It is a Sunday afternoon on the Grand Canal. We are watching the sailboats trying to sail along without wind. Small row boats are making their incisions on the water, only to have the wounds seal up again soon after they pass. In the background the smoke from the factories and the smoke from the steamboats merge into tiny clouds above us then disappear. Our mothers and fathers walk arm and arm along the shore clutching tightly their umbrellas and canes. We are sitting on a blanket in the foreground, but even if someone were to have taken a photograph of us only our closest relatives would have recognized us: we seem to be burying our heads between our knees.