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Venice
A Traveller's Reader
Views of the city of lagoons and gondolas
Henry James was passionate: "You desire to embrace it, to caress it, to possess it...", whereas Mark Twain found St Mark's "so ugly...Propped on its long row of thick-legged columns, its back knobbed with domes, it seems like a vast, warty bug taking a mediaeval walk."
Reactions to Venice have been, throughout the ages, astonishingly different. John Julius Norwich has produced a dazzling anthology from the writings of Byron, Goethe, Wagner, Casanova, Jan Morris, Robert Browning, and Horace Walpole, among many others.
From the days of the sixth century, when lagoon-dwellers lived "like sea-birds" in huts built on heaps of osiers, to the Venice of eighteenth-century revellers and nineteenth-century art lovers - the city''s many different guises are all portrayed as its inhabitants and visitors saw them.