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  • Florentine Pilgrim
    BY
    Robert Service


    "I'll do the old dump in a day,"
    He told me in his brittle way.
    "Two more, I guess, I'll give to Rome
    Before I hit the trail for home;
    But while I'm there I kindo' hope
    To have an audience with the Pope."

    We stood upon the terraced height
    With sunny Florence in our sight.
    I gazed and gazed, too moved to speak
    Until he queried: "What's that creek?"
    "The Arno, sir," I said surprised;
    He stared at it with empty eyes.

    "It is," said I, "the storied stream
    Where Dante used to pace and dream,
    And wait for Beatrice to pass."
    (Oh how I felt a silly ass
    Explaining this.) With eyes remote
    He asked: "Was Beatrice a boat?"

    Then tranced by far Fiesole
    Softly I sought to steal away;
    But his adhesiveness was grim,
    I could not pry apart from him:
    And so in our hotel-ward walk
    Meekly I listened to his talk.

    "Bologna! Say, the lunch was swell;
    Them wops know how to feed you well.
    Verona! There I met a blonde"
    Oh how that baby could respond!
    Siena! That's the old burg where
    We soused on Asti in the square.

    "Antiquity! Why, that's the bunk -
    Statues and all that mouldy junk
    Will never get you anywhere . . .
    My line is ladies' underware,
    And better than a dozen Dantes
    Is something cute in female scanties. . . .

    "One day in Florence is too small
    You think, maybe, to see it all.
    Well, it don't matter what you've seen -
    The thing is: you can say you've been."

       
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