Transactions. Session Sixth, 1855-56W.H. Lizars, 1856 - 201 pages |
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Page 13
... pillars , it is only when all other things are equal that we can infer that the better hearing in the one or the other depends upon the presence or the absence of pillars ; and while we are so imperfectly acquainted with the laws 13.
... pillars , it is only when all other things are equal that we can infer that the better hearing in the one or the other depends upon the presence or the absence of pillars ; and while we are so imperfectly acquainted with the laws 13.
Page 14
... equal or unequal . If indeed the experi- ments amounted to this , that the committee visited a great number of churches , all accommodating about the same number of hearers , and found that they heard as distinctly in those with as in ...
... equal or unequal . If indeed the experi- ments amounted to this , that the committee visited a great number of churches , all accommodating about the same number of hearers , and found that they heard as distinctly in those with as in ...
Page 32
... equal amount of tasteful decoration . Indeed nothing is more remarkable than the genius of the French archi- tects in ornamental design . Their drawing is always perfect , and the workmanship often equally so . A careful- ness of finish ...
... equal amount of tasteful decoration . Indeed nothing is more remarkable than the genius of the French archi- tects in ornamental design . Their drawing is always perfect , and the workmanship often equally so . A careful- ness of finish ...
Page 43
... equal to that of Princes Street from Charlotte Square to Hanover Street , the breadth being equal to the space from Princes Street to the centre of the garden between Queen Street and Heriot Row . Whether we consider the consummate ...
... equal to that of Princes Street from Charlotte Square to Hanover Street , the breadth being equal to the space from Princes Street to the centre of the garden between Queen Street and Heriot Row . Whether we consider the consummate ...
Page 50
... equal share of eminence in the three fine arts : in painting she had her Albert Dürer , in sculpture her Adam Kraft , and if the names connected with the earlier period of her architecture have not been handed down to us , it is but the ...
... equal share of eminence in the three fine arts : in painting she had her Albert Dürer , in sculpture her Adam Kraft , and if the names connected with the earlier period of her architecture have not been handed down to us , it is but the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Kraft aisles Ammianus Marcellinus ancient appear arches architect ARCHITECTURAL INSTITUTE arrangement Beams beautiful building built capital carved centre century chapel choir church Circus Circus Maximus colour columns consideration constructive corbels cornice court cross section Cwts decoration DEFLECTION Divisions of Load Domitian door Dürer edifices Edinburgh Egypt Egyptian Emperor erected experiments façade feeling feet 6 inches figures flanges front gable galleries garden genius Germany Gothic Gothic Architecture granite ground height Heliopolis hieroglyphics houses imitation interior masses ments modern monuments mouldings nave neutral axis Nuremberg obelisk occupied oriels ornament painted palms pediments pillars Pius VI placed Plate Pliny Pointed style proportions purpose pyramidion Pyramids remarkable represented Roman Rome roof sarcophagus sculptures sectional area shaft side Simbul stone storey street strength strongest section Syene taste temple Thebes tion tomb towers town turrets upper walls whole xxxvi
Popular passages
Page 162 - The gods confound the man who first found out How to distinguish hours — confound him, too Who in this place set up a sun-dial, To cut and hack my days so wretchedly Into small pieces!
Page 35 - You ascend a flight of oak stairs (carefully, for the porter-husband is polishing his way down from the top, vigorously) by the help of a banister supported by bronzed and gilt rails. Your friend's door opened, admits you to a little hall, in which, when it is shut after you, you feel as much isolated from the world as if you were standing on the mat of the private residence of the honourable Deputy of St. Vitus's. Backlane, near Camber•well Green. Little drawing-rooms, diningroom, study, nursery,...
Page 56 - Ocean, the first thing which strikes us is, that, the north-east and south-east monsoons, which are found the one on the north and the other on...
Page 34 - At the end of a pretty tesselated passage beside the shop, there is, at the foot of the stairs, a snug little glass case or, lodge. Looking in, you •will usually see a woman in a clean cap knitting a stocking ; a gilt pendule is certain to be ticking on the chimney-piece ; and a clean bed ensconced in an alcove. This woman's husband — always dressed, in the morning, in a cap and a coarse green apron — is one of the trustworthy and serviceable class of domestic hall-keepers, or porters, for...
Page 35 - Little drawing-rooms, dining-room, study, nursery, bed-rooms, kitchen, (and a back-stair leading to it, for servants and tradesmen,) all furnished with an amount of sensible taste highly suggestive to all the Deputies in all Camberwell. And all — horrid idea ! — over a shop. Yet your friend may be an English baronet or a foreign count, with thousands a year, and with some capital horses in a stable close by.
Page 34 - ... trustworthy and serviceable class of domestic hall-keepers, or porters, for which Paris is remarkable. He polishes the stairs, polishes the banisters, polishes every thing he can lay his hands upon, and has generally polished his own manners too. He is shrewd, steady, observant, and can keep his own counsel withal. Every floor pays him a small fixed monthly stipend ; and he is the guardian genius of the whole house. You ask his wife on which floor your friend lives, and she, the portress on duty,...
Page 164 - The beneficent Being who presides over reproduction, who enjoys heavenly dominion and fourfold power, commits the atmosphere by means of Mophtha, the beneficent principle of atmospheric humidity, unto Ammon, most powerful over the lower parts of the world, who by means of an image and appropriate ceremonies, is drawn to the exercising of his power.
Page 162 - I had aught to eat. But nowadays why, even when I have, I can't fall to, unless the sun gives leave. The town's so full of these confounded dials, The greatest part of its inhabitants Shrunk up with hunger, creep along the streets.
Page 89 - ... before we proceed to treat of them, it will be proper to make a few remarks on the distinction between mere house-building, and that high character of composition in the Grecian and Roman orders which is properly styled Architecture ; for though we have now many nobly architectural houses, we are much in danger of having our public edifices debased, by a consideration of what is convenient as a house, rather than what is correct as an architectural design.
Page 24 - Mr. Denison gives the clearest and most rational account of the merits and demerits of all the distinct styles of English Architecture of any which I have yet met with."— Sishop Terrofi Address.