[351] a chair and pretty soon he said to me, “How do you like your books, Mr. S? For my part, I prefer to cut the leaves of a book, for then I feel as if I had earned the right to read it.” I replied that I liked books with rough edges if they were printed on good paper; and then he said, “See this remarkable picture.” I drew my chair closer to him, and he showed me a large colored chart of Hell and Purgatory, according to the theory that prevailed in Dante's time. Satan with his three faces was represented in the centre, and on the other side rose the Mount of Purgatory. “It is an Italian commentary,” he said, “on the Divina Commedia,” which had been sent to him that day; and he added that some of the information in it was of a very curious sort. I asked him if he could read Italian as easily as English. “Very nearly,” he replied; “but the fine points of Italian are as difficult as those of German.” He inquired how I and my friends spent our evenings in Rome, and I said, “In all kinds of study and reading, but just now P-- was at work on Browning's ‘Ring and the Book.’ ” Mr. Longfellow laughed. “I do not wonder you call it work,” he said. “It seems to me a story told in so many different ways may be ”
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.