ope (nay; for years no shadow of reasonable hope) that I should ever be able to appease my desire。 I taught myself to read Italian; that was something。 I worked (half…heartedly) at a colloquial phrase…book。 But my sickness only grew towards despair。
Then came into my hands a sum of money (such a poor little sum) for a book I had written。 It was early autumn。 I chanced to hear some one speak of Naples……and only death would have held me back。
XX
Truly; I grow aged。 I have no longer much delight in wine。
But then; no wine ever much rejoiced me save that of Italy。 Wine… drinking in England is; after all; only make…believe; a mere playing with an exotic inspiration。 Tennyson had his port; whereto clings a good old tradition; sherris sack belongs to a nobler age; these drinks are not for us。 Let him who will; toy with dubious Bordeaux or Burgundy; to get good of them; soul's good; you must be on the green side of thirty。 Once or twice they have plucked me from despair; I would not speak unkindly of anything in cask or bottle which bears the great name of wine。 But for me it is a thing of days gone by。 Never again shall I know the mellow hour cum regnat rosa; cum madent capilli。 Yet how it lives in memory!
〃What call you this wine?〃 I asked of the temple…guardian at Paestum; when he ministered to my thirst。 〃Vino di Calabria;〃 he answered; and what a glow in the name! There I drank it; seated against the column of Poseidon's temple。 There I drank it; my feet resting on acanthus; my eyes wandering from sea to mountain; or peering at little shells niched in the crumbling surface of the sacred stone。 The autumn day declined; a breeze of evening whispered about the forsaken shore; on the far summit lay a long; still cloud; and its hue was that of