ITALIAN HOURS
By
Henry James
Published 1909
CONTENTS:
PREFACE. 3
VENICE. 4
THE
GRAND CANAL. 21
VENICE:
AN EARLY IMPRESSION.. 33
CASA
ALVISI 46
FROM
CHAMBÉRY TO MILAN.. 50
THE
OLD SAINT-GOTHARD LEAVES FROM A NOTE-BOOK.. 56
ITALY
REVISITED.. 63
A
ROMAN HOLIDAY.. 79
ROMAN
RIDES. 90
ROMAN
NEIGHBOURHOODS. 99
THE
AFTER-SEASON IN ROME. 109
FROM
A ROMAN NOTE-BOOK.. 113
A
FEW OTHER ROMAN NEIGHBOURHOODS. 124
A
CHAIN OF CITIES. 131
SIENA
EARLY AND LATE. 141
THE
AUTUMN IN FLORENCE. 153
FLORENTINE
NOTES. 159
TUSCAN
CITIES. 176
OTHER
TUSCAN CITIES. 182
RAVENNA.. 191
THE
SAINT'S AFTERNOON AND OTHERS. 197
The chapters of which this volume is composed have with few
exceptions already been collected, and were then associated with others
commemorative of other impressions of (no very extensive) excursions and
wanderings. The notes on various visits to Italy are here for the first time exclusively
placed together, and as they largely refer to quite other days than these--the
date affixed to each paper sufficiently indicating this--I have introduced a
few passages that speak for a later and in some cases a frequently repeated
vision of the places and scenes in question. I have not hesitated to amend my
text, expressively, wherever it seemed urgently to ask for this, though I have
not pretended to add the element of information or the weight of curious and
critical insistence to a brief record of light inquiries and conclusions. The
fond appeal of the observer concerned is all to aspects and appearances--above
all to the interesting face of things as it mainly used to be.
H. J.
VENICE
It is a great pleasure to write the word; but I am not sure
there is not a certain impudence in pretending to add
anything to it. Venice
has been painted and described many thousands of times, and of all the cities
of the world is the easiest to visit without going there. Open the first book
and you will find a rhapsody about it; step into the first picture-dealer's and
you will find three or four high-coloured "views" of it. There is
notoriously nothing more to be said on the subject. Every one has been there,
and every one has brought back a collection of photographs. There is as little
mystery about the Grand Canal as about our
local thoroughfare, and the name of St. Mark is as familiar as the postman's
ring. It is not forbidden, however, to speak of familiar things, and I hold
that for the true Venice-lover Venice
is always in order. There is nothing new to be said about her certainly, but
the old is better than any novelty. It would be a sad day indeed when there
should be something new to say. I write these lines with the full consciousness
of having no information whatever to offer. I do not pretend to enlighten the
reader; I pretend only to give a fillip to his memory; and I hold any writer
sufficiently justified who is himself in love with his theme.
I
Mr. Ruskin has given it up, that is very true; but only
after extracting half a lifetime of pleasure and an immeasurable quantity of
fame from it. We all may do the same, after it has served our turn, which it
probably will not cease to do for many a year to come. Meantime it is Mr.
Ruskin who beyond anyone helps us to enjoy. He has indeed lately produced
several aids to depression in the shape of certain little
humorous--ill-humorous--pamphlets (the series of St. Mark's Rest) which embody
his latest reflections on the subject of our city and describe the latest
atrocities perpetrated there. These latter are numerous and deeply to be
deplored; but to admit that they have spoiled Venice would be to admit that
Venice may be spoiled--an admission pregnant, as it seems to us, with
disloyalty. Fortunately one reacts against the Ruskinian contagion, and one
hour of the lagoon is worth a hundred pages of demoralised prose. This queer
late-coming prose of Mr. Ruskin (including the revised and condensed issue of
the Stones of Venice, only one little volume of which has been published, or
perhaps ever will be) is all to be read, though much of it appears addressed to
children of tender age. It is pitched in the nursery-key, and might be supposed
to emanate from an angry governess. It is, however, all suggestive, and much of
it is delightfully just. There is an inconceivable want of form in it, though
the author has spent his life in laying down the principles of form and
scolding people for departing from them; but it throbs and flashes with the
love of his subject--a love disconcerted and abjured, but which has still much
of the force of inspiration. Among the many strange things that have befallen
Venice, she has had the good fortune to become the object of a passion to a man
of splendid genius, who has made her his own and in doing so has made her the
world's. There is no better reading at Venice
therefore, as I say, than Ruskin, for every true Venice-lover can separate the
wheat from the chaff. The narrow theological spirit, the moralism à tout
propos, the queer provincialities and pruderies, are mere wild weeds in a
mountain of flowers. One may doubtless be very happy in Venice without reading at all--without
criticising or analysing or thinking a strenuous thought. It is a city in
which, I suspect, there is very little strenuous thinking, and yet it is a city
in which there must be almost as much happiness as misery. The misery of Venice stands there for all the world to see; it is part of the spectacle--a
thoroughgoing devotee of local colour might consistently say it is part of the
pleasure. The Venetian people have little to call their own--little more than
the bare privilege of leading their lives in the most beautiful of towns. Their
habitations are decayed; their taxes heavy; their pockets light; their opportunities
few. One receives an impression, however, that life presents itself to them
with attractions not accounted for in this meagre train of advantages, and that
they are on better terms with it than many people who have made a better
bargain. They lie in the sunshine; they dabble in the sea; they wear bright
rags; they fall into attitudes and harmonies; they assist at an eternal
conversazione. It is not easy to say that one would have them other than they
are, and it certainly would make an immense difference should they be better
fed. The number of persons in Venice
who evidently never have enough to eat is painfully large; but it would be more
painful if we did not equally perceive that the rich Venetian temperament may
bloom upon a dog's allowance. Nature has been kind to it, and sunshine and
leisure and conversation and beautiful views form the greater part of its
sustenance. It takes a great deal to make a successful American, but to make a
happy Venetian takes only a handful of quick sensibility. The Italian people
have at once the good and the evil fortune to be conscious of few wants; so
that if the civilisation of a society is measured by the number of its needs,
as seems to be the common opinion to-day, it is to be feared that the children
of the lagoon would make but a poor figure in a set of comparative tables. Not
their misery, doubtless, but the way they elude their misery, is what pleases
the sentimental tourist, who is gratified by the sight of a beautiful race that
lives by the aid of its imagination. The way to enjoy Venice is to follow the example of these
people and make the most of simple pleasures. Almost all the pleasures of the
place are simple; this may be maintained even under the imputation of ingenious
paradox. There is no simpler pleasure than looking at a fine Titian, unless it
be looking at a fine Tintoret or strolling into St. Mark's,--abominable the way
one falls into the habit,--and resting one's light-wearied eyes upon the
windowless gloom; or than floating in a gondola or than hanging over a balcony
or than taking one's coffee at Florian's. It is of such superficial pastimes
that a Venetian day is composed, and the pleasure of the matter is in the
emotions to which they minister. These are fortunately of the finest--otherwise
Venice would be
insufferably dull. Reading Ruskin is good; reading the old records is perhaps
better; but the best thing of all is simply staying on. The only way to care
for Venice as
she deserves it is to give her a chance to touch you often--to linger and
remain and return.
II
The danger is that you will not linger enough--a danger of
which the author of these lines had known something. It is possible to dislike Venice, and to entertain
the sentiment in a responsible and intelligent manner. There are travellers who
think the place odious, and those who are not of this opinion often find
themselves wishing that the others were only more numerous. The sentimental
tourist's sole quarrel with his Venice
is that he has too many competitors there. He likes to be alone; to be
original; to have (to himself, at least) the air of making discoveries. The Venice of to-day is a
vast museum where the little wicket that admits you is perpetually turning and
creaking, and you march through the institution with a herd of fellow-gazers.
There is nothing left to discover or describe, and originality of attitude is
completely impossible. This is often very annoying; you can only turn your back
on your impertinent playfellow and curse his want of delicacy. But this is not
the fault of Venice;
it is the fault of the rest of the world. The fault of Venice is that, though she is easy to admire,
she is not so easy to live with as you count living in other places. After you
have stayed a week and the bloom of novelty has rubbed off you wonder if you
can accommodate yourself to the peculiar conditions. Your old habits become
impracticable and you find yourself obliged to form new ones of an undesirable
and unprofitable character. You are tired of your gondola (or you think you
are) and you have seen all the principal pictures and heard the names of the
palaces announced a dozen times by your gondolier, who brings them out almost
as impressively as if he were an English butler bawling titles into a
drawing-room. You have walked several hundred times round the Piazza and bought
several bushels of photographs. You have visited the antiquity mongers whose
horrible sign-boards dishonour some of the grandest vistas in the Grand Canal;
you have tried the opera and found it very bad; you have bathed at the Lido and found the water flat. You have begun to have a
shipboard-feeling--to regard the Piazza as an enormous saloon and the Riva
degli Schiavoni as a promenade-deck. You are obstructed and encaged; your
desire for space is unsatisfied; you miss your usual exercise. You try to take
a walk and you fail, and meantime, as I say, you have come to regard your
gondola as a sort of magnified baby's cradle. You have no desire to be rocked
to sleep, though you are sufficiently kept awake by the irritation produced, as
you gaze across the shallow lagoon, by the attitude of the perpetual gondolier,
with his turned-out toes, his protruded chin, his absurdly unscientific stroke.
The canals have a horrible smell, and the everlasting Piazza, where you have looked
repeatedly at every article in every shop-window and found them all rubbish,
where the young Venetians who sell bead bracelets and "panoramas" are
perpetually thrusting their wares at you, where the same tightly-buttoned
officers are for ever sucking the same black weeds, at the same empty tables,
in front of the same cafés--the Piazza, as I say, has resolved itself into a
magnificent tread-mill. This is the state of mind of those shallow inquirers
who find Venice
all very well for a week; and if in such a state of mind you take your
departure you act with fatal rashness. The loss is your own, moreover; it is
not--with all deference to your personal attractions--that of your companions
who remain behind; for though there are some disagreeable things in Venice there is nothing so disagreeable as the visitors. The conditions are
peculiar, but your intolerance of them evaporates before it has had time to
become a prejudice. When you have called for the bill to go, pay it and remain,
and you will find on the morrow that you are deeply attached to Venice. It is by living
there from day to day that you feel the fulness of her charm; that you invite
her exquisite influence to sink into your spirit. The creature varies like a
nervous woman, whom you know only when you know all the aspects of her beauty.
She has high spirits or low, she is pale or red, grey or pink, cold or warm,
fresh or wan, according to the weather or the hour. She is always interesting
and almost always sad; but she has a thousand occasional graces and is always
liable to happy accidents. You become extraordinarily fond of these things; you
count upon them; they make part of your life. Tenderly fond you become; there
is something indefinable in those depths of personal acquaintance that gradually
establish themselves. The place seems to personify itself, to become human and
sentient and conscious of your affection. You desire to embrace it, to caress
it, to possess it; and finally a soft sense of possession grows up and your
visit becomes a perpetual love-affair. It is very true that if you go, as the
author of these lines on a certain occasion went, about the middle of March, a
certain amount of disappointment is possible. He had paid no visit for several
years, and in the interval the beautiful and helpless city had suffered an
increase of injury. The barbarians are in full possession and you tremble for
what they may do. You are reminded from the moment of your arrival that Venice scarcely exists
any more as a city at all; that she exists only as a battered peep-show and
bazaar. There was a horde of savage Germans encamped in the Piazza, and they
filled the Ducal Palace and the Academy with their
uproar. The English and Americans came a little later. They came in good time,
with a great many French, who were discreet enough to make very long repasts at
the Caffè Quadri, during which they were out of the way. The months of April
and May of the year 1881 were not, as a general thing, a favourable season for
visiting the Ducal
Palace and the Academy.
The valet-de-place had marked them for his own and
held triumphant possession of them. He celebrates his triumphs in a terrible
brassy voice, which resounds all over the place, and has, whatever language he
be speaking, the accent of some other idiom. During all the spring months in Venice these gentry
abound in the great resorts, and they lead their helpless captives through
churches and galleries in dense irresponsible groups. They infest the Piazza;
they pursue you along the Riva; they hang about the bridges and the doors of
the cafés. In saying just now that I was disappointed at first, I had chiefly
in mind the impression that assails me to-day in the whole precinct of St.
Mark's. The condition of this ancient sanctuary is surely a great scandal. The
pedlars and commissioners ply their trade--often a very unclean one--at the
very door of the temple; they follow you across the threshold, into the sacred
dusk, and pull your sleeve, and hiss into your ear, scuffling with each other
for customers. There is a great deal of dishonour about St. Mark's altogether,
and if Venice,
as I say, has become a great bazaar, this exquisite edifice is now the biggest
booth.
III
It is treated as a booth in all ways, and if it had not
somehow a great spirit of solemnity within it the traveller would soon have
little warrant for regarding it as a religious affair. The restoration of the
outer walls, which has lately been so much attacked and defended, is certainly
a great shock. Of the necessity of the work only an expert is, I suppose, in a
position to judge; but there is no doubt that, if a necessity it be, it is one
that is deeply to be regretted. To no more distressing necessity have people of
taste lately had to resign themselves. Wherever the hand of the restorer has been
laid all semblance of beauty has vanished; which is a sad fact, considering
that the external loveliness of St. Mark's has been for ages less impressive
only than that of the still comparatively uninjured interior. I know not what
is the measure of necessity in such a case, and it appears indeed to be a very
delicate question. To-day, at any rate, that admirable harmony of faded mosaic
and marble which, to the eye of the traveller emerging from the narrow streets
that lead to the Piazza, filled all the further end of it with a sort of
dazzling silver presence--to-day this lovely vision is in a way to be
completely reformed and indeed well-nigh abolished. The old softness and
mellowness of colour--the work of the quiet centuries and of the breath of the salt
sea--is giving way to large crude patches of new material which have the effect
of a monstrous malady rather than of a restoration to health. They look like
blotches of red and white paint and dishonourable smears of chalk on the cheeks
of a noble matron. The face toward the Piazzetta is in especial the
newest-looking thing conceivable--as new as a new pair of boots or as the
morning's paper. We do not profess, however, to undertake a scientific quarrel
with these changes; we admit that our complaint is a purely sentimental one.
The march of industry in united Italy
must doubtless be looked at as a whole, and one must endeavour to believe that
it is through innumerable lapses of taste that this deeply interesting country
is groping her way to her place among the nations. For the present, it is not
to be denied, certain odd phases of the process are more visible than the
result, to arrive at which it seems necessary that, as she was of old a
passionate votary of the beautiful, she should to-day burn everything that she
has adored. It is doubtless too soon to judge her, and there are moments when
one is willing to forgive her even the restoration of St. Mark's. Inside as
well there has been a considerable attempt to make the place more
tidy; but the general effect, as yet, has not seriously suffered. What I
chiefly remember is the straightening out of that dark and rugged old
pavement--those deep undulations of primitive mosaic in which the fond
spectator was thought to perceive an intended resemblance to the waves of the
ocean. Whether intended or not the analogy was an image the more in a
treasure-house of images; but from a considerable portion of the church it has
now disappeared. Throughout the greater part indeed the pavement remains as
recent generations have known it--dark, rich, cracked, uneven, spotted with
porphyry and time-blackened malachite, polished by the knees of innumerable
worshippers; but in other large stretches the idea imitated by the restorers is
that of the ocean in a dead calm, and the model they have taken the floor of a
London club-house or of a New York hotel. I think no Venetian and scarcely any
Italian cares much for such differences; and when, a year ago, people in England were
writing to the Times about the whole business and holding meetings to protest
against it the dear children of the lagoon--so far as they heard or heeded the
rumour--thought them partly busy-bodies and partly asses. Busy-bodies they
doubtless were, but they took a good deal of disinterested trouble. It never occurs
to the Venetian mind of to-day that such trouble may be worth taking; the
Venetian mind vainly endeavours to conceive a state of existence in which
personal questions are so insipid that people have to look for grievances in
the wrongs of brick and marble. I must not, however, speak of St. Mark's as if
I had the pretension of giving a description of it or as if the reader desired
one. The reader has been too well served already. It is surely the
best-described building in the world. Open the Stones of Venice, open Théophile
Gautier's ltalia, and you will see. These writers take it very seriously, and
it is only because there is another way of taking it that I venture to speak of
it; the way that offers itself after you have been in Venice a couple of months,
and the light is hot in the great Square, and you pass in under the pictured
porticoes with a feeling of habit and friendliness and a desire for something
cool and dark. There are moments, after all, when the church is comparatively
quiet and empty, and when you may sit there with an easy consciousness of its
beauty. From the moment, of course, that you go into any Italian church for any
purpose but to say your prayers or look at the ladies, you rank yourself among
the trooping barbarians I just spoke of; you treat the place as an orifice in
the peep-show. Still, it is almost a spiritual function--or, at the worst, an
amorous one--to feed one's eyes on the molten colour that drops from the hollow
vaults and thickens the air with its richness. It is all so quiet and sad and
faded and yet all so brilliant and living. The strange figures in the mosaic
pictures, bending with the curve of niche and vault, stare down through the
glowing dimness; the burnished gold that stands behind them catches the light on
its little uneven cubes. St. Mark's owes nothing of its character to the beauty
of proportion or perspective; there is nothing grandly balanced or far-arching;
there are no long lines nor triumphs of the
perpendicular. The church arches indeed, but arches like a dusky cavern. Beauty
of surface, of tone, of detail, of things near enough to touch and kneel upon
and lean against--it is from this the effect proceeds. In this sort of beauty
the place is incredibly rich, and you may go there every day and find afresh
some lurking pictorial nook. It is a treasury of bits, as the painters say; and
there are usually three or four of the fraternity with their easels set up in
uncertain equilibrium on the undulating floor. It is not easy to catch the real
complexion of St. Mark's, and these laudable attempts at portraiture are apt to
look either lurid or livid. But if you cannot paint the old loose-looking
marble slabs, the great panels of basalt and jasper, the crucifixes of which
the lonely anguish looks deeper in the vertical light, the tabernacles whose
open doors disclose a dark Byzantine image spotted with dull, crooked gems--if
you cannot paint these things you can at least grow fond of them. You grow fond
even of the old benches of red marble, partly worn away by the breeches of many
generations and attached to the base of those wide pilasters of which the
precious plating, delightful in its faded brownness, with a faint grey bloom
upon it, bulges and yawns a little with honourable age.
[Illustration: FLAGS AT ST. MARK'S VENICE]
IV
Even at first, when the vexatious sense of the city of the
Doges reduced to earning its living as a curiosity-shop was in its keenness,
there was a great deal of entertainment to be got from lodging on Riva
Schiavoni and looking out at the far-shimmering lagoon. There was entertainment
indeed in simply getting into the place and observing the queer incidents of a
Venetian installation. A great many persons contribute indirectly to this
undertaking, and it is surprising how they spring out at you during your
novitiate to remind you that they are bound up in some mysterious manner with
the constitution of your little establishment. It was an interesting problem
for instance to trace the subtle connection existing between the niece of the
landlady and the occupancy of the fourth floor. Superficially it was none too
visible, as the young lady in question was a dancer at the Fenice theatre--or
when that was closed at the Rossini--and might have been supposed absorbed by
her professional duties. It proved necessary, however, that she should hover
about the premises in a velvet jacket and a pair of black kid gloves with one
little white button; as also, that she should apply a thick coating of powder
to her face, which had a charming oval and a sweet weak expression, like that
of most of the Venetian maidens, who, as a general thing--it was not a
peculiarity of the land-lady's niece--are fond of besmearing themselves with
flour. You soon recognise that it is not only the many-twinkling lagoon you
behold from a habitation on the Riva; you see a little of everything Venetian.
Straight across, before my windows, rose the great pink mass of San Giorgio
Maggiore, which has for an ugly Palladian church a success beyond all reason.
It is a success of position, of colour, of the immense detached Campanile,
tipped with a tall gold angel. I know not whether it is because San Giorgio is
so grandly conspicuous, with a great deal of worn, faded-looking brickwork; but
for many persons the whole place has a kind of suffusion of rosiness. Asked
what may be the leading colour in the Venetian concert, we should inveterately
say Pink, and yet without remembering after all that this elegant hue occurs
very often. It is a faint, shimmering, airy, watery pink; the bright sea-light
seems to flush with it and the pale whiteish-green of lagoon and canal to drink
it in. There is indeed a great deal of very evident brickwork, which is never
fresh or loud in colour, but always burnt out, as it were, always exquisitely
mild.
Certain little mental pictures rise before the collector of
memories at the simple mention, written or spoken, of the places he has loved.
When I hear, when I see, the magical name I have written above these pages, it
is not of the great Square that I think, with its strange basilica and its high
arcades, nor of the wide mouth of the Grand Canal, with the stately steps and
the well- poised dome of the Salute; it is not of the low lagoon, nor the sweet
Piazzetta, nor the dark chambers of St. Mark's. I simply see a narrow canal in
the heart of the city--a patch of green water and a surface of pink wall. The
gondola moves slowly; it gives a great smooth swerve, passes under a bridge,
and the gondolier's cry, carried over the quiet water, makes a kind of splash in
the stillness. A girl crosses the little bridge, which has an arch like a
camel's back, with an old shawl on her head, which makes her characteristic and
charming; you see her against the sky as you float beneath. The pink of the old
wall seems to fill the whole place; it sinks even into the opaque water. Behind
the wall is a garden, out of which the long arm of a white June rose--the roses
of Venice are
splendid--has flung itself by way of spontaneous ornament. On the other side of
this small water-way is a great shabby facade of Gothic windows and
balconies--balconies on which dirty clothes are hung and under which a
cavernous-looking doorway opens from a low flight of slimy water-steps. It is
very hot and still, the canal has a queer smell, and the whole place is
enchanting.
[Illustration: A NARROW
CANAL, VENICE]
It is poor work, however, talking about the colour of things
in Venice. The
fond spectator is perpetually looking at it from his window, when he is not
floating about with that delightful sense of being for the moment a part of it,
which any gentleman in a gondola is free to entertain. Venetian windows and
balconies are a dreadful lure, and while you rest your elbows on these
cushioned ledges the precious hours fly away. But in truth Venice isn't in fair weather a place for
concentration of mind. The effort required for sitting down to a writing-table
is heroic, and the brightest page of MS. looks dull beside the brilliancy of
your milieu. All nature beckons you forth and murmurs to you sophistically that
such hours should be devoted to collecting impressions. Afterwards, in ugly
places, at unprivileged times, you can convert your impressions into prose.
Fortunately for the present proser the weather wasn't always fine; the first
month was wet and windy, and it was better to judge of the matter from an open
casement than to respond to the advances of persuasive gondoliers. Even then
however there was a constant entertainment in the view. It was all cold colour, and the steel-grey floor of the lagoon was stroked
the wrong way by the wind. Then there were charming cool intervals, when the
churches, the houses, the anchored fishing-boats, the whole gently-curving line
of the Riva, seemed to be washed with a pearly white. Later it all turned
warm--warm to the eye as well as to other senses. After the middle of May the
whole place was in a glow. The sea took on a thousand shades, but they were
only infinite variations of blue, and those rosy walls I just spoke of began to
flush in the thick sunshine. Every patch of colour, every yard of
weather-stained stucco, every glimpse of nestling garden or daub of sky above a
calle, began to shine and sparkle--began, as the painters say, to
"compose." The lagoon was streaked with odd currents, which played
across it like huge smooth finger-marks. The gondolas multiplied and spotted it
allover; every gondola and gondolier looking, at a distance, precisely like
every other.
There is something strange and fascinating in this
mysterious impersonality of the gondola. It has an identity when you are in it,
but, thanks to their all being of the same size, shape and colour, and of the
same deportment and gait, it has none, or as little as possible, as you see it
pass before you. From my windows on the Riva there was always the same
silhouette--the long, black, slender skiff, lifting its head and throwing it
back a little, moving yet seeming not to move, with the grotesquely-graceful
figure on the poop. This figure inclines, as may be, more to the graceful or to
the grotesque--standing in the "second position" of the
dancing-master, but indulging from the waist upward in a freedom of movement
which that functionary would deprecate. One may say as a general thing that
there is something rather awkward in the movement even of the most graceful
gondolier, and something graceful in the movement of the most awkward. In the
graceful men of course the grace predominates, and nothing can be finer than
the large, firm way in which, from their point of vantage, they throw
themselves over their tremendous oar. It has the boldness of a plunging bird
and the regularity of a pendulum. Sometimes, as you see this movement in
profile, in a gondola that passes you--see, as you recline on your own low
cushions, the arching body of the gondolier lifted up against the sky--it has a
kind of nobleness which suggests an image on a Greek frieze. The gondolier at Venice is your very good
friend--if you choose him happily--and on the quality of the personage depends
a good deal that of your impressions. He is a part of your daily life, your
double, your shadow, your complement. Most people, I think, either like their
gondolier or hate him; and if they like him, like him very much. In this case
they take an interest in him after his departure; wish him to be sure of
employment, speak of him as the gem of gondoliers and tell their friends to be
certain to "secure" him. There is usually no difficulty in securing
him; there is nothing elusive or reluctant about a gondolier. Nothing would
induce me not to believe them for the most part excellent fellows, and the
sentimental tourist must always have a kindness for them. More than the rest of
the population, of course, they are the children of Venice; they are associated with its
idiosyncrasy, with its essence, with its silence, with its melancholy.
When I say they are associated with its silence I should
immediately add that they are associated also with its sound. Among themselves
they are an extraordinarily talkative company. They chatter at the traghetti,
where they always have some sharp point under discussion; they bawl across the
canals; they bespeak your commands as you approach; they defy each other from
afar. If you happen to have a traghetto under your window, you are well aware
that they are a vocal race. I should go even further than I went just now, and
say that the voice of the gondolier is in fact for audibility the dominant or
rather the only note of Venice.
There is scarcely another heard sound, and that indeed is part of the interest
of the place. There is no noise there save distinctly human noise; no rumbling,
no vague uproar, nor rattle of wheels and hoofs. It is all articulate and vocal
and personal. One may say indeed that Venice
is emphatically the city of conversation; people talk all over the place
because there is nothing to interfere with its being caught by the ear. Among
the populace it is a general family party. The still water carries the voice,
and good Venetians exchange confidences at a distance of half a mile. It saves
a world of trouble, and they don't like trouble. Their delightful garrulous
language helps them to make Venetian life a long conversazione. This language,
with its soft elisions, its odd transpositions, its kindly contempt for
consonants and other disagreeables, has in it something peculiarly human and
accommodating. If your gondolier had no other merit he would have the merit
that he speaks Venetian. This may rank as a merit even--some people perhaps
would say especially--when you don't understand what he says. But he adds to it
other graces which make him an agreeable feature in your life. The price he
sets on his services is touchingly small, and he has a happy art of being
obsequious without being, or at least without seeming, abject. For occasional
liberalities he evinces an almost lyrical gratitude. In short he has
delightfully good manners, a merit which he shares for the most part with the
Venetians at large. One grows very fond of these people, and the reason of
one's fondness is the frankness and sweetness of their address. That of the
Italian family at large has much to recommend it; but in the Venetian manner
there is something peculiarly ingratiating. One feels that the race is old,
that it has a long and rich civilisation in its blood, and that if it hasn't been
blessed by fortune it has at least been polished by time. It hasn't a genius
for stiff morality, and indeed makes few pretensions in that direction. It
scruples but scantly to represent the false as the true, and has been accused
of cultivating the occasion to grasp and to overreach, and of steering a
crooked course--not to your and my advantage--amid the sanctities of property.
It has been accused further of loving if not too well at least too often, of
being in fine as little austere as possible. I am not sure it is very brave,
nor struck with its being very industrious. But it has an unfailing sense of
the amenities of life; the poorest Venetian is a natural man of the world. He
is better company than persons of his class are apt to be among the nations of
industry and virtue--where people are also sometimes perceived to lie and steal
and otherwise misconduct themselves. He has a great desire to please and to be
pleased.
V
In that matter at least the cold-blooded stranger begins at
last to imitate him; begins to lead a life that shall be before all things
easy; unless indeed he allow himself, like Mr. Ruskin, to be put out of humour
by Titian and Tiepolo. The hours he spends among the pictures are his best
hours in Venice,
and I am ashamed to have written so much of common things when I might have
been making festoons of the names of the masters. Only, when we have covered
our page with such festoons what more is left to say? When one has said
Carpaccio and Bellini, the Tintoret and the Veronese, one has struck a note
that must be left to resound at will. Everything has been said about the mighty
painters, and it is of little importance that a pilgrim the more has found them
to his taste. "Went this morning to the Academy; was very much pleased with
Titian's 'Assumption.'" That honest phrase has doubtless been written in
many a traveller's diary, and was not indiscreet on the part of its author. But
it appeals little to the general reader, and we must moreover notoriously not
expose our deepest feelings. Since I have mentioned Titian's
"Assumption" I must say that there are some people who have been less
pleased with it than the observer we have just imagined. It is one of the
possible disappointments of Venice,
and you may if you like take advantage of your privilege of not caring for it.
It imparts a look of great richness to the side of the beautiful room of the
Academy on which it hangs; but the same room contains two or three works less
known to fame which are equally capable of inspiring a passion. "The
'Annunciation' struck me as coarse and superficial": that note was once
made in a simple-minded tourist's book. At Venice, strange to say, Titian is altogether
a disappointment; the city of his adoption is far from containing the best of
him. Madrid, Paris,
London, Florence,
Dresden, Munich
--these are the homes of his greatness.
