to it was entered, and the carriage was, I thought,
to be at once embarked, when a drove of oxen were discovered
to have the precedence; and so I had to wait.
This under such a sun, on a shadeless beach, and with
the prospect of having to stay there for two hours
at least, was by no means pleasant. It took three-quarters
of an hour to put the oxen in the boat, it took half
an hour to get them on the other shore, and another
hour to have the ferry boat back. The panorama
from the beach was splendid, the Po appeared in all
the mighty power of his waters, and as you looked
with the glass at oxen and trees on the other shore,
they appeared to be clothed in all the colours of the
rainbow, and as if belonging to another world.
Several peasants were waiting for the boat near me,
talking about the war and the Austrians, and swearing
they would, if possible, annihilate some of the latter.
I gave them the glass to look with, and I imagined
that they had never seen one before, for they thought
it highly wonderful to make out what the time was
at the Luzzara Tower, three miles in a straight line
on the other side. The revolver, too, was a subject
of great admiration, and they kept turning, feeling,
and staring at it, as if they could not make out which
way the cartridges were put in. One of these peasants,
however, was doing the grand with the others, and
once on the subject of history related to all who
would hear how he had been to St. Helena, which was
right in the middle of Moscow, where it was so very
cold that his nose had got to be as large as his head.
The poor man was evidently mixing one night’s
tale with that of the next one, a tale probably heard
from the old Sindaco, who is at the same time the
schoolmaster, the notary, and the highest municipal
authority in the place.
I started in the ferry boat with them at last.
While crossing they got to speak of the priests, and
were all agreed, to put it in the mildest way, in
thinking extremely little of them, and only differed
as to what punishment they should like them to suffer.
On the side where we landed lay heaps of ammunition
casks for the corps besieging Borgoforte. Others
were conveyed upon cars by my friends the carrettieri,
of whom it was decreed I should not be quit for some
time to come. Entering Guastalla I found only
a few artillery officers, evidently in charge of what
we had seen carried along the route. Guastalla
is a neat little town very proud of its statue of
Duke Ferrante Gonzaga, and the Croce Rossa is a neat
little inn, which may be proud of a smart young waiter,
who actually discovered that, as I wanted to proceed
to Luzzara, a few miles on, I had better stop till
next morning, I did not take his advice, and was soon
under the gate of Luzzara, a very neat little place,
once one of the many possessions where the Gonzagas
had a court, a palace, and a castle. The arms
over the archway may still be seen, and would not
be worth any notice but for a remarkable work of terracotta