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Renovation Of The City. - Conclusion Of The   Whole Work.   
   In the last days of Pope Eugenius the Fourth, ^* two   of his   
   servants, the learned Poggius ^1 and a friend, ascended the   Capitoline hill; reposed themselves among the ruins of   columns and temples; and viewed from that commanding spot   the wide and various prospect of desolation. ^2 The place and   the object gave ample scope for moralizing on the vicissitudes   of fortune, which spares neither man nor the proudest of his   works, which buries empires and cities in a common grave;   and it was agreed, that in proportion to her former greatness,   the fall of Rome was the more awful and deplorable. "Her   primeval state, such as she might appear in a remote age,   when Evander entertained the stranger of Troy, ^3 has been   delineated by the fancy of Virgil. This Tarpeian rock was then a savage and solitary thicket: in the time of the poet, it was   crowned with the golden roofs of a temple; the temple is   overthrown, the gold has been pillaged, the wheel of fortune   has accomplished her revolution, and the sacred ground is   again disfigured with thorns and brambles. The hill of the   Capitol, on which we sit, was formerly the head of the Roman empire, the citadel of the earth, the terror of kings; illustrated   by the footsteps of so many triumphs, enriched with the spoils   and tributes of so many nations. This spectacle of the world,   how is it fallen! how changed! how defaced! The path of victory   is obliterated by vines, and the benches of the senators are   concealed by a dunghill. Cast your eyes on the Palatine hill,   and seek among the shapeless and enormous fragments the   marble theatre, the obelisks, the colossal statues, the porticos   of

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