Continental Monthly - Volume 1 - Issue 3 by Various
page 139 of 313 (44%)
page 139 of 313 (44%)
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'It must be so,' answered the priest, 'unless it's a sign of a lottery office, or a caution against blasphemy up and down the pavement. Those are the only signs we have in the country, except the government salt and cigar shops.' ... He took a snuff-box from a pocket in his sleeve, and with a bow offered a pinch to Mr. Caper. This accepted, they bid each other profoundly farewell. 'There goes a brick!' remarked the traveler. Arrived at the entrance-door to the tower of the Capitoline Hill, James Caper first felt in one pocket for a silver piece and in the other for a match-box, and finding them both there, rang the bell, and then mounted to the top of the tower. Lighting a _zigarro scelto_ or papal cigar, he leaned on both elbows on the parapet, and gazed long and fixedly over the seven-hilled city. 'And this,' soliloquized he, _is_ Rome. Many a day have I been kept in school without my dinner because I was not able to parse thee idly by, _Roma_--Rome--noun of the first declension, feminine gender, that a quarter of a century ago caused me punishment, I have thee now literally under foot, and (knocking his cigar) throw ashes on thy head. 'My mission in this great city is not that of a picture-peddler or art student. I come to investigate the eating, drinking, sleeping arrangements of the Eternal City--its wine more than its vinegar, its pretty girls more than its galleries, its _cafés_ more than its churches. I see from here that I have a fine field to work in. Down there, clambering over the fallen ruins of the Palace of the Cæsars, is a donkey. Could one have a finer opportunity to see in this a moral and |
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