There are other painters who have but a single home, and the
greatest of these is the Tintoret. Close beside him sit Carpaccio and Bellini,
who make with him the dazzling Venetian trio. The Veronese may be seen and
measured in other places; he is most splendid in Venice,
but he shines in Paris and in Dresden. You may walk out of the noon-day
dusk of Trafalgar Square
in November, and in one of the chambers of the National Gallery see the family
of Darius rustling and pleading and weeping at the feet of Alexander. Alexander
is a beautiful young Venetian in crimson pantaloons, and the picture sends a
glow into the cold London
twilight. You may sit before it for an hour and dream you are floating to the
water-gate of the Ducal Palace, where a certain old beggar who has one of the
handsomest heads in the world--he has sat to a hundred painters for Doges and
for personages more sacred--has a prescriptive right to pretend to pull your gondola
to the steps and to hold out a greasy immemorial cap. But you must go to Venice in very fact to
see the other masters, who form part of your life while you are there, who
illuminate your view of the universe. It is difficult to express one's relation
to them; the whole Venetian art-world is so near, so familiar, so much an
extension and adjunct of the spreading actual, that it seems almost invidious
to say one owes more to one of them than to the other. Nowhere, not even in
Holland, where the correspondence between the real aspects and the little
polished canvases is so constant and so exquisite, do art and life seem so
interfused and, as it were, so consanguineous. All the splendour of light and
colour, all the Venetian air and the Venetian history are on the walls and
ceilings of the palaces; and all the genius of the masters, all the images and
visions they have left upon canvas, seem to tremble in the sunbeams and dance
upon the waves. That is the perpetual interest of the place--that
you live in a certain sort of knowledge as in a rosy cloud. You don't go into
the churches and galleries by way of a change from the streets; you go into
them because they offer you an exquisite reproduction of the things that
surround you. All Venice
was both model and painter, and life was so pictorial that art couldn't help
becoming so. With all diminutions life is pictorial still, and this fact gives
an extraordinary freshness to one's perception of the great Venetian works. You
judge of them not as a connoisseur, but as a man of the world, and you enjoy
them because they are so social and so true. Perhaps of all works of art that
are equally great they demand least reflection on the part of the
spectator--they make least of a mystery of being enjoyed. Reflection only confirms
your admiration, yet is almost ashamed to show its head. These things speak so
frankly and benignantly to the sense that even when they arrive at the highest
style--as in the Tintoret's "Presentation of the little Virgin at the Temple"--they are still
more familiar.
But it is hard, as I say, to express all this, and it is
painful as well to attempt it--painful because in the memory of vanished hours
so filled with beauty the consciousness of present loss oppresses. Exquisite
hours, enveloped in light and silence, to have known them once is to have
always a terrible standard of enjoyment. Certain lovely mornings of May and
June come back with an ineffaceable fairness. Venice
isn't smothered in flowers at this season, in the manner of Florence
and Rome; but
the sea and sky themselves seem to blossom and rustle. The gondola waits at the
wave-washed steps, and if you are wise you will take your place beside a
discriminating companion. Such a companion in Venice should of course be of the sex that
discriminates most finely. An intelligent woman who knows her Venice seems doubly intelligent, and it makes
no woman's perceptions less keen to be aware that she can't help looking
graceful as she is borne over the waves. The handsome Pasquale, with uplifted
oar, awaits your command, knowing, in a general way, from observation of your habits, that your intention is to go to see a picture or
two. It perhaps doesn't immensely matter what picture you choose: the whole
affair is so charming. It is charming to wander through the light and shade of
intricate canals, with perpetual architecture above you and perpetual fluidity
beneath. It is charming to disembark at the polished steps of a little empty
campo--a sunny shabby square with an old well in the middle, an old church on
one side and tall Venetian windows looking down. Sometimes the windows are
tenantless; sometimes a lady in a faded dressing-gown leans vaguely on the
sill. There is always an old man holding out his hat for coppers; there are
always three or four small boys dodging possible umbrella-pokes while they
precede you, in the manner of custodians, to the door of the church.
VI
The churches of Venice
are rich in pictures, and many a masterpiece lurks in the unaccommodating gloom
of side-chapels and sacristies. Many a noble work is perched behind the dusty
candles and muslin roses of a scantily-visited altar; some of them indeed,
hidden behind the altar, suffer in a darkness that can never be explored. The
facilities offered you for approaching the picture in such cases are a mockery
of your irritated wish. You stand at tip-toe on a three-legged stool, you climb
a rickety ladder, you almost mount upon the shoulders
of the custode. You do everything but see the picture. You see just enough to
be sure it's beautiful. You catch a glimpse of a divine head, of a fig tree
against a mellow sky, but the rest is impenetrable mystery. You renounce all
hope, for instance, of approaching the magnificent Cima da Conegliano in San
Giovanni in Bragora; and bethinking yourself of the immaculate purity that
shines in the spirit of this master, you renounce it with chagrin and pain.
Behind the high altar in that church hangs a Baptism of Christ by Cima which I
believe has been more or less repainted. You make the thing out in spots, you see it has a fullness of perfection. But you turn
away from it with a stiff neck and promise yourself consolation in the Academy
and at the Madonna dell' Orto, where two noble works by the same hand--pictures
as clear as a summer twilight--present themselves in
better circumstances. It may be said as a general thing that you never see the
Tintoret. You admire him, you adore him, you think him the greatest of
painters, but in the great majority of cases your eyes fail to deal with him.
This is partly his own fault; so many of his works have turned to blackness and
are positively rotting in their frames. At the Scuola di San Rocco, where there
are acres of him, there is scarcely anything at all adequately visible save the
immense "Crucifixion" in the upper story. It is true that in looking
at this huge composition you look at many pictures; it has not only a multitude
of figures but a wealth of episodes; and you pass from one of these to the
other as if you were "doing" a gallery. Surely no single picture in
the world contains more of human life; there is everything in it, including the
most exquisite beauty. It is one of the greatest things of art; it is always
interesting. There are works of the artist which contain touches more
exquisite, revelations of beauty more radiant, but there is no other vision of
so intense a reality, an execution so splendid. The interest, the
impressiveness, of that whole corner of Venice,
however melancholy the effect of its gorgeous and ill-lighted chambers, gives a
strange importance to a visit to the Scuola. Nothing that all travellers go to
see appears to suffer less from the incursions of travellers. It is one of the
loneliest booths of the bazaar, and the author of these lines has always had
the good fortune, which he wishes to every other traveller, of having it to
himself. I think most visitors find the place rather alarming and
wicked-looking. They walk about a while among the fitful figures that gleam
here and there out of the great tapestry (as it were) with which the painter
has hung all the walls, and then, depressed and bewildered by the portentous
solemnity of these objects, by strange glimpses of unnatural scenes, by the
echo of their lonely footsteps on the vast stone floors, they take a hasty
departure, finding themselves again, with a sense of release from danger, a
sense that the genius loci was a sort of mad white-washer who worked with a bad
mixture, in the bright light of the campo, among the beggars, the
orange-vendors and the passing gondolas. Solemn indeed is the place, solemn and
strangely suggestive, for the simple reason that we shall scarcely find four
walls elsewhere that inclose within a like area an equal quantity of genius.
The air is thick with it and dense and difficult to breathe; for it was genius
that was not happy, inasmuch as it, lacked the art to
fix itself for ever. It is not immortality that we breathe at the Scuola di San
Rocco, but conscious, reluctant mortality.
Fortunately, however, we can turn to the Ducal Palace,
where everything is so brilliant and splendid that the poor dusky Tintoret is
lifted in spite of himself into the concert. This deeply original building is
of course the loveliest thing in Venice,
and a morning's stroll there is a wonderful illumination. Cunningly select your
hour--half the enjoyment of Venice
is a question. of dodging--and enter at about one
o'clock, when the tourists have flocked off to lunch and the echoes of the
charming chambers have gone to sleep among the sunbeams. There is no brighter
place in Venice--by
which I mean that on the whole there is none half so bright. The reflected
sunshine plays up through the great windows from the glittering lagoon and
shimmers and twinkles over gilded walls and ceilings. All the history of Venice, all its splendid
stately past, glows around you in a strong sealight. Everyone here is
magnificent, but the great Veronese is the most magnificent of all. He swims
before you in a silver cloud; he thrones in an eternal morning. The deep blue
sky burns behind him, streaked across with milky bars; the white colonnades
sustain the richest canopies, under which the first gentlemen and ladies in the
world both render homage and receive it. Their glorious garments rustle in the
air of the sea and their sun-lighted faces are the very complexion of Venice. The mixture of
pride and piety, of politics and religion, of art and patriotism, gives a
splendid dignity to every scene. Never was a painter more nobly joyous, never
did an artist take a greater delight in life, seeing it all as a kind of breezy
festival and feeling it through the medium of perpetual success. He revels in
the gold-framed ovals of the ceilings, multiplies himself there with the
fluttering movement of an embroidered banner that tosses itself into the blue.
He was the happiest of painters and produced the happiest picture in the world.
"The Rape of Europa" surely deserves this title; it is impossible to
look at it without aching with envy. Nowhere else in art is such a temperament
revealed; never did inclination and opportunity combine to express such
enjoyment. The mixture of flowers and gems and brocade, of blooming flesh and
shining sea and waving groves, of youth, health, movement, desire--all this is
the brightest vision that ever descended upon the soul of a painter. Happy the
artist who could entertain such a vision; happy the artist who could paint it
as the masterpiece I here recall is painted.
The Tintoret's visions were not so
bright as that; but he had several that were radiant enough. In the room that
contains the work just cited are several smaller canvases by the greatly more
complex genius of the Scuola di San Rocco, which are almost simple in their
loveliness, almost happy in their simplicity. They have kept their brightness
through the centuries, and they shine with their neighbours in those golden
rooms. There is a piece of painting in one of them which is one of the sweetest
things in Venice and which reminds one afresh of those wild flowers of
execution that bloom so profusely and so unheeded in the dark corners of all of
the Tintoret's work. "Pallas chasing away Mars" is, I believe, the
name that is given to the picture; and it represents in fact a young woman of
noble appearance administering a gentle push to a fine young man in armour, as
if to tell him to keep his distance. It is of the gentleness of this push that
I speak, the charming way in which she puts out her arm, with a single bracelet
on it, and rests her young hand, its rosy fingers parted, on his dark
breastplate. She bends her enchanting head with the effort--a head which has
all the strange fairness that the Tintoret always sees in women--and the soft,
living, flesh-like glow of all these members, over which the brush has scarcely
paused in its course, is as pretty an example of genius as all Venice can show.
But why speak of the Tintoret when I can say nothing of the great "Paradise," which unfolds its somewhat smoky
splendour and the wonder of its multitudinous circles in one of the other
chambers? If it were not one of the first pictures in the world it would be
about the biggest, and we must confess that the spectator gets from it at first
chiefly an impression of quantity. Then he sees that this quantity is really
wealth; that the dim confusion of faces is a magnificent composition, and that
some of the details of this composition are extremely beautiful. It is
impossible however in a retrospect of Venice
to specify one's happiest hours, though as one looks backward certain
ineffaceable moments start here and there into vividness. How is it possible to
forget one's visits to the sacristy of the Frari, however frequent they may
have been, and the great work of John Bellini which forms the treasure of that
apartment?
VII
Nothing in Venice
is more perfect than this, and we know of no work of art more complete. The
picture is in three compartments; the Virgin sits in the central division with
her child; two venerable saints, standing close together, occupy each of the
others. It is impossible to imagine anything more finished or more ripe. It is one of those things that sum up the genius
of a painter, the experience of a life, the teaching of a school. It seems
painted with molten gems, which have only been clarified by time, and is as
solemn as it is gorgeous and as simple as it is deep. Giovanni Bellini is more
or less everywhere in Venice,
and, wherever he is, almost certain to be first--first, I mean, in his own
line: paints little else than the Madonna and the saints; he has not
Carpaccio's care for human life at large, nor the Tintoret's nor the of the Veronese. Some of his greater pictures, however,
where several figures are clustered together, have a richness of sanctity that
is almost profane. There is one of them on the dark side of the room at the
Academy that contains Titian's "Assumption," which if we could only
see it--its position is an inconceivable scandal--would evidently be one of the
mightiest of so-called sacred pictures. So too is the Madonna of San Zaccaria,
hung in a cold, dim, dreary place, ever so much too high, but so mild and
serene, and so grandly disposed and accompanied, that the proper attitude for
even the most critical amateur, as he looks at it, strikes one as the bended
knee. There is another noble John Bellini, one of the very few in which there
is no Virgin, at San Giovanni Crisostomo--a St. Jerome, in a red dress, sitting
aloft upon the rocks and with a landscape of extraordinary purity behind him.
The absence of the peculiarly erect Madonna makes it an interesting surprise
among the works of the painter and gives it a somewhat less strenuous air. But
it has brilliant beauty and the St.
Jerome is a delightful old personage.
The same church contains another great picture for which the
haunter of these places must find a shrine apart in his memory; one of the most
interesting things he will have seen, if not the most brilliant. Nothing
appeals more to him than three figures of Venetian ladies which occupy the
foreground of a smallish canvas of Sebastian del
Piombo, placed above the high altar of San Giovanni Crisostomo. Sebastian was a
Venetian by birth, but few of his productions are to be seen in his native
place; few indeed are to be seen anywhere. The picture represents the
patron-saint of the church, accompanied by other saints and by the worldly votaries
I have mentioned. These ladies stand together on the left, holding in their
hands little white caskets; two of them are in profile, but the foremost turns
her face to the spectator. This face and figure are almost unique among the
beautiful things of Venice,
and they leave the susceptible observer with the impression of having made, or
rather having missed, a strange, a dangerous, but a most valuable,
acquaintance. The lady, who is superbly handsome, is the typical Venetian of
the sixteenth century, and she remains for the mind the perfect flower of that
society. Never was there a greater air of breeding, a deeper expression of
tranquil superiority. She walks a goddess--as if she trod without sinking the
waves of the Adriatic. It is impossible to
conceive a more perfect expression of the aristocratic spirit either in its
pride or in its benignity. This magnificent creature is so strong and secure
that she is gentle, and so quiet that in comparison all minor assumptions of
calmness suggest only a vulgar alarm. But for all this there are depths of
possible disorder in her light-coloured eye.
I had meant however to say nothing about her, for it's not
right to speak of Sebastian when one hasn't found room for Carpaccio. These
visions come to one, and one can neither hold them nor brush them aside.
Memories of Carpaccio, the magnificent, the delightful--it's not for want of
such visitations, but only for want of space, that I haven't said of him what I
would. There is little enough need of it for Carpaccio's sake, his fame being
brighter to-day--thanks to the generous lamp Mr. Ruskin has held up to it--than
it has ever been. Yet there is something ridiculous in talking of Venice without making him
almost the refrain. He and the Tintoret are the two great realists, and it is
hard to say which is the more human, the more various. The Tintoret had the
mightier temperament, but Carpaccio, who had the advantage of more newness and
more responsibility, sailed nearer to perfection. Here and there he quite
touches it, as in the enchanting picture, at the Academy, of St. Ursula asleep
in her little white bed, in her high clean room, where the angel visits her at
dawn; or in the noble St. Jerome
in his study at S. Giorgio Schiavoni. This latter work is a pearl of sentiment,
and I may add without being fantastic a ruby of colour. It unites the most
masterly finish with a kind of universal largeness of feeling, and he who has
it well in his memory will never hear the name of Carpaccio without a throb of
almost personal affection. Such indeed is the feeling that descends upon you in
that wonderful little chapel of St. George of the Slaves, where this most
personal and sociable of artists has expressed all the sweetness of his
imagination. The place is small and incommodious, the pictures are out of sight
and ill-lighted, the custodian is rapacious, the visitors are mutually
intolerable, but the shabby little chapel is a palace of art. Mr. Ruskin has
written a pamphlet about it which is a real aid to enjoyment, though I can't
but think the generous artist, with his keen senses and his just feeling, would
have suffered to hear his eulogist declare that one of his other
productions--in the Museo Civico of Palazzo Correr, a delightful portrait of
two Venetian ladies with pet animals--is the "finest picture in the
world." It has no need of that to be thought admirable; and what more can
a painter desire?
VIII
May in Venice
is better than April, but June is best of all. Then the days are hot, but not
too hot, and the nights are more beautiful than the days. Then Venice is rosier than ever in the morning and
more golden than ever as the day descends. She seems to expand and evaporate,
to multiply all her reflections and iridescences. Then the life of her people
and the strangeness of her constitution become a perpetual comedy, or at least
a perpetual drama. Then the gondola is your sole habitation, and you spend days
between sea and sky. You go to the Lido, though the Lido
has been spoiled. When I first saw it, in 1869, it was a very natural place,
and there was but a rough lane across the little island from the landing-place
to the beach. There was a bathing-place in those days, and a restaurant, which
was very bad, but where in the warm evenings your dinner didn't much matter as
you sat letting it cool on the wooden terrace that stretched out into the sea.
To-day the Lido is a part of united Italy and has been made the victim
of villainous improvements. A little cockney village has sprung up on its rural
bosom and a third-rate boulevard leads from Santa Elisabetta to the Adriatic. There are bitumen walks and gas-lamps,
lodging-houses, shops and a teatro diurno. The bathing-establishment is bigger
than before, and the restaurant as well; but it is a compensation perhaps that
the cuisine is no better. Such as it is, however, you won't scorn occasionally
to partake of it on the breezy platform under which bathers dart and splash,
and which looks out to where the fishing-boats, with sails of orange and
crimson, wander along the darkening horizon. The beach at the Lido
is still lonely and beautiful, and you can easily walk away from the cockney
village. The return to Venice
in the sunset is classical and indispensable, and those who at that glowing
hour have floated toward the towers that rise out of the lagoon will not easily
part with the impression. But you indulge in larger excursions--you go to
Burano and Torcello, to Malamocco and Chioggia.
Torcello, like the Lido, has been improved; the deeply interesting little
cathedral of the eighth century, which stood there on the edge of the sea, as
touching in its ruin, with its grassy threshold and its primitive mosaics, as
the bleached bones of a human skeleton washed ashore by the tide, has now been
restored and made cheerful, and the charm of the place, its strange and
suggestive desolation, has well-nigh departed.
It will still serve you as a pretext, however, for a day on
the lagoon, especially as you will disembark at Burano and admire the wonderful
fisher-folk, whose good looks--and bad manners, I am sorry to say--can scarcely
be exaggerated. Burano is celebrated for the beauty of its women and the
rapacity of its children, and it is a fact that though some of the ladies are
rather bold about it every one of them shows you a handsome face. The children
assail you for coppers, and in their desire to be satisfied pursue your gondola
into the sea. Chioggia is a larger Burano, and you carry away from either place
a half-sad, half-cynical, but altogether pictorial impression; the impression
of bright-coloured hovels, of bathing in stagnant canals, of young girls with
faces of a delicate shape and a susceptible expression, with splendid heads of
hair and complexions smeared with powder, faded yellow shawls that hang like
old Greek draperies, and little wooden shoes that click as they go up and down
the steps of the convex bridges; of brown-cheeked matrons with lustrous tresses
and high tempers, massive throats encased with gold beads, and eyes that meet
your own with a certain traditional defiance. The men throughout the islands of
Venice are
almost as handsome as the women; I have never seen so many good-looking
rascals. At Burano and Chioggia they sit mending their nets, or lounge at the
street corners, where conversation is always high-pitched, or clamour to you to
take a boat; and everywhere they decorate the scene with their splendid
colour--cheeks and throats as richly brown as the sails of their
fishing-smacks--their sea-faded tatters which are always a "costume,"
their soft Venetian jargon, and the gallantry with which they wear their hats,
an article that nowhere sits so well as on a mass of dense Venetian curls. If
you are happy you will find yourself, after a June day in Venice
(about ten o'clock), on a balcony that overhangs the Grand
Canal, with your elbows on the broad ledge, a cigarette in your
teeth and a little good company beside you. The gondolas pass beneath, the
watery surface gleams here and there from their lamps, some of which are
coloured lanterns that move mysteriously in the darkness. There are some
evenings in June when there are too many gondolas, too many lanterns, too many
serenades in front of the hotels. The serenading in particular is overdone; but
on such a balcony as I speak of you needn't suffer from it, for in the apartment
behind you--an accessible refuge--there is more good company, there are more
cigarettes. If you are wise you will step back there presently.
1882.
THE GRAND CANAL
The honour of representing the plan and the place at their
best might perhaps appear, in the City of St. Mark, properly to belong to the
splendid square which bears the patron's name and which is the centre of
Venetian life so far (this is pretty. well all the way indeed) as Venetian life
is a matter of strolling and chaffering, of gossiping and gaping, of
circulating without a purpose, and of staring--too often with a foolish
one--through the shop-windows of dealers whose hospitality makes their
doorsteps dramatic, at the very vulgarest rubbish in all the modern market. If
the Grand Canal, however, is not quite technically a "street," the
perverted Piazza is perhaps even less normal; and I hasten to add that I am
glad not to find myself studying my subject under the international arcades, or
yet (I will go the length of saying) in the solemn presence of the church. For
indeed in that case I foresee I should become still more confoundingly
conscious of the stumbling-block that inevitably, even with his first few
words, crops up in the path of the lover of Venice who rashly addresses himself
to expression. "Venetian life" is a mere literary convention, though
it be an indispensable figure. The words have played
an effective part in the literature of sensibility; they constituted thirty
years ago the title of Mr. Howells's delightful volume of impressions; but in
using them to-day one owes some frank amends to one's own lucidity. Let me
carefully premise therefore that so often as they
shall again drop from my pen, so often shall I beg to be regarded as
systematically superficial.
Venetian life, in the large old sense, has long since come
to an end, and the essential present character of the most melancholy of cities
resides simply in its being the most beautiful of tombs. Nowhere else has the
past been laid to rest with such tenderness, such a sadness of resignation and remembrance. Nowhere else is the present so alien, so
discontinuous, so like a crowd in a cemetery without garlands for the graves.
It has no flowers in its hands, but, as a compensation
perhaps--and the thing is doubtless more to the point--it has money and little
red books. The everlasting shuffle of these irresponsible visitors in the
Piazza is contemporary Venetian life. Everything else is only a reverberation
of that. The vast mausoleum has a turnstile at the door, and a functionary in a
shabby uniform lets you in, as per tariff, to see how dead it is. From this
constatation, this cold curiosity, proceed all the
industry, the prosperity, the vitality of the place. The shopkeepers and
gondoliers, the beggars and the models, depend upon it for a living; they are
the custodians and the ushers of the great museum--they are even themselves to
a certain extent the objects of exhibition. It is in the wide vestibule of the
square that the polygot pilgrims gather most densely; Piazza San Marco is the
lobby of the opera in the intervals of the performance. The present fortune of Venice, the lamentable
difference, is most easily measured there, and that is why, in the effort to
resist our pessimism, we must turn away both from the purchasers and from the
vendors of ricordi. The ricordi that we prefer are gathered best where the
gondola glides--best of all on the noble waterway that begins in its glory at
the Salute and ends in its abasement at the railway station. It is, however,
the cockneyfied Piazzetta (forgive me, shade of St. Theodore--has not a brand
new café begun to glare there, electrically, this very year?) that introduces
us most directly to the great picture by which the Grand Canal works its first
spell, and to which a thousand artists, not always with a talent apiece, have
paid their tribute. We pass into the Piazzetta to look down the great throat,
as it were, of Venice,
and the vision must console us for turning our back on St. Mark's.
We have been treated to it again and again, of course, even
if we have never stirred from home; but that is only a reason the more for
catching at any freshness that may be left in the world of photography. It is
in Venice above all that we hear the small buzz
of this vulgarising voice of the familiar; yet perhaps it is in Venice too that the
picturesque fact has best mastered the pious secret of how to wait for us. Even
the classic Salute waits like some great lady on the threshold of her saloon.
She is more ample and serene, more seated at her door, than all the copyists
have told us, with her domes and scrolls, her scolloped buttresses and statues
forming a pompous crown, and her wide steps disposed on the ground like the
train of a robe. This fine air of the woman of the world is carried out by the
well-bred assurance with which she looks in the direction of her old-fashioned
Byzantine neighbour; and the juxtaposition of two churches so distinguished and
so different, each splendid in its sort, is a sufficient mark of the scale and
range of Venice. However, we ourselves are looking away from St. Mark's--we
must blind our eyes to that dazzle; without it indeed there are brightnesses
and fascinations enough. We see them in abundance even while we look away from
the shady steps of the Salute. These steps are cool in the morning, yet I don't
know that I can justify my excessive fondness for them any better than I can
explain a hundred of the other vague infatuations with which Venice sophisticates the spirit. Under such
an influence fortunately one need n't explain--it keeps account of nothing but
perceptions and affections. It is from the Salute steps perhaps, of a summer
morning, that this view of the open mouth of the city is most brilliantly
amusing. The whole thing composes as if composition were the chief end of human
institutions. The charming architectural promontory of the Dogana stretches out
the most graceful of arms, balancing in its hand the gilded globe on which
revolves the delightful satirical figure of a little weathercock of a woman. This
Fortune, this Navigation, or whatever she is called--she surely needs no
name--catches the wind in the bit of drapery of which she has divested her
rotary bronze loveliness. On the other side of the Canal twinkles and glitters
the long row of the happy palaces which are mainly expensive hotels. There is a
little of everything everywhere, in the bright Venetian air, but to these
houses belongs especially the appearance of sitting, across the water, at the
receipt of custom, of watching in their hypocritical loveliness for the
stranger and the victim. I call them happy, because even their sordid uses and
their vulgar signs melt somehow, with their vague sea-stained pinks and drabs,
into that strange gaiety of light and colour which is made up of the reflection
of superannuated things. The atmosphere plays over them like a laugh, they are
of the essence of the sad old joke. They are almost as charming from other
places as they are from their own balconies, and share
fully in that universal privilege of Venetian objects which consists of being
both the picture and the point of view.
This double character, which is particularly strong in the Grand Canal, adds a difficulty to any control of one's
notes. The Grand Canal may be practically, as
in impression, the cushioned balcony of a high and well-loved palace--the
memory of irresistible evenings, of the sociable elbow, of endless lingering
and looking; or it may evoke the restlessness of a fresh curiosity, of
methodical inquiry, in a gondola piled with references. There are no
references, I ought to mention, in the present remarks, which sacrifice to
accident, not to completeness. A rhapsody of Venice is always in order, but I think the
catalogues are finished. I should not attempt to write here the names of all the
palaces, even if the number of those I find myself able to remember in the
immense array were less insignificant. There are many I delight in that I don't
know, or at least don't keep, apart. Then there are the bad reasons for
preference that are better than the good, and all the sweet bribery of
association and recollection. These things, as one stands on the Salute steps,
are so many delicate fingers to pick straight out of the row a dear little
featureless house which, with its pale green shutters, looks straight across at
the great door and through the very keyhole, as it were, of the church, and
which I needn't call by a name--a pleasant American name--that every one in
Venice, these many years, has had on grateful lips. It is the very friendliest house
in all the wide world, and it has, as it deserves to
have, the most beautiful position. It is a real porto
di mare, as the gondoliers say--a port within a port; it sees everything that
comes and goes, and takes it all in with practised eyes. Not a tint or a hint
of the immense iridescence is lost upon it, and there are days of exquisite
colour on which it may fancy itself the heart of the wonderful prism. We wave
to it from the Salute steps, which we must decidedly leave if we wish to get
on, a grateful hand across the water, and turn into the big white church of
Longhena--an empty shaft beneath a perfunctory dome--where an American family
and a German party, huddled in a corner upon a pair of benches, are gazing,
with a conscientiousness worthy of a better cause, at nothing in particular.
For there is nothing particular in this cold and
conventional temple to gaze at save the great Tintoretto of the sacristy, to
which we quickly pay our respects, and which we are glad to have for ten
minutes to ourselves. The picture, though full of beauty, is not the finest of
the master's; but it serves again as
well as another to transport--there is no other word--those of his
lovers for whom, in far-away days when Venice was an early rapture, this
strange and mystifying painter was almost the supreme revelation. The plastic
arts may have less to say to us than in the hungry years of youth, and the
celebrated picture in general be more of a blank; but more than the others any
fine Tintoret still carries us back, calling up not only the rich particular
vision but the freshness of the old wonder. Many things come and go, but this
great artist remains for us in Venice
a part of the company of the mind. The others are there in their obvious glory,
but he is the only one for whom the imagination, in our expressive modern
phrase, sits up. "The Marriage in Cana,"
at the Salute, has all his characteristic and fascinating unexpectedness--the
sacrifice of the figure of our Lord, who is reduced to the mere final point of
a clever perspective, and the free, joyous presentation of all the other
elements of the feast. Why, in spite of this queer one-sidedness, does the
picture give us no impression of a lack of what the critics call reverence? For
no other reason that I can think of than because it happens to be the work of
its author, in whose very mistakes there is a singular wisdom. Mr. Ruskin has
spoken with sufficient eloquence of the serious loveliness of the row of heads
of the women on the right, who talk to each other as they sit at the
foreshortened banquet. There could be no better example of the roving
independence of the painter's vision, a real spirit of adventure for which his
subject was always a cluster of accidents; not an obvious order, but a sort of
peopled and agitated chapter of life, in which the figures are submissive
pictorial notes. These notes are all there in their beauty and heterogeneity,
and if the abundance is of a kind to make the principle of selection seem in
comparison timid, yet the sense of "composition" in the spectator--if
it happen to exist--reaches out to the painter in
peculiar sympathy. Dull must be the spirit of the worker tormented in any field
of art with that particular question who is not moved to recognise in the
eternal problem the high fellowship of Tintoretto.
If the long reach from this point to the deplorable iron
bridge which discharges the pedestrian at the Academy--or, more
comprehensively, to the painted and gilded Gothic of the noble Palazzo
Foscari--is too much of a curve to be seen at any one point as a whole, it
represents the better the arched neck, as it were, of the undulating serpent of
which the Canalazzo has the likeness. We pass a dozen historic houses, we note
in our passage a hundred component "bits," with the baffled sketcher's
sense, and with what would doubtless be, save for our intensely Venetian
fatalism, the baffled sketcher's temper. It is the early palaces, of course,
and also, to be fair, some of the late, if we could take them one by one, that
give the Canal the best of its grand air. The fairest are often cheek-by-jowl
with the foulest, and there are few, alas, so fair as to have been completely
protected by their beauty. The ages and the generations have worked their will
on them, and the wind and the weather have had much to say; but disfigured and
dishonoured as they are, with the bruises of their marbles and the patience of
their ruin, there is nothing like them in the world, and the long succession of
their faded, conscious faces makes of the quiet waterway they overhang a
promenade historique of which the lesson, however often we read it, gives, in
the depth of its interest, an incomparable dignity to Venice. We read it in the
Romanesque arches, crooked to-day in their very curves, of the early middle-age,
in the exquisite individual Gothic of the splendid time, and in the cornices
and columns of a decadence almost as proud. These
things at present are almost equally touching in their good faith; they have
each in their degree so effectually parted with their pride. They have lived on
as they could and lasted as they might, and we hold them to no account of their
infirmities, for even those of them whose blank eyes to-day meet criticism with
most submission are far less vulgar than the uses we have mainly managed to put
them to. We have botched them and patched them and covered them with sordid
signs; we have restored and improved them with a merciless taste, and the best
of them we have made over to the pedlars. Some of the most striking objects in
the finest vistas at present are the huge advertisements of the
curiosity-shops.
