The Innocents Abroad


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talked so much about. We were growing accustomed to encomiums on  
wonders  
that too often proved no wonders at all. And so we were most happily  
disappointed to find in the sequel that the guide had even failed to rise  
to the magnitude of his subject.  
We arrived at a tumble-down old rookery called the Palazzo Simonetti--a  
massive hewn-stone affair occupied by a family of ragged Italians.  
A good-looking young girl conducted us to a window on the second floor  
which looked out on a court walled on three sides by tall buildings. She  
put her head out at the window and shouted. The echo answered more  
times  
than we could count. She took a speaking trumpet and through it she  
shouted, sharp and quick, a single "Ha!" The echo answered:  
"Ha!--ha!----ha!--ha!--ha!-ha! ha! h-a-a-a-a-a!" and finally went off  
into a rollicking convulsion of the jolliest laughter that could be  
imagined. It was so joyful--so long continued--so perfectly cordial and  
hearty, that every body was forced to join in. There was no resisting  
it.  
Then the girl took a gun and fired it. We stood ready to count the  
astonishing clatter of reverberations. We could not say one, two, three,  
fast enough, but we could dot our notebooks with our pencil points almost  
rapidly enough to take down a sort of short-hand report of the result.  
My page revealed the following account. I could not keep up, but I did  
as well as I could.  
220  


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