But For These
Fine Roman Remains And For Its Name, Orange Is A
Perfectly Featureless Little Town; Without The Rhone -
Which, As I Have Mentioned, Is Several Miles Distant -
To Help It To A Physiognomy.
It seems one of the
oddest things that this obscure French borough -
obscure, I mean, in our modern era,
For the Gallo-
Roman Arausio must have been, judging it by its
arches and theatre, a place of some importance -
should have given its name to the heirs apparent of
the throne of Holland,and been borne by a king of
England who had sovereign rights over it. During
the Middle Ages it formed part of an independent
principality; but in 1531 it fell, by the marriage of
one of its princesses, who had inherited it, into the
family of Nassau. I read in my indispensable Mur-
ray that it was made over to France by the treaty of
Utrecht. The arch of triumph, which stands a little
way out of the town, is rather a pretty than an im-
posing vestige of the Romans. If it had greater purity
of style, one might say of it that it belonged to the
same family of monuments as the Maison Carree at
Nimes. It has three passages, - the middle much
higher than the others, - and a very elevated attic.
The vaults of the passages are richly sculptured, and
the whole monument is covered with friezes and
military trophies. This sculpture is rather mixed;
much of it is broken and defaced, and the rest seemed
to me ugly, though its workmanship is praised.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 251 of 276
Words from 68720 to 68984
of 75796