The antiquity-mongers in Venice have all the courage of their opinion,
and it is easy to see how well they know they can confound you with an
unanswerable question. What is the whole place but a curiosity-shop, and what
are you here for yourself but to pick up odds and ends? "We pick them up
for you," say these honest Jews, whose prices are marked in dollars,
"and who shall blame us if, the flowers being pretty well plucked, we add
an artificial rose or two to the composition of the bouquet?" They take
care, in a word, that there be plenty of relics, and their establishments are
huge and active. They administer the antidote to pedantry, and you can complain
of them only if you never cross their thresholds. If you take this step you are
lost, for you have parted with the correctness of your attitude. Venice becomes frankly
from such a moment the big depressing dazzling joke in which after all our
sense of her contradictions sinks to rest--the grimace of an over-strained
philosophy. It's rather a comfort, for the curiosity-shops are amusing. You
have bad moments indeed as you stand in their halls of humbug and, in the
intervals of haggling, hear through the high windows the soft splash of the sea
on the old water-steps, for you think with anger of the noble homes that are
laid waste in such scenes, of the delicate lives that must have been, that
might still be, led there. You reconstruct the admirable house according to
your own needs; leaning on a back balcony, you drop your eyes into one of the
little green gardens with which, for the most part, such establishments are
exasperatingly blessed, and end by feeling it a shame that you yourself are not
in possession. (I take for granted, of course, that as you go and come you are,
in imagination, perpetually lodging yourself and setting up your gods; for if
this innocent pastime, this borrowing of the mind, be not your favourite sport
there is a flaw in the appeal that Venice makes to you.) There may be happy
cases in which your envy is tempered, or perhaps I should rather say
intensified, by real participation. If you have had the good fortune to enjoy
the hospitality of an old Venetian home and to lead your life a little in the
painted chambers that still echo with one of the historic names, you have
entered by the shortest step into the inner spirit of the place. If it did n't
savour of treachery to private kindness I should like to speak frankly of one
of these delightful, even though alienated, structures, to refer to it as a
splendid example of the old palatial type. But I can only do so in passing,
with a hundred precautions, and, lifting the curtain at the edge, drop a
commemorative word on the success with which, in this particularly happy instance,
the cosmopolite habit, the modern sympathy, the intelligent, flexible attitude,
the latest fruit of time, adjust themselves to the great gilded, relinquished
shell and try to fill it out. A Venetian palace that has not too grossly
suffered and that is not overwhelming by its mass makes almost any life
graceful that may be led in it. With cultivated and generous contemporary ways
it reveals a pre-established harmony. As you live in it day after day its
beauty and its interest sink more deeply into your spirit; it has its moods and
its hours and its mystic voices and its shifting expressions. If in the absence
of its masters you have happened to have it to yourself for twenty-four hours
you will never forget the charm of its haunted stillness, late on the summer
afternoon for instance, when the call of playing children comes in behind from
the campo, nor the way the old ghosts seemed to pass on tip-toe on the marble
floors. It gives you practically the essence of the matter that we are
considering, for beneath the high balconies Venice comes and goes, and the particular
stretch you command contains all the characteristics. Everything has its turn,
from the heavy barges of merchandise, pushed by long poles and the patient
shoulder, to the floating pavilions of the great serenades, and you may study
at your leisure the admirable Venetian arts of managing a boat and organising a
spectacle. Of the beautiful free stroke with which the gondola, especially when
there are two oars, is impelled, you never, in the Venetian scene, grow weary;
it is always in the picture, and the large profiled action that lets the
standing rowers throw themselves forward to a constant recovery has the double
value of being, at the fag-end of greatness, the only energetic note. The people
from the hotels are always afloat, and, at the hotel pace, the solitary
gondolier (like the solitary horseman of the old-fashioned novel) is, I
confess, a somewhat melancholy figure. Perched on his poop without a mate, he
re-enacts perpetually, in high relief, with his toes turned out, the comedy of
his odd and charming movement. He always has a little the look of an
absent-minded nursery-maid pushing her small charges in a perambulator.
But why should I risk too free a comparison, where this picturesque and amiable class are concerned? I delight
in their sun-burnt complexions and their childish dialect; I know them only by
their merits, and I am grossly prejudiced in their favour. They are interesting
and touching, and alike in their virtues and their defects human nature is
simplified as with a big effective brush. Affecting above all is their
dependence on the stranger, the whimsical stranger who swims out of their ken,
yet whom Providence
sometimes restores. The best of them at any rate are in their line great
artists. On the swarming feast-days, on the strange feast-night of the
Redentore, their steering is a miracle of ease. The master-hands, the
celebrities and winners of prizes--you may see them on the private gondolas in
spotless white, with brilliant sashes and ribbons, and often with very handsome
persons--take the right of way with a pardonable insolence. They penetrate the
crush of boats with an authority of their own. The crush of boats, the
universal sociable bumping and squeezing, is great when, on the summer nights,
the ladies shriek with alarm, the city pays the fiddlers, and the illuminated
barges, scattering music and song, lead a long train down the Canal. The barges
used to be rowed in rhythmic strokes, but now they are towed by the steamer.
The coloured lamps, the vocalists before the hotels, are not to my sense the
greatest seduction of Venice;
but it would be an uncandid sketch of the Canalazzo that shouldn't touch them
with indulgence. Taking one nuisance with another, they are probably the
prettiest in the world, and if they have in general more magic for the new
arrival than for the old Venice-lover, they in any case, at their best, keep up
the immemorial tradition. The Venetians have had from the beginning of time the
pride of their processions and spectacles, and it's a wonder how with empty
pockets they still make a clever show. The Carnival is dead, but these are the
scraps of its inheritance. Vauxhall on the water is of course more Vauxhall
than ever, with the good fortune of home-made music and of a mirror that
reduplicates and multiplies. The feast of the Redeemer--the great popular feast
of the year--is a wonderful Venetian Vauxhall. All Venice on this occasion takes to the boats
for the night and loads them with lamps and provisions. Wedged together in a
mass it sups and sings; every boat is a floating arbour, a private
café-concert. Of all Christian commemorations it is the most ingenuously and
harmlessly pagan. Toward morning the passengers repair to the Lido,
where, as the sun rises, they plunge, still sociably, into the sea. The night
of the Redentore has been described, but it would be interesting to have an
account, from the domestic point of view, of its usual morrow. It is mainly an
affair of the Giudecca, however, which is bridged over from the Zattere to the
great church. The pontoons are laid together during the day--it is all done
with extraordinary celerity and art--and the bridge is prolonged across the
Canalazzo (to Santa Maria Zobenigo), which is my only warrant for glancing at
the occasion. We glance at it from our palace windows; lengthening our necks a
little, as we look up toward the Salute, we see all Venice, on the July afternoon, so serried as to move slowly, pour across the temporary
footway. It is a flock of very good children, and the bridged Canal is their
toy. All Venice on such occasions is gentle and
friendly; not even all Venice
pushes anyone into the water.
But from the same high windows we catch without any
stretching of the neck a still more indispensable note in the picture, a famous
pretender eating the bread of bitterness. This repast is served in the open
air, on a neat little terrace, by attendants in livery, and there is no
indiscretion in our seeing that the pretender dines. Ever since the table
d'hôte in "Candide" Venice
has been the refuge of monarchs in want of thrones--she would n't know herself
without her rois en exil. The exile is agreeable and soothing,
the gondola lets them down gently. Its movement is an anodyne, its silence a philtre,
and little by little it rocks all ambitions to sleep. The proscript has plenty
of leisure to write his proclamations and even his memoirs, and I believe he
has organs in which they are published; but the only noise he makes in the
world is the harmless splash of his oars. He comes and goes along the
Canalazzo, and he might be much worse employed. He is but one of the
interesting objects it presents, however, and I am by no means sure that he is
the most striking. He has a rival, if not in the iron bridge,
which, alas, is within our range, at least--to take an immediate example--in
the Montecuculi Palace. Far-descended and weary, but
beautiful in its crooked old age, with its lovely proportions, its delicate
round arches, its carvings and its disks of marble, is the haunted Montecuculi.
Those who have a kindness for Venetian gossip like to remember that it was once
for a few months the property of Robert Browning, who, however, never lived in
it, and who died in the splendid Rezzonico, the residence of his son and a
wonderful cosmopolite "document," which, as it presents itself, in an
admirable position, but a short way farther down the Canal, we can almost see,
in spite of the curve, from the window at which we stand. This great seventeenth
century pile, throwing itself upon the water with a peculiar florid assurance,
a certain upward toss of its cornice which gives it the air of a rearing
sea-horse, decorates immensely--and within, as well as without--the wide angle
that it commands.
There is a more formal greatness in the high square Gothic
Foscari, just below it, one of the noblest creations of the fifteenth century,
a masterpiece of symmetry and majesty. Dedicated to-day to official uses--it is
the property of the State--it looks conscious of the consideration it enjoys,
and is one of the few great houses within our range whose old age strikes us as
robust and painless. It is visibly "kept up"; perhaps it is kept up
too much; perhaps I am wrong in thinking so well of it. These doubts and fears
course rapidly through my mind--I am easily their victim when it is a question
of architecture--as they are apt to do to-day, in Italy, almost anywhere, in the
presence of the beautiful, of the desecrated or the neglected. We feel at such
moments as if the eye of Mr. Ruskin were upon us; we grow nervous and lose our
confidence. This makes me inevitably, in talking of Venice, seek a pusillanimous safety in the trivial and the
obvious. I am on firm ground in rejoicing in the little garden directly
opposite our windows--it is another proof that they really show us
everything--and in feeling that the gardens of Venice would deserve a page to themselves.
They are infinitely more numerous than the arriving stranger can suppose; they
nestle with a charm all their own in the complications of most back-views. Some
of them are exquisite, many are large, and even the scrappiest have an artful
understanding, in the interest of colour, with the waterways that edge their
foundations. On the small canals, in the hunt for amusement, they are the
prettiest surprises of all. The tangle of plants and flowers crowds over the
battered walls, the greenness makes an arrangement with the rosy sordid brick.
Of all the reflected and liquefied things in Venice, and the number of these is countless,
I think the lapping water loves them most. They are numerous on the Canalazzo,
but wherever they occur they give a brush to the picture and in particular, it
is easy to guess, give a sweetness to the house. Then
the elements are complete--the trio of air and water and of things that grow. Venice without them would
be too much a matter of the tides and the stones. Even the little trellises of
the traghetti count charmingly as reminders, amid so much artifice, of the
woodland nature of man. The vine-leaves, trained on horizontal poles, make a
roof of chequered shade for the gondoliers and ferrymen, who doze there
according to opportunity, or chatter or hail the
approaching "fare." There is no "hum" in Venice, so that their voices travel far; they
enter your windows and mingle even with your dreams. I beg the reader to
believe that if I had time to go into everything, I would go into the
traghetti, which have their manners and their morals, and which used to have
their piety. This piety was always a madonnina, the protectress of the
passage--a quaint figure of the Virgin with the red spark of a lamp at her
feet. The lamps appear for the most part to have gone out, and the images
doubtless have been sold for bric-a-brac. The ferrymen, for aught I know, are
converted to Nihilism--a faith consistent happily with a good stroke of
business. One of the figures has been left, however--the Madonnetta which gives
its name to a traghetto near the Rialto.
But this sweet survivor is a carven stone inserted ages ago in the corner of an
old palace and doubtless difficult of removal. Pazienza, the day will come when
so marketable a relic will also be extracted from its socket and purchased by
the devouring American. I leave that expression, on second thought, standing; but
I repent of it when I remember that it is a devouring American--a lady long
resident in Venice and whose kindnesses all Venetians, as well as her
country-people, know, who has rekindled some of the extinguished tapers,
setting up especially the big brave Gothic shrine, of painted and gilded wood,
which, on the top of its stout palo, sheds its influence on the place of
passage opposite the Salute.
If I may not go into those of the palaces this devious
discourse has left behind, much less may I enter the great galleries of the
Academy, which rears its blank wall, surmounted by the lion of St. Mark, well
within sight of the windows at which we are still lingering. This wondrous temple of Venetian
art--for all it promises little from without--overhangs, in a manner, the Grand Canal, but if we were so much as to cross its
threshold we should wander beyond recall. It contains, in some of the most
magnificent halls--where the ceilings have all the glory with which the
imagination of Venice alone could over-arch a room--some of the noblest
pictures in the world; and whether or not we go back to them on any particular
occasion for another look, it is always a comfort to know that they are there,
as the sense of them on the spot is a part of the furniture of the mind--the
sense of them close at hand, behind every wall and under every cover, like the
inevitable reverse of a medal, of the side exposed to the air that reflects,
intensifies, completes the scene. In other words, as it was the inevitable
destiny of Venice
to be painted, and painted with passion, so the wide world of picture becomes,
as we live there, and however much we go about our affairs, the constant
habitation of our thoughts. The truth is, we are in it so uninterruptedly, at
home and abroad, that there is scarcely a pressure upon us to seek it in one
place more than in another. Choose your standpoint at random and trust the
picture to come to you. This is manifestly why I have not, I find myself
conscious, said more about the features of the Canalazzo which occupy the reach
between the Salute and the position we have so obstinately taken up. It is
still there before us, however, and the delightful little Palazzo Dario,
intimately familiar to English and American travellers, picks itself out in the
foreshortened brightness. The Dario is covered with the loveliest little marble
plates and sculptured circles; it is made up of exquisite pieces --as if there
had been only enough to make it small--so that it looks, in its extreme
antiquity, a good deal like a house of cards that hold together by a tenure it
would be fatal to touch. An old Venetian house dies hard indeed, and I should
add that this delicate thing, with submission in every feature, continues to
resist the contact of generations of lodgers. It is let out in floors (it used
to be let as a whole) and in how many eager hands--for it is in great
requisition--under how many fleeting dispensations have we not known and loved
it? People are always writing in advance to secure it, as they are to secure the
Jenkins's gondolier, and as the gondola passes we see strange faces at the
windows--though it's ten to one we recognise them--and the millionth artist
coming forth with his traps at the water-gate. The poor little patient Dario is
one of the most flourishing booths at the fair.
The faces in the window look out at the great Sansovino--the
splendid pile that is now occupied by the Prefect. I feel decidedly that I
don't object as I ought to the palaces of the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries. Their pretensions impose upon me, and the imagination peoples them
more freely than it can people the interiors of the prime. Was not moreover
this masterpiece of Sansovino once occupied by the Venetian post-office, and
thereby intimately connected with an ineffaceable first impression of the
author of these remarks? He had arrived, wondering, palpitating, twenty-three
years ago, after nightfall, and, the first thing on the morrow,
had repaired to the post-office for his letters. They had been waiting a long
time and were full of delayed interest, and he returned with them to the
gondola and floated slowly down the Canal. The mixture, the rapture, the
wonderful temple of the poste restante, the beautiful strangeness, all
humanised by good news--the memory of this abides with him still, so that there
always proceeds from the splendid waterfront I speak of a certain secret
appeal, something that seems to have been uttered first in the sonorous
chambers of youth. Of course this association falls to the ground--or rather splashes
into the water--if I am the victim of a confusion. Was
the edifice in question twenty-three years ago the post-office, which has
occupied since, for many a day, very much humbler quarters? I am afraid to take
the proper steps for finding out, lest I should learn that during these years I
have misdirected my emotion. A better reason for the sentiment, at any rate, is
that such a great house has surely, in the high beauty of its tiers, a
refinement of its own. They make one think of colosseums and aqueducts and
bridges, and they constitute doubtless, in Venice, the most pardonable specimen of the
imitative. I have even a timid kindness for the huge Pesaro, far down the Canal, whose main
reproach, more even than the coarseness of its forms, is its swaggering size,
its want of consideration for the general picture, which the early examples so
reverently respect. The Pesaro
is as far out of the frame as a modern hotel, and the Cornaro, close to it,
oversteps almost equally the modesty of art. One more thing they and their
kindred do, I must add, for which, unfortunately, we can patronise them less.
They make even the most elaborate material civilisation of the present day seem
woefully shrunken and bourgeois, for they simply--I allude to the biggest
palaces--can't be lived in as they were intended to be. The modern tenant may
take in all the magazines, but he bends not the bow of Achilles. He occupies
the place, but he doesn't fill it, and he has guests from the neighbouring inns
with ulsters and Baedekers. We are far at the Pesaro, by the way, from our attaching
window, and we take advantage of it to go in rather a melancholy mood to the
end. The long straight vista from the Foscari to the Rialto, the great middle stretch of the
Canal, contains, as the phrase is, a hundred objects of interest, but it
contains most the bright oddity of its general Deluge air. In all these
centuries it has never got over its resemblance to a flooded city; for some
reason or other it is the only part of Venice
in which the houses look as if the waters had overtaken them. Everywhere else
they reckon with them--have chosen them; here alone the lapping seaway seems to
confess itself an accident.
[Illustration: PALAZZO MONCENIGO, VENICE]
There are persons who hold this long, gay, shabby, spotty
perspective, in which, with its immense field of confused reflection, the
houses have infinite variety, the dullest expanse in Venice. It was not dull, we imagine, for Lord
Byron, who lived in the midmost of the three Mocenigo palaces, where the
writing-table is still shown at which he gave the rein to his passions. For
other observers it is sufficiently enlivened by so delightful a creation as the
Palazzo Loredan, once a masterpiece and at present the Municipio, not to speak
of a variety of other immemorial bits whose beauty still has a degree of
freshness. Some of the most touching relics of early Venice are here--for it was here she
precariously clustered--peeping out of a submersion more pitiless than the sea.
As we approach the Rialto
indeed the picture falls off and a comparative commonness suffuses it. There is
a wide paved walk on either side of the Canal, on which the waterman--and who
in Venice is
not a waterman?--is prone to seek repose. I speak of the summer days--it is the
summer Venice that is the visible Venice. The big tarry
barges are drawn up at the fondamenta, and the bare-legged boatmen, in faded
blue cotton, lie asleep on the hot stones. If there were no colour anywhere
else there would be enough in their tanned personalities. Half the low doorways
open into the warm interior of waterside drinking-shops, and here and there, on
the quay, beneath the bush that overhangs the door, there are rickety tables
and chairs. Where in Venice
is there not the amusement of character and of detail? The tone in this part is
very vivid, and is largely that of the brown plebeian faces looking out of the
patchy miscellaneous houses--the faces of fat undressed women and of other
simple folk who are not aware that they enjoy, from balconies once doubtless
patrician, a view the knowing ones of the earth come thousands of miles to envy
them. The effect is enhanced by the tattered clothes hung to dry in the
windows, by the sun-faded rags that flutter from the polished
balustrades--these are ivory-smooth with time; and the whole scene profits by
the general law that renders decadence and ruin in Venice more brilliant than
any prosperity. Decay is in this extraordinary place golden in tint and misery
couleur de rose. The gondolas of the correct people are unmitigated sable, but
the poor market-boats from the islands are kaleidoscopic.
The Bridge of the Rialto
is a name to conjure with, but, honestly speaking, it is scarcely the gem of
the composition. There are of course two ways of taking it--from the water or
from the upper passage, where its small shops and booths abound in Venetian
character; but it mainly counts as a feature of the Canal when seen from the
gondola or even from the awful vaporetto. The great curve of its single arch is
much to be commended, especially when, coming from the direction of the
railway-station, you see it frame with its sharp compass-line the perfect
picture, the reach of the Canal on the other side. But the backs of the little
shops make from the water a graceless collective hump, and the inside view is
the diverting one. The big arch of the bridge--like the arches of all the
bridges--is the waterman's friend in wet weather. The gondolas, when it rains,
huddle beside the peopled barges, and the young ladies from the hotels, vaguely
fidgeting, complain of the communication of insect life. Here indeed is a
little of everything, and the jewellers of this celebrated precinct--they have
their immemorial row--make almost as fine a show as the fruiterers. It is a
universal market, and a fine place to study Venetian types. The produce of the
islands is discharged there, and the fishmongers announce their presence. All
one's senses indeed are vigorously attacked; the whole place is violently hot
and bright, all odorous and noisy. The churning of the screw of the vaporetto
mingles with the other sounds--not indeed that this offensive note is confined
to one part of the Canal. But Just here the little
piers of the resented steamer are particularly near together, and it seems
somehow to be always kicking up the water. As we go further down we see it
stopping exactly beneath the glorious windows of the Ca'd'Oro. It has chosen
its position well, and who shall gainsay it for having put itself under the
protection of the most romantic facade in Europe?
The companionship of these objects is a symbol; it expresses supremely the
present and the future of Venice.
Perfect, in its prime, was the marble Ca'd'Oro, with the noble recesses of its
loggie, but even then it probably never "met a want," like the
successful vaporetto. If, however, we are not to go into the Museo Civico--the
old Museo Correr, which rears a staring renovated front far down on the left,
near the station, so also we must keep out of the great vexed question of steam
on the Canalazzo, just as a while since we prudently kept out of the Accademia.
These are expensive and complicated excursions. It is obvious that if the
vaporetti have contributed to the ruin of the gondoliers, already hard pressed
by fate, and to that of the palaces, whose foundations their waves undermine,
and that if they have robbed the Grand Canal of the supreme distinction of its
tranquillity, so on the other hand they have placed "rapid transit,"
in the New York phrase, in everybody's reach, and enabled everybody--save
indeed those who wouldn't for the world--to rush about Venice as furiously as
people rush about New York. The suitability of this consummation needn't be
pointed out.
Even we ourselves, in the irresistible contagion, are going
so fast now that we have only time to note in how clever and costly a fashion
the Museo Civico, the old Fondaco dei Turchi, has been reconstructed and
restored. It is a glare of white marble without, and a series of showy majestic
halls within, where a thousand curious mementos and relics of old Venice are gathered and
classified. Of its miscellaneous treasures I fear I may perhaps frivolously
prefer the series of its remarkable living Longhis, an illustration of manners
more copious than the celebrated Carpaccio, the two ladies with their little
animals and their long sticks. Wonderful indeed today are the museums of Italy, where
the renovations and the belle ordonnance speak of funds apparently unlimited,
in spite of the fact that the numerous custodians frankly look starved. What is
the pecuniary source of all this civic magnificence--it is shown in a hundred
other ways--and how do the Italian cities manage to acquit themselves of
expenses that would be formidable to communities richer and doubtless less
aesthetic? Who pays the bills for the expressive statues alone, the general
exuberance of sculpture, with which every piazzetta of almost every village is
patriotically decorated? Let us not seek an answer to the puzzling question,
but observe instead that we are passing the mouth of the populous Canareggio,
next widest of the waterways, where the race of Shylock abides, and at the
corner of which the big colourless church
of San Geremia stands
gracefully enough on guard. The Canareggio, with its wide lateral footways and
humpbacked bridges, makes on the feast of St.
John an admirable noisy, tawdry theatre for one of the
prettiest and the most infantile of the Venetian processions.
The rest of the course is a reduced magnificence, in spite
of interesting bits, of the battered pomp of the Pesaro and the Cornaro, of the
recurrent memories of royalty in exile which cluster about the Palazzo
Vendramin Calergi, once the residence of the Comte de Chambord and still that
of his half-brother, in spite too of the big Papadopoli gardens, opposite the
station, the largest private grounds in Venice, but of which Venice in general
mainly gets the benefit in the usual form of irrepressible greenery climbing
over walls and nodding at water. The rococo church of the Scalzi is here, all
marble and malachite, all a cold, hard glitter and a costly, curly ugliness,
and here too, opposite, on the top of its high steps, is San Simeone Profeta, I
won't say immortalised, but unblushingly misrepresented, by the perfidious
Canaletto. I shall not stay to unravel the mystery of this prosaic painter's
malpractices; he falsified without fancy, and as he apparently transposed at
will the objects he reproduced, one is never sure of the particular view that
may have constituted his subject. It would look exactly like such and such a
place if almost everything were not different. San Simeone Profeta appears to
hang there upon the wall; but it is on the wrong side of the Canal and the
other elements quite fail to correspond. One's confusion is the greater because
one doesn't know that everything may not really have changed, even beyond all
probability--though it's only in America that churches cross the street or the
river--and the mixture of the recognisable and the different makes the
ambiguity maddening, all the more that the painter is almost as attaching as he
is bad. Thanks at any rate to the white church, domed and porticoed, on the top
of its steps, the traveller emerging for the first time upon the terrace of the
railway-station seems to have a Canaletto before him. He speedily discovers
indeed even in the presence of this scene of the final accents of the
Canalazzo--there is a charm in the old pink warehouses on the hot
fondamenta--that he has something much better. He looks up and down at the
gathered gondolas; he has his surprise after all, his little first Venetian
thrill; and as the terrace of the station ushers in these things we shall say
no harm of it, though it is not lovely. It is the beginning of his experience,
but it is the end of the Grand Canal.
1892.
VENICE: AN EARLY
IMPRESSION
There would be much to say about that golden chain of
historic cities which stretches from Milan to Venice, in which the very names--Brescia,
Verona, Mantua, Padua--are
an ornament to one's phrase; but I should have to draw upon recollections now
three years old and to make my short story a long one. Of Verona
and Venice only
have I recent impressions, and even to these must I do hasty justice.
I came into Venice,
just as I had done before, toward the end of a summer's day, when the shadows
begin to lengthen and the light to glow, and found that the attendant
sensations bore repetition remarkably well. There was the same last intolerable
delay at Mestre, just before your first glimpse of the lagoon confirms the
already distinct sea-smell which has added speed to the precursive flight of
your imagination; then the liquid level, edged afar off by its band of
undiscriminated domes and spires, soon distinguished and proclaimed, however,
as excited and contentious heads multiply at the windows of the train; then
your long rumble on the immense white railway-bridge, which, in spite of the
invidious contrast drawn, and very properly, by Mr. Ruskin between the old and
the new approach, does truly, in a manner, shine across the green lap of the
lagoon like a mighty causeway of marble; then the plunge into the station,
which would be exactly similar to every other plunge save for one little
fact--that the keynote of the great medley of voices borne back from the exit
is not "Cab, sir!" but "Barca, signore!"
I do not mean, however, to follow the traveller through
every phase of his initiation, at the risk of stamping poor Venice beyond repair as the supreme bugbear
of literature; though for my own part I hold that to a fine healthy romantic
appetite the subject can't be too diffusely treated. Meeting in the Piazza on
the evening of my arrival a young American painter who told me that he had been
spending the summer just where I found him, I could have assaulted him for very
envy. He was painting forsooth the interior of St. Mark's. To be a young
American painter unperplexed by the mocking, elusive soul of things and
satisfied with their wholesome light-bathed surface and shape; keen of eye;
fond of colour, of sea and sky and anything that may chance between them; of
old lace and old brocade and old furniture (even when made to order); of
time-mellowed harmonies on nameless canvases and happy contours in cheap old
engravings; to spend one's mornings in still, productive analysis of the clustered
shadows of the Basilica, one's afternoons anywhere, in church or campo, on
canal or lagoon, and one's evenings in star-light gossip at Florian's, feeling
the sea-breeze throb languidly between the two great pillars of the Piazzetta
and over the low black domes of the church--this, I consider, is to be as happy
as is consistent with the preservation of reason.
The mere use of one's eyes in Venice is happiness enough, and generous
observers find it hard to keep an account of their profits in this line. Everything
the attention touches holds it, keeps playing with it--thanks to some
inscrutable flattery of the atmosphere. Your brown-skinned, white-shirted
gondolier, twisting himself in the light, seems to you, as you lie at
contemplation beneath your awning, a perpetual symbol of Venetian
"effect." The light here is in fact a mighty magician and, with all
respect to Titian, Veronese and Tintoret, the greatest artist of them all. You
should see in places the material with which it deals--slimy brick, marble battered
and befouled, rags, dirt, decay. Sea and sky seem to meet half-way, to blend
their tones into a soft iridescence, a lustrous compound of wave and cloud and
a hundred nameless local reflections, and then to fling the clear tissue
against every object of vision. You may see these elements at work everywhere,
but to see them in their intensity you should choose the finest day in the
month and have yourself rowed far away across the lagoon to Torcello. Without
making this excursion you can hardly pretend to know Venice or to sympathise with that longing for
pure radiance which animated her great colourists. It is a perfect bath of
light, and I couldn't get rid of a fancy that we were cleaving the upper
atmosphere on some hurrying cloud-skiff. At Torcello there is nothing but the
light to see--nothing at least but a sort of blooming sand-bar intersected by a
single narrow creek which does duty as a canal and occupied by a meagre cluster
of huts, the dwellings apparently of market-gardeners and fishermen, and by a
ruinous church of the eleventh century. It is impossible to imagine a more
penetrating case of unheeded collapse. Torcello was the mother-city of Venice, and she lies there now, a mere mouldering vestige, like a group of
weather-bleached parental bones left impiously unburied. I stopped my gondola
at the mouth of the shallow inlet and walked along the grass beside a hedge to
the low-browed, crumbling cathedral. The charm of certain vacant grassy spaces,
in Italy, overfrowned by masses of brickwork that are honeycombed by the suns
of centuries, is something that I hereby renounce once for all the attempt to
express; but you may be sure that whenever I mention such a spot enchantment
lurks in it.
