The Innocents Abroad


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imperial majesties Napoleon III and Abdul Aziz. The vast concourse of  
people swung their hats and shouted--the windows and housetops in the  
wide vicinity burst into a snowstorm of waving handkerchiefs, and the  
wavers of the same mingled their cheers with those of the masses below.  
It was a stirring spectacle.  
But the two central figures claimed all my attention. Was ever such a  
contrast set up before a multitude till then? Napoleon in military  
uniform--a long-bodied, short-legged man, fiercely moustached, old,  
wrinkled, with eyes half closed, and such a deep, crafty, scheming  
expression about them!--Napoleon, bowing ever so gently to the loud  
plaudits, and watching everything and everybody with his cat eyes from  
under his depressed hat brim, as if to discover any sign that those  
cheers were not heartfelt and cordial.  
Abdul Aziz, absolute lord of the Ottoman empire--clad in dark green  
European clothes, almost without ornament or insignia of rank; a red  
Turkish fez on his head; a short, stout, dark man, black-bearded,  
black-eyed, stupid, unprepossessing--a man whose whole appearance  
somehow suggested that if he only had a cleaver in his hand and a white  
apron on, one would not be at all surprised to hear him say: "A mutton  
roast today, or will you have a nice porterhouse steak?"  
Napoleon III, the representative of the highest modern civilization,  
progress, and refinement; Abdul-Aziz, the representative of a people by  
nature and training filthy, brutish, ignorant, unprogressive,  
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