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    Chapter 20 - Page 2

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    lake; we take a shapely
    little boat and sail abroad among the reflections of the stars; lie on
    the thwarts and listen to the distant laughter, the singing, the soft
    melody of flutes and guitars that comes floating across the water from
    pleasuring gondolas; we close the evening with exasperating billiards on
    one of those same old execrable tables. A midnight luncheon in our ample
    bed-chamber; a final smoke in its contracted veranda facing the water,
    the gardens, and the mountains; a summing up of the day's events. Then
    to bed, with drowsy brains harassed with a mad panorama that mixes up
    pictures of France, of Italy, of the ship, of the ocean, of home, in
    grotesque and bewildering disorder. Then a melting away of familiar
    faces, of cities, and of tossing waves, into a great calm of
    forgetfulness and peace.

    After which, the nightmare.

    Breakfast in the morning, and then the lake.

    I did not like it yesterday. I thought Lake Tahoe was much finer.
    I have to confess now, however, that my judgment erred somewhat, though
    not extravagantly. I always had an idea that Como was a vast basin of
    water, like Tahoe, shut in by great mountains. Well, the border of huge
    mountains is here, but the lake itself is not a basin. It is as crooked
    as any brook, and only from one-quarter to two-thirds as wide as the
    Mississippi. There is not a yard of low ground on either side of it
    --nothing but endless chains of mountains that spring abruptly from the
    water's edge and tower to altitudes varying from a thousand to two
    thousand feet. Their craggy sides are clothed with vegetation, and white
    specks of houses peep out from the luxuriant foliage everywhere; they are
    even perched upon jutting and picturesque pinnacles a thousand feet above
    your head.

    Again, for miles along the shores, handsome country seats, surrounded by
    gardens and groves, sit fairly in the water, sometimes in nooks carved by
    Nature out of the vine-hung precipices, and with no ingress or egress
    save by boats. Some have great broad stone staircases leading down to
    the water, with heavy stone balustrades ornamented with statuary and
    fancifully adorned with creeping vines and bright-colored flowers--for

    all the world like a drop curtain in a theatre, and lacking nothing but
    long-waisted, high-heeled women and plumed gallants in silken tights
    coming down to go serenading in the splendid gondola in waiting.

    A great feature of Como's attractiveness is the multitude of pretty
    houses and gardens that cluster upon its shores and on its mountain
    sides. They look so snug and so homelike, and at eventide when every
    thing seems to slumber, and the music of the vesper bells comes stealing
    over the water, one almost believes that nowhere else than on the lake
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