[The Roman Question by Edmond About]@TWC D-Link bookThe Roman Question CHAPTER VI 12/22
My sole regret is that their numbers are so few, and that their scope of action is so limited. If there were but two thousand of them, and the Government allowed them to follow their own course, the Roman Campagna would soon assume another aspect, and fever and ague take themselves off. The foreigners who have inhabited Rome for any length of time, speak of the middle-class as contemptuously as the princes.
I once made the same mistake as they do, so my testimony on the subject is the more worthy of acceptation. Perhaps the foreigners in question have lived in furnished lodgings, and have found the landlady a little less than cruel.
No doubt adventures of this kind are of daily occurrence elsewhere than in Rome; but is the middle-class to be held responsible for the light conduct of some few poor and uneducated women? Or they may have had to do with the trade of Rome, and have found it extremely limited.
This is because there is no capital, nor any extension of public credit.
They are shocked to see the shopkeepers, during the Carnival, riding in carriages, and occupying the best boxes at the theatres; but this foolish love of show, so hurtful to the middle-class, is taught them by the universal example of those above them. Perhaps they have sent to the chemist's for a doctor, and have fallen upon an ignorant professor of the healing art.
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