This Was Very Disappointing, For I Had
Always Thought Of The Italians As Gay And As Liking To Laugh And To Make
Laugh.
In Venice, where I used to live, the gondoliers were full of
jokes, good, bad, and indifferent, and an
Infection of humor seemed to
spread from them to all the lower classes, who were as ready to joke as
the lower classes of Irish, and who otherwise often reminded one of
them. The joking hahit extended as far down as Florence, even as Siena,
and at Naples I had found cabmen who tempered their predacity with
_bonhomie._ But the Romans were preferably serious, at least with the
average American, though, if I had tried them in their English instead
of my Italian, it might have been different. At times I thought, they
felt the weight of being Romans, as it had descended to them from
antiquity, and that the strain of supporting it had sobered them. In any
case, though there was shouting by night, and some singing of not at all
the Neapolitan quality and still less the Neapolitan quantity, there was
no laughing, or, as far as I could see, smiling by day.
Yet one day there was a tragedy in front of the hotel next ours which
would have made a dog laugh, as the saying is, unless it was a Roman
dog. It was a quarrel, more or less murderous, between a fat, elderly
man and an agile stripling of not half his age or girth, of whom the
tumult about them permitted only fleeting glimpses. By these the elder
seemed to be laboriously laying about him with a five-foot club and the
younger to be making wild dashes at him and then escaping to the skirts
of the cabmen, mounted and dismounted, who surrounded them. Now and then
a cabman drove out of the mellay very excitedly, and then turned and
drove excitedly back into the thick of it. All the while the dismounted
cabmen pressed about the combatants with their hands on one another's
backs and their heads peering carefully over one another's shoulders. On
the very outermost rim of these, more careful than any, was one of those
strange images whom you see about Italian towns in couples, with red-
braided swallowtail coats and cocked hats, those carabinieres - namely,
who are soldiers in war and policemen in times of peace. Any spectator
from a foreign land would have thought it the business of such an
officer of the law to press in and stop the fighting; but he did not so
interpret his duty. He gingerly touched the shoulders next him with the
tips of his fingers, and now and then lifted himself on the tips of his
toes to look if the fight had stopped of itself or not.
At last the fat, elderly man, whom his friends - and all the throng
except that one wicked youth seemed his friends - were caressing in
untimely embraces and coaxing in tones of tender entreaty, burst from
them, and, aiming at the head of his enemy, flung his club, to the
imminent peril of all the bystanders, and missed him.
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