A delicious stillness covered the little campo at Torcello;
I remember none so subtly audible save that of the Roman Campagna. There was no
life but the visible tremor of the brilliant air and the cries of half-a-dozen
young children who dogged our steps and clamoured for coppers. These children,
by the way, were the handsomest little brats in the world, and, each was
furnished with a pair of eyes that could only have signified the protest of
nature against the meanness of fortune. They were very nearly as naked as
savages, and their little bellies protruded like those of infant cannibals in
the illustrations of books of travel; but as they scampered and sprawled in the
soft, thick grass, grinning like suddenly-translated cherubs and showing their
hungry little teeth, they suggested forcibly that the best assurance of
happiness in this world is to be found in the maximum of innocence and the
minimum of wealth. One small urchin--framed, if ever a child was, to be the joy
of an aristocratic mamma--was the most expressively beautiful creature I had
ever looked upon. He had a smile to make Correggio sigh in his grave; and yet
here he was running wild among the sea-stunted bushes, on the lonely margin of
a decaying world, in prelude to how blank or to how dark a destiny? Verily
nature is still at odds with propriety; though indeed if they ever really pull
together I fear nature will quite lose her distinction. An infant citizen of
our own republic, straight-haired, pale-eyed and freckled, duly darned and
catechised, marching into a New England schoolhouse, is an object often seen and soon forgotten; but
I think I shall always remember with infinite tender conjecture, as the years
roll by, this little unlettered Eros of the Adriatic strand. Yet all youthful
things at Torcello were not cheerful, for the poor lad who brought us the key
of the cathedral was shaking with an ague, and his melancholy presence seemed
to point the moral of forsaken nave and choir. The church, admirably primitive
and curious, reminded me of the two or three oldest churches of Rome--St. Clement and St.
Agnes. The interior is rich in grimly mystical mosaics of the twelfth century
and the patchwork of precious fragments in the pavement not inferior to that of
St. Mark's. But the terribly distinct Apostles are ranged against their dead
gold backgrounds as stiffly as grenadiers presenting arms--intensely personal
sentinels of a personal Deity. Their stony stare seems to wait for ever vainly
for some visible revival of primitive orthodoxy, and one may well wonder
whether it finds much beguilement in idly-gazing troops of Western
heretics--passionless even in their heresy.
I had been curious to see whether in the galleries and
temples of Venice
I should be disposed to transpose my old estimates--to burn what I had adored
and adore what I had burned. It is a sad truth that one can stand in the Ducal
Palace for the first time but once, with the deliciously ponderous sense of
that particular half-hour's being an era in one's mental history; but I had the
satisfaction of finding at least--a great comfort in a short stay--that none of
my early memories were likely to change places and that I could take up my
admirations where I had left them. I still found Carpaccio delightful, Veronese
magnificent, Titian supremely beautiful and Tintoret scarce to be appraised. I repaired
immediately to the little church of San Cassano, which contains the smaller of
Tintoret's two great Crucifixions; and when I had looked at it a while I drew a
long breath and felt I could now face any other picture in Venice with proper
self-possession. It seemed to me I had advanced to the uttermost limit of
painting; that beyond this another art--inspired poetry--begins, and that
Bellini, Veronese, Giorgione, and Titian, all joining hands and straining every
muscle of their genius, reach forward not so far but that they leave a visible
space in which Tintoret alone is master. I well remember the exaltations to
which he lifted me when first I learned to know him; but the glow of that
comparatively youthful amazement is dead, and with it, I fear, that confident
vivacity of phrase of which, in trying to utter my impressions, I felt less the
magniloquence than the impotence. In his power there are many weak spots,
mysterious lapses and fitful intermissions; but when the list of his faults is
complete he still remains to me the most interesting of painters. His
reputation rests chiefly on a more superficial sort of merit--his energy, his
unsurpassed productivity, his being, as Théophile Gautier says, le roi des
fougueux. These qualities are immense, but the great source of his
impressiveness is that his indefatigable hand never drew a line that was not,
as one may say, a moral line. No painter ever had such breadth and such depth;
and even Titian, beside him, scarce figures as more than a great decorative
artist. Mr. Ruskin, whose eloquence in dealing with the great Venetians
sometimes outruns his discretion, is fond of speaking even of Veronese as a
painter of deep spiritual intentions. This, it seems to me, is pushing matters
too far, and the author of "The Rape of Europa" is, pictorially
speaking, no greater casuist than any other genius of supreme good taste.
Titian was assuredly a mighty poet, but Tintoret--well, Tintoret was almost a
prophet. Before his greatest works you are conscious of a sudden evaporation of
old doubts and dilemmas, and the eternal problem of the conflict between
idealism and realism dies the most natural of deaths. In his genius the problem
is practically solved; the alternatives are so harmoniously interfused that I
defy the keenest critic to say where one begins and the other ends. The
homeliest prose melts into the most ethereal poetry--the literal and the
imaginative fairly confound their identity.
This, however, is vague praise. Tintoret's great merit, to
my mind, was his unequalled distinctness of vision. When once he had conceived
the germ of a scene it defined itself to his imagination with an intensity, an amplitude, an individuality of expression,
which makes one's observation of his pictures seem less an operation of the
mind than a kind of supplementary experience of life. Veronese and Titian are
content with a much looser specification, as their treatment of any subject
that the author of the Crucifixion at San Cassano has also treated abundantly
proves. There are few more suggestive contrasts than that between the absence
of a total character at all commensurate with its scattered variety and
brilliancy in Veronese's "Marriage of Cana," at the Louvre, and the
poignant, almost startling, completeness of Tintoret's illustration of the
theme at the Salute church. To compare his "Presentation of the
Virgin," at the Madonna dell' Orto, with Titian's at the Academy, or his
"Annunciation" with Titian's close at hand, is to measure the
essential difference between observation and imagination. One has certainly not
said all that there is to say for Titian when one has called him an observer.
Il y mettait du sien, and I use the term to designate roughly the artist whose
apprehension, infinitely deep and strong when applied to the single figure or
to easily balanced groups, spends itself vainly on great dramatic
combinations--or rather leaves them ungauged. It was the whole scene that
Tintoret seemed to have beheld in a flash of inspiration intense enough to
stamp it ineffaceably on his perception; and it was the whole scene, complete,
peculiar, individual, unprecedented, that he committed
to canvas with all the vehemence of his talent. Compare his "Last
Supper," at San Giorgio--its long, diagonally placed table, its dusky
spaciousness, its scattered lamp-light and halo-light,
its startled, gesticulating figures, its richly realistic foreground--with the
customary formal, almost mathematical rendering of the subject, in which
impressiveness seems to have been sought in elimination rather than
comprehension. You get from Tintoret's work the impression that he felt,
pictorially, the great, beautiful, terrible spectacle of human life very much
as Shakespeare felt it poetically--with a heart that never ceased to beat a
passionate accompaniment to every stroke of his brush. Thanks to this fact his
works are signally grave, and their almost universal and rapidly increasing
decay doesn't relieve their gloom. Nothing indeed can well be sadder than the
great collection of Tintorets at San Rocco. Incurable blackness is settling
fast upon all of them, and they frown at you across the sombre splendour of
their great chambers like gaunt twilight phantoms of pictures. To our
children's children Tintoret, as things are going, can be hardly more than a name;
and such of them as shall miss the tragic beauty, already so dimmed and
stained, of the great "Bearing of the Cross" in that temple of his
spirit will live and die without knowing the largest eloquence of art. If you
wish to add the last touch of solemnity to the place recall as vividly as
possible while you linger at San Rocco the painter's singularly interesting
portrait of himself, at the Louvre. The old man looks out of the canvas from
beneath a brow as sad as a sunless twilight, with just such a stoical
hopelessness as you might fancy him to wear if he stood at your side gazing at
his rotting canvases. It isn't whimsical to read it as the face of a man who
felt that he had given the world more than the world was likely to repay.
Indeed before every picture of Tintoret you may remember this tremendous
portrait with profit. On one side the power, the passion, the illusion of his
art; on the other the mortal fatigue of his spirit. The world's knowledge of
him is so small that the portrait throws a doubly precious light on his
personality; and when we wonder vainly what manner of man he was, and what were
his purpose, his faith and his method, we may find forcible assurance there
that they were at any rate his life--one of the most intellectually passionate
ever led.
Verona, which was my last
Italian stopping-place, is in any conditions a delightfully interesting city;
but the kindness of my own memory of it is deepened by a subsequent ten days'
experience of Germany.
I rose one morning at Verona,
and went to bed at night at Botzen! The statement needs no comment, and the two
places, though but fifty miles apart, are as painfully dissimilar as their
names. I had prepared myself for your delectation with a copious tirade on
German manners, German scenery, German art and the German stage--on the lights
and shadows of Innsbrück, Munich, Nüremberg and Heidelberg; but just as I was
about to put pen to paper I glanced into a little volume on these very topics
lately published by that famous novelist and moralist, M. Ernest Feydeau, the
fruit of a summer's observation at Homburg. This work produced a reaction; and
if I chose to follow M. Feydeau's own example when he wishes to qualify his
approbation I might call his treatise by any vile name known to the speech of
man. But I content myself with pronouncing it superficial. I then reflect that
my own opportunities for seeing and judging were extremely limited, and I
suppress my tirade, lest some more enlightened critic should come and hang me
with the same rope. Its sum and substance was to have been
that--superficially--Germany
is ugly; that Munich is a nightmare, Heidelberg a
disappointment (in spite of its charming castle) and even Nüremberg not a joy
for ever. But comparisons are odious, and if Munich
is ugly Verona
is beautiful enough. You may laugh at my logic, but will probably assent to my
meaning. I carried away from Verona
a precious mental picture upon which I cast an introspective glance whenever
between Botzen and Strassburg the oppression of external circumstance became
painful. It was a lovely August afternoon in the Roman arena--a ruin in which
repair and restoration have been so watchfully and plausibly practised that it
seems all of one harmonious antiquity. The vast stony oval rose high against
the sky in a single clear, continuous line, broken here and there only by
strolling and reclining loungers. The massive tiers inclined in solid monotony
to the central circle, in which a small open-air theatre was in active
operation. A small quarter of the great slope of masonry facing the stage was
roped off into an auditorium, in which the narrow level space between the
foot-lights and the lowest step figured as the pit. Foot-lights are a figure of
speech, for the performance was going on in the broad glow of the afternoon,
with a delightful and apparently by no means misplaced confidence in the
good-will of the spectators. What the piece was that was deemed so superbly
able to shift for itself I know not--very possibly the same drama that I
remember seeing advertised during my former visit to Verona; nothing less than
La Tremenda Giustizia di Dio. If titles are worth anything this product of the
melodramatist's art might surely stand upon its own legs. Along the tiers above
the little group of regular spectators was gathered a free-list of unauthorised
observers, who, although beyond ear-shot, must have been enabled by the
generous breadth of Italian gesture to follow the tangled thread of the piece.
It was all deliciously Italian--the mixture of old life and new, the
mountebank's booth (it was hardly more) grafted on the antique circus, the
dominant presence of a mighty architecture, the loungers and idlers beneath the
kindly sky and upon the sun-warmed stones. I never felt more keenly the
difference between the background to life in very old and very new
civilisations. There are other things in Verona
to make it a liberal education to be born there, though that it is one for the
contemporary Veronese I don't pretend to say. The Tombs of the Scaligers, with
their soaring pinnacles, their high-poised canopies, their exquisite refinement
and concentration of the Gothic idea, I can't profess, even after much
worshipful gazing, to have fully comprehended and enjoyed. They seemed to me
full of deep architectural meanings, such as must drop gently into the mind one
by one, after infinite tranquil contemplation. But even to the hurried and
preoccupied traveller the solemn little chapel-yard in the city's heart, in
which they stand girdled by their great swaying curtain of linked and twisted
iron, is one of the most impressive spots in Italy. Nowhere else is such a
wealth of artistic achievement crowded into so narrow a space; nowhere else are
the daily comings and goings of men blessed by the presence of manlier art. Verona is rich furthermore
in beautiful churches--several with beautiful names: San Fermo, Santa
Anastasia, San Zenone. This last is a structure of
high antiquity and of the most impressive loveliness. The nave terminates in a
double choir, that is a sub-choir or crypt into which
you descend and where you wander among primitive columns whose variously
grotesque capitals rise hardly higher than your head, and an upper choral plane
reached by broad stairways of the bravest effect. I shall never forget the
impression of majestic chastity that I received from the great nave of the
building on my former visit. I then decided to my satisfaction that every
church is from the devotional point of view a solecism that has not something
of a similar absolute felicity of proportion; for strictly formal beauty seems
best to express our conception of spiritual beauty. The nobly serious character
of San Zenone is deepened by its single picture--a masterpiece of the most
serious of painters, the severe and exquisite Mantegna.
[Illustration: THE AMPHITHEATRE, VERONA]
1872
TWO OLD HOUSES AND THREE YOUNG WOMEN
There are times and places that come back yet again, but
that, when the brooding tourist puts out his hand to them, meet it a little
slowly, or even seem to recede a step, as if in slight
fear of some liberty he may take. Surely they should know by this time that he
is capable of taking none. He has his own way--he makes it all right. It now
becomes just a part of the charming solicitation that it presents precisely a
problem--that of giving the particular thing as much as possible without at the
same time giving it, as we say, away. There are considerations, proprieties, a
necessary indirectness--he must use, in short, a little art. No necessity,
however, more than this, makes him warm to his work, and thus it is that, after
all, he hangs his three pictures.
I
The evening that was to give me the first of them was by no
means the first occasion of my asking myself if that
inveterate "style" of which we talk so much be absolutely
conditioned--in dear old Venice
and elsewhere--on decrepitude. Is it the style that has brought about the
decrepitude, or the decrepitude that has, as it were, intensified and
consecrated the style? There is an ambiguity about it all that constantly haunts
and beguiles. Dear old Venice
has lost her complexion, her figure, her reputation, her self-respect; and yet,
with it all, has so puzzlingly not lost a shred of her distinction. Perhaps
indeed the case is simpler than it seems, for the poetry of misfortune is
familiar to us all, whereas, in spite of a stroke here and there of some happy
justice that charms, we scarce find ourselves anywhere arrested by the poetry
of a run of luck. The misfortune of Venice being, accordingly, at every point,
what we most touch, feel and see, we end by assuming it to be of the essence of
her dignity; a consequence, we become aware, by the way, sufficiently
discouraging to the general application or pretension of style, and all the
more that, to make the final felicity deep, the original greatness must have
been something tremendous. If it be the ruins that are noble we have known
plenty that were not, and moreover there are degrees and varieties: certain
monuments, solid survivals, hold up their heads and decline to ask for a grain
of your pity. Well, one knows of course when to keep one's pity to oneself; yet
one clings, even in the face of the colder stare, to one's prized Venetian
privilege of making the sense of doom and decay a part of every impression.
Cheerful work, it may be said of course; and it is doubtless only in Venice that you gain more
by such a trick than you lose. What was most beautiful is gone; what was next
most beautiful is, thank goodness, going--that, I think, is the monstrous
description of the better part of your thought. Is it really your fault if the
place makes you want so desperately to read history into everything?
You do that wherever you turn and wherever you look, and you
do it, I should say, most of all at night. It comes to you there with longer
knowledge, and with all deference to what flushes and shimmers, that the night
is the real time. It perhaps even wouldn't take much to make you award the palm
to the nights of winter. This is certainly true for the form of progression
that is most characteristic, for every question of departure and arrival by
gondola. The little closed cabin of this perfect vehicle, the movement, the
darkness and the plash, the indistinguishable swerves and twists, all the
things you don't see and all the things you do feel--each dim recognition and
obscure arrest is a possible throb of your sense of being floated to your doom,
even when the truth is simply and sociably that you are going out to tea.
Nowhere else is anything as innocent so mysterious, nor anything as mysterious
so pleasantly deterrent to protest. These are the moments when you are most
daringly Venetian, most content to leave cheap trippers and other aliens the
high light of the mid-lagoon and the pursuit of pink and gold. The splendid day
is good enough for them; what is best for you is to stop at last, as you are
now stopping, among clustered pali and softly-shifting
poops and prows, at a great flight of water-steps that play their admirable
part in the general effect of a great entrance. The high doors stand open from
them to the paved chamber of a basement tremendously tall and not vulgarly
lighted, from which, in turn, mounts the slow stone staircase that draws you
further on. The great point is, that if you are worthy of this impression at
all, there isn't a single item of it of which the association isn't noble. Hold
to it fast that there is no other such dignity of arrival as arrival by water.
Hold to it that to float and slacken and gently bump, to creep out of the low,
dark felze and make the few guided movements and find the strong crooked and
offered arm, and then, beneath lighted palace-windows, pass up the few damp
steps on the precautionary carpet--hold to it that these things constitute a
preparation of which the only defect is that it may sometimes perhaps really
prepare too much. It's so stately that what can come after?--it's so good in
itself that what, upstairs, as we comparative vulgarians say, can be better?
Hold to it, at any rate, that if a lady, in especial, scrambles out of a carriage,
tumbles out of a cab, flops out of a tram-car, and hurtles, projectile-like,
out of a "lightning-elevator," she alights from the Venetian
conveyance as Cleopatra may have stepped from her barge. Upstairs--whatever may
be yet in store for her--her entrance shall still advantageously enjoy the
support most opposed to the "momentum" acquired. The beauty of the
matter has been in the absence of all momentum--elsewhere so scientifically
applied to us, from behind, by the terrible life of our day--and in the fact
that, as the elements of slowness, the felicities of deliberation, doubtless
thus all hang together, the last of calculable dangers is to enter a great
Venetian room with a rush.
Not the least happy note, therefore, of the picture I am
trying to frame is that there was absolutely no rushing; not only in the sense
of a scramble over marble floors, but, by reason of something dissuasive and
distributive in the very air of the place, a suggestion, under the fine old
ceilings and among types of face and figure abounding in the unexpected, that
here were many things to consider. Perhaps the simplest rendering of a scene
into the depths of which there are good grounds of discretion for not sinking
would be just this emphasis on the value of the unexpected for such
occasions--with due qualification, naturally, of its degree. Unexpectedness
pure and simple, it is needless to say, may easily endanger any social
gathering, and I hasten to add moreover that the figures and faces I speak of
were probably not in the least unexpected to each other. The stage they
occupied was a stage of variety--Venice
has ever been a garden of strange social flowers. It is only as reflected in
the consciousness of the visitor from afar--brooding tourist even call him, or
sharp-eyed bird on the branch--that I attempt to give you the little drama;
beginning with the felicity that most appealed to him, the visible,
unmistakable fact that he was the only representative of his class. The whole
of the rest of the business was but what he saw and felt and fancied--what he
was to remember and what he was to forget. Through it all, I may say
distinctly, he clung to his great Venetian clue--the explanation of everything
by the historic idea. It was a high historic house, with such a quantity of
recorded past twinkling in the multitudinous candles that one grasped at the
idea of something waning and displaced, and might even fondly and secretly
nurse the conceit that what one was having was just the very last. Wasn't it
certainly, for instance, no mere illusion that there is no appreciable future
left for such manners--an urbanity so comprehensive, a form so transmitted, as
those of such a hostess and such a host? The future is for a different
conception of the graceful altogether--so far as it's for a conception of the
graceful at all. Into that computation I shall not attempt to enter; but these
representative products of an antique culture, at least, and one of which the
secret seems more likely than not to be lost, were not common, nor indeed was
any one else--in the circle to which the picture most insisted on restricting
itself.
Neither, on the other hand, was anyone either very beautiful
or very fresh: which was again, exactly, a precious "value" on an
occasion that was to shine most, to the imagination, by the complexity of its
references. Such old, old women with such old, old jewels; such ugly, ugly ones
with such handsome, becoming names; such battered, fatigued gentlemen with such
inscrutable decorations; such an absence of youth, for the most part, in either
sex--of the pink and white, the "bud" of new worlds; such a general
personal air, in fine, of being the worse for a good deal of wear in various
old ones. It was not a society--that was clear--in which little girls and boys
set the tune; and there was that about it all that might well have cast a
shadow on the path of even the most successful little girl. Yet also--let me
not be rudely inexact--it was in honour of youth and freshness that we had all
been convened. The fiançailles of the last--unless it were the last but
one--unmarried daughter of the house had just been brought to a proper climax;
the contract had been signed, the betrothal rounded off--I'm not sure that the
civil marriage hadn't, that day, taken place. The occasion then had in fact the
most charming of heroines and the most ingenuous of heroes, a young man, the latter, all happily suffused with a fair Austrian blush.
The young lady had had, besides other more or less shining recent ancestors, a
very famous paternal grandmother, who had played a great part in the political
history of her time and whose portrait, in the taste and dress of 1830, was
conspicuous in one of the rooms. The grand-daughter of this celebrity, of royal
race, was strikingly like her and, by a fortunate stroke, had been habited,
combed, curled in a manner exactly to reproduce the portrait. These things were
charming and amusing, as indeed were several other things besides. The great
Venetian beauty of our period was there, and nature had equipped the great
Venetian beauty for her part with the properest sense of the suitable, or in
any case with a splendid generosity--since on the ideally suitable character of
so brave a human symbol who shall have the last word? This responsible agent
was at all events the beauty in the world about whom probably, most, the
absence of question (an absence never wholly propitious) would a little smugly
and monotonously flourish: the one thing wanting to the interest she inspired
was thus the possibility of ever discussing it. There were plenty of suggestive
subjects round about, on the other hand, as to which the exchange of ideas
would by no means necessarily have dropped. You profit to the full at such
times by all the old voices, echoes, images--by that element of the history of
Venice which represents all Europe as having at one time and another revelled
or rested, asked for pleasure or for patience there; which gives you the place
supremely as the refuge of endless strange secrets, broken fortunes and wounded
hearts.
II
There had been, on lines of further or different
speculation, a young Englishman to luncheon, and the young Englishman had
proved "sympathetic"; so that when it was a question afterwards of
some of the more hidden treasures, the browner depths of the old churches, the
case became one for mutual guidance and gratitude--for a small afternoon tour
and the wait of a pair of friends in the warm little campi, at locked doors for
which the nearest urchin had scurried off to fetch the keeper of the key. There
are few brown depths to-day into which the light of the hotels doesn't shine,
and few hidden treasures about which pages enough, doubtless, haven't already
been printed: my business, accordingly, let me hasten to say, is not now with
the fond renewal of any discovery--at least in the order of impressions most
usual. Your discovery may be, for that matter, renewed every week; the only
essential is the good luck--which a fair amount of practice has taught you to
count upon-of not finding, for the particular occasion, other discoverers in
the field. Then, in the quiet corner, with the closed door--then in the
presence of the picture and of your companion's sensible emotion--not only the
original happy moment, but everything else, is renewed. Yet once again it can
all come back. The old custode, shuffling about in the dimness, jerks away, to
make sure of his tip, the old curtain that isn't much more modern than the
wonderful work itself. He does his best to create light where light can never
be; but you have your practised groping gaze, and in guiding the young eyes of
your less confident associate, moreover, you feel you possess the treasure.
These are the refined pleasures that Venice
has still to give, these odd happy passages of communication and response.
But the point of my reminiscence is that there were other
communications that day, as there were certainly other responses. I have
forgotten exactly what it was we were looking for--without much success--when
we met the three Sisters. Nothing requires more care, as a long knowledge of Venice works in, than not
to lose the useful faculty of getting lost. I had so successfully done my best
to preserve it that I could at that moment conscientiously profess an absence
of any suspicion of where we might be. It proved enough that, wherever we were,
we were where the three sisters found us. This was on a little bridge near a
big campo, and a part of the charm of the matter was the theory that it was
very much out of the way. They took us promptly in hand--they were only walking
over to San Marco to match some coloured wool for the manufacture of such
belated cushions as still bloom with purple and green in the long leisures of
old palaces; and that mild errand could easily open a parenthesis. The obscure
church we had feebly imagined we were looking for proved, if I am not mistaken,
that of the sisters' parish; as to which I have but a confused recollection of
a large grey void and of admiring for the first time a fine work of art of
which I have now quite lost the identity. This was the effect of the charming
beneficence of the three sisters, who presently were to give our adventure a
turn in the emotion of which everything that had preceded
seemed as nothing. It actually strikes me even as a little dim to have been
told by them, as we all fared together, that a certain low, wide house, in a
small square as to which I found myself without particular association, had
been in the far-off time the residence of George Sand. And yet this was a fact
that, though I could then only feel it must be for another day, would in a
different connection have set me richly reconstructing.
Madame Sand's famous Venetian year has been of late
immensely in the air--a tub of soiled linen which the muse of history, rolling
her sleeves well up, has not even yet quite ceased energetically and publicly
to wash. The house in question must have been the house to which the wonderful
lady betook herself when, in 1834, after the dramatic exit of Alfred de Musset,
she enjoyed that remarkable period of rest and refreshment with the so long
silent, the but recently rediscovered, reported, extinguished, Doctor Pagello.
As an old Sandist--not exactly indeed of the première heure, but of the fine
high noon and golden afternoon of the great career--I had been, though I
confess too inactively, curious as to a few points in the topography of the
eminent adventure to which I here allude; but had never got beyond the little
public fact, in itself always a bit of a thrill to the Sandist, that the
present Hotel Danieli had been the scene of its first remarkable stages. I am
not sure indeed that the curiosity I speak of has not at last, in my breast,
yielded to another form of wonderment--truly to the rather rueful question of
why we have so continued to concern ourselves, and why the fond observer of the
footprints of genius is likely so to continue, with a body of discussion,
neither in itself and in its day, nor in its preserved and attested records, at
all positively edifying. The answer to such an inquiry would doubtless reward
patience, but I fear we can now glance at its possibilities only long enough to
say that interesting persons--so they be of a sufficiently approved and
established interest--render in some degree interesting whatever happens to
them, and give it an importance even when very little else (as in the case I
refer to) may have operated to give it a dignity. Which is
where I leave the issue of further identifications.
For the three sisters, in the kindest way in the world, had
asked us if we already knew their sequestered home and whether, in case we
didn't, we should be at all amused to see it. My own acquaintance with them,
though not of recent origin, had hitherto lacked this enhancement, at which we
both now grasped with the full instinct, indescribable enough, of what it was
likely to give. But how, for that matter, either, can I find the right
expression of what was to remain with us of this episode? It is the fault of
the sad-eyed old witch of Venice
that she so easily puts more into things that can pass under the common names
that do for them elsewhere. Too much for a rough sketch was to be seen and felt
in the home of the three sisters, and in the delightful and slightly pathetic
deviation of their doing us so simply and freely the honours of it. What was
most immediately marked was their resigned cosmopolite state, the effacement of
old conventional lines by foreign contact and example; by the action, too, of
causes full of a special interest, but not to be emphasised perhaps--granted indeed
they be named at all--without a certain sadness of sympathy. If
"style," in Venice,
sits among ruins, let us always lighten our tread when we pay her a visit.
Our steps were in fact, I am happy to think, almost soft
enough for a death-chamber as we stood in the big, vague sala of the three
sisters, spectators of their simplified state and their beautiful blighted
rooms, the memories, the portraits, the shrunken relics of nine Doges. If I
wanted a first chapter it was here made to my hand; the painter of life and
manners, as he glanced about, could only sigh--as he so frequently has to--over
the vision of so much more truth than he can use. What on earth is the need to
"invent," in the midst of tragedy and comedy that never cease? Why,
with the subject itself, all round, so inimitable,
condemn the picture to the silliness of trying not to be aware of it? The
charming lonely girls, carrying so simply their great name and fallen fortunes,
the despoiled decaduta house, the unfailing Italian grace, the space so out of
scale with actual needs, the absence of books, the presence of ennui, the sense
of the length of the hours and the shortness of everything else--all this was a
matter not only for a second chapter and a third, but for a whole volume, a
dénoûment and a sequel.
This time, unmistakably, it was the last--Wordsworth's
stately "shade of that which once was great"; and it was almost as if
our distinguished young friends had consented to pass away slowly in order to
treat us to the vision. Ends are only ends in truth, for the painter of
pictures, when they are more or less conscious and prolonged. One of the
sisters had been to London, whence she had brought back the impression of
having seen at the British Museum a room exclusively filled with books and
documents devoted to the commemoration of her family. She must also then have
encountered at the National Gallery the exquisite specimen of an early Venetian
master in which one of her ancestors, then head of the State,
kneels with so sweet a dignity before the Virgin and Child. She was perhaps old
enough, none the less, to have seen this precious work taken down from the wall
of the room in which we sat and--on terms so far too easy--carried away for
ever; and not too young, at all events, to have been present, now and then,
when her candid elders, enlightened too late as to what their sacrifice might
really have done for them, looked at each other with the pale hush of the
irreparable. We let ourselves note that these were matters to put a great deal
of old, old history into sweet young Venetian faces.
III
In Italy,
if we come to that, this particular appearance is far from being only in the
streets, where we are apt most to observe it--in countenances caught as we pass
and in the objects marked by the guide-books with their respective stellar
allowances. It is behind the walls of the houses that old, old history is thick
and that the multiplied stars of Baedeker might often best find their
application. The feast of St. John the Baptist
is the feast of the year in Florence,
and it seemed to me on that night that I could have scattered about me a
handful of these signs. I had the pleasure of spending a couple of hours on a
signal high terrace that overlooks the Arno, as well as in the galleries that
open out to it, where I met more than ever the pleasant curious question of the
disparity between the old conditions and the new manners. Make our manners, we
moderns, as good as we can, there is still no getting over it that they are not
good enough for many of the great places. This was one of those scenes, and its
greatness came out to the full into the hot Florentine evening, in which the
pink and golden fires of the pyrotechnics arranged on Ponte Carraja--the
occasion of our assembly--lighted up the large issue. The "good
people" beneath were a huge, hot, gentle, happy family; the fireworks on
the bridge, kindling river as well as sky, were delicate and charming; the
terrace connected the two wings that give bravery to the front of the palace,
and the close-hung pictures in the rooms, open in a long series, offered to a
lover of quiet perambulation an alternative hard to resist.
