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blick auf das schloss lympne kent peter de wintBlick auf das Schloss Lympne, Kent: eine Harmonie zwischen Natur und Architektur. Diese faszinierende Arbeit zeigt das Schloss Lympne, majesttisch auf einem grnen Hgel gelegen, umgeben von ppiger Natur. Die sanften Tne von Grn und Blau verschmelzen harmonisch und schaffen eine ruhige und friedliche Atmosphre. Die lmaltechnik verleiht eine reiche Textur, whrend das Licht auf den Mauern des Schlosses spielt und die architektonischen Details hervorhebt.
Blick auf das Schloss Lympne, Kent: eine Harmonie zwischen Natur und Architektur. Diese faszinierende Arbeit zeigt das Schloss Lympne, majestätisch auf einem grünen Hügel gelegen, umgeben von üppiger Natur. Die sanften Töne von Grün und Blau verschmelzen harmonisch und schaffen eine ruhige und friedliche Atmosphäre. Die Ölmaltechnik verleiht eine reiche Textur, während das Licht auf den Mauern des Schlosses spielt und die architektonischen Details hervorhebt. Der Künstler gelingt es, die Essenz dieser englischen Landschaft einzufangen und den Betrachter in diese idyllische Szene einzutauchen. Blick auf das Schloss Lympne, Kent: ein Zeugnis der romantischen Kunst. Der Künstler Blick auf das Schloss Lympne, Kent, obwohl weniger bekannt, gehört zur Tradition der Landschaftsmaler des 19. Jahrhunderts. Beeinflusst von der romantischen Bewegung, sucht er die sublime Schönheit der Natur und die Harmonie zwischen Mensch und Umwelt auszudrücken. Diese Epoche ist geprägt von einer Wiederentdeckung malerischer Landschaften und historischer Denkmäler, wobei jedes Gemälde ein Fenster in eine idealisierte Welt wird. Das Werk dieses Künstlers zeugt von der Bedeutung des Erhalts des natürlichen und architektonischen Erbes und feiert gleichzeitig die zeitlose Schönheit englischer Landschaften. Eine dekorative Anschaffung mit vielfältigen Vorteilen. Die reproduction des Gemäldes Blick auf das Schloss Lympne, Kent ist eine ideale Wahl, um Ihr Interieur zu verschönern, sei es im Wohnzimmer, Büro oder Schlafzimmer. Die Druckqualität garantiert eine Treue zu den Farben und Details des Originalwerks und verleiht Ihrer Dekoration eine elegante Note. Dieses Bild, mit seinem unbestreitbaren ästhetischen Reiz, lädt zur Träumerei und Kontemplation ein und verwandelt Ihren Raum in einen Ort der Ruhe und Schönheit. Gönnen Sie sich dieses Meisterstück, das alle Blicke auf sich ziehen wird.Shipping Notes
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4.4 ★★★★★
Based on 675 reviews
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★★★★★ 4
Practical Pilgrim Traveling
Format: Paperback
My wife and I earned a compostela walking a portion of the Camino Frances in May of 2004. Since then I've read many books on pilgrimage, including several accounts of other pilgrims' journeys on the same road we traveled. Many are what another reviewer describes: diaries of the interior lives of the author, focusing mainly on their hardships and triumphs, as if to point out how they changed the camino, rather than how they were changed by it. If I felt that this were all to this book, I wouldn't recommend it. Instead, I think this book provides a wonderful balance between soulful reflection and the pragmatism of the all-too-physical journey. Walking the camino does appear to have all the ingredients necessary for earning a 'spiritual experience merit badge', and some seem to walk it just to earn pilgrimage street cred. Even were that Rupp's intention, and I doubt very much that is the case, she's provided a great perspective for potential pilgrims and useful material to aid past walkers. It's true that she does not shy away from describing unpleasantries of the road: dirty accommodations, illness, rude pilgrims, bad food, and bad weather. These are very real likelihoods, and she discusses them very frankly; pilgrims do not float along the road, barely touching the earth, and any idyllic expectations soon come face-to-face with harsh reality. Rupp does not bring up these issues merely to complain, however; the benefit of this book is how she treats these subjects as well as her prayerful introspection as equally engaging points of reflection and provides a useful perspective on integrating even these issues into a larger pilgrimage experience. The subtitle of the book, however, is "Life Lessons from the Camino", and that's the true value of these observations: her effort in showing that much of our day-to-day life is filled with just these sort of experiences and just this sort of potential for reflection, appreciation, and understanding.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2008
★★★★★ 5
Putting one foot in front of the other
Format: Paperback
I actually bought this book as a gift for a friend who is considering making this pilgrimage. I read it for the first time when it was first published, just because Joyce Rupp is one of my favorite spiritual writers. She has a gift for delving into the spiritual on many levels, from the perspective of a woman, a woman religious, one acquainted with the life and love of God. She writes in an incredibly lucid manner and captures the divine in the midst of life struggles, always prayerfully, with uncommon insight and compassion. In this small and readable volume she tells it like it is.
