The Innocents Abroad


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melody of flutes and guitars that comes floating across the water from  
pleasuring gondolas; we close the evening with exasperating billiards on  
one of those same old execrable tables. A midnight luncheon in our ample  
bed-chamber; a final smoke in its contracted veranda facing the water,  
the gardens, and the mountains; a summing up of the day's events. Then  
to bed, with drowsy brains harassed with a mad panorama that mixes up  
pictures of France, of Italy, of the ship, of the ocean, of home, in  
grotesque and bewildering disorder. Then a melting away of familiar  
faces, of cities, and of tossing waves, into a great calm of  
forgetfulness and peace.  
After which, the nightmare.  
Breakfast in the morning, and then the lake.  
I did not like it yesterday. I thought Lake Tahoe was much finer.  
I have to confess now, however, that my judgment erred somewhat, though  
not extravagantly. I always had an idea that Como was a vast basin of  
water, like Tahoe, shut in by great mountains. Well, the border of huge  
mountains is here, but the lake itself is not a basin. It is as crooked  
as any brook, and only from one-quarter to two-thirds as wide as the  
Mississippi. There is not a yard of low ground on either side of it  
-
-nothing but endless chains of mountains that spring abruptly from the  
water's edge and tower to altitudes varying from a thousand to two  
thousand feet. Their craggy sides are clothed with vegetation, and white  
specks of houses peep out from the luxuriant foliage everywhere; they are  
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