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ne of the good things of life," he added, after a short pause. "What are the others?" I demanded. "There is Malvoisia sack," said the man in black, "and partridge, and beccafico." "And what do you say to high mass?" said I. "High mass!" said the man in black; "however," he continued, after a pause, "I will be frank with you; I came to be so; I may have heard high mass on a time, and said it too; but as for any predilection for it, I assure you I have no more than for a long High Church sermon." "You speak _a la Margutte_," said I. "Margutte!" said the man in black, musingly, "Margutte!" "You have read Pulci, I suppose?" said I. "Yes, yes," said the man in black, laughing; "I remember." "He might be rendered into English," said I, "something in this style:-- 'To which Margutte answered with a sneer, I like the blue no better than the black, My faith consists alone in savoury cheer, In roasted capons, and in potent sack; But above all, in famous gin and clear, Which often lays the Briton on his back, With lump of sugar, and with lymph from well, I drink it, and defy the fiends of hell.'" "He! he! he!" said the man in black; "that is more than Mezzofante {347} could have done for a stanza of Byron." "A clever man," said I. "Who?" said the man in black. "Mezzofante di Bologna." "He! he! he!" said the man in black; "now I know that you are not a Gypsy, at least a soothsayer; no soothsayer would have said that--" "Why," said I, "does he not understand five-and-twenty tongues?" "Oh yes," said the man in black; "and five-and-twenty added to them; but, he! he! he! it was principally from him, who is certainly the greatest of Philologists, that I formed my opinion of the sect." "You ought to speak of him with more respect," said I; "I have heard say that he has done good service to your See." "Oh yes," said the man in black; "he has done good service to our See, that is, in his way; when the neophytes of the propaganda are to be examined in the several tongues in which they are destined to preach, he is appointed to question them, the questions being first written down for him, or else, he! he! he!--Of course you know Napoleon's estimate of Mezzofante; he sent for the linguist from motives of curiosity, and after some discourse with him, told him that he might depart; then turning to some of his generals, he observed, '_Nous avons eu ici un exemple qu'un homme pe
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