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THE ITALIAN, OR, THE Confessional of the Black Penitents.
ABOUT the year 1764, some English travellers in Italy, during one of their excursions in the envi|rons of Naples, happened to stop before the portico of the Santa Maria del Pianto, a church belonging to a very ancient convent of the order of the Black Penitents. The magnificence of this portico, though impaired by time, excited so much admiration, that the travellers were curious to survey the structure to which it belonged, and with this intention they as|cended the marble steps that led to it.
Within the shade of the portico, a person with fol|ded arms, and eyes directed towards the ground, was pacing behind the pillars the whole extent of the pave|ment, and was apparently so engaged by his own thoughts, as not to observe that strangers were ap|proaching. He turned, however, suddenly, as if star|tled by the sound of steps, and then, without further pausing, glided to a door that opened into the church, and disappeared.
There was something too extraordinary in the fi|gure of this man, and too singular in his conduct, to to pass unnoticed by the visitors. He was of a tall thin figure, bending forward from the shoulders; of a sallow complexion, and harsh features, and had an