Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
The segment touches on Byron and Shelley, but is mostly about Keats and his time in Rome. It also includes part of a beautiful love letter to Fanny Brawne. The narrator speaks of Keats living on the second floor. The Italian way of counting stories is to call the first floor, the ground floor, and the numbering starts above.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
The narrator reads some moving passages from the letters of John Keats and Fanny Brawne. Giacomo Leopardi, the Italian poet and near contemporary to Keats and Shelley, also lived in Piazza di Spagna.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
We visit the cemetery where the English poets are buried, and learn about the relationship between the Tiber River and the city of Rome.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Rome's many bridges are the focus of this video, including the Ponte Rotto, which dates back to ancient Rome. Only part of the Ponte Rotto is still standing and this is why it is called rotto or broken. Rivers are masculine in Italian, and ancient Roman statues portray River Gods as recumbent elderly men with long beards.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
The tour draws to a close in Rome's rougher neighborhoods, those that were particularly fascinating to poet and filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Lojacono goes to talk with the Scognamiglios, where Teresa had worked as a maid.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Lojacono and Aragona talk to different residents of the building where Teresa was killed. Everyone has something to say about her.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Lojacano can't wait to have some time with his daughter, but she has other plans. Pisanelli goes to see his friar friend, Leonardo, at the monastery.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Lojacono, Romano, and Di Nardo go to talk to Teresa's husband again. He reveals the reason for the fight he had had with Giacomo. The team goes back to the building where the Scognomiglios live and they run into the ex-door person.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Lojacono would like to talk to Giacomo Scognamiglio, but his mother says he is out. He then goes to talk to Signor Vassallo downstairs in the same building.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Carmen Esposito tells the police everything she knows. Then Lojacono meets with Aragona and Palma at the DA's office to discuss the case.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Lojacono takes his daughter Marinella to Letizia's trattoria and the two women hit it off. Ottavia reports on the victim's phone records.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Lojacono and Di Nardo go to forensics to find out about evidence on the victim's body and clothing. Palma and Piras question Giacomo Scognamiglio, or at least, they try.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
Lojacono, Palma, and the DA discuss the interview they had had with Giacomo. When they go back to the apartment building where the crime had been committed, they encounter some of the residents whom they now are acquainted with.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Italy
A woman (from the Veneto region) in the building remembered something she thought might be important. The police questioned Teresa's husband again. Palma asks Ottavia for help finding an apartment.
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