WHEN IN ROME, 1788
Often
a new procession increases the general crush.
A dozen Pulcinelle, for example, assemble, elect a king,
crown him, put a sceptre in his hand, seat him in a
decorated carriage, and accompany him along the Corso, with
music and loud cheers. Now one perceives that
each of them is wearing his own individual variation of this commonest kind of
fancy dress. One wears a wig; another a bonnet, and another a
birdcage on his head instead of a cap, in which a pair of birds, dressed
up as an abbate and as a lady, are hopping about on their
perches.
Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Italian
Journey (1786-1788), translated by W.H. Auden and Elizabeth Mayer, New York,
Pantheon Press, 1962.
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