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From: Gaeta Re <mu...@to...> - 2010-03-28 10:14:34
|
Ambs into a kind of valley formed by the great court, with its wonderful portico and belt of columns, it is difficult to conceive a more imposing scene. The walls on all sides were covered with gigantic figures, quite wonderful to behold in their serene ugliness; but awakening no more human sympathy than the singular figures we saw on the Chinese-patterned plate stuck over the doorway in Nubia. The exaggeration that is usually indulged in with reference to Egyptian art is such, that if we were to attempt to describe these sculptured ornaments according to our own impressions, we should run the risk of being accused of caricature. We do not mean on this temple only, but on all the temples of Egypt. Now and then a face of beautiful expression, though still with heavy features, is met with; but in general both countenance and figure are flat, out of proportion, and stiff in drawing, whilst the highest effort of colouring consists of one uniform layer, without tints or gradation. Perhaps amidst the many thousand subjects found in tombs and temples |
From: Zuver <da...@ci...> - 2009-12-29 08:44:49
|
So that you may be interested? Again and again did California and I prance down that reach to the little bay, each with a salmon in tow, and land him in the shallows. Then Portland took my rod and caught some ten-pounders, and my spoon was carried away by an unknown leviathan. Each fish, for the merits of the three that had died so gamely, was hastily hooked on the balance and flung back. Portland recorded the weight in a pocket-book, for he was a real-estate man. Each fish fought for all he was worth, and none more savagely than the smallest, a game little six-pounder. At the end of six hours we added up the list. Read it. Total: Sixteen fish; aggregate weight, one hundred and forty pounds. The score in detail runs something like this--it is only interesting to those concerned: fifteen, eleven and a half, twelve, ten, nine and three quarters, eight, and so forth; as I have said, nothing under six pounds, and thr |
From: Gururaja N M. <nmg...@in...> - 2009-12-26 22:42:25
|
I will be out of the office starting 21/12/2009 and will not return until 28/12/2009. Please conatct Venu B Reddy for any urgent issues |
From: Griep R. <unf...@dr...> - 2009-12-26 19:17:51
|
could not stick down into the water and then mounted their sea horses again and rode away. They were delighted to find that now the logs behaved much better, and they grew so bold that they ventured out into deeper water. They had made a wonderful plaything. All the morning they rode the logs, and when the tide began to come in, they had the best time of all. It picked up the little raft and floated the children, screaming with joy, far up the beach on a long, low, rolling wave. Limberleg had been so busy making a frame of sticks to stretch the deer-skin on that she had paid no attention to the Twins. But when she heard their screams, she came to the door of the cave and looked out on the |
From: Sikkila S. <rea...@tw...> - 2009-12-06 19:12:42
|
Lated to these immediate forerunners than to the piece of which it is the titular successor. The discovery which I recently was fortunate enough to make of a common immediate source of the two Byron plays and of _The Revenge_ accentuates the connection between them, and at the same time throws fresh light on the problem of the _provenance_ of the second D'Ambois drama. In his scholarly monograph _Quellen Studien zu den Dramen George Chapmans, Massingers, und Fords_ (1897), E. Koeppel showed that the three connected plays were based upon materials taken from Jean de Serres's _Inventaire General de l'Histoire de France_ (1603), Pierre Matthieu's _Histoire de France durant Sept Annees de Paix du Regne de Henri IV_ (1605), and P. V. Cayet's _Chronologie Septenaire de l'Histoire de la Paix entre les Roys de France et d'Espagne_ (1605). The picture suggested by Koeppel's treatise was of Chapman collating a number of contemporary French historical works, and choosing from each of them such portions as suited his dramatic purposes. But this conception, as I have shown in the _Athenaeum_ for Jan. 10, 1903, p. 51, must now be abandoned. Chapman did not go to the French originals at all, but to a more easily accessible source, wherein the task of selection and rearrangement had already been in large measure performed. In 1607 the printer, George Eld, published a handsome folio, of which the British Museum possesses a fine copy (c. 66, b. 14), originally the property of Prince Henry, eldest son of James I. Its title is: "_A General Inventorie of the Historie of France, from the beginning of that Monarchie, unto the Treatie of Vervins, in the Yeare 1598. Written by Jhon de Serr |
From: Lykam <cog...@ae...> - 2009-09-03 11:11:33
|
T were a pity to do you hurt, for I feel you are passing feeble. Ah, said Sir Gawaine, gentle knight, ye say the word that I shou |
From: Kockler S. <pa...@si...> - 2009-09-02 17:39:15
|
P sea-worms, observed Stumps's foot, and licked his lips, no doubt. He sank immediately for much the same reason that little boys retire to take a race before a leap. Turning on his back, according to custom, he went at the foot like a submarine thunderbolt. Now, it was at that precise moment that Robin Wright snored, as aforesaid. The snore awoke Stumps, who had another sprawl, and drew up his leg gently--oh, how gently compared with what he would have done had he known what you know, reader! Nevertheless, the action was in time, else would he have had, for the rest of his life, a better title than heretofore to his nickname. As it was, the nose and lips of the slimy monster struck the youth's foot and slid up the side of his leg. Hideous wa |
From: Bridgeford F. <va...@ma...> - 2009-08-30 20:13:11
|
Tep," said Bertha. "The man's tread behind you!" "She is not to be deceived," observed the Carrier, laughing. "Come along, sir. You'll be welcome, never fear!" He spoke in a loud tone; and, as he spoke, the deaf old gentleman entered. "He's not so much a stranger that you haven't seen him once, Caleb," said the Carrier. "You'll give him house room till we go?" "Oh, surely, John, and take it as an honour!" "He's t |
From: Sprehe <hau...@ja...> - 2009-08-24 06:41:49
|
Ang. Anyway--I'll give her credit for that--she doesn't hunt with the hounds and run with the hare. If it's the prospect of sharing a title with me, a rotter would have eaten the leek. Yes, Elizabeth is class." CHAPTER XVIII Dewan Sewlal was in a shiver of apprehension over the killing of the two sepoys; there would be trouble over this if the Resident came to know of it. But Hunsa had assured him that the soldiers and their saddles had been buried in the pit with the others, and that nobody but the decoits knew of their a |
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From: Gururaja N M. <nmg...@in...> - 2009-06-16 14:38:01
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I will be out of the office starting 12/06/2009 and will not return until 17/06/2009. Please conatct Tamilselvan Narayanaswamy for any urgent issues |
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From: Gururaja N M. <nmg...@in...> - 2009-05-21 22:34:58
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I will be out of the office starting 21/05/2009 and will not return until 25/05/2009. |