What I Remember, Volume 2 by Thomas Adolphus Trollope
page 79 of 379 (20%)
page 79 of 379 (20%)
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or pensive.
One specialty, and that not a pleasant one, of a life so protracted as mine has been in the midst of such a society as that of Florence in those days, is the enormous quantity of the names which turn the tablets of memory into palimpsests, not twice, but fifty times written over!--unpleasant, not from the thronging _in_ of the motley company, but from the inevitable passing _out_ of them from the field of vision. One's recollections come to resemble those of the spectator of a phantasmagoric show. Processions of heterogeneous figures, almost all of them connected in some way or other with more or less pleasant memories, troop across the magic circle of light, only, alack! to vanish into uttermost night when they pass beyond its limit. Of course all this is inevitable from the migratory nature of such a society as that which was gathered together on the banks of the Arno. Some fixtures--comparatively fixtures--of course there were, who gave to our moving quicksand-like society some degree of cohesion. Chief among these was of course the British minister--at the time of our arrival in Florence, and many years afterwards--Lord Holland. A happier instance of the right man in the right place could hardly be met with. At his great _omnium-gatherum_ dinners and receptions--his hospitality was of the most catholic and generous sort--both he and Lady Holland (how pretty she then was there is her very clever portrait by Watts to testify) never failed to win golden opinions from all sorts and conditions of men and women. And in the smaller circle, which assembled in their rooms yet more frequently, they showed to yet greater advantage, for Lord Holland was one of the most amusing talkers I ever knew. |
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