[The Bravo by J. Fenimore Cooper]@TWC D-Link book
The Bravo

CHAPTER I
7/14

As for the stranger, we could do no more than offer up a prayer to San Teodoro, since he never rose after the blow.

But what has brought thee to Venice, caro mio?
for thy ill-fortune with the oranges, in the last voyage, caused thee to denounce the place." The Calabrian laid a finger on one cheek, and drew the skin down in a manner to give a droll expression to his dark, comic eye, while the whole of his really fine Grecian face was charged with an expression of coarse humor.
"Look you, Gino--thy master sometimes calls for his gondola between sunset and morning ?" "An owl is not more wakeful than he has been of late.

This head of mine has not been on a pillow before the sun has come above the Lido, since the snows melted from Monselice." "And when the sun of thy master's countenance sets in his own palazzo, thou hastenest off to the bridge of the Rialto, among the jewellers and butchers, to proclaim the manner in which he passed the night ?" "Diamine! 'Twould be the last night I served the Duca di Sant' Agata, were my tongue so limber! The gondolier and the confessor are the two privy-councillors of a noble, Master Stefano, with this small difference--that the last only knows what the sinner wishes to reveal, while the first sometimes knows more.

I can find a safer, if not a more honest employment, than to be running about with my master's secrets in the air." "And I am wiser than to let every Jew broker in San Marco, here, have a peep into my charter-party." "Nay, old acquaintance, there is some difference between our occupations, after all.

A padrone of a felucca cannot, in justice, be compared to the most confidential gondolier of a Neapolitan duke, who has an unsettled right to be admitted to the Council of Three Hundred." "Just the difference between smooth water and rough--you ruffle the surface of a canal with a lazy oar, while I run the channel of Piombino in a mistral, shoot the Faro of Messina in a white squall, double Santa Maria di Leuca in a breathing Levanter, and come skimming up the Adriatic before a sirocco that is hot enough to cook my maccaroni, and which sets the whole sea boiling worse than the caldrons of Scylla." "Hist!" eagerly interrupted the gondolier, who had indulged, with Italian humor, in the controversy for preeminence, though without any real feeling, "here comes one who may think, else, we shall have need of his hand to settle the dispute--Eccolo!" The Calabrian recoiled apace, in silence, and stood regarding the individual who had caused this hurried remark, with a gloomy but steady air.


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