'After we had been at Paris between two and three months,we left it in the direction of Italy,which country the family had a great desire to see.After travelling a great many days in a thing which,though called a diligence,did not exhibit much diligence,we came to a great big town,seated around a nasty salt-water bason,connected by a narrow passage with the sea.Here we were to embark;and so we did as soon as possible,glad enough to get away-at least I was,and so I make no doubt were the rest,for such a place for bad smells I never was in.It seems all the drains and sewers of the place run into that same salt bason,voiding into it all their impurities,which,not being able to escape into the sea in any considerable quantity,owing to the narrowness of the entrance,there accumulate,filling the whole atmosphere with these same outrageous scents,on which account the town is a famous lodging-house of the plague.The ship in which we embarked was bound for a place in Italy called Naples,where we were to stay some time.The voyage was rather a lazy one,the ship not being moved by steam;for at the time of which I am speaking,some five years ago,steam-ships were not so plentiful as now.There were only two passengers in the grand cabin,where my governor and his daughters were,an Italian lady and a priest.Of the lady I have not much to say;she appeared to be a quiet respectable person enough,and after our arrival at Naples I neither saw nor heard anything more of her;but of the priest I shall have a good deal to say in the sequel (that,by the bye,is a word I learnt from the professor of rhetoric),and it would have been well for our family had they never met him.
'On the third day of the voyage the priest came to me,who was rather unwell with sea-sickness,which he,of course,felt nothing of-that kind of people being never affected like others.He was a finish-looking man of about forty-five,but had something strange in his eyes,which I have since thought denoted that all was not right in a certain place called the heart.After a few words of condolence,in a broken kind of English,he asked me various questions about our family;and I,won by his seeming kindness,told him all I knew about them-of which communicativeness I afterwards very much repented.As soon as he had got out of me all he desired,he left me;and I observed that during the rest of the voyage he was wonderfully attentive to our governor,and yet more to the young ladies.Both,however,kept him rather at a distance;the young ladies were reserved,and once or twice I heard our governor cursing him between his teeth for a sharking priest.The priest,however,was not disconcerted,and continued his attentions,which in a little time produced an effect,so that,by the time we landed at Naples,our great folks had conceived a kind of liking for the man,and when they took their leave invited him to visit them,which he promised to do.We hired a grand house or palace at Naples;it belonged to a poor kind of prince,who was glad enough to let it to our governor,and also his servants and carriages;and glad enough were the poor servants,for they got from us what they never got from the prince-plenty of meat and money;and glad enough,I make no doubt,were the horses for the provender we gave them;and I daresay the coaches were not sorry to be cleaned and furbished up.Well,we went out and came in;going to see the sights,and returning.Amongst other things we saw was the burning mountain,and the tomb of a certain sorcerer called Virgilio,who made witch rhymes,by which he could raise the dead.
Plenty of people came to see us,both English and Italians,and amongst the rest the priest.He did not come amongst the first,but allowed us to settle and become a little quiet before he showed himself;and after a day or two he paid us another visit,then another,till at last his visits were daily.
'I did not like that Jack Priest;so I kept my eye upon all his motions.Lord!how that Jack Priest did curry favour with our governor and the two young ladies;and he curried,and curried,till he had got himself into favour with the governor,and more especially with the two young ladies,of whom their father was doatingly fond.At last the ladies took lessons in Italian of the priest,a language in which he was said to be a grand proficient,and of which they had hitherto known but very little;and from that time his influence over them,and consequently over the old governor,increased,till the tables were turned,and he no longer curried favour with them,but they with him-yes,as true as my leg aches,the young ladies curried,and the old governor curried favour with that same priest;when he was with them,they seemed almost to hang on his lips,that is,the young ladies;and as for the old governor,he never contradicted him,and when the fellow was absent,which,by the bye,was not often,it was,"Father so-and-so said this,"and "Father so-and-so said that";"Father so-and-so thinks we should do so-and-so,or that we should not do so-and-so."I at first thought that he must have given them something,some philtre or the like,but one of the English maid-servants,who had a kind of respect for me,and who saw much more behind the scenes than I did,informed me that he was continually instilling strange notions into their heads,striving,by every possible method,to make them despise the religion of their own land,and take up that of the foreign country in which they were.