Mosaico decorativo

Fondare 276 Risultati per: Work

  • On the base of either capital there was a chain of lily-work, four cubits long;✻ (1 Kings 7, 19)

  • it was the remaining part of the capitals, above, that had the net-work pattern, which went the full round of the pillar; on this second part of them, too, were the rows of pomegranates, two hundred in number. (1 Kings 7, 20)

  • Above the pillars he did work in lily pattern, and so the making of the pillars was finished. (1 Kings 7, 22)

  • He cast, too, a great round basin of molten work, ten cubits from brim to brim, five cubits high, and with a girth of thirty cubits. (1 Kings 7, 23)

  • Even these stands were of embossed work; there was moulding between the shafts; (1 Kings 7, 28)

  • Each stand had four wheels, with axles of bronze; and on each of its four corners it had a bracket of molten work, to take the basin, four brackets facing one another at opposite corners. (1 Kings 7, 30)

  • such wheels were they as might be found in a chariot, axles and spokes and rims and naves all of molten work, (1 Kings 7, 33)

  • just as the four brackets, springing from the corners of each stand, were of molten work and part of the stand itself. (1 Kings 7, 34)

  • At the top of each stand was a round rim, half a cubit across, carefully made so that the foot of the basin could rest upon it; a rim covered with engraving, that had embossed work springing from it. (1 Kings 7, 35)

  • Thus he made the ten stands, all alike in the manner of their casting, in their measurements, and in their figured work. (1 Kings 7, 37)

  • He made the two pillars, and the chain-work for their capitals, and the net-work to cover the chain-work, (1 Kings 7, 41)

  • and four hundred pomegranates to go with the net-work, two rows of them for each piece of net-work, to adorn the capitals of the pillars, (1 Kings 7, 42)


“Comunguemos com santo temor e com grande amor.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina