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Updated: June 22, 2025
Ep. 309. p. 845. Henry Dupuis. Grotii manes, p. 299. Niceron. Ep. Vossii, 257. p. 150. Ruari Ep. 36. p. 186. Ep. 326. p. 849. Ep. 326. p. 849. Ep. 163. p. 801. Ep. 170. p. 805. Ep. 173. p. 805. Ep. 184. p. 809. 212. p. 819. Ep. 215. p. 820. ep. 229. p. 824. & ep. 242. p. 829. Prefacio Man. Grotii Vir. Grot. p. 300. At Lutsen. Ep. Grotii, 87. p. 384. Ep. 344. p. 123. & 346. p. 124.
We found the roomy grot where the nymphs danced, and the seats where they sat the nymphs who tended the flocks of Hēlios. "As long as we had a plenty of bread and wine my comrades were satisfied and spared the cattle. But when our store of food was exhausted they roamed all over the island to see what they could get to appease their hunger.
The glen seems as if struck into the mountain's depths by one blow of an enchanter's wand; and just at the end, where the rod might have rested in its downward sweep, is the fathomless well whose overbrimming fulness gives birth to the Sorgues. We climbed up over the mossy rocks and sat down in the grot, beside the dark, still pool. It was the most absolute solitude.
When he had finished it, he had sat for a while dreamily listening to the solemn strains of the organ, which penetrated to every part of the building, and then moved by a vague curiosity to see how many men there were dwelling thus together in this lonely retreat, perched like an eagle's nest among the frozen heights of Caucasus, he had managed to find his way, guided by the sound of the music, through various long corridors and narrow twisting passages, into the cavernous grot where he now stood, feeling infinitely bored and listlessly dissatisfied.
Ep. 647. p. 951. Ep. 615. p. 944. Sent. des Theolog. de Hollande, p. 393. Menagiana, t. 2. p. 298. Vin. Grot. p. 506. Vin. Grot. p. 505. Tom. 4. p. 180. See Vie du P. Petau, Niceron, t. 37. p. 159.
He was not tall, but very strong, and well built. Grot. p. 478. Menagiana. Hist. du Socinianisme, c. 42. p. 831. Observat. Hallen. 15. t. 7. p. 341. It is a prayer addressed to Jesus Christ, and suited to the condition of a dying person who builds his hope on the Mediator. M. Le Clerc has recited it at large in the Sentimens de quelques Theologiens de Hollande, 17 Lettre, p. 397. Memoirs, p. 431.
Others they bury in a grot or den, and lay a calabash of water and some bread on his head. Others they burn in their houses, having first strangled them when at the last gasp, and this is done to caciques. Others are carried out of the house in a hammock, laying bread and water at their head, and they never return any more to see after them.
The church stands in a cave supposed to be the place where the Blessed Virgin received the joyful message of the angel, recorded in the first chapter of St. Luke's Gospel. It resembles the figure of a cross. That part of it which stands for the tree of the cross is fourteen paces long and six broad, and runs directly into the grot, having no other arch over it at top but that of the natural rock.
The candles on the Roman altars, whatever they have been made to symbolise since then, are the hereditary memorials of that fact. Throughout the North, in these isles as much as in any land, the idea of the grot was, in like wise, the idea of a church. The saint or hermit built himself a cell; dark, massive, intended to exclude light as well as weather; or took refuge in a cave.
So that night her passengers danced till late, for there was no resisting the hospitality of Hogarth, or the witchery of those vistas and arcades, grand hall and lost grot, salons and conservatories, there in the dark of the ocean, or such an enchantment of music, and fabulousness of table; the host, too, pleaded prettily for himself; and now they pardoned, and now they pouted, but always they banqueted, kissed, lost themselves in visions, were charmed, and danced.
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