OUR DAY AT PISA.

We took the train at Florence,[1] we,—

The day was warm and pleasant.

The town of Pisa would we see.

No time was like the present.

Anon we climb’d the Leaning Tower,[2]

Dropt something down, and sat an hour;

And then the grand Baptistry[2] door

They swung for us; and, o’er and o’er,

We made its domed rotunda roar,

To echo back our joking.

We set our pockets jingling, we,

To make our guide a crony,

Saw the cathedral, paid a fee,

And ate some macaroni,

Then feasted on an outside view

Of all three buildings,[2] yet so new;

Then bought, in alabaster[3] wrought,

Some models of them; then we sought

The Campo Santo,[4] where we thought

About the dead, while smoking.

We took the train at sunset, we,

And while we left the station,

Extoll’d the land, “How much to see!

How grand this Roman nation!

Our own, how mean!—no works of art!”

We strove to sigh, but check’d a start

And cried, “How home-like!” o’er and o’er.—

What thrill’d us thus?—alas, it bore

No hint from art; we heard once more

A frog, near by us, croaking.

FOOTNOTES

[1] The poem is supposed to be written by an American “doing” Italy.

[2] The Leaning Tower, the Baptistry (under the dome of which may be heard, by those who care for it, an echo, repeating itself many times), and the Cathedral are all found in one square.

[3] Alabaster worked into articles suitable for gifts is one of the chief commodities of Pisa. Great quantities of it are purchased for presents.

[4] Campo Santo or cemetery, the most famous in Italy.