[Rome in 1860 by Edward Dicey]@TWC D-Link book
Rome in 1860

CHAPTER VIII
14/14

It is sad to see the offices on a Thursday night, when they are kept open till midnight, hours after every other shop is closed, and to watch the crowds of common humble people who hurry in, one after the other; servants and cabmen and clerks and beggars, and, above all, women of the poorer class, to stake their small savings--too often their small pilferings--on the hoped-for numbers.

When one speaks of the disgrace and shame that this authorized system of gambling confers on the Papal Government; of the improvidence and dishonesty and misery it creates too certainly among the poor, one is always told, by the advocates of the Papacy, that the people are so passionately attached to the lottery, that no Government could run the risk of abolishing it.

If this be true, which I do not believe, I can only say--shame upon the rulers, who have so demoralized their subjects!.


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