Wherever he stood--on the broad loggia, in the cluster of
company, among bland ejaculations and liquefied ices, or in the presence of the
mixed masters that led him from wall to wall--such a seeker for the spirit of
each occasion could only turn it over that in the first place this was an
intenser, finer little Florence than ever, and that in the second the testimony
was again wonderful to former fashions and ideas. What did they do, in the
other time, the time of so much smaller a society, smaller and fewer fortunes,
more taste perhaps as to some particulars, but fewer tastes, at any rate, and
fewer habits and wants--what did they do with chambers so multitudinous and so
vast? Put their "state" at its highest--and we know of many ways in
which it must have broken down--how did they live in them without the aid of
variety? How did they, in minor communities in which every one knew every one,
and every one's impression and effect had been long, as we say,
discounted, find representation and emulation sufficiently amusing? Much of the
charm of thinking of it, however, is doubtless that we are not able to say.
This leaves us with the conviction that does them most honour: the old
generations built and arranged greatly for the simple reason that they liked
it, and they could bore themselves--to say nothing of each other, when it came
to that--better in noble conditions than in mean ones.
It was not, I must add, of the far-away Florentine age that
I most thought, but of periods more recent and of which the sound and beautiful
house more directly spoke. If one had always been homesick for the Arno-side of
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, here was a chance, and a better one
than ever, to taste again of the cup. Many of the pictures--there was a
charming quarter of an hour when I had them to myself--were
bad enough to have passed for good in those delightful years. Shades of
Grand-Dukes encompassed me--Dukes of the pleasant later sort who weren't really
grand. There was still the sense of having come too late--yet not too late,
after all, for this glimpse and this dream. My business was to people the
place--its own business had never been to save us the trouble of understanding
it. And then the deepest spell of all was perhaps that just here I was
supremely out of the way of the so terribly actual Florentine question. This,
as all the world knows, is a battle-ground, to-day, in many journals, with all
Italy practically pulling on one side and all England, America and Germany
pulling on the other: I speak of course of the more or less articulate opinion.
The "improvement," the rectification of Florence is in the air, and the problem of
the particular ways in which, given such desperately delicate cases, these
matters should be understood. The little treasure-city is, if there ever was
one, a delicate case-- more delicate perhaps than any other in the world save
that of our taking on ourselves to persuade the
Italians that they mayn't do as they like with their own. They so absolutely
may that I profess I see no happy issue from the fight. It will take more tact
than our combined tactful genius may at all probably muster to convince them
that their own is, by an ingenious logic, much rather ours. It will take more
subtlety still to muster for them that dazzling show of examples from which
they may learn that what in general is "ours" shall appear to them as
a rule a sacrifice to beauty and a triumph of taste. The situation, to the
truly analytic mind, offers in short, to perfection, all the elements of
despair; and I am afraid that if I hung back, at the Corsini palace, to woo
illusions and invoke the irrelevant, it was because I could think, in the
conditions, of no better way to meet the acute responsibility of the critic
than just to shirk it.
[1899.]
Invited to "introduce" certain pages of cordial
and faithful reminiscence from another hand, [1]
[1] "Browning in Venice,"
being Recollections of the late Katharine De Kay Bronson, with a Prefatory Note
by H. J. (Cornhill Magazine, February, 1902).]
in which a frankly predominant presence seems to live again,
I undertook that office with an interest inevitably somewhat sad--so passed and
gone to-day is so much of the life suggested. Those who fortunately knew Mrs.
Bronson will read into her notes still more of it--more of her subject, more of
herself too, and of many things--than she gives, and some may well even feel
tempted to do for her what she has done here for her distinguished friend. In
Venice, during a long period, for many pilgrims, Mrs. Arthur Bronson,
originally of New York, was, so far as society, hospitality, a charming
personal welcome were concerned, almost in sole possession; she had become
there, with time, quite the prime representative of those private amenities
which the Anglo-Saxon abroad is apt to miss just in proportion as the place
visited is publicly wonderful, and in which he therefore finds a value twice as
great as at home. Mrs. Bronson really earned in this way the gratitude of
mingled generations and races. She sat for twenty years at the wide mouth, as
it were, of the Grand Canal, holding out her
hand, with endless good-nature, patience, charity, to all decently accredited
petitioners, the incessant troop of those either bewilderedly making or fondly
renewing acquaintance with the dazzling city.
[Illustration: CASA ALVISI, VENICE]
Casa Alvisi is directly opposite the high, broad-based
florid church of S. Maria della Salute--so directly that from the balcony over
the water-entrance your eye, crossing the canal, seems to find the key-hole of
the great door right in a line with it; and there was something in this
position that for the time made all Venice-lovers think of the genial padrona
as thus levying in the most convenient way the toll of curiosity and sympathy.
Every one passed, every one was seen to pass, and few were those not seen to
stop and to return. The most generous of hostesses died a year ago at Florence;
her house knows her no more--it had ceased to do so for some time before her
death; and the long, pleased procession--the charmed arrivals, the happy
sojourns at anchor, the reluctant departures that made Ca' Alvisi, as was
currently said, a social porto di mare--is, for remembrance and regret, already
a possession of ghosts; so that, on the spot, at present, the attention
ruefully averts itself from the dear little old faded but once familiarly
bright façade, overtaken at last by the comparatively vulgar uses that are
doing their best to "paint out" in Venice, right and left, by staring
signs and other vulgarities, the immemorial note of distinction. The house, in
a city of palaces, was small, but the tenant clung to her perfect, her
inclusive position--the one right place that gave her a better command, as it
were, than a better house obtained by a harder compromise; not being fond,
moreover, of spacious halls and massive treasures, but of compact and familiar
rooms, in which her remarkable accumulation of minute and delicate Venetian
objects could show. She adored--in the way of the Venetian, to which all her
taste addressed itself--the small, the domestic and the exquisite; so that she
would have given a Tintoretto or two, I think, without difficulty, for a
cabinet of tiny gilded glasses or a dinner-service of the right old silver.
The general receptacle of these multiplied treasures played
at any rate, through the years, the part of a friendly private-box at the
constant operatic show, a box at the best point of the best tier, with the
cushioned ledge of its front raking the whole scene and with its withdrawing
rooms behind for more detached conversation; for easy--when not indeed slightly
difficult--polyglot talk, artful bibite, artful cigarettes too, straight from
the hand of the hostess, who could do all that belonged to a hostess, place
people in relation and keep them so, take up and put down the topic, cause
delicate tobacco and little gilded glasses to circulate, without ever leaving
her sofa-cushions or intermitting her good-nature. She exercised in these
conditions, with never a block, as we say in London, in the traffic, with never an
admission, an acceptance of the least social complication, her positive genius
for easy interest, easy sympathy, easy friendship. It
was as if, at last, she had taken the human race at large, quite irrespective
of geography, for her neighbours, with neighbourly relations as a matter of
course. These things, on her part, had at all events the greater appearance of
ease from their having found to their purpose--and as if the very air of Venice produced them--a
cluster of forms so light and immediate, so pre-established by picturesque
custom. The old bright tradition, the wonderful Venetian legend had appealed to
her from the first, closing round her house and her well-plashed water-steps,
where the waiting gondolas were thick, quite as if, actually, the ghost of the
defunct Carnival--since I have spoken of ghosts--still played some haunting
part.
Let me add, at the same time, that Mrs. Bronson's social
facility, which was really her great refuge from importunity, a defence with
serious thought and serious feeling quietly cherished behind it, had its
discriminations as well as its inveteracies, and that the most marked of all
these, perhaps, was her attachment to Robert Browning. Nothing in all her
beneficent life had probably made her happier than to have found herself able
to minister, each year, with the returning autumn, to his pleasure and comfort.
Attached to Ca' Alvisi, on the land side, is a somewhat melancholy old section
of a Giustiniani palace, which she had annexed to her own premises mainly for
the purpose of placing it, in comfortable guise, at the service of her friends.
She liked, as she professed, when they were the real thing, to have them under
her hand; and here succeeded each other, through the years, the company of the
privileged and the more closely domesticated, who liked, harmlessly, to
distinguish between themselves and outsiders. Among visitors partaking of this
pleasant provision Mr. Browning was of course easily first. But I must leave
her own pen to show him as her best years knew him. The point was, meanwhile,
that if her charity was great even for the outsider, this was by reason of the
inner essence of it--her perfect tenderness for Venice, which she always recognised as a
link. That was the true principle of fusion, the key to communication. She
communicated in proportion--little or much, measuring it as she felt people
more responsive or less so; and she expressed herself, or in other words her
full affection for the place, only to those who had most of the same sentiment.
The rich and interesting form in which she found it in Browning may well be
imagined--together with the quite independent quantity of the genial at large
that she also found; but I am not sure that his favour was not primarily based
on his paid tribute of such things as "Two in a Gondola" and "A
Toccata of Galuppi." He had more ineffaceably than anyone recorded his initiation
from of old.
She was thus, all round, supremely faithful; yet it was
perhaps after all with the very small folk, those to the manner born, that she
made the easiest terms. She loved, she had from the first enthusiastically
adopted, the engaging Venetian people, whose virtues she found touching and
their infirmities but such as appeal mainly to the sense of humour and the love
of anecdote; and she befriended and admired, she studied and spoiled them.
There must have been a multitude of whom it would scarce be too much to say
that her long residence among them was their settled golden age. When I
consider that they have lost her now I fairly wonder to what shifts they have
been put and how long they may not have to wait for such another messenger of
Providence. She cultivated their dialect, she renewed their boats, she piously
relighted--at the top of the tide-washed pali of traghetto or lagoon--the
neglected lamp of the tutelary Madonnetta; she took cognisance of the wives,
the children, the accidents, the troubles, as to which she became, perceptibly,
the most prompt, the established remedy. On lines where the amusement was
happily less one-sided she put together in dialect many short comedies,
dramatic proverbs, which, with one of her drawing-rooms permanently arranged as
a charming diminutive theatre, she caused to be performed by the young persons
of her circle--often, when the case lent itself, by the wonderful small
offspring of humbler friends, children of the Venetian lower class, whose aptitude,
teachability, drollery, were her constant delight. It was certainly true that
an impression of Venice
as humanly sweet might easily found itself on the frankness and quickness and
amiability of these little people. They were at least so much to the good; for
the philosophy of their patroness was as Venetian as everything else; helping
her to accept experience without bitterness and to remain fresh, even in the
fatigue which finally overtook her, for pleasant surprises and proved
sincerities. She was herself sincere to the last for the place of her
predilection; inasmuch as though she had arranged herself, in the later
time--and largely for the love of "Pippa Passes"--an alternative
refuge at Asolo, she absented herself from Venice with continuity only under coercion of
illness.
At Asolo, periodically, the link with Browning was more
confirmed than weakened, and there, in old Venetian territory, and with the
invasion of visitors comparatively checked, her preferentially small house
became again a setting for the pleasure of talk and the sense of Italy. It
contained again its own small treasures, all in the pleasant key of the
homelier Venetian spirit. The plain beneath it stretched away like a purple sea
from the lower cliffs of the hills, and the white campanili of the villages, as
one was perpetually saying, showed on the expanse like scattered sails of
ships. The rumbling carriage, the old-time, rattling, red-velveted carriage of
provincial, rural Italy,
delightful and quaint, did the office of the gondola; to Bassano, to Treviso, to high-walled
Castelfranco, all pink and gold, the home of the great Giorgione. Here also
memories cluster; but it is in Venice
again that her vanished presence is most felt, for there, in the real, or
certainly the finer, the more sifted Cosmopolis, it falls into its place among
the others evoked, those of the past seekers of poetry and dispensers of
romance. It is a fact that almost every one interesting, appealing, melancholy,
memorable, odd, seems at one time or another, after many days and much life, to
have gravitated to Venice by a happy instinct, settling in it and treating it,
cherishing it, as a sort of repository of consolations; all of which to-day,
for the conscious mind, is mixed with its air and constitutes its unwritten
history. The deposed, the defeated, the disenchanted, the wounded, or even only
the bored, have seemed to find there something that no other place could give.
But such people came for themselves, as we seem to see them--only with the
egotism of their grievances and the vanity of their hopes. Mrs. Bronson's case
was beautifully different--she had come altogether for others.
Your truly sentimental tourist will never take it from any
occasion that there is absolutely nothing for him, and it was at Chambéry--but
four hours from Geneva--that I accepted the situation and decided there might
be mysterious delights in entering Italy by a whizz through an eight-mile
tunnel, even as a bullet through the bore of a gun. I found my reward in the
Savoyard landscape, which greets you betimes with the smile of anticipation. If
it is not so Italian as Italy
it is at least more Italian than anything but Italy--more Italian, too, I should
think, than can seem natural and proper to the swarming red-legged soldiery who
so publicly proclaim it of the empire of M. Thiers. The light and the
complexion of things had to my eyes not a little of that mollified depth last
loved by them rather further on. It was simply perhaps that the weather was hot
and the mountains drowsing in that iridescent haze that I have seen nearer home
than at Chambéry. But the vegetation, assuredly, had an all but Transalpine twist and curl, and the classic wayside tangle
of corn and vines left nothing to be desired in the line of careless grace.
Chambéry as a town, however, constitutes no foretaste of the monumental cities.
There is shabbiness and shabbiness, the fond critic of such things will tell
you; and that of the ancient capital of Savoy
lacks style. I found a better pastime, however, than strolling through the dark
dull streets in quest of effects that were not forthcoming. The first urchin
you meet will show you the way to Les Charmettes and the Maison Jean-Jacques. A very. pleasant way it becomes as
soon as it leaves the town--a winding, climbing by-road, bordered with such a
tall and sturdy hedge as to give it the air of an English lane--if you can
fancy an English lane introducing you to the haunts of a Madame de Warens.
The house that formerly sheltered this lady's singular
ménage stands on a hillside above the road, which a rapid path connects with
the little grass-grown terrace before it. It is a small shabby, homely
dwelling, with a certain reputable solidity, however, and more of internal
spaciousness than of outside promise. The place is shown by an elderly
competent dame who points out the very few surviving objects which you may
touch with the reflection--complacent in whatsoever degree suits you--that they
have known the familiarity of Rousseau's hand. It was presumably a
meagrely-appointed house, and I wondered that on such scanty features so much
expression should linger. But the structure has an ancient ponderosity, and the
dust of the eighteenth century seems to lie on its worm-eaten floors, to cling
to the faded old papiers à ramages on the walls and to lodge in the crevices of
the brown wooden ceilings. Madame de Warens's bed remains, with the narrow
couch of Jean-Jacques as well, his little warped and cracked yellow spinet, and
a battered, turnip-shaped silver timepiece, engraved with its master's
name--its primitive tick as extinct as his passionate heart-beats. It cost me,
I confess, a somewhat pitying acceleration of my own to see this intimately
personal relic of the genius loci--for it had dwelt; in his waistcoat-pocket,
than which there is hardly a material point in space nearer to a man's
consciousness--tossed so the dog's-eared visitors' record or livre de cuisine
recently denounced by Madame George Sand. In fact the place generally, in so
far as some faint ghostly presence of its famous inmates seems to linger there,
is by no means exhilarating. Coppet and Ferney tell, if not of pure happiness,
at least of prosperity and, honour, wealth and success. But Les Charmettes is
haunted by ghosts unclean and forlorn. The place tells of poverty, perversity,
distress. A good deal of clever modern talent in France has been employed in
touching up the episode of which it was the scene and tricking it out in
idyllic love-knots. But as I stood on the charming terrace I have mentioned--a
little jewel of a terrace, with grassy flags and a mossy parapet, and an
admirable view of great swelling violet hills--stood there reminded how much
sweeter Nature is than man, the story looked rather wan and unlovely beneath
these literary decorations, and I could pay it no livelier homage than is
implied in perfect pity. Hero and heroine have become too much creatures of
history to take up attitudes as part of any poetry. But, not to moralise too
sternly for a tourist between trains, I should add that, as an illustration, to
be inserted mentally in the text of the "Confessions," a glimpse of
Les Charmettes is pleasant enough. It completes the rare charm of good
autobiography to behold with one's eyes the faded and battered background of
the story; and Rousseau's narrative is so incomparably vivid and forcible that
the sordid little house at Chambéry seems of a hardly deeper shade of reality
than so many other passages of his projected truth.
If I spent an hour at Les Charmettes, fumbling thus
helplessly with the past, I recognised on the morrow how strongly the Mont
Cenis Tunnel smells of the time to come. As I passed along the Saint-Gothard
highway a couple of months since, I perceived, half up the Swiss ascent, a
group of navvies at work in a gorge beneath the road. They had laid bare a
broad surface of granite and had punched in the centre of it a round black
cavity, of about the dimensions, as it seemed to me, of a soup-plate. This was
to attain its perfect development some eight years hence. The Mont Cenis may
therefore be held to have set a fashion which will be followed till the highest
Himalaya is but the ornamental apex or
snow-capped gable-tip of some resounding fuliginous corridor. The tunnel
differs but in length from other tunnels; you spend half an hour in it. But you
whirl out into the blest peninsula, and as you look back seem to see the mighty
mass shrug its shoulders over the line, the mere turn of a dreaming giant in
his sleep. The tunnel is certainly not a poetic object, out there is no
perfection without its beauty; and as you measure the long rugged outline of
the pyramid of which it forms the base you accept it as the perfection of a
short cut. Twenty-four hours from Paris to Turin is speed for the times--speed which may content us,
at any rate, until expansive Berlin has
succeeded in placing itself at thirty-six from Milan.
To enter Turin then of a lovely August afternoon was to find
a city of arcades, of pink and yellow stucco, of innumerable cafes, of
blue-legged officers, of ladies draped in the North-Italian mantilla. An old
friend of Italy
coming back to her finds an easy waking for dormant memories. Every object is a
reminder and every reminder a thrill. Half an hour after my arrival, as I stood
at my window, which overhung the great square, I found the scene, within and
without, a rough epitome of every pleasure and every impression I had formerly
gathered from Italy: the balcony and the Venetian-blind, the cool floor of
speckled concrete, the lavish delusions of frescoed wall and ceiling, the broad
divan framed for the noonday siesta, the massive medieval Castello in
mid-piazza, with its shabby rear and its pompous Palladian front, the brick
campaniles beyond, the milder, yellower light, the range of colour, the
suggestion of sound. Later, beneath the arcades, I found many an old
acquaintance: beautiful officers, resplendent, slow-strolling, contemplative of
female beauty; civil and peaceful dandies, hardly less gorgeous, with that
religious faith in moustache and shirt-front which distinguishes the belle
jeunesse of Italy; ladies with heads artfully shawled in Spanish-looking lace,
but with too little art--or too much nature at least--in the region of the
bodice; well-conditioned young abbati with neatly drawn stockings. These indeed are not objects of first-rate interest, and with such Turin is rather
meagrely furnished. It has no architecture, no churches, no monuments, no romantic street-scenery. It has the great votive temple
of the Superga, which stands on a high hilltop above the city, gazing across at
Monte Rosa and lifting its own fine dome against the sky with no contemptible
art. But when you have seen the Superga from the quay beside the Po, a skein of
a few yellow threads in August, despite its frequent habit of rising high and
running wild, and said to yourself that in architecture position is half the
battle, you have nothing left to visit but the Museum of pictures. The Turin
Gallery, which is large and well arranged, is the fortunate owner of three or
four masterpieces: a couple of magnificent Vandycks and a couple of Paul
Veroneses; the latter a Queen of Sheba and a Feast of the House of Levi--the
usual splendid combination of brocades, grandees and marble colonnades dividing
those skies de turquoise malade to which Théophile Gautier is fond of alluding.
The Veroneses are fine, but with Venice
in prospect the traveller feels at liberty to keep his best attention in
reserve. If, however, he has the proper relish for Vandyck, let him linger long
and fondly here; for that admiration will never be more potently stirred than
by the adorable group of the three little royal highnesses, sons and the
daughter of Charles I. All the purity of childhood is here, and all its soft
solidity of structure, rounded tenderly beneath the spangled satin and
contrasted charmingly with the pompous rigidity. Clad respectively in crimson,
white and blue, these small scions stand up in their ruffs and fardingales in
dimpled serenity, squaring their infantine stomachers at the spectator with an innocence, a dignity, a delightful grotesqueness, which
make the picture a thing of close truth as well as of fine decorum. You might
kiss their hands, but you certainly would think twice before pinching their
cheeks--provocative as they are of this tribute of admiration--and would
altogether lack presumption to lift them off the ground or the higher level or
dais on which they stand so sturdily planted by right of birth. There is
something inimitable in the paternal gallantry with which the painter has
touched off the young lady. She was a princess, yet she was a baby, and he has
contrived, we let ourselves fancy, to interweave an
intimation that she was a creature whom, in her teens, the lucklessly
smitten--even as he was prematurely--must vainly sigh for. Though the work is a
masterpiece of execution its merits under this head may be emulated, at a
distance; the lovely modulations of colour in the three contrasted and
harmonised little satin petticoats, the solidity of the little heads, in spite
of all their prettiness, the happy, unexaggerated squareness and maturity of
pose, are, severally, points to study, to imitate, and to reproduce with
profit. But the taste of such a consummate thing is its great secret as well as
its great merit--a taste which seems one of the lost instincts of mankind. Go
and enjoy this supreme expression of Vandyck's fine sense, and admit that never
was a politer production.
Milan speaks to us of a burden of felt life of which Turin
is innocent, but in its general aspect still lingers a northern reserve which
makes the place rather perhaps the last of the prose capitals than the first of
the poetic. The long Austrian occupation perhaps did something to Germanise its physiognomy; though indeed this is an
indifferent explanation when one remembers how well, temperamentally speaking, Italy held her own in Venetia.
Milan, at any
rate, if not bristling with the æsthetic impulse, opens to us frankly enough
the thick volume of her past. Of that volume the Cathedral is the fairest and
fullest page--a structure not supremely interesting, not logical, not even, to some minds, commandingly beautiful, but grandly
curious and superbly rich. I hope, for my own part, never to grow too
particular to admire it. If it had no other distinction it would still have
that of impressive, immeasurable achievement. As I strolled beside its vast
indented base one evening, and felt it, above me, rear its grey mysteries into
the starlight while the restless human tide on which I floated rose no higher
than the first few layers of street-soiled marble, I was tempted to believe
that beauty in great architecture is almost a secondary merit, and that the
main point is mass--such mass as may make it a supreme embodiment of vigorous
effort. Viewed in this way a great building is the greatest conceivable work of
art. More than any other it represents difficulties mastered, resources
combined, labour, courage and patience. And there are people who tell us that
art has nothing to do with morality! Little enough, doubtless, when it is
concerned, even ever so little, in painting the roof of Milan Cathedral within
to represent carved stone-work. Of this famous roof every one has heard--how
good it is, how bad, how perfect a delusion, how transparent an artifice. It is
the first thing your cicerone shows you on entering the church. The
occasionally accommodating art-lover may accept it philosophically, I think;
for the interior, though admirably effective as a whole, has no great
sublimity, nor even purity, of pitch. It is splendidly vast and dim; the
altarlamps twinkle afar through the incense-thickened air like foglights at
sea, and the great columns rise straight to the roof, which hardly curves to
meet them, with the girth and altitude of oaks of a thousand years; but there
is little refinement of design--few of those felicities of proportion which the
eye caresses, when it finds them, very much as the memory retains and repeats
some happy lines of poetry or some haunting musical phrase. Consistently brave,
none the less, is the result produced, and nothing braver than a certain
exhibition that I privately enjoyed of the relics of St. Charles Borromeus.
This holy man lies at his eternal rest in a small but gorgeous sepulchral
chapel, beneath the boundless pavement and before the high altar; and for the
modest sum of five francs you may have his shrivelled mortality unveiled and
gaze at it with whatever reserves occur to you. The Catholic Church never
renounces a chance of the sublime for fear of a chance of the
ridiculous--especially when the chance of the sublime may be the very excellent
chance of five francs. The performance in question, of which the good San Carlo
paid in the first instance the cost, was impressive certainly, but as a
monstrous matter or a grim comedy may still be. The little sacristan, having
secured his audience, whipped on a white tunic over his frock, lighted a couple
of extra candles and proceeded to remove from above the altar, by means of a
crank, a sort of sliding shutter, just as you may see a shop-boy do of a
morning at his master's window. In this case too a large sheet of plate-glass
was uncovered, and to form an idea of the étalage you must imagine that a
jeweller, for reasons of his own, has struck an unnatural partnership with an
undertaker. The black mummified corpse of the saint is stretched out in a glass
coffin, clad in his mouldering canonicals, mitred, crosiered and gloved,
glittering with votive jewels. It is an extraordinary mixture of death and
life; the desiccated clay, the ashen rags, the hideous little black mask and
skull, and the living, glowing, twinkling splendour of diamonds, emeralds and
sapphires. The collection is really fine, and many great historic names are
attached to the different offerings. Whatever may be the better opinion as to
the future of the Church, I can't help thinking she will make a figure in the
world so long as she retains this great fund of precious
"properties," this prodigious capital decoratively invested and
scintillating throughout Christendom at effectively-scattered points. You see I
am forced to agree after all, in spite of the sliding shutter and the profane
swagger of the sacristan, that a certain pastoral majesty saved the situation,
or at least made irony gape. Yet it was from a natural desire to breathe a
sweeter air that I immediately afterwards undertook the interminable climb to
the roof of the cathedral. This is another world of wonders, and one which
enjoys due renown, every square inch of wall on the winding stairways being bescribbled
with a traveller's name. There is a great glare from the far-stretching slopes
of marble, a confusion (like the masts of a navy or the spears of an army) of
image-capped pinnacles, biting the impalpable blue, and, better than either,
the goodliest view of level Lombardy sleeping in its rich transalpine light and
resembling, with its white-walled dwellings and the spires on its horizon, a
vast green sea spotted with ships. After two months of Switzerland the Lombard
plain is a rich rest to the eye, and the yellow, liquid, free-flowing light--as
if on favoured Italy the vessels of heaven were more widely opened--had for
mine a charm which made me think of a great opaque mountain as a blasphemous
invasion of the atmospheric spaces.
[Illustration: THE SIMPLON GATE, MILAN]
I have mentioned the cathedral first, but the prime treasure
of Milan at the
present hour is the beautiful, tragical Leonardo. The cathedral is good for
another thousand years, but we ask whether our children will find in the most majestic
and most luckless of frescoes much more than the shadow of a shadow. Its fame
has been for a century or two that, as one may say, of an illustrious invalid
whom people visit to see how he lasts, with leave-taking sighs and almost
death-bed or tiptoe precautions. The picture needs not another scar or stain,
now, to be the saddest work of art in the world; and battered, defaced, ruined as it is, it remains one of the greatest. We may
really compare its anguish of decay to the slow conscious ebb of life in a
human organism. The production of the prodigy was a breath from the infinite,
and the painter's conception not immeasurably less complex than the scheme,
say, of his own mortal constitution. There has been much talk lately of the
irony of fate, but I suspect fate was never more ironical than when she led the
most scientific, the most calculating of all painters to spend fifteen long
years in building his goodly house upon the sand. And yet, after all, may not
the playing of that trick represent but a deeper wisdom, since if the thing
enjoyed the immortal health and bloom of a first-rate Titian we should have
lost one of the most pertinent lessons in the history of art? We know it as
hearsay, but here is the plain proof, that there is no limit to the amount of
"stuff" an artist may put into his work. Every painter ought once in
his life to stand before the Cenacolo and decipher its moral. Mix with your
colours and mess on your palette every particle of the very substance of your
soul, and this lest perchance your "prepared surface" shall play you
a trick! Then, and then only, it will fight to the last--it will resist even in
death. Raphael was a happier genius; you look at his lovely "Marriage of
the Virgin" at the Brera, beautiful as some first deep smile of conscious
inspiration, but to feel that he foresaw no complaint against fate, and that he
knew the world he wanted to know and charmed it into never giving him away. But
I have left no space to speak of the Brera, nor of that paradise of book-worms
with an eye for their background--if such creatures exist--the Ambrosian
Library; nor of that mighty basilica of St. Ambrose, with its spacious atrium
and its crudely solemn mosaics, in which it is surely your own fault if you
don't forget Dr. Strauss and M. Renan and worship as grimly as a Christian of
the ninth century.
It is part of the sordid prose of the Mont Cenis road that,
unlike those fine old unimproved passes, the Simplon, the Splügen and--yet
awhile longer--the Saint-Gothard, it denies you a glimpse of that paradise
adorned by the four lakes even as that of uncommented Scripture by the rivers
of Eden. I made, however, an excursion to the Lake of Como,
which, though brief, lasted long enough to suggest to me that I too was a hero
of romance with leisure for a love-affair, and not a hurrying tourist with a
Bradshaw in his pocket. The Lake
of Como has figured
largely in novels of "immoral" tendency--being commonly the spot to
which inflamed young gentlemen invite the wives of other gentlemen to fly with
them and ignore the restrictions of public opinion. But even the Lake of Como has been revised and improved; the
fondest prejudices yield to time; it gives one somehow a sense of an aspiringly
high tone. I should pay a poor compliment at least to the swarming inmates of
the hotels which now alternate attractively by the water-side with villas old
and new were I to read the appearances more cynically. But if it is lost to
florid fiction it still presents its blue bosom to most other refined uses, and
the unsophisticated tourist, the American at least, may do any amount of
private romancing there. The pretty hotel at Cadenabbia offers him, for
instance, in the most elegant and assured form, the so often precarious
adventure of what he calls at home summer board. It is all so unreal, so
fictitious, so elegant and idle, so framed to undermine a rigid sense of the
chief end of man not being to float for ever in an ornamental boat, beneath an
awning tasselled like a circus-horse, impelled by an affable Giovanni or
Antonio from one stately stretch of lake-laved villa steps to another, that
departure seems as harsh and unnatural as the dream-dispelling note of some
punctual voice at your bedside on a dusky winter morning. Yet I wondered, for
my own part, where I had seen it all before--the pink-walled villas gleaming
through their shrubberies of orange and oleander, the mountains shimmering in
the hazy light like so many breasts of doves, the constant presence of the
melodious Italian voice. Where indeed but at the Opera when the manager has
been more than usually regardless of expense? Here in the foreground was the
palace of the nefarious barytone, with its banqueting-hall opening as freely on
the stage as a railway buffet on the platform; beyond, the delightful back
scene, with its operatic gamut of colouring; in the middle the scarlet-sashed
barcaiuoli, grouped like a chorus, hat in hand, awaiting the conductor's
signal. It was better even than being in a novel--this being, this fairly
wallowing, in a libretto.
