[Casanova’s Homecoming by Arthur Schnitzler]@TWC D-Link bookCasanova’s Homecoming CHAPTER TWELVE 3/14
He entered into friendly talk with someone who expressed satisfaction that the weather seemed to be clearing at last. "What, has it been raining here for three days? That is news to me.
I come from the south, from Naples and Rome." The boat had entered the canals of the suburbs.
Sordid houses stared at him with dirty windows, as if with vacant, hostile eyes.
Twice or thrice the vessel stopped at a quay, and passengers came aboard; young fellows, one of whom had a great portfolio under his arm; women with baskets. Here, at last, was familiar ground.
Was not that the church where Martina used to go to confession? Was not that the house in which, after his own fashion, he had restored the pallid and dying Agatha to ruddy health? Was not that the place in which he had dealt with the charming Sylvia's rascal of a brother, had beaten the fellow black and blue? Up that canal to the right, in the small yellow house upon whose splashed steps the fat, bare-footed woman was standing.... Before he had fully recaptured the distant memory attaching to the house in question, the boat had entered the Grand Canal, and was passing slowly up the broad waterway with palaces on either hand.
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