Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

straw hats, who lean out at opened lattice blinds, are almost the

only airs stirring. Very ugly and haggard old women with distaffs,

and with a grey tow upon them that looks as if they were spinning

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

out their own hair (I suppose they were once pretty, too, but it is

very difficult to believe so), sit on the footway leaning against

house walls. Everybody who has come for water to the fountain,

stays there, and seems incapable of any such energetic idea as

going home. Vespers are over, though not so long but that I can

smell the heavy resinous incense as I pass the church. No man

seems to be at work, save the coppersmith. In an Italian town he

is always at work, and always thumping in the deadliest manner.

I keep straight on, and come in due time to the first on the right:

a narrow dull street, where I see a well-favoured man of good

stature and military bearing, in a great cloak, standing at a door.

Drawing nearer to this threshold, I see it is the threshold of a

small wine-shop; and I can just make out, in the dim light, the

inscription that it is kept by Giovanni Carlavero.

I touch my hat to the figure in the cloak, and pass in, and draw a

stool to a little table. The lamp (just such another as they dig

out of Pompeii) is lighted, but the place is empty. The figure in

the cloak has followed me in, and stands before me.

‘The master?’

‘At your service, sir.’

‘Please to give me a glass of the wine of the country.’

He turns to a little counter, to get it. As his striking face is

pale, and his action is evidently that of an enfeebled man, I

remark that I fear he has been ill. It is not much, he courteously

and gravely answers, though bad while it lasts: the fever.

As he sets the wine on the little table, to his manifest surprise I

lay my hand on the back of his, look him in the face, and say in a

low voice: ‘I am an Englishman, and you are acquainted with a

friend of mine. Do you recollect – ?’ and I mentioned the name of

my generous countryman.

Instantly, he utters a loud cry, bursts into tears, and falls on

his knees at my feet, clasping my legs in both his arms and bowing

his head to the ground.

Some years ago, this man at my feet, whose over-fraught heart is

heaving as if it would burst from his breast, and whose tears are

wet upon the dress I wear, was a galley-slave in the North of

Italy. He was a political offender, having been concerned in the

then last rising, and was sentenced to imprisonment for life. That

he would have died in his chains, is certain, but for the

circumstance that the Englishman happened to visit his prison.

It was one of the vile old prisons of Italy, and a part of it was

below the waters of the harbour. The place of his confinement was

an arched under-ground and under-water gallery, with a grill-gate

at the entrance, through which it received such light and air as it

got. Its condition was insufferably foul, and a stranger could

hardly breathe in it, or see in it with the aid of a torch. At the

upper end of this dungeon, and consequently in the worst position,

as being the furthest removed from light and air, the Englishman

first beheld him, sitting on an iron bedstead to which he was

chained by a heavy chain. His countenance impressed the Englishmen

as having nothing in common with the faces of the malefactors with

whom he was associated, and he talked with him, and learnt how he

came to be there.

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When the Englishman emerged from the dreadful den into the light of

day, he asked his conductor, the governor of the jail, why Giovanni

Carlavero was put into the worst place?

‘Because he is particularly recommended,’ was the stringent answer.

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