Berne, September, 1873.--In Berne
again, some eleven weeks after having left it in July. I have never been in Switzerland so
late, and I came hither innocently supposing the last Cook's tourist to have
paid out his last coupon and departed. But I was lucky, it seems, to discover
an empty cot in an attic and a very tight place at a table d'hôte. People are
all flocking out of Switzerland,
as in July they were flocking in, and the main channels of egress are terribly
choked. I have been here several days, watching them come and go; it is like
the march-past of an army. It gives one, for an occasional change from darker
thoughts, a lively impression of the numbers of people now living, and above
all now moving, at extreme ease in the world. Here is little Switzerland
disgorging its tens of thousands of honest folk, chiefly English, and rarely,
to judge by their faces and talk, children of light in any eminent degree; for
whom snow-peaks and glaciers and passes and lakes and chalets and sunsets and a
café complet, "including honey," as the coupon says, have become
prime necessities for six weeks every year. It's not so long ago that lords and
nabobs monopolised these pleasures; but nowadays i a month's tour in Switzerland is
no more a jeu de prince than a Sunday excursion. To watch this huge Anglo-Saxon
wave ebbing through Berne suggests, no doubt
most fallaciously, that the common lot of mankind isn't after all so very hard
and that the masses have reached a high standard of comfort. The view of the
Oberland chain, as you see it from the garden of the hotel, really butters
one's bread most handsomely; and here are I don't know how many hundred Cook's
tourists a day looking at it through the smoke of their pipes. Is it really the
"masses," however, that I see every day at the table d'hôte? They
have rather too few h's to the dozen, but their good-nature is great. Some
people complain that they "vulgarise" Switzerland; but as far as I am
concerned I freely give it up to them and offer them a personal welcome and
take a peculiar satisfaction in seeing them here. Switzerland is a "show
country"--I am more and more struck with the bearings of that truth; and
its use in the world is to reassure persons of a benevolent imagination when
they begin to wish for the drudging millions a greater supply of elevating
amusement. Here is amusement for a thousand years, and as elevating certainly
as mountains three miles high can make it. I expect to live to see the summit
of Monte Rosa heated by steam-tubes and adorned with a hotel setting three
tables d'hôte a day.
[Illustration: THE CLOCK TOWER, BERNE]
I have been walking about the arcades, which used to bestow
a grateful shade in July, but which seem rather dusky and chilly in these shortening
autumn days. I am struck with the way the English always speak of them--with a
shudder, as gloomy, as dirty, as evil-smelling, as suffocating, as freezing, as
anything and everything but admirably picturesque. I take us Americans for the
only people who, in travelling, judge things on the first impulse--when we do
judge them at all--not from the standpoint of simple comfort. Most of us,
strolling forth into these bustling basements, are, I imagine, too much amused,
too much diverted from the sense of an alienable right to public ease, to be
conscious of heat or cold, of thick air, or even of the universal smell of
strong charcuterie. If the visible romantic were banished from the face of the
earth I am sure the idea of it would still survive in some typical American
heart....
Lucerne,
September. --Berne, I find, has been filling with tourists at the expense of Lucerne, which I have
been having almost to myself. There are six people at the table d'hôte; the
excellent dinner denotes on the part of the chef the easy leisure in which true
artists love to work. The waiters have nothing to do but lounge about the hall
and chink in their pockets the fees of the past season. The day has been lovely
in itself, and pervaded, to my sense, by the gentle
glow of a natural satisfaction at my finding myself again on the threshold of Italy.
I am lodged en prince, in a room with a balcony hanging over the lake--a
balcony on which I spent a long time this morning at dawn, thanking the
mountain-tops, from the depths of a landscape-lover's heart, for their promise
of superbly fair weather. There were a great many mountain-tops to thank, for
the crags and peaks and pinnacles tumbled away through the morning mist in an
endless confusion of grandeur. I have been all day in better humour with Lucerne than ever
before--a forecast reflection of Italian moods. If Switzerland,
as I wrote the other day, is so furiously a show-place, Lucerne is certainly one of the biggest
booths at the fair. The little quay, under the trees, squeezed in between the
decks of the steamboats and the doors of the hotels, is a terrible medley of
Saxon dialects--a jumble of pilgrims in all the phases of devotion, equipped
with book and staff, alpenstock and Baedeker. There are so many hotels and
trinket-shops, so many omnibuses and steamers, so many Saint-Gothard vetturini,
so many ragged urchins poking photographs, minerals and Lucernese English at
you, that you feel as if lake and mountains themselves, in all their
loveliness, were but a part of the "enterprise" of landlords and
pedlars, and half expect to see the Righi and Pilatus and the fine weather
figure as items on your hotel-bill between the bougie and the siphon. Nature
herself assists you to this conceit; there is something so operatic and suggestive
of footlights and scene-shifters in the view on which Lucerne looks out. You are one of five
thousand--fifty thousand--"accommodated" spectators; you have taken
your season-ticket and there is a responsible impresario somewhere behind the
scenes. There is such a luxury of beauty in the prospect--such a redundancy of
composition and effect--so many more peaks and pinnacles than are needed to
make one heart happy or regale the vision of one quiet observer, that you
finally accept the little Babel on the quay and the looming masses in the
clouds as equal parts of a perfect system, and feel as if the mountains had
been waiting so many ages for the hotels to come and balance the colossal
group, that they show a right, after all, to have them big and numerous. The
scene-shifters have been at work all day long, composing and discomposing the
beautiful background of the prospect--massing the clouds and scattering the
light, effacing and reviving, making play with their wonderful machinery of
mist and haze. The mountains rise, one behind the other, in an enchanting
gradation of distances and of melting blues and greys; you think each
successive tone the loveliest and haziest possible till you see another loom
dimly behind it. I couldn't enjoy even The Swiss Times, over my breakfast, till
I had marched forth to the office of the Saint-Gothard service of coaches and
demanded the banquette for to-morrow. The one place at the disposal of the
office was taken, but I might possibly m'entendre with the conductor for his
own seat--the conductor being generally visible, in the intervals of business,
at the post-office. To the post-office, after breakfast, I repaired, over the
fine new bridge which now spans the green Reuss and gives such a woeful air of
country-cousinship to the crooked old wooden structure which did sole service
when I was here four years ago. The old bridge is covered with a running hood
of shingles and adorned with a series of very quaint and vivid little paintings
of the "Dance of Death," quite in the Holbein manner; the new sends
up a painful glare from its white limestone, and is ornamented with candelabra
in a meretricious imitation of platinum. As an almost professional cherisher of
the quaint I ought to have chosen to return at least by the dark and narrow
way; but mark how luxury unmans us. I was already demoralised. I crossed the
threshold of the timbered portal, took a few steps, and retreated. It smelt
badly! So I marched back, counting the lamps in their fine falsity. But the
other, the crooked and covered way, smelt very badly indeed; and no good
American is without a fund of accumulated sensibility to the odour of stale
timber.
Meanwhile I had spent an hour in the great yard of the
postoffice, waiting for my conductor to turn up and seeing the yellow
malles-postes pushed to and fro. At last, being told my man was at my service,
I was brought to speech of a huge, jovial, bearded, delightful Italian, clad in
the blue coat and waistcoat, with close, round silver buttons, which are a
heritage of the old postilions. No, it was not he; it was a friend of his; and
finally the friend was produced, en costume de ville, but equally jovial,and Italian enough--a brave Lucernese, who had spent half
of his life between Bellinzona and Camerlata. For ten francs this worthy man's
perch behind the luggage was made mine as far as Bellinzona, and we separated
with reciprocal wishes for good weather on the morrow. To-morrow is so
manifestly determined to be as fine as any other 30th of September since the
weather became on this planet a topic of conversation that I have had nothing
to do but stroll about Lucerne, staring, loafing
and vaguely intent on regarding the fact that, whatever happens, my place is
paid to Milan.
I loafed into the immense new Hotel National and read the New York Tribune on a
blue satin divan; after which I was rather surprised, on coming out, to find
myself staring at a green Swiss lake and not at the Broadway omnibuses. The
Hotel National is adorned with a perfectly appointed Broadway bar--one of the
"prohibited" ones seeking hospitality in foreign lands after the
manner of an old-fashioned French or Italian refugee.
Milan,
October.--My journey hither was such a pleasant piece of traveller's luck that
I feel a delicacy for taking it to pieces to see what it was made of. Do what
we will, however, there remains in all deeply agreeable impressions a charming
something we can't analyse. I found it agreeable even, given the rest of my
case, to turn out of bed, at Lucerne,
by four o'clock, into the chilly autumn darkness. The thick-starred sky was
cloudless, and there was as yet no flush of dawn; but the lake was wrapped in a
ghostly white mist which crept halfway up the mountains and made them look as
if they too had been lying down for the night and were casting away the
vaporous tissues of their bedclothes. Into this fantastic fog the little
steamer went creaking away, and I hung about the deck with the two or three
travellers who had known better than to believe it would save them francs or
midnight sighs--over those debts you "pay with your person"--to go
and wait for the diligence at the Poste at Fliielen, or yet at the Guillaume
Tell. The dawn came sailing up over the mountain-tops, flushed but unperturbed,
and blew out the little stars and then the big ones, as a thrifty matron after
a party blows out her candles and lamps; the mist went melting and wandering
away into the duskier hollows and recesses of the mountains, and the summits
defined their profiles against the cool soft light.
At Flüelen, before the landing, the big yellow coaches were
actively making themselves bigger, and piling up boxes
and bags on their roofs in a way to turn nervous people's thoughts to the sharp
corners of the downward twists of the great road. I climbed into my own
banquette, and stood eating peaches--half-a-dozen women were hawking them about
under the horses' legs--with an air of security that might have been offensive
to the people scrambling and protesting below between coupé and intérieur. They
were all English and all had false alarms about the claim of somebody else to
their place, the place for which they produced their ticket, with a declaration
in three or four different tongues of the inalienable right to it given them by
the expenditure of British gold. They were all serenely confuted by the stout,
purple-faced, many-buttoned conductors, patted on the backs, assured that their
bath-tubs had every advantage of position on the top, and stowed away according
to their dues. When once one has fairly started on a journey and has but to go
and go by the impetus received, it is surprising what entertainment one finds
in very small things. We surrender to the gaping traveller's mood, which surely
isn't the unwisest the heart knows. I don't envy people, at any rate, who have
outlived or outworn the simple sweetness of feeling settled to go somewhere
with bag and umbrella. If we are settled on the top of a coach, and the
"somewhere" contains an element of the new and strange, the case is
at its best. In this matter wise people are content to become children again.
We don't turn about on our knees to look out of the omnibus-window, but we
indulge in very much the same round-eyed contemplation of accessible objects.
Responsibility is left at home or at the worst packed away in the valise,
relegated to quite another part of the diligence with the clean shirts and the
writing-case. I sucked in the gladness of gaping, for this occasion, with the
somewhat acrid juice of my indifferent peaches; it made me think them very good.
This was the first of a series of kindly services it rendered me. It made me
agree next, as we started, that the gentleman at the booking-office at Lucerne had but played a
harmless joke when he told me the regular seat in the banquette was taken. No
one appeared to claim it; so the conductor and I reversed positions, and I
found him quite as conversible as the usual Anglo-Saxon.
He was trolling snatches of melody and showing his great
yellow teeth in a jovial grin all the way to Bellinzona--and this in face of
the sombre fact that the Saint-Gothard tunnel is scraping away into the
mountain, all the while, under his nose, and numbering the days of the
many-buttoned brotherhood. But he hopes, for long service's sake, to be taken
into the employ of the railway; he at least is no cherisher of quaintness and
has no romantic perversity. I found the railway coming on, however, in a manner
very shocking to mine. About an hour short of Andermatt they have pierced a
huge black cavity in the mountain, around which has grown up a swarming,
digging, hammering, smoke-compelling colony. There are great barracks, with
tall chimneys, down in the gorge that bristled the other day but with natural
graces, and a wonderful increase of wine-shops in the little village of Göschenen
above. Along the breast of the mountain, beside the road, come wandering
several miles of very handsome iron pipes, of a stupendous girth--a conduit for
the water-power with which some of the machinery is worked. It lies at its
mighty length among the rocks like an immense black serpent, and serves, as a
mere detail, to give one the measure of the central enterprise. When at the end
of our long day's journey, well down in warm Italy, we came upon the other
aperture of the tunnel, I could but uncap with a grim
reverence. Truly Nature is great, but she seems to me to stand in very much the
shoes of my poor friend the conductor. She is being superseded at her strongest
points, successively, and nothing remains but for her to take humble service
with her master. If she can hear herself think amid that din of blasting and
hammering she must be reckoning up the years to elapse before the cleverest of
Ober-Ingénieurs decides that mountains are mere obstructive matter and has the Jungfrau melted down and the residuum carried away in
balloons and dumped upon another planet.
The Devil's Bridge, with the same failing apparently as the
good Homer, was decidedly nodding. The volume of water in the torrent was
shrunken, and I missed the thunderous uproar and far-leaping spray that have
kept up a miniature tempest in the neighbourhood on my other passages. It
suddenly occurs to me that the fault is not in the good Homer's inspiration,
but simply in the big black pipes above-mentioned. They dip into the rushing
stream higher up, presumably, and pervert its fine frenzy to their prosaic
uses. There could hardly be a more vivid reminder of the standing quarrel
between use and beauty, and of the hard time poor
beauty is having. I looked wistfully, as we rattled into dreary Andermatt, at
the great white zigzags of the Oberalp road which climbed away to the left.
Even on one's way to Italy
one may spare a throb of desire for the beautiful vision of the castled
Grisons. Dear to me the memory of my day's drive last summer through that long
blue avenue of mountains, to queer little mouldering Ilanz, visited before
supper in the ghostly dusk. At Andermatt a sign over a little black doorway
flanked by two dung-hills seemed to me tolerably comical: Mineraux,
Quadrupedes, Oiseaux, OEufs, Tableaux Antiques. We
bundled in to dinner and the American gentleman in the banquette made the
acquaintance of the Irish lady in the coupé, who talked of the weather as foine
and wore a Persian scarf twisted about her head. At the other end of the table
sat an Englishman, out of the intérieur, who bore an extraordinary resemblance
to the portraits of Edward VI's and Mary's reigns. He
walking, a convincing Holbein. The impression was of value to a
cherisher of quaintness, and he must have wondered--not knowing me for such a
character--why I stared at him. It wasn't him I was staring at, but some
handsome Seymour or Dudley
or Digby with a ruff and a round cap and plume.
From Andermatt, through its high, cold, sunny valley, we
passed into rugged little Hospenthal, and then up the last stages of the
ascent. From here the road was all new to me. Among the summits of the various
Alpine passes there is little to choose. You wind and double slowly into keener
cold and deeper stillness; you put on your overcoat and turn up the collar; you
count the nestling snow-patches and then you cease to count them; you pause, as
you trudge before the lumbering coach, and listen to the last-heard cow-bell
tinkling away below you in kindlier herbage. The sky was tremendously blue, and
the little stunted bushes on the snow-streaked slopes were all dyed with
autumnal purples and crimsons. It was a great display of colour. Purple and
crimson too, though not so fine, were the faces thrust out at us from the
greasy little double casements of a barrack beside the road, where the horses
paused before the last pull. There was one little girl in particular, beginning
to lisser her hair, as civilisation approached, in a manner not to be
described, with her poor little blue-black hands. At the summit are the two
usual grim little stone taverns, the steel-blue tarn, the snow-white peaks, the pause in the cold sunshine. Then we begin to rattle down
with two horses. In five minutes we are swinging along the famous zigzags.
Engineer, driver, horses--it's very handsomely done by all of them. The road
curves and curls and twists and plunges like the tail of a kite; sitting
perched in the banquette, you see it making below you and in mid-air certain
bold gyrations which bring you as near as possible, short of the actual
experience, to the philosophy of that immortal Irishman who wished that his
fall from the house-top would only last. But the zigzags last no more than
Paddy's fall, and in due time we were all coming to our senses over cafe au
lait in the little inn at Faido. After Faido the valley, plunging deeper, began
to take thick afternoon shadows from the hills, and at Airolo we were fairly in
the twilight. But the pink and yellow houses shimmered through the gentle
gloom, and Italy
began in broken syllables to whisper that she was at hand. For the rest of the
way to Bellinzona her voice was muffled in the grey of evening, and I was half
vexed to lose the charming sight of the changing vegetation. But only half
vexed, for the moon was climbing all the while nearer the edge of the crags
that overshadowed us, and a thin magical light came trickling down into the
winding, murmuring gorges. It was a most enchanting business. The
chestnut-trees loomed up with double their daylight stature; the vines began to
swing their low festoons like nets to trip up the fairies. At last the ruined
towers of Bellinzona stood gleaming in the moonshine, and we rattled into the
great post-yard. It was eleven o'clock and I had risen at four; moonshine apart
I wasn't sorry.
All that was very well; but the drive next day from
Bellinzona to Como
is to my mind what gives its supreme beauty to this great pass. One can't
describe the beauty of the Italian lakes, nor would one try if one could; the
floweriest rhetoric can recall it only as a picture on a fireboard recalls a
Claude. But it lay spread before me for a whole perfect day: in the long gleam
of the Major, from whose head the diligence swerves away and begins to climb
the bosky hills that divide it from Lugano; in the shimmering, melting azure of
the southern slopes and masses; in the luxurious tangle of nature and the
familiar amenity of man; in the lawn-like inclinations, where the great grouped
chestnuts make so cool a shadow in so warm a light; in the rusty vineyards, the
littered cornfields and the tawdry wayside shrines. But most of all it's the
deep yellow light that enchants you and tells you where you are. See it come
filtering down through a vine-covered trellis on the red handkerchief with
which a ragged contadina has bound her hair, and all the magic of Italy, to the
eye, makes an aureole about the poor girl's head. Look at a brown-breasted
reaper eating his chunk of black bread under a spreading chestnut; nowhere is
shadow so charming, nowhere is colour so charged, nowhere has accident such
grace. The whole drive to Lugano was one long loveliness,
and the town itself is admirably Italian. There was a great unlading of the
coach, during which I wandered under certain brown old arcades and bought for
six sous, from a young woman in a gold necklace, a hatful of peaches and figs.
When I came back I found the young man holding open the door of the second
diligence, which had lately come up, and beckoning to me with a despairing
smile. The young man, I must note, was the most amiable of Ticinese; though he
wore no buttons he was attached to the diligence in some amateurish capacity,
and had an eye to the mail-bags and other valuables in the boot. I grumbled at Berne over the want of soft curves in the Swiss
temperament; but the children of the tangled Tessin are cast in the Italian
mould. My friend had as many quips and cranks as a Neapolitan; we walked
together for an hour under the chestnuts, while the coach was plodding up from
Bellinzona, and he never stopped singing till we reached a little wine-house
where he got his mouth full of bread and cheese. I looked into his open door, a
la Sterne, and saw the young woman sitting rigid and grim, staring over his
head and with a great pile of bread and butter in her lap. He had only informed
her most politely that she was to be transferred to another diligence and must
do him the favour to descend; but she evidently knew of but one way for a
respectable young insulary of her sex to receive the politeness of a foreign
adventurer guilty of an eye betraying latent pleasantry. Heaven only knew what
he was saying! I told her, and she gathered up her parcels and emerged. A part
of the day's great pleasure perhaps was my grave sense of being an instrument
in the hands of the powers toward the safe consignment of this young woman and
her boxes. When once you have really bent to the helpless you are caught; there
is no such steel trap, and it holds you fast. My rather grim Abigail was a
neophyte in foreign travel, though doubtless cunning enough at her trade, which
I inferred to be that of making up those prodigious chignons worn mainly by
English ladies. Her mistress had gone on a mule over the mountains to
Cadenabbia, and she herself was coming up with the wardrobe, two big boxes and
a bath-tub. I had played my part, under the powers, at Bellinzona, and had
interposed between the poor girl's frightened English and the dreadful Ticinese
French of the functionaries in the post-yard. At the custom-house on the
Italian frontier I was of peculiar service; there was a kind of fateful
fascination in it. The wardrobe was voluminous; I exchanged a paternal glance
with my charge as the douanier plunged his brown fists into it. Who was the
lady at Cadenabbia? What was she to me or I to her?
She wouldn't know, when she rustled down to dinner
next day, that it was I who had guided the frail skiff of her public basis of
vanity to port. So unseen but not unfelt do we cross each other's orbits. The
skiff however may have foundered that evening in sight of land. I disengaged
the young woman from among her fellow-travellers and placed her boxes on a
hand-cart in the picturesque streets of Como,
within a stone's throw of that lovely striped and toned cathedral which has the
facade of cameo medallions. I could only make the facchino swear to take her to
the steamboat. He too was a jovial dog, but I hope he was polite with
precautions.
1873.
ITALY REVISITED
I
I waited in Paris until after the elections for the new
Chamber (they took place on the 14th of October); as only after one had learned
that the famous attempt of Marshal MacMahon and his ministers to drive the
French nation to the polls like a flock of huddling sheep, each with the white
ticket of an official candidate round his neck, had not achieved the success
which the energy of the process might have promised--only then it was possible
to draw a long breath and deprive the republican party of such support as might
have been conveyed in one's sympathetic presence. Seriously speaking too, the
weather had been enchanting--there were Italian fancies to be gathered without
leaving the banks of the Seine. Day after day
the air was filled with golden light, and even those chalkish vistas of the
Parisian beaux quartiers assumed the iridescent tints of autumn. Autumn weather
in Europe is often such a very sorry affair
that a fair-minded American will have it on his conscience to call attention to
a rainless and radiant October.
The echoes of the electoral strife kept me company for a
while after starting upon that abbreviated journey to Turin
which, as you leave Paris
at night, in a train unprovided with encouragements to slumber, is a singular
mixture of the odious and the charming. The charming indeed I think prevails;
for the dark half of the journey is the least interesting. The morning light
ushers you into the romantic gorges of the Jura, and after a big bowl of cafe
au lait at Culoz you may compose yourself comfortably for the climax of your
spectacle. The day before leaving Paris
I met a French friend who had just returned from a visit to a Tuscan
country-seat where he had been watching the vintage. "Italy," he said, "is more lovely than words can tell, and France, steeped in this electoral
turmoil, seems no better than a bear-garden." The part of the bear-garden
through which you travel as you approach the Mont Cenis
seemed to me that day very beautiful. The autumn colouring, thanks to the
absence of rain, had been vivid and crisp, and the vines that swung their low
garlands between the mulberries round about Chambery looked like long festoons of coral
and amber. The frontier station of Modane, on the further side of the Mont
Cenis Tunnel, is a very ill-regulated place; but even the most irritable of
tourists, meeting it on his way southward, will be disposed to consider it
good-naturedly. There is far too much bustling and scrambling, and the
facilities afforded you for the obligatory process of ripping open your luggage
before the officers of the Italian custom-house are much scantier than should
be; but for myself there is something that deprecates irritation in the shabby
green and grey uniforms of all the Italian officials who stand loafing about
and watching the northern invaders scramble back into marching order. Wearing
an administrative uniform doesn't necessarily spoil a man's temper, as in
France one is sometimes led to believe; for these excellent under-paid Italians
carry theirs as lightly as possible, and their answers to your inquiries don't
in the least bristle with rapiers, buttons and cockades. After leaving Modane
you slide straight downhill into the Italy
of your desire; from which point the road edges, after the grand manner, along
those It precipices that stand shoulder to shoulder, in a prodigious
perpendicular file, till they finally admit you to a distant glimpse he ancient
capital of Piedmont.
Turin
is no city of a name to conjure with, and I pay an extravagant tribute to
subjective emotion in speaking of it as ancient. if
the place is less bravely peninsular than Florence
and Rome, at
least it is more in the scenic tradition than New York Paris; and while I paced
the great arcades and looked at the fourth-rate shop windows I didn't scruple
to cultivate a shameless optimism. Relatively speaking, Turin touches a chord; but there is after all
no reason in a large collection of shabbily-stuccoed houses, disposed in a
rigidly rectangular manner, for passing a day of deep, still gaiety. The only
reason, I am afraid, is the old superstition of Italy--that property in the very
look of the written word, the evocation of a myriad images,
that makes any lover of the arts take Italian satisfactions on easier terms
than any others. The written word stands for something that eternally tricks
us; we juggle to our credulity even with such inferior apparatus as is offered
to our hand at Turin.
I roamed all the morning under the tall porticoes, thinking it sufficient joy
to take note of the soft, warm air, of that local colour of things that is at
once so broken and so harmonious, and of the comings and goings, the
physiognomy and manners, of the excellent Turinese. I had opened the old book
again; the old charm was in the style; I was in a more delightful world. I saw
nothing surpassingly beautiful or curious; but your true taster of the most
seasoned of dishes finds well-nigh the whole mixture in any mouthful. Above all
on the threshold of Italy
he knows again the solid and perfectly definable pleasure of finding himself
among the traditions of the grand style in architecture. It must be said that
we have still to go there to recover the sense of the domiciliary mass. In
northern cities there are beautiful houses, picturesque and curious houses;
sculptured gables that hang over the street, charming bay-windows, hooded
doorways, elegant proportions, a profusion of delicate ornament; but a good
specimen of an old Italian palazzo has a nobleness that is all its own. We
laugh at Italian "palaces," at their peeling paint, their nudity,
their dreariness; but they have the great palatial quality--elevation and extent.
They make of smaller things the apparent abode of pigmies; they round their
great arches and interspace their huge windows with a proud indifference to the
cost of materials. These grand proportions--the colossal basements, the
doorways that seem meant for cathedrals, the far away cornices--impart by
contrast a humble and bourgeois expression to interiors founded on the
sacrifice of the whole to the part, and in which the air of grandeur depends
largely on the help of the upholsterer. At Turin my first feeling was really one of
renewed shame for our meaner architectural manners. If the Italians at bottom
despise the rest of mankind and regard them as barbarians, disinherited of the
tradition of form, the idea proceeds largely, no doubt, from our living in
comparative mole-hills. They alone were really to build their civilisation.
[Illustration: UNDER THE ARCADES, TURIN.]
An impression which on coming back to Italy I find even
stronger than when it was first received is that of the contrast between the fecundity
of the great artistic period and the vulgarity there of the genius of to-day.
The first few hours spent on Italian soil are sufficient to renew it, and the
question I allude to is, historically speaking, one of the oddest. That the
people who but three hundred years ago had the best taste in the world should
now have the worst; that having produced the noblest, loveliest, costliest
works, they should now be given up to the manufacture of objects at once ugly
and paltry; that the race of which Michael Angelo and Raphael, Leonardo and
Titian were characteristic should have no other title to distinction than
third-rate genre pictures and catchpenny statues--all this is a frequent
perplexity to the observer of actual Italian life. The flower of "great"
art in these latter years ceased to bloom very powerfully anywhere; but nowhere
does it seem so drooping and withered as in the shadow
of the immortal embodiments of the old Italian genius. You go into a church or
a gallery and feast your fancy upon a splendid picture
or an exquisite piece of sculpture, and on issuing from the door that has
admitted you to the beautiful past are confronted with something that has the
effect of a very bad joke. The aspect of your lodging--the carpets, the
curtains, the upholstery in general, with their crude and violent colouring and
their vulgar material--the trumpery things in the shops, the extreme bad taste
of the dress of the women, the cheapness and baseness of every attempt at
decoration in the cafes and railway-stations, the hopeless frivolity of
everything that pretends to be a work of art--all this modern crudity runs riot
over the relics of the great period.
We can do a thing for the first time but once; it is but
once for all that we can have a pleasure in its freshness. This is a law not on
the whole, I think, to be regretted, for we sometimes learn to know things
better by not enjoying them too much. It is certain, however, at the same time,
that a visitor who has worked off the immediate ferment for this inexhaustibly
interesting country has by no means entirely drained the cup. After thinking of
Italy as historical and artistic it will do him no great harm to think of her
for a while as panting both for a future and for a balance at the bank;
aspirations supposedly much at variance with the Byronic, the Ruskinian, the
artistic, poetic, aesthetic manner of considering our eternally attaching
peninsula. He may grant--I don't say it is absolutely necessary--that its
actual aspects and economics are ugly, prosaic, provokingly out of relation to
the diary and the album; it is nevertheless true that, at the point things have
come to, modern Italy in a manner imposes herself.
I hadn't been many hours in the country before that truth assailed me; and I
may add that, the first irritation past, I found myself able to accept it. For,
if we think, nothing is more easy to understand than
an honest ire on the part of the young Italy of to-day at being looked at
by all the world as a kind of soluble pigment. Young Italy, preoccupied with
its economical and political future, must be heartily tired of being admired
for its eyelashes and its pose. In one of Thackeray's novels occurs a mention
of a young artist who sent to the Royal
Academy a picture
representing "A Contadino dancing with a Trasteverina at the door of a
Locanda, to the music of a Pifferaro." It is in this attitude and with
these conventional accessories that the world has hitherto seen fit to
represent young Italy,
and one doesn't wonder that if the youth has any spirit he should at last begin
to resent our insufferable aesthetic patronage. He has established a line of
tram-cars in Rome,
from the Porta del Popolo to the Ponte Molle, and it
is on one of these democratic vehicles that I seem to see him taking his
triumphant course down the vista of the future. I won't pretend to rejoice with
him any more than I really do; I won't pretend, as the sentimental tourists say
about it all, as if it were the setting of an intaglio or the border of a Roman
scarf, to "like" it. Like it or not, as we may, it is evidently
destined to be; I see a new Italy in the future which in many important
respects will equal, if not surpass, the most enterprising sections of our
native land. Perhaps by that time Chicago and San Francisco will have
acquired a pose, and their sons and daughters will dance at the doors of
locande.
