[78]
a monument.
As soon as he heard that the Longfellow party was below, he came down and greeted them very cordially.
He was glad that they had stopped at Verona, which was so interesting and so often overlooked; he wanted them to observe the sculptures on the monument,--the softly-flowing draperies which seemed more as if they had been moulded with hands than cut with a chisel.
He then spoke in grievous terms of the recent devastation by the floods in Switzerland, which had also caused much damage in the plains of Lombardy.
He thought that reservoirs ought to be constructed on the sides of the mountains, which would stay the force of the torrents, and hold the water until it could be made useful.
He wished that the Alpine Club would take an interest in the matter.
After enjoying so much in Switzerland it would be only fair for them to do something for the benefit of the country.
Mr. Appleton then said: “That is a work for government to do;” to which Ruskini replied: “Governments do nothing but fill their pockets, and issue this,” --taking out a handful of Italian paper currency, which was then much below par.
Everyone has his or her favorite poet or poets, and it is a common practice with young critics to disparage one in order to elevate
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