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Roman Cameos And Florentine Mosaics, A Series Of Studies - Historical, Critical, And Artistic (1882) (Paperback)
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Roman Cameos And Florentine Mosaics, A Series Of Studies - Historical, Critical, And Artistic (1882) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
CHAPTER II. ITALY AND THE WESTERN NATIONS OF EUROPE IN THE MIDDLE
AGES?THEIR POETRY AND THEIR REAL LIFE. The period, commonly spoken
of as The Middle Ages, is bounded at either end by two great
catastrophes?the first being that irruption of the Northern
barbarians which overwhelmed the Greece-Latin civilization? the
second, the invasion of the Turks, which destroyed the Byzantine
Empire and brought Asiatic barbarism into Europe. In the interval
between these two calamities, the domestic life of Christendom was
one long term of suffering that seems like a chastisement. The old
towns and ruined monuments of Europe bear pathetic witness to the
saddened lives that must have been led by the men of former days.
We cannot see all these evidences of the care they took to hide
their goods and fortify their dwellings, without the conviction
that they must have suffered the torments of continual mistrust,
and occasional terror. Observe the labyrinths of narrow, tortuous
streets, some of them looking like cul-de-sacs but always
communicating with each other?notice the vaulted passages where
only a glimmering twilight struggles in at mid-day?the dreary
wastes by the river-sides, like that by the Ghetto, from which the
benighted wayfarer saw the corpse of Giovanni Borgia thrown into
the Tiber?mark the covered bridges connecting the palace with the
prison or citadel, like that by which Clement VII. took refuge in
the Castle of St. Angelo from the sack of Rome; note the massive
signorial strongholds, like those at Florence, fit to brave any
assault?the castles perched like eagles' nests on the summits of a
mountain-peak, like Acqua-pendente, or ranged along a wall of rock,
as at Narni, or protected by Pelasgic ramparts, as at Cortona, or
squeezed between the sides of some ravine, as a...
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