. A summer voyage on the river Saône. With a hundred and forty-eight illustrations. posing on an open book with the legend non nisi grandiacanto I regret to say that Stephen is able to read Pickwickin this imposing presence, instead of Paradise Lost. I have discovered who has given that artistic touch whichpleased me in this house. It is the mechanic. He showed mea reduced cast of the frieze of the Parthenon, and a marvellouscopy in pen and ink of an etching by Boissieu, a deceptive pieceof imitation, but a waste of talent and time. LETTER LVI. St. Rambert,September igt/i, Evening. A The He Ba
. A summer voyage on the river Saône. With a hundred and forty-eight illustrations. posing on an open book with the legend non nisi grandiacanto I regret to say that Stephen is able to read Pickwickin this imposing presence, instead of Paradise Lost. I have discovered who has given that artistic touch whichpleased me in this house. It is the mechanic. He showed mea reduced cast of the frieze of the Parthenon, and a marvellouscopy in pen and ink of an etching by Boissieu, a deceptive pieceof imitation, but a waste of talent and time. LETTER LVI. St. Rambert,September igt/i, Evening. A The He Barbe is six hundred yards long with a width of abouta hundred and forty. The southern end is arranged as a publicpromenade easily accessible from both banks of the Saone by asuspension bridge. The buildings begin about the middle of theisland and continue to the northern extremity, where there is abarrack occupied by one or two companies of soldiers. Thesouthern part of the island has no character except that givenby its fine trees ; the northern extremity is rocky and rises to a. to» 3. 1*1 ssar > In ? j f 1! tj —- ???,*
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidsummervoyageonri00hame