The Wonders of Pompeii
The Wonders of Pompeii
Book Excerpt
Senate hesitated a long time before they allowed the city to be rebuilt
and the deserted district to be re-peopled. The Pompeians at last
returned; but the decurions wished to make the restoration of the place
a complete rejuvenation. The columns of the Forum speedily reappeared,
but with capitals in the fashion of the day; the Corinthian-Roman order,
adopted almost everywhere, changed the style of the monuments; the old
shafts covered with stucco were patched up for the new topwork they were
to receive, and the Oscan inscriptions disappeared. From all this there
sprang great blunders in an artistic point of view, but a uniformity
and consistency that please those who are fond of monuments and cities
of one continuous derivation. Taste loses, but harmony gains thereby,
and you pass in review a collective totality of edifices that bear their
age upon their fronts, and give a very exact and vivid idea of what a
municeps a Roman colony must have been in the time of Vespasian.
They went to work, then,
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The writing here is fresher than any modern travel book, even though this gem was written in 1871. Monnier's enthusiasm for Pompeii comes through so clearly, you'll feel you're sitting next to him, marveling at the ruins.
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