Letters Of A Traveller, By William Cullen Bryant















































































































 -  The simplicity of nature, so far as can be
done, is destroyed; there is no fine sweep of forest, no - Page 22
Letters Of A Traveller, By William Cullen Bryant - Page 22 of 396 - First - Home

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The Simplicity Of Nature, So Far As Can Be Done, Is Destroyed; There Is No Fine Sweep Of Forest, No Broad Expanse Of Meadow Or Pasture Ground, No Ancient And Towering Trees Clustered About The Villas, No Rows Of Natural Shrubbery Following The Course Of The Brooks And Rivers.

The streams, which are often but the beds of torrents dry during the summer, are confined in straight channels

By stone walls and embankments; the slopes are broken up and disfigured by terraces; and the trees are kept down by constant pruning and lopping, until half way up the sides of the Appenines, where the limit of cultivation is reached, and thence to the summit is a barren steep of rock, without herbage or soil. The grander features of the landscape, however, are fortunately beyond the power of man to injure; the lofty mountain-summits, bare precipices cleft with chasms, and pinnacles of rock piercing the sky, betokening, far more than any thing I have seen elsewhere, a breaking up of the crust of the globe in some early period of its existence. I am told that in May and June the country is much more beautiful than at present, and that owing to a drought it now appears under a particular disadvantage.

The Academy of the Fine Arts has had its exhibition since I arrived. In its rooms, which were gratuitously open to the public, I found a large crowd of gazers at the pictures and statues. Many had come to look at some work ordered by an acquaintance; others made the place a morning lounge. In the collection were some landscapes by Morghen, the son of the celebrated engraver, very fresh and clear; a few pieces sent by Bezzoli, one of the most eminent Italian painters of his time; a statue of Galileo, not without merit, by Costoli, for there is always a Galileo or two, I believe, at every exhibition of the kind in Florence; portraits good, bad, and indifferent, in great abundance, and many square feet of canvas spoiled by attempts at historical painting.

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