[At Home And Abroad by Margaret Fuller Ossoli]@TWC D-Link bookAt Home And Abroad PART II 152/526
The daughter of John Bull would speak to the lady in English, and, when she found it of no use, would say imperiously to the _suivante_, "Go and ask your mistress what she will have for breakfast." And now when I went on deck there was a parley between the two steamers, which the Captain was obliged to manage by such interpreters as he could find; it was a long and confused business.
It ended at last in the Neapolitan steamer taking us in tow for an inglorious return to Leghorn.
When she had decided upon this she swept round, her lights glancing like sagacious eyes, to take us.
The sea was calm as a lake, the sky full of stars; she made a long detour, with her black hull, her smoke and lights, which look so pretty at night, then came round to us like the bend of an arm embracing.
It was a pretty picture, worth the stop and the fright,--perhaps the loss of twenty-four hours, though I did not think so at the time. At Leghorn we changed the boat, and, retracing our steps, came now at last to Naples,--to this priest-ridden, misgoverned, full of dirty, degraded men and women, yet still most lovely Naples,--of which the most I can say is that the divine aspect of nature _can_ make you forget the situation of man in this region, which was surely intended for him as a princely child, angelic in virtue, genius, and beauty, and not as a begging, vermin-haunted, image kissing Lazzarone. LETTER XIV. ITALY .-- MISFORTUNE OF TRAVELLERS .-- ENGLISH TRAVELLERS .-- COCKNEYISM .-- MACDONALD THE SCULPTOR .-- BRITISH ARISTOCRACY .-- TENERANI .-- WOLFF'S DIANA AND SEASONS .-- GOTT .-- CRAWFORD .-- OVERBECK THE PAINTER .-- AMERICAN PAINTERS IN ROME .-- TERRY .-- GRANCH .-- HICKS .-- REMAINS OF THE ANTIQUE .-- ITALIAN PAINTERS .-- DOMENICHIMO AND TITIAN .-- FRESCOS OF RAPHAEL .-- MICHEL ANGELO .-- THE COLOSSEUM .-- HOLY WEEK .-- ST.
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