[A Wanderer in Venice by E.V. Lucas]@TWC D-Link book
A Wanderer in Venice

CHAPTER VI
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Ruskin suggests that the best looking is a Venetian and the others the Venetians' inferiors drawn from the rest of the world.
The third has youths and women with symbols, signifying I know not what.
All are corpulent enough to suggest gluttony.

This is repeated in No.

11 on the Piazzetta side.
The fourth has various animals and no lettering.
The fifth has lions' heads and no lettering.
The sixth has virtues and vices and is repeated in the fourth on the Piazzetta.
The seventh has cranes, and is repeated in the third on the Piazzetta.
The eighth has vices again and is repeated in the seventh on the Piazzetta.

Above it are traces of a medallion over three triangles.
The ninth has virtues and is repeated in the eighth on the Piazzetta.
The tenth has symbolical figures, and is repeated in the sixth on the Piazzetta.
The eleventh has vices and virtues and is repeated in the ninth on the Piazzetta.
The twelfth has female heads and no lettering.
The thirteenth has named rulers: Octavius, Titus, Trajan, Priam, Darius, and so forth, all crowned and ruling.
The fourteenth has children and no lettering.
The fifteenth has heads, male and female, and no lettering.

Above it was once another medallion and three triangles.
The sixteenth has pelicans and no lettering.
The seventeenth and last has children with symbols and no lettering.
Above this, on the corner by the bridge, is the group representing the Sin of Ham.


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