The Innocents Abroad


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See what one can accustom himself to.--The reflection that he must some  
day be taken apart like an engine or a clock, or like a house whose owner  
is gone, and worked up into arches and pyramids and hideous frescoes, did  
not distress this monk in the least. I thought he even looked as if he  
were thinking, with complacent vanity, that his own skull would look well  
on top of the heap and his own ribs add a charm to the frescoes which  
possibly they lacked at present.  
Here and there, in ornamental alcoves, stretched upon beds of bones, lay  
dead and dried-up monks, with lank frames dressed in the black robes one  
sees ordinarily upon priests. We examined one closely. The skinny hands  
were clasped upon the breast; two lustreless tufts of hair stuck to the  
skull; the skin was brown and sunken; it stretched tightly over the cheek  
bones and made them stand out sharply; the crisp dead eyes were deep in  
the sockets; the nostrils were painfully prominent, the end of the nose  
being gone; the lips had shriveled away from the yellow teeth: and  
brought down to us through the circling years, and petrified there, was a  
weird laugh a full century old!  
It was the jolliest laugh, but yet the most dreadful, that one can  
imagine. Surely, I thought, it must have been a most extraordinary joke  
this veteran produced with his latest breath, that he has not got done  
laughing at it yet. At this moment I saw that the old instinct was  
strong upon the boys, and I said we had better hurry to St. Peter's.  
They were trying to keep from asking, "Is--is he dead?"  
344  


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