Old Calabria by Norman Douglas
page 313 of 451 (69%)
page 313 of 451 (69%)
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"You can pay twenty dollars."
Twenty dollars--a hundred francs! But it is useless trying to bargain with an _americano_ (their time is too valuable). "A dollar a mile?" I protested. "That's so." "You be damned." "Same to you, mister." And he drove off. Such bold defiance of fate never goes unrewarded. A two-wheeled cart conveying some timber overtook me shortly afterwards on my way from the inhospitable Taverna. For a small consideration I was enabled to pass the burning hours of the afternoon in an improvised couch among its load of boards, admiring the scenery and the engineering feats that have carried a road through such difficult country, and thinking out some further polite remarks to be addressed to my twenty-dollar friend, in the event of our meeting at Catanzaro. . . . One must have traversed the Sila in order to appreciate the manifold charms of the mountain town--I have revelled in them since my arrival. But it has one irremediable drawback: the sea lies at an inconvenient distance. It takes forty-five minutes to reach the shore by means of two railways in whose carriages the citizens descend after wild scrambles for places, packed tight as sardines in the sweltering heat. Only a genuine enthusiast will undertake the trip more than once. For the Marina itself--at this season, at least--is an unappetizing spot; a |
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