemeteries . It is a vast rectangle , surrounded by light and elegant Gothic arcades of white marble , and the space within them paved with the same .
Here rest the ashes of all the princes and poets , of all the warriors , statesmen , and philosophers , by whom Pisa was distinguished in the brilliant period of her history ; and the spot is rendered still dearer to the man of taste and literature by being made the receptacle of an immense collection of relics of the antique . Of these there are several in excellent preservation . I observed a bust of Junius Brutus , and another of Adrian , as perfect
as if they were just come from the hands of the artist . Among the modern monuments is an exquisite piece of sculpture to the memory of Bartolomeo Chesi , and another , erected to himself during his life-time , by Filippo Decio . After reciting his own merits , he concludes by saying , that he had bad this tomb constructed for himself , because he feared that posterity would not do it for him— " de morte cogitans , hoc sepulchrum sibi fabricari curavit , ne posteris suis crederct" This is modesty with a witness ! The CnMnn Santo forms the northern side of the cathedral close : the Baptistery
stands opposite the western end , and the Campanile Torlo opposite the northeast corner . This last is a circular tower of eight stories , and nearly 190 feet in height ; and its great peculiarity is , that it declines 15 feet out of the perpendicular , from which circumstance it derives its name , which signifies « the crooked or leaning tower . ' How it has come into this position has been a subject of much discussion , some affirming that it was originall y built as it now appears ; others , with more probability , that it was built upright , but that , either from an earthquake , or the natural looseness of the soil , it has acquired its present inclination . The cicerone who shewed me the Campo Santo , gave it as his decided opinion that the architect originally built it straight , but that out of spite he so constructed the foundation , that it was sure to give way . However this be , in that precise position the tower
Untitled Article
Journal of a Tour on the Continent . 681
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1828, page 681, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2565/page/25/
-