The Innocents Abroad

What impresses Twain about St. Peter's?

help

Asked by
Last updated by Cat
1 Answers
Log in to answer

When Twain enters the church, he is taken aback by the sheer immenseness of the place. From the outside, the perspective is lost, and the church looks average, but the inside is cavernous. It is so large that maintenance men hanging from the ceiling give the impression of tiny spiders.