J.M.W.Turner: In Venice

Bridge of Sighs ,Venice
"I stood at Venice on the Bridge of Sighs;
A palace and a prison on each an’
BYRON, Childe Harold.
That is to say, a palace on one hand and a prison on the other. The palace is the Doge’s palace, the prison the criminal
prison. The title of the Bridge of Sighs has something in it suggestive of secret tribunals and dreadful crimes, committed not by
the accused but by the judges; but such romantic sympathy would be thrown away upon this elegant little structure, which has no
special historical interest, which was not built till the end of the sixteenth century, and was used only by common offenders.
who were brought through it from the prison to the judgment-hall, without causing public disturbance. The canal-front of the
palace is seen on the left side. and was built by Antonin Rizzo, at the end of the fifteenth century. The criminal prison
on the right, which is in quite a different style of architecture, was built between 1589 and 1602 by Antonio da Ponte, and has
room for four hundred prisoners. The architecture of the Bridge of Sighs is admired on account f the boldness with which the arch
is thrown at a great height over the water, and the cleverness with which it reconciles two buildings in two such different
styles.
|