The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 14, No. 399, Supplementary Number by Various
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page 7 of 43 (16%)
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beyond the Adige, one of the great works of Paolo Veronese, which do so
much honour to himself and to his native city, has been restored, after having been carried to Paris. Indeed, there is not one of the many churches of Verona which is not interesting on account of its antiquity, the works of art contained in it, or its story; and the public squares and lordly palaces, and the towers that once served as watch-towers to the proud nobles who guarded them, all force the spectator to look back with wonder and admiration to the times when a sentiment of political independence could produce such monuments of glory, even in the midst of war and in a petty state. * * * * * The preceding extract has occupied so much space, that we can give little more than an enumeration of the other contents of the _Gem_. Among the prose, we have been most pleased with Walter Errick, a touching tale, by the Hon. Mrs. Norton, (author of Sorrows of Rosalie;) and the Mining Curate, by Mr. Carne; both of which, however, terminate somewhat too gloomily. Next is the Man and the Lioness, by Lord Nugent--not a "Lioness" of Exeter 'Change, but a cook and housekeeper to a country gentleman, by all around called _the Lioness_ a name, "in the strictest sense, _de guerre_." Knowing the noble author's _forte_ in gastronomy, we are almost induced to think the cook, or _Lioness_ a portrait from life. With respect to the name, his lordship observes "it might have had some reference to those ample and bushy ringlets, of a colour which by the friends of the wearer, is generally called bright auburn, and which, on those high days when Mrs. Grace was wont to stalk forth from her solitude, swelled around a sanguine countenance, in volume, in texture, and in hue, not unlike the mane of that awful animal." To our view, Mrs. Grace is a sort of Mrs. |
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