| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1840 - 394 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part •of the...the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It is open to the sky, and its wide dome is lighted by the ever-changing illumination of the air. The... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1840 - 258 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part of the size,...the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It is open to the sky, and its wide dome is lighted by the everchanging illumination of the air. The clouds... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1845 - 246 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part of the size,...perfection of its proportions, as when you regard the umneasured dome of heaven, the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost, It is open to the sky, and... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1845 - 186 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part of the size,...perfection of its proportions, as when you regard the umneasured dome of heaven, the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It is open to the sky, and... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1847 - 578 pages
...The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part n{ the size, it is, as it were, the visible image of...universe ; in the perfection of its proportions, as »hen you regard the unmeasured dome of heaven, the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1874 - 584 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part of the size,...the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It is open to the sky, and its wide dome is lighted by the ever-changing illumination of the air. The... | |
| John Addington Symonds - 1878 - 424 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part of the size,...the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It is open to the sky, and its wide dome is lighted by the ever-changing illumination of the air. The... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1880 - 426 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part of the size,...the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It is open to the sky, and its wide dome is lighted by the ever-changing illumination of the air. The... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1880 - 424 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part of the size,...the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It is open to the sky, and its wide dome is lighted by the ever-changing illumination of the air. The... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1882 - 304 pages
...diabolical contrivance they call an attic. The effect of the Pantheon is totally the reverse of that of St. Peter's. Though not a fourth part of the size,...the idea of magnitude is swallowed up and lost. It is open to the sky, and its wide dome is lighted by the ever-changing illumination of the air. The... | |
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