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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Article
* BB ! f tMk $ s&rf W& j ^^ ra ( ^ ^ 3 $ P iY ^ m ^ W % 'M ^ fw ix ^^ Shot ; n ^ r , Jkfola .: The § ua ^ 4 h ^ j iJ 3 % matw SS ^ ffllBH W ^ P ^ ffl § ft ^ F ^^ cJti Q njkingiB a little inn in the neigbiKW-% j ^ rWQ % Ttf nicn Jn ^ | we ^ ^ y ^ ; j | € i seewg the m on the high road * de ^ - b fA ^^^ IBw t ^ J ^ W ^* 5 fepte ?» $ Ir ^ ad not the ' opportunity of forming ^ ifft ^ §? i $ * $$ ® ppini ^ n of Jjbt £ character oi ^ its inhabitants . There are , l |^ ev $ r , oSome traits in it which cannot , fail to strike the most transient obi
server , o 4 t is yery evident that , they are an extremely superstitious people * . $ p $ , pnly has every stall for lemonade , and every coffee-house in the town * 3 picture of the Virgin and Child , but the common people swear by the Ma- * donna instead of by God . The reverence , too , which is paid by all ranks to the host , when carried along the streets , is very remarkable . One day ,, as I was passing along the Toledo , I saw a suite of no fewer than nine royal carriages standing still , because they happened to meet the host . As the priest , who was carrying it , came opposite to each carriage , the ladies , who were in it , kneeled down to adore the consecrated wafer ; or if it happened to be
filled with gentlemen , they kneeled down on cushions in the street ; those ; who were passing by at the time kneeling also , and all joining in a kind of chant or hymn . The lower orders in this city are a most indolent and lawless set , much more disposed to live by their wits than by the honest labour of their hands . Many of them are to be seen lounging about the streets , or sitting on the
parapet walls , most wretchedly dressed , and without any fixed habitation . These are the lazzaroni . Another class aTe the beggars , who are so filthy and so ragged in their appearance , and so excessively troublesome in their solicitations , that our English mendicants are quite gentlefolks compared with them . In Italy , particularly in the south , these creatures are a perfect nuisance , which it is disgraceful to the police of the country to tolerate . I had really rather be robbed outright every now and then than be exposed to this daily and hourly annoyance .
The'king , I was told , is" popular with his subjects , but it is clear that he does not like trusting himself to them , for he has two or three companies of soldiers always under arms in front of his palace , and he has four thousand Swiss in hi& pay . Indeed , this , appears to be altogether a military government . I saw soldiers every where : there was not a petty , insignificant place that I entered into , not even the ruins of Paestum , or the landing-place of Scaricatojo , where I did not find some of these gentry stationed ; and it must be allowed , that some reason for this , though by no means a complete
justification , is to be found in the lawless * character of the Neapolitan canaille * The following story will form a good commentary both on the habits and dispositions of ^ thj ^ fjepple ^ and on the means whicn are taken by the government to keep them jn order , , ;! AS l ^ vya& pne cf ay crossing , the bay to Portici * one of the boat-merj ^^^ e ^ L ^ p ^ ' ^ -J ^ nfii M » T ^ ^ y ' - 't pife * - and . pbserving , I suppose , an expressi on , oi ^ , ^ hV remarked , " Your English sailors , Sir , havej a ]} jcn ^ yes , J k # QW j but we are only allowed to carry th $ mj ; iyhen we go a certain number of leagues from land . If I were to carry one , the police would put me in prison for six months . There is my brother , " continued he , pointing to his companion , " who was kept in prison for six years for the same offence , " Upon this the other told us his story in the Allowing terms : " Another man and I were violently in love with the same girl' —a young girl of fourteen ; and I said to him , 'I shall
Untitled Article
3 $ 4 £ b Journal of a Tour ^ ujf Continent .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1828, page 840, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2567/page/40/
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