However this may be, the accomplished schism between the old
order and the new is the promptest moral of a fresh visit to this
ever-suggestive part of the world. The old has become more and more a museum,
preserved and perpetuated in the midst of the new, but without any further
relation to it--it must be admitted indeed that such a relation is
considerable--than that of the stock on his shelves to the shopkeeper, or of the
Siren of the South to the showman who stands before his booth. More than once,
as we move about nowadays in the Italian cities, there seems to pass before our
eyes a vision of the coming years. It represents to our satisfaction an Italy united
and prosperous, but altogether scientific and commercial. The Italy indeed
that we sentimentalise and romance about was an ardently mercantile country;
though I suppose it loved not its ledgers less, but its frescoes and
altar-pieces more. Scattered through this paradise regained of trade--this
country of a thousand ports--we see a large number of beautiful buildings in
which an endless series of dusky pictures are darkening, dampening, fading,
failing, through the years. By the doors of the beautiful buildings are little
turnstiles at which there sit a great many uniformed men to whom the visitor
pays a tenpenny fee. Inside, in the vaulted and frescoed
chambers, the art of Italy.
lies buried as in a thousand mausoleums. It is well
taken care of; it is constantly copied; sometimes it is
"restored"--as in the case of that beautiful boy-figure of Andrea del
Sarto at Florence, which may be seen at the gallery of the Uffizi with its
honourable duskiness quite peeled off and heaven knows what raw, bleeding
cuticle laid bare. One evening lately, near the same Florence, in the soft twilight, I took a
stroll among those encircling hills on which the massive villas are mingled
with the vaporous olives. Presently I arrived where three roads met at a
wayside shrine, in which, before some pious daub of an old-time Madonna, a
little votive lamp glimmered through the evening air. The hour, the atmosphere,
the place, the twinkling taper, the sentiment of the observer, the thought that
some one had been rescued here from an assassin or from some other peril and
had set up a little grateful altar in consequence, against the yellow-plastered
wall of a tangled podere; all this led me to approach the shrine with a
reverent, an emotional step. I drew near it, but after a few steps I paused. I
became aware of an incongruous odour; it seemed to me that the evening air was
charged with a perfume which, although to a certain extent familiar, had not
hitherto associated itself with rustic frescoes and wayside altars. I wondered,
I gently sniffed, and the question so put left me no doubt. The odour was that
of petroleum; the votive taper was nourished with the essence of Pennsylvania. I confess
that I burst out laughing, and a picturesque contadino, wending his homeward
way in the dusk, stared at me as if I were an iconoclast. He noticed the
petroleum only, I imagine, to snuff it fondly up; but
to me the thing served as a symbol of the Italy of the future. There is a
horse-car from the Porta del Popolo to the Ponte
Molle, and the Tuscan shrines are fed with kerosene.
II
If it's very well meanwhile to come to Turin
first it's better still to go to Genoa
afterwards. Genoa
is the tightest topographic tangle in the world, which even a second visit
helps you little to straighten out. In the wonderful crooked, twisting,
climbing, soaring, burrowing Genoese alleys the traveller is really up to his
neck in the old Italian sketchability. The pride of
the place, I believe, is a port of great capacity, and the bequest of the late
Duke of Galliera, who left four millions of dollars for the purpose of
improving and enlarging it, will doubtless do much toward converting it into
one of the great commercial stations of Europe.
But as, after leaving my hotel the afternoon I arrived, I wandered for a long
time at hazard through the tortuous by-ways of the city, I said to myself, not
without an accent of private triumph, that here at last was something it would
be almost impossible to modernise. I had found my hotel, in the first place,
extremely entertaining--the Croce di Malta, as it is called, established in a
gigantic palace on the edge of the swarming and not over-clean harbour. It was
the biggest house I had ever entered--the basement alone would have contained a
dozen American caravansaries. I met an American gentleman in the vestibule who
(as he had indeed a perfect right to be) was annoyed by its troublesome
dimensions--one was a quarter of an hour ascending out of the basement--and
desired to know if it were a "fair sample" of the Genoese inns. It
appeared an excellent specimen of Genoese architecture generally; so far as I
observed there were few houses perceptibly smaller than this Titanic tavern. I
lunched in a dusky ballroom whose ceiling was vaulted, frescoed and gilded with
the fatal facility of a couple of centuries ago, and which looked out upon
another ancient housefront, equally huge and equally battered, separated from
it only by a little wedge of dusky space--one of the principal streets, I
believe, of Genoa--whence out of dim abysses the population sent up to the
windows (I had to crane out very far to see it) a perpetual clattering,
shuffling, chaffering sound. Issuing forth presently into this crevice of a
street I found myself up to my neck in that element of the rich and strange--as
to visible and reproducible "effect," I mean--for the love of which
one revisits Italy. It offered itself indeed in a variety of colours, some of
which were not remarkable for their freshness or purity. But their combined
charm was not to be resisted, and the picture glowed with the rankly human side
of southern lowlife.
Genoa, as I have hinted, is the crookedest and most
incoherent of cities; tossed about on the sides and crests of a dozen hills, it
is seamed with gullies and ravines that bristle with those innumerable palaces
for which we have heard from our earliest years that the place is celebrated.
These great structures, with their mottled and faded complexions, lift their
big ornamental cornices to a tremendous height in the air, where, in a certain
indescribably forlorn and desolate fashion, overtopping each other, they seem
to reflect the twinkle and glitter of the warm Mediterranean.
Down about the basements, in the close crepuscular alleys, the people are for
ever moving to and fro or standing in their cavernous doorways and their dusky,
crowded shops, calling, chattering, laughing, lamenting, living their lives in
the conversational Italian fashion. I had for a long time had no such vision of
possible social pressure. I hadn't for a long time seen people elbowing each
other so closely or swarming so thickly out of populous hives. A traveller is
often moved to ask himself whether it has been worth while to leave his
home--whatever his home may have been--only to encounter new forms of human
suffering, only to be reminded that toil and privation, hunger and sorrow and
sordid effort, are the portion of the mass of mankind. To travel is, as it
were, to go to the play, to attend a spectacle; and there is something
heartless in stepping forth into foreign streets to feast on
"character" when character consists simply of the slightly different
costume in which labour and want present themselves. These reflections were
forced upon me as I strolled as through a twilight patched with colour and
charged with stale smells; but after a time they ceased to bear me company. The
reason of this, I think, is because--at least to foreign eyes--the sum of
Italian misery is, on the whole, less than the sum of the Italian knowledge of
life. That people should thank you, with a smile of striking sweetness, for the
gift of twopence, is a proof, certainly, of extreme and constant destitution;
but (keeping in mind the sweetness) it also attests an enviable ability not to
be depressed by circumstances. I know that this may possibly be great nonsense;
that half the time we are acclaiming the fine quality of the Italian smile the
creature so constituted for physiognomic radiance may be in a sullen frenzy of
impatience and pain. Our observation in any foreign land is extremely
superficial, and our remarks are happily not addressed to the inhabitants
themselves, who would be sure to exclaim upon the impudence of the
fancy-picture.
The other day I visited a very picturesque old city upon a
mountain-top, where, in the course of my wanderings, I arrived at an old
disused gate in the ancient town-wall. The gate hadn't been absolutely
forfeited; but the recent completion of a modern road down the mountain led
most vehicles away to another egress. The grass-grown pavement, which wound
into the plain by a hundred graceful twists and plunges, was now given up to
ragged contadini and their donkeys, and to such wayfarers as were not alarmed
at the disrepair into which it had fallen. I stood in the shadow of the tall
old gateway admiring the scene, looking to right and left at the wonderful
walls of the little town, perched on the edge of a shaggy precipice; at the
circling mountains over against them; at the road dipping downward among the
chestnuts and olives. There was no one within sight but a young man who slowly
trudged upward with his coat slung over his shoulder and his hat upon his ear
in the manner of a cavalier in an opera. Like an operatic performer too he sang
as he came; the spectacle, generally, was operatic, and as his vocal flourishes
reached my ear I said to myself that in Italy accident was always romantic
and that such a figure had been exactly what was wanted to set off the
landscape. It suggested in a high degree that knowledge of life for which I
just now commended the Italians. I was turning back under the old gateway when
the young man overtook me and, suspending his song, asked me if I could favour
him with a match to light the hoarded remnant of a cigar. This request led, as
I took my way again to the inn, to my falling into talk with him. He was a
native of the ancient city, and answered freely all my inquiries as to its
manners and customs and its note of public opinion. But the point of my
anecdote is that he presently acknowledged himself a brooding young radical and
communist, filled with hatred of the present Italian government, raging with
discontent and crude political passion, professing a ridiculous hope that Italy
would soon have, as France had had, her "'89," and declaring that he
for his part would willingly lend a hand to chop off the heads of the king and
the royal family. He was an unhappy, underfed, unemployed young man, who took a
hard, grim view of everything and was operatic only quite in spite of himself.
This made it very absurd of me to have looked at him simply as a graceful
ornament to the prospect, an harmonious little figure
in the middle distance. "Damn the prospect, damn the middle
distance!" would have been all his philosophy. Yet but for the accident of
my having gossipped with him I should have made him do service, in memory, as
an example of sensuous optimism!
I am bound to say however that I believe a great deal of the
sensuous optimism observable in the Genoese alleys and beneath the low, crowded
arcades along the port was very real. Here every one was magnificently
sunburnt, and there were plenty of those queer types, mahogany-coloured,
bare-chested mariners with earrings and crimson girdles, that seem to people a
southern seaport with the chorus of "Masaniello." But it is not fair
to speak as if at Genoa
there were nothing but low-life to be seen, for the place is the residence of
some of the grandest people in the world. Nor are all the palaces ranged upon
dusky alleys; the handsomest and most impressive form a splendid series on each
side of a couple of very proper streets, in which there is plenty of room for a
coach-and-four to approach the big doorways. Many of these doorways are open,
revealing great marble staircases with couchant lions for balustrades and
ceremonious courts surrounded by walls of sun-softened yellow. One of the great
piles in the array is coloured a goodly red and contains in particular the
grand people I just now spoke of. They live indeed on the third floor; but here
they have suites of wonderful painted and gilded chambers, in which foreshortened
frescoes also cover the vaulted ceilings and florid mouldings emboss the ample
walls. These distinguished tenants bear the name of Vandyck, though they are
members of the noble family of Brignole-Sale, one of whose children--the
Duchess of Galliera--has lately given proof of nobleness in presenting the
gallery of the red palace to the city of Genoa.
III
On leaving Genoa
I repaired to Spezia, chiefly with a view of . accomplishing a sentimental pilgrimage, which I in fact
achieved in the most agreeable conditions. The Gulf of Spezia
is now the headquarters of the Italian fleet, and there were several big
iron-plated frigates riding at anchor in front of the town. The streets were
filled with lads in blue flannel, who were receiving instruction at a
schoolship in the harbour, and in the evening--there was a brilliant moon--the
little breakwater which stretched out into the Mediterranean offered a scene of
recreation to innumerable such persons. But this fact is from the point of view
of the cherisher of quaintness of little account, for since it has become
prosperous Spezia has grown ugly. The place is filled with long, dull stretches
of dead wall and great raw expanses of artificial land. It wears that look of
monstrous, of more than far-western newness which distinguishes all the
creations of the young Italian
State. Nor did I find any
great compensation in an immense inn of recent birth, an establishment seated
on the edge of the sea in anticipation of a passeggiata which is to come that
way some five years hence, the region being in the meantime of the most
primitive formation. The inn was filled with grave English people who looked
respectable and bored, and there was of course a Church of England service in
the gaudily-frescoed parlour. Neither was it the drive to Porto Venere that
chiefly pleased me--a drive among vines and olives, over the hills and beside
the Mediterranean, to a queer little crumbling
village on a headland, as sweetly desolate and superannuated as the name it
bears. There is a ruined church near the village, which occupies the site
according to tradition) of an ancient temple of Venus;
and if Venus ever revisits her desecrated shrines she must sometimes pause a
moment in that sunny stillness and listen to the murmur of the tideless sea at
the base of the narrow promontory. If Venus sometimes comes there Apollo surely
does as much; for close to the temple is a gateway surmounted by an inscription
in Italian and English, which admits you to a curious, and it must be confessed
rather cockneyfied, cave among the rocks. It was here, says the inscription,
that the great Byron, swimmer and poet, "defied the waves of the Ligurian
sea." The fact is interesting, though not supremely so; for Byron was
always defying something, and if a slab had been put up wherever this
performance came off these commemorative tablets would be in many parts of Europe as thick as milestones.
No; the great merit of Spezia, to my eye, is that I engaged
a boat there of a lovely October afternoon and had myself rowed across the
gulf--it took about an hour and a half--to the little bay of Lerici, which
opens out of it. This bay
of Lerici is charming;
the bosky grey-green hills close it in, and on either side of the entrance,
perched on a bold headland, a wonderful old crumbling castle keeps ineffectual
guard. The place is classic to all English travellers, for in the middle of the
curving shore is the now desolate little villa in which Shelley spent the last
months of his short life. He was living at Lerici when he started on that short
southern cruise from which he never returned. The house he occupied is
strangely shabby and as sad as you may choose to find it. It stands directly
upon the beach, with scarred and battered walls and a loggia of several arches
opening to a little terrace with a rugged parapet, which, when the wind blows,
must be drenched with the salt spray. The place is very lonely--all overwearied
with sun and breeze and brine--very close to nature, as it was Shelley's
passion to be. I can fancy a great lyric poet sitting on the terrace of a warm
evening and feeling very far from England in the early years of the
century. In that place, and with his genius, he would as a
matter of course have heard in the voice of nature a sweetness which
only the lyric movement could translate. It is a place where an
English-speaking pilgrim himself may very honestly think thoughts and feel
moved to lyric utterance. But I must content myself with saying in halting
prose that I remember few episodes of Italian travel more sympathetic, as they
have it here, than that perfect autumn afternoon; the half-hour's station on
the little battered terrace of the villa; the climb to the singularly
felicitous old castle that hangs above Lerici; the meditative lounge, in the
fading light, on the vine-decked platform that looked out toward the sunset and
the darkening mountains and, far below, upon the quiet sea, beyond which the
pale-faced tragic villa stared up at the brightening moon.
IV
I had never known Florence
more herself, or in other words more attaching, than I found her for a week in
that brilliant October. She sat in the sunshine beside her yellow river like
the little treasure-city she has always seemed, without commerce, without other
industry than the manufacture of mosaic paper-weights and alabaster Cupids,
without actuality or energy or earnestness or any of those rugged virtues which
in most cases are deemed indispensable for civic cohesion; with nothing but the
little unaugmented stock of her mediaeval memories, her tender-coloured
mountains, her churches and palaces, pictures and statues. There were very few
strangers; one's detested fellow-pilgrim was infrequent; the native population
itself seemed scanty; the sound of wheels in the streets was but occasional; by
eight o'clock at night, apparently, every one had gone to bed, and the musing
wanderer, still wandering and still musing, had the place to himself--had the
thick shadow-masses of the great palaces, and the shafts of moonlight striking
the polygonal paving-stones, and the empty bridges, and the silvered yellow of
the Arno, and the stillness broken only by a homeward step, a step accompanied
by a snatch of song from a warm Italian voice. My room at the inn looked out on
the river and was flooded all day with sunshine. There was an absurd
orange-coloured paper on the walls; the Arno,
of a hue not altogether different, flowed beneath; and on the other side of it rose a line of sallow houses, of extreme antiquity,
crumbling and mouldering, bulging and protruding over the stream. (I seem to
speak of their fronts; but what I saw was their shabby backs, which were
exposed to the cheerful flicker of the river, while the fronts stood for ever
in the deep damp shadow of a narrow mediaeval street.) All this brightness and
yellowness was a perpetual delight; it was a part of that indefinably charming
colour which Florence
always seems to wear as you look up and down at it from the river, and from the
bridges and quays. This is a kind of grave radiance--a harmony of high tints--which
I scarce know how to describe. There are yellow walls and green blinds and red
roofs, there are intervals of brilliant brown and natural-looking blue; but the
picture is not spotty nor gaudy, thanks to the distribution of the colours in
large and comfortable masses, and to the washing-over of the scene by some
happy softness of sunshine. The river-front of Florence is in short a delightful
composition. Part of its charm comes of course from the generous aspect of
those high-based Tuscan palaces which a renewal of acquaintance with them has
again commended to me as the most dignified dwellings in the world. Nothing can
be finer than that look of giving up the whole immense ground-floor to simple
purposes of vestibule and staircase, of court and high-arched entrance; as if
this were all but a massive pedestal for the real habitation and people weren't
properly housed unless, to begin with, they should be lifted fifty feet above
the pavement. The great blocks of the basement; the great intervals, horizontally
and vertically, from window to window (telling of the height and breadth of the
rooms within); the armorial shield hung forward at one of the angles; the
wide-brimmed roof, overshadowing the narrow street; the rich old browns and
yellows of the walls: these definite elements put themselves together with
admirable art.
[Illustration: ROMAN GATEWAY, RIMINI.]
Take a Tuscan pile of this type out of its oblique situation
in the town; call it no longer a palace, but a villa; set it down by a terrace
on one of the hills that encircle Florence, place a row of high-waisted
cypresses beside it, give it a grassy court-yard and a view of the Florentine
towers and the valley of the Arno, and you will think it perhaps even more
worthy of your esteem. It was a Sunday noon, and brilliantly warm, when I again
arrived; and after I had looked from my windows a while at that quietly-basking
river-front I have spoken of I took my way across one of the bridges and then
out of one of the gates--that immensely tall Roman Gate in which the space from
the top of the arch to the cornice (except that there is scarcely a cornice, it
is all a plain massive piece of wall) is as great, or seems to be, as that from
the ground to the former point. Then I climbed a steep and winding way--much of
it a little dull if one likes, being bounded by mottled, mossy garden-walls--to
a villa on a hill-top, where I found various things that touched me with almost
too fine a point. Seeing them again, often, for a week, both by sunlight and
moonshine, I never quite learned not to covet them; not to feel that not being
a part of them was somehow to miss an exquisite chance. What a tranquil,
contented life it seemed, with romantic beauty as a part of its daily
texture!--the sunny terrace, with its tangled podere beneath it; the bright
grey olives against the bright blue sky; the long, serene, horizontal lines of
other villas, flanked by their upward cypresses, disposed upon the neighbouring
hills; the richest little city in the world in a softly-scooped hollow at one's
feet, and beyond it the most appealing of views, the most majestic, yet the
most familiar. Within the villa was a great love of art and a painting-room
full of felicitous work, so that if human life there confessed to quietness,
the quietness was mostly but that of the intent act. A
beautiful occupation in that beautiful position, what could possibly be better?
That is what I spoke just now of envying--a way of life that doesn't wince at
such refinements of peace and ease. When labour self-charmed presents itself in
a dull or an ugly place we esteem it, we admire it, but we scarce feel it to be
the ideal of good fortune. When, however, its votaries move as figures in an
ancient, noble landscape, and their walks and contemplations are like a turning
of the leaves of history, we seem to have before us an admirable case of virtue
made easy; meaning here by virtue contentment and concentration, a real
appreciation of the rare, the exquisite though composite, medium of life. You
needn't want a rush or a crush when the scene itself, the mere scene, shares
with you such a wealth of consciousness.
It is true indeed that I might after a certain time grow
weary of a regular afternoon stroll among the Florentine lanes; of sitting on
low parapets, in intervals of flower-topped wall, and looking across at Fiesole
or down the rich-hued valley of the Arno; of pausing at the open gates of
villas and wondering at the height of cypresses and the depth of loggias; of
walking home in the fading light and noting on a dozen westward-looking
surfaces the glow of the opposite sunset. But for a week or so all this was
delightful. The villas are innumerable, and if you're an aching alien half the
talk is about villas. This one has a story; that one has another; they all look
as if they had stories--none in truth predominantly gay. Most of them are
offered to rent (many of them for sale) at prices unnaturally low; you may have
a tower and a garden, a chapel and an expanse of thirty windows, for five
hundred dollars a year. In imagination you hire three or four; you take
possession and settle and stay. Your sense of the fineness of the finest is of
something very grave and stately; your sense of the bravery of two or three of
the best something quite tragic and sinister. From what does this latter
impression come? You gather it as you stand there in the early dusk, with your
eyes on the long, pale-brown facade, the enormous windows, the
iron cages fastened to the lower ones. Part of the brooding expression of these
great houses comes, even when they have not fallen into decay, from their look
of having outlived their original use. Their extraordinary largeness and
massiveness are a satire on their present fate. They weren't built with such a
thickness of wall and depth of embrasure, such a solidity of staircase and
superfluity of stone, simply to afford an economical winter residence to
English and American families. I don't know whether it was the appearance of
these stony old villas, which seemed so dumbly conscious of a change of
manners, that threw a tinge of melancholy over the general prospect; certain it
is that, having always found this note as of a myriad old sadnesses in solution
in the view of Florence, it seemed to me now particularly strong. "Lovely,
lovely, but it makes me 'blue,'" the sensitive stranger couldn't but
murmur to himself as, in the late afternoon, he looked
at the landscape from over one of the low parapets, and then, with his hands in
his pockets, turned away indoors to candles and dinner.
V
Below, in the city, through all frequentation of streets and
churches and museums, it was impossible not to have a good deal of the same
feeling; but here the impression was more easy to
analyse. It came from a sense of the perfect separateness of all the great
productions of the Renaissance from the present and the future of the place,
from the actual life and manners, the native ideal. I have already spoken of
the way in which the vast aggregation of beautiful works of art in the Italian
cities strikes the visitor nowadays--so far as present Italy is
concerned--as the mere stock-in-trade of an impecunious but thrifty people. It
is this spiritual solitude, this conscious disconnection of the great works of
architecture and sculpture that deposits a certain weight upon the heart; when
we see a great tradition broken we feel something of the pain with which we
hear a stifled cry. But regret is one thing and resentment is another. Seeing
one morning, in a shop-window, the series of Mornings in Florence published a few years since by Mr.
Ruskin, I made haste to enter and purchase these amusing little books, some
passages of which I remembered formerly to have read. I couldn't turn over many
pages without observing that the "separateness" of the new and old
which I just mentioned had produced in their author the liveliest irritation.
With the more acute phases of this condition it was difficult to sympathise,
for the simple reason, it seems to me, that it savours of arrogance to demand
of any people, as a right of one's own, that they shall be artistic. "Be
artistic yourselves!" is the very natural reply that young Italy has at
hand for English critics and censors. When a people produces beautiful statues
and pictures it gives us something more than is set down in the bond, and we
must thank it for its generosity; and when it stops producing them or caring
for them we may cease thanking, but we hardly have a right to begin and rail.
The wreck of Florence, says Mr. Ruskin, "is now too ghastly and
heart-breaking to any human soul that remembers the days of old"; and
these desperate words are an allusion to the fact that the little square in
front of the cathedral, at the foot of Giotto's Tower, with the grand
Baptistery on the other side, is now the resort of a number of hackney-coaches
and omnibuses. This fact is doubtless lamentable, and it would be a hundred
times more agreeable to see among people who have been made the heirs of so
priceless a work of art as the sublime campanile some such feeling about it as
would keep it free even from the danger of defilement. A cab-stand is a very
ugly and dirty thing, and Giotto's Tower should have nothing in common with
such conveniences. But there is more than one way of taking such things, and
the sensitive stranger who has been walking about for a week with his mind full
of the sweetness and suggestiveness of a hundred Florentine places may feel at
last in looking into Mr. Ruskin's little tracts that, discord for discord,
there isn't much to choose between the importunity of the author's personal
ill-humour and the incongruity of horse-pails and bundles of hay. And one may
say this without being at all a partisan of the doctrine of the inevitableness
of new desecrations. For my own part, I believe there are few things in this line
that the new Italian spirit isn't capable of, and not many indeed that we
aren't destined to see. Pictures and buildings won't be completely destroyed,
because in that case the forestieri, scatterers of cash, would cease to arrive
and the turn-stiles at the doors of the old palaces and convents, with the
little patented slit for absorbing your half-franc, would grow quite rusty,
would stiffen with disuse. But it's safe to say that the new Italy growing into an old Italy again
will continue to take her elbow-room wherever she may find it.
[Illustration: SANTA MARIA
NOVELLA, FLORENCE]
I am almost ashamed to say what I did with Mr. Ruskin's
little books. I put them into my pocket and betook myself to Santa Maria
Novella. There I sat down and, after I had looked about for a while at the
beautiful church, drew them forth one by one and read the greater part of them.
Occupying one's self with light literature in a great religious edifice is
perhaps as bad a piece of profanation as any of those rude dealings which Mr.
Ruskin justly deplores; but a traveller has to make the most of odd moments,
and I was waiting for a friend in whose company I was to go and look at
Giotto's beautiful frescoes in the cloister of the church. My friend was a long
time coming, so that I had an hour with Mr. Ruskin, whom I called just now a
light littérateur because in these little Mornings in Florence he is for ever making his readers
laugh. I remembered of course where I was, and in spite of my latent hilarity
felt I had rarely got such a snubbing. I had really been enjoying the good old
city of Florence,
but I now learned from Mr. Ruskin that this was a scandalous waste of charity.
I should have gone about with an imprecation on my lips,
I should have worn a face three yards long. I had taken great pleasure in
certain frescoes by Ghirlandaio in the choir of that very church; but it
appeared from one of the little books that these frescoes were as naught. I had much admired Santa Croce and had thought the
Duomo a very noble affair; but I had now the most positive assurance I knew
nothing about them. After a while, if it was only ill-humour that was needed
for doing honour to the city of the Medici, I felt that I had risen to a proper
level; only now it was Mr. Ruskin himself I had lost patience with, not the
stupid Brunelleschi, not the vulgar Ghirlandaio. Indeed I lost patience
altogether, and asked myself by what right this informal votary of form
pretended to run riot through a poor charmed flaneur's quiet contemplations,
his attachment to the noblest of pleasures, his enjoyment of the loveliest of
cities. The little books seemed invidious and insane, and it was only when I
remembered that I had been under no obligation to buy them that I checked
myself in repenting of having done so.
Then at last my friend arrived and we passed together out of
the church, and, through the first cloister beside it, into a smaller enclosure
where we stood a while to look at the tomb of the Marchesa Strozzi-Ridolfi,
upon which the great Giotto has painted four superb little pictures. It was
easy to see the pictures were superb; but I drew forth one of my little books
again, for I had observed that Mr. Ruskin spoke of them. Hereupon I recovered
my tolerance; for what could be better in this case, I asked myself, than Mr.
Ruskin's remarks? They are in fact excellent and charming--full of appreciation
of the deep and simple beauty of the great painter's work. I read them aloud to
my companion; but my companion was rather, as the phrase is, "put
off" by them. One of the frescoes--it is a picture of the birth of the
Virgin--contains a figure coming through a door. "Of ornament," I
quote, "there is only the entirely simple outline of the vase which the
servant carries; of colour two or three masses of sober red and pure white,
with brown and grey. That is all," Mr. Ruskin continues. "And if you
are pleased with this you can see Florence.
But if not, by all means amuse yourself there, if you find it amusing, as long
as you like; you can never see it." You can never see it. This seemed to
my friend insufferable, and I had to shuffle away the book again, so that we
might look at the fresco with the unruffled geniality it deserves. We agreed
afterwards, when in a more convenient place I read aloud a good many more passages
from the precious tracts, that there are a great many ways of seeing Florence,
as there are of seeing most beautiful and interesting things, and that it is
very dry and pedantic to say that the happy vision depends upon our squaring
our toes with a certain particular chalk-mark. We see Florence wherever and whenever we enjoy it,
and for enjoying it we find a great many more pretexts than Mr. Ruskin seems
inclined to allow. My friend and I convinced ourselves also, however, that the
little books were an excellent purchase, on account of the great charm and
felicity of much of their incidental criticism; to say nothing, as I hinted
just now, of their being extremely amusing. Nothing in fact is more comical
than the familiar asperity of the author's style and the pedagogic fashion in
which he pushes and pulls his unhappy pupils about, jerking their heads toward
this, rapping their knuckles for that, sending them to stand in corners and
giving them Scripture texts to copy. But it is neither the felicities nor the
aberrations of detail, in Mr. Ruskin's writings, that are the main affair for
most readers; it is the general tone that, as I have said, puts them off or
draws them on. For many persons he will never bear the test of being read in
this rich old Italy,
where art, so long as it really lived at all, was spontaneous, joyous, irresponsible. If the reader is in daily contact with those
beautiful Florentine works which do still, in away, force themselves into
notice through the vulgarity and cruelty of modern profanation, it will seem to
him that this commentator's comment is pitched in the strangest falsetto key.
"One may read a hundred pages of this sort of thing," said my friend,
"without ever dreaming that he is talking about art. You can say nothing
worse about him than that." Which is perfectly true.
Art is the one corner of human life in which we may take our ease. To justify
our presence there the only thing demanded of us is that we shall have felt the
representational impulse. In other connections our impulses are conditioned and
embarrassed; we are allowed to have only so many as are consistent with those
of our neighbours; with their convenience and well-being, with their
convictions and prejudices, their rules and regulations. Art means an escape from
all this. Wherever her shining standard floats the need for apology and
compromise is over; there it is enough simply that we please or are pleased.
There the tree is judged only by its fruits. If these are sweet the tree is
justified--and not less so the consumer.
One may read a great many pages of Mr. Ruskin without
getting a hint of this delightful truth; a hint of the not unimportant fact
that art after all is made for us and not we for art. This idea that the value
of a work is in the amount of illusion it yields is conspicuous by its absence.
And as for Mr. Ruskin's world's being a place--his world of art--where we may
take life easily, woe to the luckless mortal who enters it with any such
disposition. Instead of a garden of delight, he finds a sort of assize court in
perpetual session. Instead of a place in which human responsibilities are
lightened and suspended, he finds a region governed by a kind of Draconic legislation. His responsibilities indeed are
tenfold increased; the gulf between truth and error is for ever yawning at his
feet; the pains and penalties of this same error are advertised, in apocalyptic
terminology, upon a thousand sign-posts; and the rash intruder soon begins to
look back with infinite longing to the lost paradise of the artless. There can
be no greater want of tact in dealing with those things with which men attempt
to ornament life than to be perpetually talking about "error." A
truce to all rigidities is the law of the place; the only thing absolute there
is that some force and some charm have worked. The grim old bearer of the
scales excuses herself; she feels this not to be her province. Differences here
are not iniquity and righteousness; they are simply variations of temperament,
kinds of curiosity. We are not under theological government.
