Pictures from Italy

the old stone seats, and a spangled Cavalier being gallant, or a

Policinello funny, with the grim walls looking on. Above all, I

thought how strangely those Roman mutes would gaze upon the

favourite comic scene of the travelling English, where a British

nobleman (Lord John), with a very loose stomach: dressed in a

blue-tailed coat down to his heels, bright yellow breeches, and a

white hat: comes abroad, riding double on a rearing horse, with an

English lady (Lady Betsy) in a straw bonnet and green veil, and a

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Dickens, Charles – Pictures From Italy

red spencer; and who always carries a gigantic reticule, and a putup

parasol.

I walked through and through the town all the rest of the day, and

could have walked there until now, I think. In one place, there

was a very pretty modern theatre, where they had just performed the

opera (always popular in Verona) of Romeo and Juliet. In another

there was a collection, under a colonnade, of Greek, Roman, and

Etruscan remains, presided over by an ancient man who might have

been an Etruscan relic himself; for he was not strong enough to

open the iron gate, when he had unlocked it, and had neither voice

enough to be audible when he described the curiosities, nor sight

enough to see them: he was so very old. In another place, there

was a gallery of pictures: so abominably bad, that it was quite

delightful to see them mouldering away. But anywhere: in the

churches, among the palaces, in the streets, on the bridge, or down

beside the river: it was always pleasant Verona, and in my

remembrance always will be.

I read Romeo and Juliet in my own room at the inn that night – of

course, no Englishman had ever read it there, before – and set out

for Mantua next day at sunrise, repeating to myself (in the COUPE

of an omnibus, and next to the conductor, who was reading the

Mysteries of Paris),

There is no world without Verona’s walls

But purgatory, torture, hell itself.

Hence-banished is banished from the world,

And world’s exile is death –

which reminded me that Romeo was only banished five-and-twenty

miles after all, and rather disturbed my confidence in his energy

and boldness.

Was the way to Mantua as beautiful, in his time, I wonder! Did it

wind through pasture land as green, bright with the same glancing

streams, and dotted with fresh clumps of graceful trees! Those

purple mountains lay on the horizon, then, for certain; and the

dresses of these peasant girls, who wear a great, knobbed, silver

pin like an English ‘life-preserver’ through their hair behind, can

hardly be much changed. The hopeful feeling of so bright a

morning, and so exquisite a sunrise, can have been no stranger,

even to an exiled lover’s breast; and Mantua itself must have

broken on him in the prospect, with its towers, and walls, and

water, pretty much as on a common-place and matrimonial omnibus.

He made the same sharp twists and turns, perhaps, over two rumbling

drawbridges; passed through the like long, covered, wooden bridge;

and leaving the marshy water behind, approached the rusty gate of

stagnant Mantua.

If ever a man were suited to his place of residence, and his place

of residence to him, the lean Apothecary and Mantua came together

in a perfect fitness of things. It may have been more stirring

then, perhaps. If so, the Apothecary was a man in advance of his

time, and knew what Mantua would be, in eighteen hundred and fortyfour.

He fasted much, and that assisted him in his foreknowledge.

I put up at the Hotel of the Golden Lion, and was in my own room

arranging plans with the brave Courier, when there came a modest

little tap at the door, which opened on an outer gallery

surrounding a court-yard; and an intensely shabby little man looked

in, to inquire if the gentleman would have a Cicerone to show the

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Dickens, Charles – Pictures From Italy

town. His face was so very wistful and anxious, in the half-opened

doorway, and there was so much poverty expressed in his faded suit

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