.MTM5OA.MTIwODY4: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "Boine in its realization. I see now as I look back upon my association with Barbaro that I knew almost nothing about him and had seemingly no curiosity with regard to him. I...") |
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Boine in its realization. | Boine in the [[^ its]] realization. | ||
I see now as I look back upon my association | I see now as I look back upon my association | ||
with Barbaro that I knew almost nothing | with Barbaro that I knew almost nothing | ||
about him and had seemingly no curiosity with | about him and had seemingly no curiosity with | ||
regard to him. I suspect now that he must have | regard to him. I suspect now that he must have | ||
been of Sicilian extraction from the fine dark | been of Sicilian extraction from the fine dark | ||
hair and the olive - pale coloring. His appearance | hair and the olive-pale coloring. His appearance | ||
was clean, shabby and invariable, no matter | was clean, shabby and invariable, no matter | ||
what the weather might have been like the | what the weather might have been [[crossed out: doing]], like the | ||
coat of an animal | coat of an animal or the shell of a snail. One day | ||
it was raining when he arrived. "Why didn't you | it was raining when he arrived. "Why didn't you | ||
take your umbrella? I'll lend you mine when | take your umbrella? I'll lend you mine when | ||
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of the sort until many years later when I went | of the sort until many years later when I went | ||
back to Rome and found that Barbaro was no | back to Rome and found that Barbaro was no | ||
longer alive and that the charm of that immaterial | longer [[^alive]] living and that the charm of that immaterial |
Latest revision as of 04:53, 9 December 2022
Boine in the ^ its realization.
I see now as I look back upon my association
with Barbaro that I knew almost nothing about him and had seemingly no curiosity with regard to him. I suspect now that he must have been of Sicilian extraction from the fine dark hair and the olive-pale coloring. His appearance was clean, shabby and invariable, no matter what the weather might have been crossed out: doing, like the coat of an animal or the shell of a snail. One day it was raining when he arrived. "Why didn't you take your umbrella? I'll lend you mine when it's time for you to leave." "Per carita!" he replied "It always seems absurd to me to go around holding a little thing over one's head." How old could Barbaro have been? Did he have a family and how did he earn a living? It never occurred to me to wonder about anything of the sort until many years later when I went back to Rome and found that Barbaro was no longer ^alive living and that the charm of that immaterial