United States or Guernsey ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


M. Zuliani, brother to the Duchess of Fiano, gave me the same advice, and promised to use all his interest in my behalf. With the idea of following this counsel I decided to set up my abode at Trieste, where M. Zaguri told me he had an intimate friend to whom he would give me a letter of introduction.

The next day as I was getting up from dinner the cardinal told me that M. Zuliani had written about me to the ambassador, who would be delighted to make my acquaintance, and when I went I had an excellent reception from him. The Chevalier Erizzo, who is still alive, was a man of great intelligence, common sense, and oratorical power.

M. Zuliani, brother to the Duchess of Fiano, gave me the same advice, and promised to use all his interest in my behalf. With the idea of following this counsel I decided to set up my abode at Trieste, where M. Zaguri told me he had an intimate friend to whom he would give me a letter of introduction.

The other was addressed to the Duchess of Fiano, by her brother M. Zuliani. I saw that I should be free of all the best houses, and I promised myself the pleasure of an early visit to Cardinal Bernis. I did not hire either a carriage or a servant. At Rome both these articles are procurable at a moment's notice. My first call was on the Duchess of Fiano.

B. MALON, Le Socialisme Integral, 2 vol., Paris, 1892. ZULIANI, Il privilegio della salute, Milan, 1893. LETOURNEAU, Passé, présent et avenir du travail, in Revue mensuelle de l'école d'anthropologie, Paris, June 15, 1894. "Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp," is the way Robert Browning expresses this in "Andrea Del Sarto." Translator. Tr.

His Dialogues were printed in Venice by Zuliani in 1593, under the title Dialoghi piacevolissimi di Nicolo Franco da Benevento; and there is a French translation, made by Gabriel Chapins, published at Lyons in 1579, entitled Dix plaisans Dialogues du sieur Nicolo Franco.

The next day as I was getting up from dinner the cardinal told me that M. Zuliani had written about me to the ambassador, who would be delighted to make my acquaintance, and when I went I had an excellent reception from him. The Chevalier Erizzo, who is still alive, was a man of great intelligence, common sense, and oratorical power.

The other was addressed to the Duchess of Fiano, by her brother M. Zuliani. I saw that I should be free of all the best houses, and I promised myself the pleasure of an early visit to Cardinal Bernis. I did not hire either a carriage or a servant. At Rome both these articles are procurable at a moment's notice. My first call was on the Duchess of Fiano.