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Horace
Walpole
In Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Oxford,
vol. 1, this Grand Tourist had this to
say about Herculaneum:
Horace
Walpole
(by Joshua Reynolds)
“(June 14, 1740):
(from Naples) One hates writing descriptions that are to be found in
every book of travels; but we have seen something to-day that I am
sure you never read of, and perhaps never heard of. Have you ever
heard of a subterraneous town? a whole Roman town, with all its
edifices, remaining under ground? Don't fancy the inhabitants buried
it there to save it from the Goths: they were buried with it
themselves; which is a caution we are not told that they ever took.
You remember in Titus's time there were several cities destroyed by
an eruption of Vesuvius, attended with an earthquake. Well, this was
one of them, not very considerable, and then called Herculaneum.
Above it has since been built Portici, about three miles from Naples,
where the King has a villa. This under-ground city is perhaps one of
the noblest curiosities that ever has been discovered. It was found
out by chance, about a year and half ago. They began digging, they
found statues; they dug, further, they found more. Since that they
have made a very considerable progress, and find continually.”
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