Page:The grand tour in the eighteenth century by Mead, William Edward.djvu/477

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NOTES

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143. 3. Keysler observes that the sea trip from Genoa to Leghorn was least interrupted by pirates in the autumn and winter. Travels, i. 473.
4. Nugent, Grand Tour, iii, 377, 378.
5. Tivaroni, Storia Critica del Risorgimento Italiano, i, 366.
6. Ibid., i, 342.
144. 1. A Short Account of a late Journey to Tuscany, Rome, etc., pp. 2. 3.
2. Berchtold, An Essay to Direct and Extend the Inquiries of Patriotic Travellers, p. 50.
3. Cf. Misson, New Voyage to Italy, ii2, 379; Wyndham, Travels, i, 194.
145. 1. Lecky, History of England in the Eighteenth Century, vii, 338, 340.
2. Letters, vi, 129. See also, ibid., viii, 88, 89.
3. See Evelyn's Diary, i, 271; Journal of Major Ferrier, pp. 26, 36.
4. Cf. Babeau, Les Voyageurs en France, p. 256.
5. (Jones) Journey to Paris, i, 63, 64.
6. Birkbeck, Notes on a Journey through France, p. 8.
146. 1. Sharp, Letters from Italy, p. 209.
2. Essex, Journal of a Tour, etc., p. 38.
3. Nugent, Grand Tour, ii, 68.
4. Coryate, Crudities, ii, 308.
5. De La Lande, Voyage en Italie, v, 169.
6. Nugent, Grand Tour, iii, 307, 308.
7. Garibaldi's Defence of the Roman Republic, p. 82.
8. Cf. Dupaty, Lettres sur l'Italie, iii, 87, 88.
9. Tivaroni, Storia Critica del Risorgimento Italiano, i, 351.
147. 1. Ibid, i, 342. Cf. also ibid., i, 315, 339, 352.
2. During the reign of Charles of Bourbon, "In the city of Naples alone, the judicial census numbered 30,000 thieves. Homicides, inroads of banditti, and violent acts of robbery, were frequent in the provinces; and there were so many cases of poisoning in the city, that the king instituted a Court of Magistracy called the Giunta de' Veleni to discover and punish the delinquents." Colletta, History of the Kingdom of Naples, i. 52, 53.
3. Misson, New Voyage to Italy, i2, 425.
4. New Voyage to Italy, 112, 397.
5. Travels, i, 345.
6. Ibid., iii, 22.
7. Tivaroni, Storia Critica del Risorgimento Italiano, i, 296, 315.
148. 1. New Letters from an English Traveller, pp. 43, 44. The evil reputation of Naples continued long. "From the moment you land till you quit Naples, always carry your handkerchief in your hat, and your purse in your breast-pocket, and your watch well secured with a strong guard: the pick-pockets in Naples are the most expert in Europe." Coghlan, Hand-Book for Italy (1847), p. 340.
2. View of Society and Manners in Italy, i, 231.

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