NOTEBOOK Dress these people differently (Church all right) and it is a funeral in Hannibal, fifty years ago. For evidently all these gorgeous folk know each other from babyhood— greet, kindly and cordially. 3:05. It is a fine picture now—a solid mass of blue and green and gold with that splotch of stunning red and white and gold in front of church. 1600 years ago the Emperor Marcus Aurelius died here—it was a Roman Camp then, and the country had been under the Roman Dominion something over 400, possibly 600, years. 3:58. An interval. The crowd waiting. Pause—waiting. (I suppose that no one past 45 attaches high value to his life, but would not like to have it taken in a horrible way.) Essentially, nobilities are foolishnesses, but if I were a citizen where they prevail I would do my best to get a title, for the consideration it furnishes—that is what we want. In Republics we strive for it with the surest means we have—money. 4:12. The procession is coming—cavalry, four abreast, to spread the crowd apart—25 men. Great body of Lancers—blue, and gilt helmets. Hardly a sound of hoofs. Three 6-horse mourning coaches. Outriders and coach- men in cocked hats and white wigs. Troops in red, gold and white—splendid. The hearse—eight black horses, plumed—all uncover. The military salute. Drums. Hungarian bodyguard with leopard skins. Candles. The little coffin borne In. That scalawag caused it. The crowd has surged together. Solid. Splendid mass of color. 367