This book differs somewhat from others I've read in that it is her own lived experience of making this journey across Spain. It's illustrated with photos from that journey and populated and enriched with the varied pilgrims she met along the way.
I recommend it especial for anyone contemplating making this amazing journey, but also for those of us who wish we could.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2013
★★★★★ 5
Must read before walking the Camino
Format: Kindle
Beautiful, thoughtful account of the many ways walking the Camino can challenge us and help us grow. By far the best of the Camino books I read.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2025
★★★★★ 3
Not a bad first-person account
Format: Paperback
I had mixed thoughts about this book. It's the author's personal experiences and thoughts about the Camino, but aren't most books about the Camino? I tend to think it's a little too much interior maundering, how every part of the experience affected the writer. Still, what would you expect? I have to call this just an ok read. Most of the reason I liked it at all is because I am intrigued by the Camino and enjoy reading about it.
The writer is a dedicated sister and her companion was a retired priest. I enjoyed the places where she touched on Catholicism, but there wasn't much of that. But there was the part of the book that I found a jarring note, and that was about her take on some fellow Catholics. She and her companion meet a group of three helpful, warm, caring priests and take them to be Jesuits. The priests inform them that that are Opus Dei. As the sister and priest continue walking, they find they are both astounded at the goodness of these men, since Opus Dei is considered to be extremely wealthy, conservative, and have strong ties to traditional Rome. (I thought all Catholics felt they have ties to Rome. I myself talk about the year I "crossed the Tiber.") It is just amazing to this twosome that such nice men could be from wealthy, conservative Opus Dei. I thought this antipathy toward a Catholic group known to do good works told a lot more about the writer than about the well-met priests--maybe more than she intended to let slide about herself. It was the one part of the book that struck a negative note for me.
Other than that, I also wished for more at the end. They finished the Camino and went on to Finisterre. (Huh? What happened to the time spent at the Cathedral at the end? The beauty of the place and the experience of Mass there, and that wonderful incense burner. That whole part was left out.)
I finished the book and consider it just "ok".
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Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2021
★★★★★ 5
Been on the Camino and love this book
Format: Paperback
I am a Joyce Rupp fan. I'd always dreamt of doing the Camino some day, and when I saw that Joyce had done it, and written a book about it, I quickly bought it and read it.
Her book gave me the courage to buy a plane ticket and go. I'm a hiker and camper. I could tell from reading her book that some of the facets of the hike- some of the albergues, some of the pilgrims, some of the food-- etc etc-- were perhaps harder for her to accept than they would be for me. I thought she gave a really honest appraisal of how things were for her, and was touched by how she eventually resolved some of those contretemps.
I recently was looking at reviews of the book and was surprised to see some of the negative reviews. What I got from reading Joyce's book was an honest look at the Camino from the eyes of a middle-aged woman used to her own personal space, solitude, food, level of cleanliness, etc. One does necessarily give a lot of that up when on the Camino, if you stay in the albergues! They are fabulous places for meeting people from all over the world- but they can make you cringe if you are not used to hearing snoring at night. What I love about this book is the life lessons, her thoughts on what she found there, and what she got out of it in spite of -- and maybe even because of her discomfort.
I recommend this book for mature people thinking of hiking the Camino. In 2011 I accompanied a women's group from my church from Samos to Santiago, and I asked them all to read the book-- they liked it, too.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2013