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第209章

We like to talk about Capri, and to talk of going there.The Sorrento people have no end of gossip about the wild island; and, simple and primitive as they are, Capri is still more out of the world.I do not know what enchantment there is on the island; but--whoever sets foot there, they say, goes insane or dies a drunkard.Ifancy the reason of this is found in the fact that the Capri girls are raving beauties.I am not sure but the monotony of being anchored off there in the bay, the monotony of rocks and precipices that goats alone can climb, the monotony of a temperature that scarcely ever, winter and summer, is below 55 or above 75 Fahrenheit indoors, might drive one into lunacy.But I incline to think it is due to the handsome Capri girls.

There are beautiful girls in Sorrento, with a beauty more than skin deep, a glowing, hidden fire, a ripeness like that of the grape and the peach which grows in the soft air and the sun.And they wither, like grapes that hang upon the stem.I have never seen a handsome, scarcely a decent-looking, old woman here.They are lank and dry, and their bones are covered with parchment.One of these brown-cheeked girls, with large, longing eyes, gives the stranger a start, now and then, when he meets her in a narrow way with a basket of oranges on her head.I hope he has the grace to go right by.Let him meditate what this vision of beauty will be like in twenty ears.

The Capri girls are famed as magnificent beauties, but they fade like their mainland sisters.The Saracens used to descend on their island, and carry them off to their harems.The English, a very adventurous people, who have no harems, have followed the Saracens.

The young lords and gentlemen have a great fondness for Capri.Ihear gossip enough about elopements, and not seldom marriages, with the island girls,--bright girls, with the Greek mother-wit, and surpassingly handsome; but they do not bear transportation to civilized life (any more than some of the native wines do): they accept no intellectual culture; and they lose their beauty as they grow old.What then? The young English blade, who was intoxicated by beauty into an injudicious match and might, as the proverb says, have gone insane if he could not have made it, takes to drink now, and so fulfills the other alternative.Alas! the fatal gift of beauty.

But I do not think Capri is so dangerous as it is represented.For (of course we went to Capri) neither at the marina, where a crowd of bare-legged, vociferous maidens with donkeys assailed us, nor in the village above, did I see many girls for whom and one little isle a person would forswear the world.But I can believe that they grow here.One of our donkey girls was a handsome, dark-skinned, black-eyed girl; but her little sister, a mite of a being of six years, who could scarcely step over the small stones in the road, and was forced to lead the donkey by her sister in order to establish another lien on us for buona mano, was a dirty little angel in rags, and her great soft black eyes will look somebody into the asylum or the drunkard's grave in time, I have no doubt.There was a stout, manly, handsome little fellow of five years, who established himself as the guide and friend of the tallest of our party.His hat was nearly gone; he was sadly out of repair in the rear; his short legs made the act of walking absurd; but he trudged up the hill with a certain dignity.

And there was nothing mercenary about his attachment: he and his friend got upon very cordial terms: they exchanged gifts of shells and copper coin, but nothing was said about pay.

Nearly all the inhabitants, young and old, joined us in lively procession, up the winding road of three quarters of a mile, to the town.At the deep gate, entering between thick walls, we stopped to look at the sea.The crowd and clamor at our landing had been so great that we enjoyed the sight of the quiet old woman sitting here in the sun, and the few beggars almost too lazy to stretch out their hands.Within the gate is a large paved square, with the government offices and the tobacco-shop on one side, and the church opposite;between them, up a flight of broad stone steps, is the Hotel Tiberio.

Our donkeys walk up them and into the hotel.The church and hotel are six hundred years old; the hotel was a villa belonging to Joanna II.of Naples.We climb to the roof of the quaint old building, and sit there to drink in the strange oriental scene.The landlord says it is like Jaffa or Jerusalem.The landlady, an Irish woman from Devonshire, says it is six francs a day.In what friendly intercourse the neighbors can sit on these flat roofs! How sightly this is, and yet how sheltered! To the east is the height where Augustus, and after him Tiberius, built palaces.To the west, up that vertical wall, by means of five hundred steps cut in the face of the rock, we go to reach the tableland of Anacapri, the primitive village of that name, hidden from view here; the medieval castle of Barbarossa, which hangs over a frightful precipice; and the height of Monte Solaro.The island is everywhere strewn with Roman ruins, and with faint traces of the Greeks.

Capri turns out not to be a barren rock.Broken and picturesque as it is, it is yet covered with vegetation.There is not a foot, one might say a point, of soil that does not bear something; and there is not a niche in the rock, where a scrap of dirt will stay, that is not made useful.The whole island is terraced.The most wonderful thing about it, after all, is its masonry.You come to think, after a time, that the island is not natural rock, but a mass of masonry.If the labor that has been expended here, only to erect platforms for the soil to rest on, had been given to our country, it would have built half a dozen Pacific railways, and cut a canal through the Isthmus.

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