[The Three Cities Trilogy by Emile Zola]@TWC D-Link book
The Three Cities Trilogy

PART III
144/231

And at any other hour of the day Leo XIII could not approach his window without beholding the abandoned houses for which all those brick-fields had worked, those houses which had died before they even lived, and where there was now nought but the swarming misery of Rome, rotting there like some decomposition of olden society.
However, Pierre more particularly thought of Leo XIII, forgetting the rest of the city to let his thoughts dwell on the Palatine, now bereft of its crown of palaces and rearing only its black cypresses towards the blue heavens.

Doubtless in his mind he rebuilt the palaces of the Caesars, whilst before him rose great shadowy forms arrayed in purple, visions of his real ancestors, those emperors and Supreme Pontiffs who alone could tell him how one might reign over every nation and be the absolute master of the world.

Then, however, his glances strayed to the Quirinal, and there he could contemplate the new and neighbouring royalty.

How strange the meeting of those two palaces, the Quirinal and the Vatican, which rise up and gaze at one another across the Rome of the middle ages and the Renascence, whose roofs, baked and gilded by the burning sun, are jumbled in confusion alongside the Tiber.

When the Pope and the King go to their windows they can with a mere opera-glass see each other quite distinctly.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books