[The Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain]@TWC D-Link book
The Innocents Abroad

CHAPTER XXIII
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He has grown up here.

He is well educated.

He reads, writes, and speaks English, Italian, Spanish, and French, with perfect facility; is a worshipper of art and thoroughly conversant with it; knows the history of Venice by heart and never tires of talking of her illustrious career.

He dresses better than any of us, I think, and is daintily polite.

Negroes are deemed as good as white people, in Venice, and so this man feels no desire to go back to his native land.


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