"Via Laura" is the second collection of poems by Pasquale Quaglia, composed entirely of Neapolitan dialect. The common denominator of the work is undoubtedly the exaltation of beauty, enclosed in the little things that the author discovers and investigates with a childlike look, typical of those who never gave up on that side of the child. The picturesque Neapolitan language, which in itself has a poetic sound, is a frame of lively, playful, almost extravagant compositions, with highly emotional features that arise from the author's imagination. In "Via Laura" is the second collection of poems by Pasquale Quaglia, composed entirely of Neapolitan dialect. The common denominator of the work is undoubtedly the exaltation of beauty, enclosed in the little things that the author discovers and investigates with a childlike look, typical of those who never gave up on that side of the child. The picturesque Neapolitan language, which in itself has a poetic sound, is a frame of lively, playful, almost extravagant compositions, with highly emotional features that arise from the author's imagination. In the verses alternate memories of vanished and hoped love, suggestive descriptions of typical landscapes of southern Italy, imaginative images of small animals loaded with symbolic meanings and complaints of some of human defects, all accompanied by a fairytale color. The collection is rich in small but precious splits of life coming from the horizon of a typically southern, disillusioned and frank folklore, but also poetic. Undeniable is the echo of the poems of Antonio de Curtis, the great Totò, which we can often see as an example hidden in these lyrics. The collection represents the personality of the author who never forgets his origins and that wisdom simple, but always valid, that "Via Laura", the contrada natìa, donated him (Matilde Saviotti).