Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: September 8, 2025
The whilom prima donna dropped fifty centesimi into Pompeo's palm, and he bowed to the very gunwale of the boat. "Grazie, nobilit
The 'grazie, Signore, and smile with which an italian rewards the commonest civility, would make the plainest woman appear handsome in the eyes of a foreigner." The above lines of Mr. Headley, though rather too severe ones, will, with time, benefit the american ladies more, than any thing said by foreigners: not because Mr. Headley was the first to observe it; Mr.
Ponte alle Grazie particularly interesting, mentioned by Dante. San Miniato beautiful as well as interesting; the crucifix that kissed a murderer Miss Honeychurch would remember the story. The men on the river were fishing. Every city, let me teach you, has its own smell." "Is it a very nice smell?" said Lucy, who had inherited from her mother a distaste to dirt.
Meleagro beat his forehead to see her so lovely and so unapproachable; Orsini bit his lip; but Alessandro, mindful of his nails, and not to be Sub-Prefect for nothing, went away to find the girl's father. This worthy bowed to the earth before his visitor. In what way could His Excellency be served? By the acceptance, on Matteo's part, of twenty ducats? Benissimo, e tante grazie!
"Signor Lodovico loved Bramante greatly, and rewarded him richly," writes Fra Gaspare Bugati, a Dominican friar of S. Maria delle Grazie, the Moro's favourite church, which this great architect did so much to beautify.
"State con Dio may God be with you," he said, and, with a last wave of his hand, put spurs to his black charger and rode off. The sun was setting in the western sky, and the sorrowing courtiers thought that their master had gone to Como. But he alighted before the gates of S. Maria delle Grazie, and, throwing the reins to a page, entered the church where Beatrice was buried.
Lodovico Sforza enters Lyons as a captive His imprisonment at Pierre-Encise and Lys Saint-Georges Laments over Il Moro in the popular poetry of France and Italy Efforts of the Emperor Maximilian to obtain his release Ascanio and Ermes Sforza released Lodovico removed to Loches Paolo Giovio's account of his captivity His attempt to escape Dungeon at Loches Death of Lodovico Sforza His burial in S. Maria delle Grazie.
It was now time for him to wave his hat at the approaching trio. He did not omit to do so. "She has learnt through you," and if his voice was still clerical, it was now also sincere; "let it be your care that her knowledge is profitable to her." "Grazie tante!" said Cecil, who did not like parsons. "Have you heard?" shouted Mrs. Honeychurch as she toiled up the sloping garden. "Oh, Mr.
"Mille grazie, signor!" "It is of no consequence." They arrived on the ground, and the seconds loaded the pistols. Michel asked permission of Yanski to say two words to him. "Speak!" said Varhely.
"Have another cigarette," Vere added, after a pause during which she considered him carefully. "You can't get anything more out of that one." "Grazie, Signorina." He took it eagerly. "Do tell me your name, won't you?" Vere went on. "Ruffo, Signorina." "Ruffo that's a nice name. It sounds strong and bold. And you live at Mergellina?" "Si, Signorina. But I wasn't born there.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking