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The Innocents Abroad
CHAPTER XXVII
Mark Twain
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       _ Chapter 27 - "Butchered to Make a Roman Holiday"--The Man who Never
       Complained--An Exasperating Subject--Asinine Guides--The Roman
       Catacombs--The Saint Whose Fervor Burst his Ribs--The Miracle of
       the Bleeding Heart--The Legend of Ara Coeli
       So far, good. If any man has a right to feel proud of himself, and
       satisfied, surely it is I. For I have written about the Coliseum, and
       the gladiators, the martyrs, and the lions, and yet have never once used
       the phrase "butchered to make a Roman holiday." I am the only free white
       man of mature age, who has accomplished this since Byron originated the
       expression.
       Butchered to make a Roman holiday sounds well for the first seventeen or
       eighteen hundred thousand times one sees it in print, but after that it
       begins to grow tiresome. I find it in all the books concerning Rome--and
       here latterly it reminds me of Judge Oliver. Oliver was a young lawyer,
       fresh from the schools, who had gone out to the deserts of Nevada to
       begin life. He found that country, and our ways of life, there, in those
       early days, different from life in New England or Paris. But he put on a
       woollen shirt and strapped a navy revolver to his person, took to the
       bacon and beans of the country, and determined to do in Nevada as Nevada
       did. Oliver accepted the situation so completely that although he must
       have sorrowed over many of his trials, he never complained--that is, he
       never complained but once. He, two others, and myself, started to the
       new silver mines in the Humboldt mountains--he to be Probate Judge of
       Humboldt county, and we to mine. The distance was two hundred miles. It
       was dead of winter. We bought a two-horse wagon and put eighteen hundred
       pounds of bacon, flour, beans, blasting-powder, picks and shovels in it;
       we bought two sorry-looking Mexican "plugs," with the hair turned the
       wrong way and more corners on their bodies than there are on the mosque
       of Omar; we hitched up and started. It was a dreadful trip. But Oliver
       did not complain. The horses dragged the wagon two miles from town and
       then gave out. Then we three pushed the wagon seven miles, and Oliver
       moved ahead and pulled the horses after him by the bits. We complained,
       but Oliver did not. The ground was frozen, and it froze our backs while
       we slept; the wind swept across our faces and froze our noses. Oliver
       did not complain. Five days of pushing the wagon by day and freezing by
       night brought us to the bad part of the journey--the Forty Mile Desert,
       or the Great American Desert, if you please. Still, this mildest-
       mannered man that ever was, had not complained. We started across at
       eight in the morning, pushing through sand that had no bottom; toiling
       all day long by the wrecks of a thousand wagons, the skeletons of ten
       thousand oxen; by wagon-tires enough to hoop the Washington Monument to
       the top, and ox-chains enough to girdle Long Island; by human graves;
       with our throats parched always, with thirst; lips bleeding from the
       alkali dust; hungry, perspiring, and very, very weary--so weary that when
       we dropped in the sand every fifty yards to rest the horses, we could
       hardly keep from going to sleep--no complaints from Oliver: none the next
       morning at three o'clock, when we got across, tired to death.
       Awakened two or three nights afterward at midnight, in a narrow canon, by
       the snow falling on our faces, and appalled at the imminent danger of
       being "snowed in," we harnessed up and pushed on till eight in the
       morning, passed the "Divide" and knew we were saved. No complaints.
       Fifteen days of hardship and fatigue brought us to the end of the two
       hundred miles, and the Judge had not complained. We wondered if any
       thing could exasperate him. We built a Humboldt house. It is done in
       this way. You dig a square in the steep base of the mountain, and set up
       two uprights and top them with two joists. Then you stretch a great
       sheet of "cotton domestic" from the point where the joists join the hill-
       side down over the joists to the ground; this makes the roof and the
       front of the mansion; the sides and back are the dirt walls your digging
       has left. A chimney is easily made by turning up one corner of the roof.
       Oliver was sitting alone in this dismal den, one night, by a sage-brush
       fire, writing poetry; he was very fond of digging poetry out of himself--
       or blasting it out when it came hard. He heard an animal's footsteps
       close to the roof; a stone or two and some dirt came through and fell by
       him. He grew uneasy and said "Hi!--clear out from there, can't you!"--
       from time to time. But by and by he fell asleep where he sat, and pretty
       soon a mule fell down the chimney! The fire flew in every direction, and
       Oliver went over backwards. About ten nights after that, he recovered
       confidence enough to go to writing poetry again. Again he dozed off to
       sleep, and again a mule fell down the chimney. This time, about half of
       that side of the house came in with the mule. Struggling to get up, the
       mule kicked the candle out and smashed most of the kitchen furniture, and
       raised considerable dust. These violent awakenings must have been
       annoying to Oliver, but he never complained. He moved to a mansion on
       the opposite side of the canon, because he had noticed the mules did not
       go there. One night about eight o'clock he was endeavoring to finish his
       poem, when a stone rolled in--then a hoof appeared below the canvas--then
       part of a cow--the after part. He leaned back in dread, and shouted
       "Hooy! hooy! get out of this!" and the cow struggled manfully--lost
       ground steadily--dirt and dust streamed down, and before Oliver could get
       well away, the entire cow crashed through on to the table and made a
       shapeless wreck of every thing!
       Then, for the first time in his life, I think, Oliver complained. He
       said,
       "This thing is growing monotonous!"
       Then he resigned his judgeship and left Humboldt county. "Butchered to
       make a Roman holyday" has grown monotonous to me.
       In this connection I wish to say one word about Michael Angelo
       Buonarotti. I used to worship the mighty genius of Michael Angelo--that
       man who was great in poetry, painting, sculpture, architecture--great in
       every thing he undertook. But I do not want Michael Angelo for
       breakfast--for luncheon--for dinner--for tea--for supper--for between
       meals. I like a change, occasionally. In Genoa, he designed every
       thing; in Milan he or his pupils designed every thing; he designed the
       Lake of Como; in Padua, Verona, Venice, Bologna, who did we ever hear of,
       from guides, but Michael Angelo? In Florence, he painted every thing,
       designed every thing, nearly, and what he did not design he used to sit
       on a favorite stone and look at, and they showed us the stone. In Pisa
       he designed every thing but the old shot-tower, and they would have
       attributed that to him if it had not been so awfully out of the
       perpendicular. He designed the piers of Leghorn and the custom house
       regulations of Civita Vecchia. But, here--here it is frightful. He
       designed St. Peter's; he designed the Pope; he designed the Pantheon, the
       uniform of the Pope's soldiers, the Tiber, the Vatican, the Coliseum, the
       Capitol, the Tarpeian Rock, the Barberini Palace, St. John Lateran, the
       Campagna, the Appian Way, the Seven Hills, the Baths of Caracalla, the
       Claudian Aqueduct, the Cloaca Maxima--the eternal bore designed the
       Eternal City, and unless all men and books do lie, he painted every thing
       in it! Dan said the other day to the guide, "Enough, enough, enough!
       Say no more! Lump the whole thing! say that the Creator made Italy from
       designs by Michael Angelo!"
       I never felt so fervently thankful, so soothed, so tranquil, so filled
       with a blessed peace, as I did yesterday when I learned that Michael
       Angelo was dead.
       But we have taken it out of this guide. He has marched us through miles
       of pictures and sculpture in the vast corridors of the Vatican; and
       through miles of pictures and sculpture in twenty other palaces; he has
       shown us the great picture in the Sistine Chapel, and frescoes enough to
       frescoe the heavens--pretty much all done by Michael Angelo. So with him
       we have played that game which has vanquished so many guides for us--
       imbecility and idiotic questions. These creatures never suspect--they
       have no idea of a sarcasm.
       He shows us a figure and says: "Statoo brunzo." (Bronze statue.)
       We look at it indifferently and the doctor asks: "By Michael Angelo?"
       "No--not know who."
       Then he shows us the ancient Roman Forum. The doctor asks: "Michael
       Angelo?"
       A stare from the guide. "No--thousan' year before he is born."
       Then an Egyptian obelisk. Again: "Michael Angelo?"
       "Oh, mon dieu, genteelmen! Zis is two thousan' year before he is born!"
       He grows so tired of that unceasing question sometimes, that he dreads to
       show us any thing at all. The wretch has tried all the ways he can think
       of to make us comprehend that Michael Angelo is only responsible for the
       creation of a part of the world, but somehow he has not succeeded yet.
       Relief for overtasked eyes and brain from study and sightseeing is
       necessary, or we shall become idiotic sure enough. Therefore this guide
       must continue to suffer. If he does not enjoy it, so much the worse for
       him. We do.
       In this place I may as well jot down a chapter concerning those necessary
       nuisances, European guides. Many a man has wished in his heart he could
       do without his guide; but knowing he could not, has wished he could get
       some amusement out of him as a remuneration for the affliction of his
       society. We accomplished this latter matter, and if our experience can
       be made useful to others they are welcome to it.
       Guides know about enough English to tangle every thing up so that a man
       can make neither head or tail of it. They know their story by heart--the
       history of every statue, painting, cathedral or other wonder they show
       you. They know it and tell it as a parrot would--and if you interrupt,
       and throw them off the track, they have to go back and begin over again.
       All their lives long, they are employed in showing strange things to
       foreigners and listening to their bursts of admiration. It is human
       nature to take delight in exciting admiration. It is what prompts
       children to say "smart" things, and do absurd ones, and in other ways
       "show off" when company is present. It is what makes gossips turn out in
       rain and storm to go and be the first to tell a startling bit of news.
       Think, then, what a passion it becomes with a guide, whose privilege it
       is, every day, to show to strangers wonders that throw them into perfect
       ecstasies of admiration! He gets so that he could not by any possibility
       live in a soberer atmosphere. After we discovered this, we never went
       into ecstasies any more--we never admired any thing--we never showed any
       but impassible faces and stupid indifference in the presence of the
       sublimest wonders a guide had to display. We had found their weak point.
       We have made good use of it ever since. We have made some of those
       people savage, at times, but we have never lost our own serenity.
       The doctor asks the questions, generally, because he can keep his
       countenance, and look more like an inspired idiot, and throw more
       imbecility into the tone of his voice than any man that lives. It comes
       natural to him.
       The guides in Genoa are delighted to secure an American party, because
       Americans so much wonder, and deal so much in sentiment and emotion
       before any relic of Columbus. Our guide there fidgeted about as if he
       had swallowed a spring mattress. He was full of animation--full of
       impatience. He said:
       "Come wis me, genteelmen!--come! I show you ze letter writing by
       Christopher Colombo!--write it himself!--write it wis his own hand!--
       come!"
       He took us to the municipal palace. After much impressive fumbling of
       keys and opening of locks, the stained and aged document was spread
       before us. The guide's eyes sparkled. He danced about us and tapped the
       parchment with his finger:
       "What I tell you, genteelmen! Is it not so? See! handwriting
       Christopher Colombo!--write it himself!"
       We looked indifferent--unconcerned. The doctor examined the document
       very deliberately, during a painful pause.--Then he said, without any
       show of interest:
       "Ah--Ferguson--what--what did you say was the name of the party who wrote
       this?"
       "Christopher Colombo! ze great Christopher Colombo!"
       Another deliberate examination.
       "Ah--did he write it himself; or--or how?"
       "He write it himself!--Christopher Colombo! He's own hand-writing, write
       by himself!"
       Then the doctor laid the document down and said:
       "Why, I have seen boys in America only fourteen years old that could
       write better than that."
       "But zis is ze great Christo--"
       "I don't care who it is! It's the worst writing I ever saw. Now you
       musn't think you can impose on us because we are strangers. We are not
       fools, by a good deal. If you have got any specimens of penmanship of
       real merit, trot them out!--and if you haven't, drive on!"
       We drove on. The guide was considerably shaken up, but he made one more
       venture. He had something which he thought would overcome us. He said:
       "Ah, genteelmen, you come wis me! I show you beautiful, O, magnificent
       bust Christopher Colombo!--splendid, grand, magnificent!"
       He brought us before the beautiful bust--for it was beautiful--and sprang
       back and struck an attitude:
       "Ah, look, genteelmen!--beautiful, grand,--bust Christopher Colombo!--
       beautiful bust, beautiful pedestal!"
       The doctor put up his eye-glass--procured for such occasions:
       "Ah--what did you say this gentleman's name was?"
       "Christopher Colombo!--ze great Christopher Colombo!"
       "Christopher Colombo--the great Christopher Colombo. Well, what did he
       do?"
       "Discover America!--discover America, Oh, ze devil!"
       "Discover America. No--that statement will hardly wash. We are just
       from America ourselves. We heard nothing about it. Christopher Colombo
       --pleasant name--is--is he dead?"
       "Oh, corpo di Baccho!--three hundred year!"
       "What did he die of?"
       "I do not know!--I can not tell."
       "Small-pox, think?"
       "I do not know, genteelmen!--I do not know what he die of!"
       "Measles, likely?"
       "May be--may be--I do not know--I think he die of somethings."
       "Parents living?"
       "Im-poseeeble!"
       "Ah--which is the bust and which is the pedestal?"
       "Santa Maria!--zis ze bust!--zis ze pedestal!"
       "Ah, I see, I see--happy combination--very happy combination, indeed.
       Is--is this the first time this gentleman was ever on a bust?"
       That joke was lost on the foreigner--guides can not master the subtleties
       of the American joke.
       We have made it interesting for this Roman guide. Yesterday we spent
       three or four hours in the Vatican, again, that wonderful world of
       curiosities. We came very near expressing interest, sometimes--even
       admiration--it was very hard to keep from it. We succeeded though.
       Nobody else ever did, in the Vatican museums. The guide was bewildered--
       non-plussed. He walked his legs off, nearly, hunting up extraordinary
       things, and exhausted all his ingenuity on us, but it was a failure; we
       never showed any interest in any thing. He had reserved what he
       considered to be his greatest wonder till the last--a royal Egyptian
       mummy, the best preserved in the world, perhaps. He took us there. He
       felt so sure, this time, that some of his old enthusiasm came back to
       him:
       "See, genteelmen!--Mummy! Mummy!"
       The eye-glass came up as calmly, as deliberately as ever.
       "Ah,--Ferguson--what did I understand you to say the gentleman's name
       was?"
       "Name?--he got no name!--Mummy!--'Gyptian mummy!"
       "Yes, yes. Born here?"
       "No! 'Gyptian mummy!"
       "Ah, just so. Frenchman, I presume?"
       "No!--not Frenchman, not Roman!--born in Egypta!"
       "Born in Egypta. Never heard of Egypta before. Foreign locality,
       likely. Mummy--mummy. How calm he is--how self-possessed. Is, ah--is
       he dead?"
       "Oh, sacre bleu, been dead three thousan' year!"
       The doctor turned on him savagely:
       "Here, now, what do you mean by such conduct as this! Playing us for
       Chinamen because we are strangers and trying to learn! Trying to impose
       your vile second-hand carcasses on us!--thunder and lightning, I've a
       notion to--to--if you've got a nice fresh corpse, fetch him out!--or by
       George we'll brain you!"
       We make it exceedingly interesting for this Frenchman. However, he has
       paid us back, partly, without knowing it. He came to the hotel this
       morning to ask if we were up, and he endeavored as well as he could to
       describe us, so that the landlord would know which persons he meant. He
       finished with the casual remark that we were lunatics. The observation
       was so innocent and so honest that it amounted to a very good thing for a
       guide to say.
       There is one remark (already mentioned,) which never yet has failed to
       disgust these guides. We use it always, when we can think of nothing
       else to say. After they have exhausted their enthusiasm pointing out to
       us and praising the beauties of some ancient bronze image or broken-
       legged statue, we look at it stupidly and in silence for five, ten,
       fifteen minutes--as long as we can hold out, in fact--and then ask:
       "Is--is he dead?"
       That conquers the serenest of them. It is not what they are looking for
       --especially a new guide. Our Roman Ferguson is the most patient,
       unsuspecting, long-suffering subject we have had yet. We shall be sorry
       to part with him. We have enjoyed his society very much. We trust he
       has enjoyed ours, but we are harassed with doubts.
       We have been in the catacombs. It was like going down into a very deep
       cellar, only it was a cellar which had no end to it. The narrow passages
       are roughly hewn in the rock, and on each hand as you pass along, the
       hollowed shelves are carved out, from three to fourteen deep; each held a
       corpse once. There are names, and Christian symbols, and prayers, or
       sentences expressive of Christian hopes, carved upon nearly every
       sarcophagus. The dates belong away back in the dawn of the Christian
       era, of course. Here, in these holes in the ground, the first Christians
       sometimes burrowed to escape persecution. They crawled out at night to
       get food, but remained under cover in the day time. The priest told us
       that St. Sebastian lived under ground for some time while he was being
       hunted; he went out one day, and the soldiery discovered and shot him to
       death with arrows. Five or six of the early Popes--those who reigned
       about sixteen hundred years ago--held their papal courts and advised with
       their clergy in the bowels of the earth. During seventeen years--from
       A.D. 235 to A.D. 252--the Popes did not appear above ground. Four were
       raised to the great office during that period. Four years apiece, or
       thereabouts. It is very suggestive of the unhealthiness of underground
       graveyards as places of residence. One Pope afterward spent his entire
       pontificate in the catacombs--eight years. Another was discovered in
       them and murdered in the episcopal chair. There was no satisfaction in
       being a Pope in those days. There were too many annoyances. There are
       one hundred and sixty catacombs under Rome, each with its maze of narrow
       passages crossing and recrossing each other and each passage walled to
       the top with scooped graves its entire length. A careful estimate makes
       the length of the passages of all the catacombs combined foot up nine
       hundred miles, and their graves number seven millions. We did not go
       through all the passages of all the catacombs. We were very anxious to
       do it, and made the necessary arrangements, but our too limited time
       obliged us to give up the idea. So we only groped through the dismal
       labyrinth of St. Callixtus, under the Church of St. Sebastian. In the
       various catacombs are small chapels rudely hewn in the stones, and here
       the early Christians often held their religious services by dim, ghostly
       lights. Think of mass and a sermon away down in those tangled caverns
       under ground!
       In the catacombs were buried St. Cecilia, St. Agnes, and several other of
       the most celebrated of the saints. In the catacomb of St. Callixtus, St.
       Bridget used to remain long hours in holy contemplation, and St. Charles
       Borromeo was wont to spend whole nights in prayer there. It was also the
       scene of a very marvelous thing.
       "Here the heart of St. Philip Neri was so inflamed with divine love
       as to burst his ribs."
       I find that grave statement in a book published in New York in 1808, and
       written by "Rev. William H. Neligan, LL.D., M. A., Trinity College,
       Dublin; Member of the Archaeological Society of Great Britain."
       Therefore, I believe it. Otherwise, I could not. Under other
       circumstances I should have felt a curiosity to know what Philip had for
       dinner.
       This author puts my credulity on its mettle every now and then. He tells
       of one St. Joseph Calasanctius whose house in Rome he visited; he visited
       only the house--the priest has been dead two hundred years. He says the
       Virgin Mary appeared to this saint. Then he continues:
       "His tongue and his heart, which were found after nearly a century
       to be whole, when the body was disinterred before his canonization,
       are still preserved in a glass case, and after two centuries the
       heart is still whole. When the French troops came to Rome, and when
       Pius VII. was carried away prisoner, blood dropped from it."
       To read that in a book written by a monk far back in the Middle Ages,
       would surprise no one; it would sound natural and proper; but when it is
       seriously stated in the middle of the nineteenth century, by a man of
       finished education, an LL.D., M. A., and an Archaeological magnate, it
       sounds strangely enough. Still, I would gladly change my unbelief for
       Neligan's faith, and let him make the conditions as hard as he pleased.
       The old gentleman's undoubting, unquestioning simplicity has a rare
       freshness about it in these matter-of-fact railroading and telegraphing
       days. Hear him, concerning the church of Ara Coeli:
       "In the roof of the church, directly above the high altar, is
       engraved, 'Regina Coeli laetare Alleluia." In the sixth century
       Rome was visited by a fearful pestilence. Gregory the Great urged
       the people to do penance, and a general procession was formed. It
       was to proceed from Ara Coeli to St. Peter's. As it passed before
       the mole of Adrian, now the Castle of St. Angelo, the sound of
       heavenly voices was heard singing (it was Easter morn,) Regina
       Coeli, laetare! alleluia! quia quem meruisti portare, alleluia!
       resurrexit sicut dixit; alleluia!" The Pontiff, carrying in his
       hands the portrait of the Virgin, (which is over the high altar and
       is said to have been painted by St. Luke,) answered, with the
       astonished people, 'Ora pro nobis Deum, alleluia!' At the same time
       an angel was seen to put up a sword in a scabbard, and the
       pestilence ceased on the same day. There are four circumstances
       which 'CONFIRM'--[The italics are mine--M. T.]--this miracle: the
       annual procession which takes place in the western church on the
       feast of St Mark; the statue of St. Michael, placed on the mole of
       Adrian, which has since that time been called the Castle of St.
       Angelo; the antiphon Regina Coeli which the Catholic church sings
       during paschal time; and the inscription in the church." _