Analysis of Two Gentlemen of Verona summary
Two Gentlemen of Verona is a touching story about human connections and familial bonds. In the story, set in Italy during World War II, two gentlemen from Verona, brothers Nicola and Jacopo, look after their sister Lucia, who is suffering from tuberculosis. The boys are impoverished and dress shabbily. Their father was a well-known vocalist and a diligent worker who perished during the war. In the absence of their father, the boys gladly accept the task of providing for their unwell sister.
The narrator was stopped by two small boys selling wild strawberries while travelling through the foothills of the Alps to Verona. The boys were clothed shabbily in outgrown clothing. The two were dark-skinned and frail, with tangled hair and serious-looking black eyes. Though their chauffeur attempted to dissuade them, the narrator and his companion purchased the largest basket the boys had for sale due to their attraction to them. The boys were siblings. Nicola, the elder, was 13 years old, while Jacopo, the younger, was about 12. The following morning, the narrator discovered the two brothers shining their shoes in front of their hotel. The boys informed him that in addition to fruit picking and shoe shining, the two boys worked as tour guides.
As the boys showed the narrator and his buddy around town, the narrator remarked how childlike and innocent the boys were. However, despite the fact that Jacopo was animated and Nicola had a wonderful smile, both boys appeared to be quite serious.
Throughout the week the narrator and his partner were in Verona, they frequently encountered the boys who were always willing to assist the two men with chores.
They were shocked one night to see the boys resting on the stone pavement beneath the lights in the windy and desolate square. It was nearly late, and Nicola sat straight, despite his seeming exhaustion, while Jacopo slept, his head resting on his brother’s shoulder. They were awaiting the final bus from Padua in order to sell newspapers.
The narrator was taken aback by how hard the boys worked, and when he confronted Nicola about it the following morning, he appeared embarrassed and speechless. The narrator assumed the boys worked so hard and spent so sparingly in order to save money for their emigration to America. Nicola expressed a wish to visit the United States but stated that they currently had plans in Italy.
The narrator then offered assistance before to his Monday departure for the United States. Nicola denied the offer, but Jacopo immediately accepted and asked if they might take the narrator’s car to Poleta, 30 kilometres from Verona. The narrator quickly volunteered to personally transport the boys there. He promised Nicola, who appeared to be enraged with his brother, that doing so would be effortless.
They travelled to the tiny settlement perched high on a hillside the following afternoon. Jacopo directed him to a magnificent red-roofed home encircled by a high stone wall in Poleta. As soon as the car came to a stop, the two boys leapt out and entered the villa, informing the narrator they would return in an hour.
The narrator followed the boys inside after a few moments. When he rang the bell, the door was opened by a nurse. He enquired as to the whereabouts of the two boys. She escorted the narrator around the hospital, eventually coming to a halt near the door of a small cubicle. The narrator spotted the boys seated close to a female of about twenty who sat propped up on pillows, her eyes gentle and sympathetic, listening to their discussion through the glass divider. He immediately recognised her as their sister due to their resemblance to another.
The nurse informed him that the children who had lost their mother earlier in the conflict had also lost their father. He was a well-known performer. Soon later, their home was damaged by a bomb. As a result, the three children were evicted and left homeless. The youngsters, who had always known a luxurious and sophisticated existence, suffered from hunger and exposure to the elements. They spent months living in a shelter they constructed out of wreckage. The city was then ruled by the Germans for three years. The boys developed an aversion to Germans. They were among the first to join the resistance effort when it began in secret. When the conflict ended and peace was restored, they returned to their loving sister. Lucia, who had previously trained as a vocalist, acquired spinal TB.
The boys were not defeated. They whisked her away to the hospital. Lucia had been in the hospital for a year and was doing well. She would eventually walk and sing again. Meanwhile, the boys fought mightily to pay for her therapy.
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