VI
It was very charming, in the bright, warm days, to wander
from one corner of Florence to another, paying one's respects again to
remembered masterpieces. It was pleasant also to find that memory had played no
tricks and that the rarest things of an earlier year were as rare as ever. To enumerate ,these felicities would take a great deal of
space; for I never had been more struck with the mere quantity of brilliant
Florentine work. Even giving up the Duomo and Santa Croce to Mr. Ruskin as very
ill-arranged edifices, the list of the Florentine treasures is almost
inexhaustible. Those long outer galleries of the Uffizi had never beguiled me
more; sometimes there were not more than two or three figures standing there,
Baedeker in hand, to break the charming perspective. One side of this upstairs
portico, it will be remembered, is entirely composed of glass; a continuity of
old-fashioned windows, draped with white curtains of rather primitive fashion,
which hang there till they acquire a perceptible tone. The light, passing
through them, is softly filtered and diffused; it rests mildly upon the old
marbles--chiefly antique Roman busts--which stand in the narrow intervals of
the casements. It is projected upon the numerous pictures that cover the
opposite wall and that are not by any means, as a general thing, the gems of
the great collection; it imparts a faded brightness to the old ornamental
arabesques upon the painted wooden ceiling, and it makes a great soft shining
upon the marble floor, in which, as you look up and down, you see the strolling
tourists and the motionless copyists almost reflected. I don't know why I
should find all this very pleasant, but in fact, I have seldom gone into the
Uffizi without walking the length of this third-story cloister, between the
(for the most part) third-rate canvases and panels and the faded cotton
curtains. Why is it that in Italy
we see a charm in things in regard to which in other countries we always take
vulgarity for granted? If in the city of New York a great museum of the arts
were to be provided, by way of decoration, with a species of verandah enclosed
on one side by a series of small-paned windows draped in dirty linen, and
furnished on the other with an array of pictorial feebleness, the place being
surmounted by a thinly-painted wooden roof, strongly suggestive of summer heat,
of winter cold, of frequent leakage, those amateurs who had had the advantage
of foreign travel would be at small pains to conceal their contempt.
Contemptible or respectable, to the judicial mind, this quaint old loggia of
the Uffizi admitted me into twenty chambers where I found as great a number of
ancient favourites. I don't know that I had a warmer greeting for any old
friend than for Andrea del Sarto, that most touching
of painters who is not one of the first. But it was on the other side of the
Arno that I found him in force, in those dusky drawing-rooms of the Pitti Palace
to which you take your way along the tortuous tunnel that wanders through the
houses of Florence
and is supported by the little goldsmiths' booths on the Ponte Vecchio. In the
rich insufficient light of these beautiful rooms, where, to look at the
pictures, you sit in damask chairs and rest your elbows on tables of malachite,
the elegant Andrea becomes deeply effective. Before long he has drawn you
close. But the great pleasure, after all, was to revisit the earlier masters,
in those specimens of them chiefly that bloom so unfadingly on the big plain
walls of the Academy. Fra Angelico and Filippo Lippi, Botticelli and Lorenzo di
Credi are the clearest, the sweetest and best of all painters; as I sat for an
hour in their company, in the cold great hall of the institution I have
mentioned--there are shabby rafters above and an immense expanse of brick tiles
below, and many bad pictures as well as good--it seemed to me more than ever
that if one really had to choose one couldn't do better than choose here. You
may rest at your ease at the Academy, in this big first room--at the upper end
especially, on the left--because more than many other places it savours of old
Florence. More for instance, in reality, than the Bargello,
though the Bargello makes great pretensions. Beautiful and masterful
though the Bargello is, it smells too strongly of restoration, and, much of old
Italy
as still lurks in its furbished and renovated chambers, it speaks even more
distinctly of the ill-mannered young kingdom that has--as
"unavoidably" as you please--lifted down a hundred delicate works of
sculpture from the convent-walls where their pious authors placed them. If the
early Tuscan painters are exquisite I can think of no praise pure enough for
the sculptors of the same period, Donatello and Luca della Robbia, Matteo
Civitale and Mina da Fiesole, who, as I refreshed my memory of them, seemed to
me to leave absolutely nothing to be desired in the way of straightness of
inspiration and grace of invention. The Bargello is full of early Tuscan
sculpture, most of the pieces of which have come from suppressed religious houses;
and even if the visitor be an ardent liberal he is uncomfortably conscious of
the rather brutal process by which it has been collected. One can hardly envy
young Italy
the number of odious things she has had to do.
The railway journey from Florence to Rome has been altered
both for the better and for the worse; for the better in that it has been
shortened by a couple of hours; for the worse inasmuch as when about half the
distance has been traversed the train deflects to the west and leaves the beautiful
old cities of Assisi, Perugia, Terni, Narni, unvisited. Of old it was possible
to call at these places, in a manner, from the window of the train; even if you
didn't stop, as you probably couldn't, every time you passed, the immensely
interesting way in which, like a loosened belt on an aged and shrunken person,
their ample walls held them easily together was something well worth noting.
Now, however, for compensation, the express train to Rome stops at Orvieto, and in consequence...
In consequence what? What is the result of the stop of an express train at
Orvieto? As I glibly wrote that sentence I suddenly paused, aware of the queer
stuff I was uttering. That an express train would graze the base of the horrid
purple mountain from the apex of which this dark old
Catholic city uplifts the glittering front of its cathedral--that might have
been foretold by a keen observer of contemporary manners. But that it would
really have the grossness to hang about is a fact over which, as he records it,
an inveterate, a perverse cherisher of the sense of the past order, the order
still largely prevailing at the time of his first visit to Italy, may well make
what is vulgarly called an ado. The train does stop at Orvieto, not very long, it is true, but long enough to let you out. The same
phenomenon takes place on the following day, when, having visited the city, you
get in again. I availed myself without scruple of both of these occasions,
having formerly neglected to drive to the place in a post-chaise. But frankly,
the railway-station being in the plain and the town on the summit of an
extraordinary hill, you have time to forget the puffing indiscretion while you
wind upwards to the city-gate. The position of Orvieto is superb--worthy of the
"middle distance" of an eighteenth-century landscape. But, as every
one knows, the splendid Cathedral is the proper attraction of the spot, which,
indeed, save for this fine monument and for its craggy and crumbling ramparts,
is a meanly arranged and, as Italian cities go, not particularly impressive
little town. I spent a beautiful Sunday there and took in the charming church.
I gave it my best attention, though on the whole I fear I found it inferior to
its fame. A high concert of colour, however, is the densely carved front, richly
covered with radiant mosaics. The old white marble of the sculptured portions
is as softly yellow as ancient ivory; the large exceedingly bright pictures
above them flashed and twinkled in the glorious weather. Very striking and
interesting the theological frescoes of Luca Signorelli, though I have seen
compositions of this general order that appealed to me more. Characteristically
fresh, finally, the clear-faced saints and seraphs, in robes of pink and azure,
whom Fra Angelico has painted upon the ceiling of the great chapel, along with
a noble sitting figure--more expressive of movement than most of the creations
of this pictorial peace-maker--of Christ in judgment. Yet the interest of the
cathedral of Orvieto is mainly not the visible result, but the historical
process that lies behind it; those three hundred years of the applied devotion
of a people of which an American scholar has written an admirable account.[1]
1877.
[1] Charles Eliot Norton, Notes of Travel and Study in Italy.]
It is certainly sweet to be merry at the right moment; but
the right moment hardly seems to me the ten days of the Roman Carnival. It was
my rather cynical suspicion perhaps that they wouldn't keep to my imagination
the brilliant promise of legend; but I have been justified by the event and
have been decidedly less conscious of the festal influences of the season than
of the inalienable gravity of the place. There was a time when the Carnival was
a serious matter--that is a heartily joyous one; but, thanks to the
seven-league boots the kingdom of Italy has lately donned for the march of
progress in quite other directions, the fashion of public revelry has fallen
woefully out of step. The state of mind and manners under which the Carnival
was kept in generous good faith I doubt if an American can exactly conceive: he
can only say to himself that for a month in the year there must have been
things--things considerably of humiliation--it was comfortable to forget. But
now that Italy
is made the Carnival is unmade; and we are not especially tempted to envy the
attitude of a population who have lost their relish for play and not yet
acquired to any striking extent an enthusiasm for work. The spectacle on the
Corso has seemed to me, on the whole, an illustration of that great breach with
the past of which Catholic Christendom felt the somewhat muffled shock in
September, 1870. A traveller acquainted with the fully papal Rome, coming back any time during the past
winter, must have immediately noticed that something momentous had
happened--something hostile to the elements of picture and colour and
"style." My first warning was that ten minutes after my arrival I
found myself face to face with a newspaper stand. The impossibility in the
other days of having anything in the journalistic line but the Osservatore
Romano and the Voce della Verità used to seem to me much connected with the
extraordinary leisure of thought and stillness of mind to which the place
admitted you. But now the slender piping of the Voice of Truth is stifled by
the raucous note of eventide vendors of the Capitale, the Libertà and the
Fanfulla; and Rome reading unexpurgated news is
another Rome
indeed. For every subscriber to the Libertà there may well be an antique masker
and reveller less. As striking a sign of the new régime is the extraordinary
increase of population. The Corso was always a well-filled street, but now it's
a perpetual crush. I never cease to wonder where the new-comers are lodged, and
how such spotless flowers of fashion as the gentlemen who stare at the
carriages can bloom in the atmosphere of those camere mobiliate of which I have
had glimpses. This, however, is their own question, and bravely enough they
meet it. They proclaimed somehow, to the first freshness of my wonder, as I
say, that by force of numbers Rome
had been secularised. An Italian dandy is a figure visually to reckon with, but
these goodly throngs of them scarce offered compensation for the absent
monsignori, treading the streets in their purple stockings and followed by the
solemn servants who returned on their behalf the bows of the meaner sort; for
the mourning gear of the cardinals' coaches that formerly glittered with
scarlet and swung with the weight of the footmen clinging behind; for the
certainty that you'll not, by the best of traveller's luck, meet the Pope
sitting deep in the shadow of his great chariot with uplifted fingers like some
inaccessible idol in his shrine. You may meet the King indeed, who is as ugly,
as imposingly ugly, as some idols, though not so inaccessible. The other day as
I passed the Quirinal he drove up in a low
carriage with a single attendant; and a group of men and women who had been
waiting near the gate rushed at him with a number of folded papers. The
carriage slackened pace and he pocketed their offerings with a business-like
air--hat of a good-natured man accepting handbills at a street-corner. Here was
a monarch at his palace gate receiving petitions from his subjects--being
adjured to right their wrongs. The scene ought to have thrilled me, but somehow
it had no more intensity than a woodcut in an illustrated newspaper. Homely I
should call it at most; admirably so, certainly, for there were lately few
sovereigns standing, I believe, with whom their people enjoyed these filial hand-to-hand
relations. The King this year, however, has had as little to do with the
Carnival as the Pope, and the innkeepers and Americans have marked it for their
own.
It was advertised to begin at half-past two o'clock of a
certain Saturday, and punctually at the stroke of the hour, from my room across
a wide court, I heard a sudden multiplication of sounds and confusion of
tongues in the Corso. I was writing to a friend for whom I cared more than for
any mere romp; but as the minutes elapsed and the hubbub deepened curiosity got
the better of affection, and I remembered that I was really within eye-shot of
an affair the fame of which had ministered to the daydreams of my infancy. I
used to have a scrap-book with a coloured print of the starting of the bedizened
wild horses, and the use of a library rich in keepsakes and annuals with a
frontispiece commonly of a masked lady in a balcony, the heroine of a
delightful tale further on. Agitated by these tender memories I descended into
the street; but I confess I looked in vain for a masked lady who might serve as
a frontispiece, in vain for any object whatever that might adorn a tale. Masked
and muffled ladies there were in abundance; but their masks were of ugly wire,
perfectly resembling the little covers placed upon strong cheese in German
hotels, and their drapery was a shabby water-proof with the hood pulled over
their chignons. They were armed with great tin scoops or funnels, with which
they solemnly shovelled lime and flour out of bushel-baskets and down on the
heads of the people in the street. They were packed into balconies all the way
along the straight vista of the Corso, in which their calcareous shower
maintained a dense, gritty, unpalatable fog. The crowd was compact in the
street, and the Americans in it were tossing back confetti out of great
satchels hung round their necks. It was quite the "you're another"
sort of repartee, and less seasoned than I had hoped with the airy mockery
tradition hangs about this festival. The scene was striking, in a word; but
somehow not as I had dreamed of its being. I stood regardful, I suppose, but
with a peculiarly tempting blankness of visage, for in a moment I received half
a bushel of flour on my too-philosophic head. Decidedly it was an ignoble form
of humour. I shook my ears like an emergent diver, and had a sudden vision of
how still and sunny and solemn, how peculiarly and undisturbedly themselves,
how secure from any intrusion less sympathetic than one's own, certain outlying
parts of Rome must just then be. The Carnival had received its deathblow in my
imagination; and it has been ever since but a thin and dusky ghost of pleasure
that has flitted at intervals in and out of my consciousness.
I turned my back accordingly on the Corso and wandered away
to the grass-grown quarters delightfully free even from the possibility of a
fellow-countryman. And so having set myself an example I have been keeping
Carnival by strolling perversely along the silent circumference of Rome. I have doubtless
lost a great deal. The Princess Margaret has occupied a balcony opposite the
open space which leads into Via Condotti and, I believe, like the discreet
princess she is, has dealt in no missiles but bonbons, bouquets and white
doves. I would have waited half an hour any day to see the Princess Margaret
hold a dove on her forefinger; but I never chanced to notice any preparation
for that effect. And yet do what you will you can't really elude the Carnival.
As the days elapse it filters down into the manners of the common people, and
before the week is over the very beggars at the church-doors seem to have gone
to the expense of a domino. When you meet these specimens of dingy drollery
capering about in dusky back-streets at all hours of the day and night, meet
them flitting out of black doorways between the greasy groups that cluster
about Roman thresholds, you feel that a love of "pranks," the more
vivid the better, must from far back have been implanted in the Roman
temperament with a strong hand. An unsophisticated American is wonderstruck at
the number of persons, of every age and various conditions, whom it costs
nothing in the nature of an ingenuous blush to walk up and down the streets in
the costume of a theatrical supernumerary. Fathers of families do it at the
head of an admiring progeniture; aunts and uncles and grandmothers do it; all
the family does it, with varying splendour but with the same good conscience.
"A pack of babies!" the doubtless too self-conscious alien pronounces
it for its pains, and tries to imagine himself strutting along Broadway in a
battered tin helmet and a pair of yellow tights. Our vices are certainly
different; it takes those of the innocent sort to be so ridiculous. A
self-consciousness lapsing so easily, in fine, strikes me as so near a relation
to amenity, urbanity and general gracefulness that, for myself, I should be
sorry to lay a tax on it, lest these other commodities should also cease to
come to market.
I was rewarded, when I had turned away with my ears full of
flour, by a glimpse of an intenser life than the dingy foolery of the Corso. I
walked down by the back streets to the steps mounting to the Capitol--that long
inclined plane, rather, broken at every two paces, which is the unfailing
disappointment, I believe, of tourists primed for retrospective raptures.
Certainly the Capitol seen from this side isn't commanding. The hill is so low,
the ascent so narrow, Michael Angelo's architecture in the quadrangle at the
top so meagre, the whole place somehow so much more of a mole-hill than a
mountain, that for the first ten minutes of your standing there Roman history
seems suddenly to have sunk through a trap-door. It emerges however on the
other side, in the Forum; and here meanwhile, if you get no sense of the
sublime, you get gradually a sense of exquisite composition. Nowhere in Rome is more colour, more
charm, more sport for the eye. The mild incline, during the winter months, is
always covered with lounging sun-seekers, and especially with those more
constantly obvious members of the Roman population--beggars, soldiers, monks
and tourists. The beggars and peasants lie kicking their heels along that
grandest of loafing-places the great steps of the Ara Coeli. The dwarfish look
of the Capitol is intensified, I think, by the neighbourhood of this huge blank
staircase, mouldering away in disuse, the weeds thick in its crevices, and
climbing to the rudely solemn facade of the church. The sunshine glares on this
great unfinished wall only to light up its featureless despair, its expression
of conscious, irremediable incompleteness. Sometimes, massing its rusty screen
against the deep blue sky, with the little cross and the sculptured porch
casting a clear-cut shadow on the bricks, it seems to have even more than a
Roman desolation, it confusedly suggests Spain and Africa--lands with no latent
risorgimenti, with absolutely nothing but a fatal past. The legendary wolf of Rome has lately been
accommodated with a little artificial grotto, among the cacti and the palms, in
the fantastic triangular garden squeezed between the steps of the church and
the ascent to the Capitol, where she holds a perpetual levee and
"draws" apparently as powerfully as the Pope himself. Above, in the
piazzetta before the stuccoed palace which rises so jauntily on a basement of
thrice its magnitude, are more loungers and knitters in the sun, seated round
the massively inscribed base of the statue of Marcus Aurelius. Hawthorne has perfectly
expressed the attitude of this admirable figure in saying that it extends its
arm with "a command which is in itself a
benediction." I doubt if any statue of king or captain in the public
places of the world has more to commend it to the general heart. Irrecoverable
simplicity--residing so in irrecoverable Style--has no sturdier representative.
Here is an impression that the sculptors of the last three hundred years have
been laboriously trying to reproduce; but contrasted with this mild old monarch
their prancing horsemen suggest a succession of riding-masters taking out young
ladies' schools. The admirably human character of the figure survives the rusty
decomposition of the bronze and the slight "debasement" of the art;
and one may call it singular that in the capital of Christendom the portrait
most suggestive of a Christian conscience is that of a pagan emperor.
You recover in some degree your stifled hopes of sublimity
as you pass beyond the palace and take your choice of either curving slope to
descend into the Forum. Then you see that the little stuccoed edifice is but a
modern excrescence on the mighty cliff of a primitive construction, whose great
squares of porous tufa, as they underlie each other, seem to resolve themselves
back into the colossal cohesion of unhewn rock. There are prodigious
strangenesses in the union of this airy and comparatively fresh-faced
superstructure and these deep-plunging, hoary foundations; and few things in
Rome are more entertaining to the eye than to measure the long plumb-line which
drops from the inhabited windows of the palace, with their little over-peeping
balconies, their muslin curtains and their bird-cages, down to the rugged
constructional work of the Republic. In the Forum proper the sublime is
eclipsed again, though the late extension of the excavations gives a chance for
it.
Nothing in Rome
helps your fancy to a more vigorous backward flight than to lounge on a sunny
day over the railing which guards the great central researches. It
"says" more things to you than you can repeat to see the past, the
ancient world, as you stand there, bodily turned up with the spade and
transformed from an immaterial, inaccessible fact of time into a matter of
soils and surfaces. The pleasure is the same--in kind--as what you enjoy of Pompeii, and the pain the same. It wasn't here, however, that I
found my compensation for forfeiting the spectacle on the Corso, but in a
little church at the end of the narrow byway which diverges up the Palatine from just beside the Arch of Titus. This byway
leads you between high walls, then takes a bend and introduces you to a long
row of rusty, dusty little pictures of the stations of the
cross. Beyond these stands a small church with a front so modest that
you hardly recognise it till you see the leather curtain. I never see a leather
curtain without lifting it; it is sure to cover a constituted scene of some
sort--good, bad or indifferent. The scene this time was meagre--whitewash and
tarnished candlesticks and mouldy muslin flowers being its principal features.
I shouldn't have remained if I hadn't been struck with the attitude of the
single worshipper--a young priest kneeling before one of the sidealtars, who,
as I entered, lifted his head and gave me a sidelong look so charged with the
languor of devotion that he immediately became an object of interest. He was
visiting each of the altars in turn and kissing the balustrade beneath them. He
was alone in the church, and indeed in the whole region. There were no beggars
even at the door; they were plying their trade on the skirts of the Carnival.
In the entirely deserted place he alone knelt for religion, and as I sat
respectfully by it seemed to me I could hear in the perfect silence the
far-away uproar of the maskers. It was my late impression of these frivolous
people, I suppose, joined with the extraordinary gravity of the young priest's
face--his pious fatigue, his droning prayer and his isolation--that gave me
just then and there a supreme vision of the religious passion, its privations
and resignations and exhaustions and its terribly small share of amusement. He
was young and strong and evidently of not too refined a fibre to enjoy the
Carnival; but, planted there with his face pale with fasting and his knees
stiff with praying, he seemed so stern a satire on it and on the crazy
thousands who were preferring it to his way, that I half expected to see some
heavenly portent out of a monastic legend come down and confirm his choice. Yet
I confess that though I wasn't enamoured of the Carnival myself, his seemed a
grim preference and this forswearing of the world a terrible game--a gaining
one only if your zeal never falters; a hard fight when it does. In such an
hour, to a stout young fellow like the hero of my anecdote, the smell of
incense must seem horribly stale and the muslin flowers and gilt candlesticks
to figure no great bribe. And it wouldn't have helped him much to think that
not so very far away, just beyond the Forum, in the Corso, there was sport for
the million, and for nothing. I doubt on the other hand whether my young priest
had thought of this. He had made himself a temple out of the very elements of
his innocence, and his prayers followed each other too fast for the tempter to
slip in a whisper. And so, as I say, I found a solider fact of human nature
than the love of coriandoli.
One of course never passes the Colosseum without paying it
one's respects--without going in under one of the hundred portals and crossing
the long oval and sitting down a while, generally at the foot of the cross in
the centre. I always feel, as I do so, as if I were seated in the depths of
some Alpine valley. The upper portions of the side toward the Esquiline look as
remote and lonely as an Alpine ridge, and you raise your eyes to their rugged
sky-line, drinking in the sun and silvered by the blue air, with much the same
feeling with which you would take in a grey cliff on which an eagle might
lodge. This roughly mountainous quality of the great ruin is its chief
interest; beauty of detail has pretty well vanished, especially since the
high-growing wild-flowers have been plucked away by the new government, whose
functionaries, surely, at certain points of their task, must have felt as if
they shared the dreadful trade of those who gather samphire. Even if you are on
your way to the Lateran you won't grudge the twenty minutes it will take you,
on leaving the Colosseum, to turn away under the Arch of Constantine, whose
noble battered bas-reliefs, with the chain of tragic statues--fettered,
drooping barbarians--round its summit, I assume you to have profoundly admired,
toward the piazzetta of the church of San Giovanni e Paolo, on the slope of
Caelian. No spot in Rome
can show a cluster of more charming accidents. The ancient brick apse of the
church peeps down into the trees of the little wooded walk before the
neighbouring church
of San Gregorio,
intensely venerable beneath its excessive modernisation; and a series of heavy
brick buttresses, flying across to an opposite wall, overarches the short,
steep, paved passage which leads into the small square. This is flanked on one
side by the long mediaeval portico of the church of the two saints, sustained
by eight time-blackened columns of granite and marble. On another rise the
great scarce-windowed walls of a Passionist convent, and on the third the
portals of a grand villa, whose tall porter, with his cockade and silver-topped
staff, standing sublime behind his grating, seems a kind of mundane St. Peter,
I suppose, to the beggars who sit at the church door or lie in the sun along
the farther slope which leads to the gate of the convent. The place always
seems to me the perfection of an out-of-the-way corner--a place you would think
twice before telling people about, lest you should find them there the next
time you were to go. It is such a group of objects, singly and in their happy
combination, as one must come to Rome
to find at one's house door; but what makes it peculiarly a picture is the
beautiful dark red campanile of the church, which stands embedded in the mass
of the convent. It begins, as so many things in Rome begin, with a stout foundation of
antique travertine, and rises high, in delicately quaint mediaeval
brickwork--little tiers and apertures sustained on miniature columns and
adorned with small cracked slabs of green and yellow marble, inserted almost at
random. When there are three or four brown-breasted contadini sleeping in the
sun before the convent doors, and a departing monk leading his shadow down over
them, I think you will not find anything in Rome more sketchable.
If you stop, however, to observe everything worthy of your
water-colours you will never reach St. John Lateran. My business was much less
with the interior of that vast and empty, that cold clean temple, which I have
never found peculiarly interesting, than with certain charming features of its
surrounding precinct--the crooked old court beside it, which admits you to the
Baptistery and to a delightful rear-view of the queer architectural odds and
ends that may in Rome compose a florid ecclesiastical façade. There are more of
these, a stranger jumble of chance detail, of lurking recesses and wanton
projections and inexplicable windows, than I have memory or phrase for; but the
gem of the collection is the oddly perched peaked turret, with its yellow
travertine welded upon the rusty brickwork, which was not meant to be
suspected, and the brickwork retreating beneath and leaving it in the odd
position of a tower under which you may see the sky. As to the great front of
the church overlooking the Porta San Giovanni, you are not admitted behind the
scenes; the term is quite in keeping, for the architecture has a vastly
theatrical air. It is extremely imposing--that of St. Peter's alone is more so;
and when from far off on the Campagna you see the colossal images of the mitred
saints along the top standing distinct against the sky, you forget their coarse
construction and their inflated draperies. The view from the great space which
stretches from the church steps to the city wall is the very prince of views.
Just beside you, beyond the great alcove of mosaic, is the Scala Santa, the
marble staircase which (says the legend) Christ descended under the weight of
Pilate's judgment, and which all Christians must for ever ascend on their
knees; before you is the city gate which opens upon the Via Appia Nuova, the
long gaunt file of arches of the Claudian aqueduct, their jagged ridge
stretching away like the vertebral column of some monstrous mouldering
skeleton, and upon the blooming brown and purple flats and dells of the
Campagna and the glowing blue of the Alban Mountains, spotted with their white,
high-nestling towns; while to your left is the great grassy space, lined with
dwarfish mulberry-trees, which stretches across to the damp little
sister-basilica of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme. During a former visit to Rome I lost my heart to
this idle tract,[1]
[1] Utterly overbuilt and
gone--1909.]
and wasted much time in sitting on
the steps of the church and watching certain white-cowled friars who were sure
to be passing there for the delight of my eyes. There are fewer friars now, and
there are a great many of the king's recruits, who inhabit the ex-conventual
barracks adjoining Santa Croce and are led forward to practise their goose-step
on the sunny turf. Here too the poor old cardinals who are no longer to be seen
on the Pincio descend from their mourning-coaches and relax their venerable
knees. These members alone still testify to the traditional splendour of the
princes of the Church; for as they advance the lifted black petticoat reveals a
flash of scarlet stockings and makes you groan at the victory of civilisation
over colour.
[Illustration: THE FAÇADE OF ST. JOHN LATERAN, ROME.]
If St. John Lateran disappoints you internally, you have an
easy compensation in pacing the long lane which connects it with Santa Maria Maggiore
and entering the singularly perfect nave of that most delightful of churches.
The first day of my stay in Rome
under the old dispensation I spent in wandering at random through the city,
with accident for my valet-de-place. It served me to perfection and introduced
me to the best things; among others to an immediate happy relation with Santa
Maria Maggiore. First impressions, memorable impressions, are generally
irrecoverable; they often leave one the wiser, but they rarely return in the
same form. I remember, of my coming uninformed and unprepared into the place of
worship and of curiosity that I have named, only that I sat for half an hour on
the edge of the base of one of the marble columns of the beautiful nave and
enjoyed a perfect revel of--what shall I call it?--taste, intelligence, fancy,
perceptive emotion? The place proved so endlessly suggestive that perception
became a throbbing confusion of images, and I departed with a sense of knowing
a good deal that is not set down in Murray.
I have seated myself more than once again at the base of the same column; but
you live your life only once, the parts as well as the whole. The obvious charm
of the church is the elegant grandeur of the nave--its perfect shapeliness and
its rich simplicity, its long double row of white marble columns and its high
flat roof, embossed with intricate gildings and mouldings. It opens into a
choir of an extraordinary splendour of effect, which I recommend you to look
out for of a fine afternoon. At such a time the glowing western light, entering
the high windows of the tribune, kindles the scattered masses of colour into
sombre bright-ness, scintillates on the great solemn mosaic of the vault,
touches the porphyry columns of the superb baldachino with ruby lights, and buries
its shining shafts in the deep-toned shadows that hang about frescoes and
sculptures and mouldings. The deeper charm even than in such things, however,
is the social or historic note or tone or atmosphere of the church--I fumble,
you see, for my right expression; the sense it gives you, in common with most
of the Roman churches, and more than any of them, of having been prayed in for
several centuries by an endlessly curious and complex society. It takes no
great attention to let it come to you that the authority of Italian Catholicism
has lapsed not a little in these days; not less also perhaps than to feel that,
as they stand, these deserted temples were the fruit of a society leavened
through and through by ecclesiastical manners, and that they formed for ages
the constant background of the human drama. They are, as one may say, the
churchiest churches in Europe--the fullest of
gathered memories, of the experience of their office. There's not a figure one
has read of in old-world annals that isn't to be imagined on proper occasion
kneeling before the lamp-decked Confession beneath the altar of Santa Maria
Maggiore. One sees after all, however, even among the most palpable realities,
very much what the play of one's imagination projects there; and I present my
remarks simply as a reminder that one's constant excursions into these places
are not the least interesting episodes of one's walks in Rome.
I had meant to give a simple illustration of the
church-habit, so to speak, but I have given it at such a length as leaves scant
space to touch on the innumerable topics brushed by the pen that begins to take
Roman notes. It is by the aimless flânerie which leaves you free to follow
capriciously every hint of entertainment that you get to know Rome. The greater part of the life about you
goes on in the streets; and for an observer fresh from a country in which town
scenery is at the least monotonous incident and character and picture seem to
abound. I become conscious with compunction, let me hasten to add, that I have
launched myself thus on the subject of Roman churches and Roman walks without
so much as a preliminary allusion to St. Peter's. One is apt to proceed thither
on rainy days with intentions of exercise--to put the case only at that--and to
carry these out body and mind. Taken as a walk not less than
as a church, St. Peter's of course reigns alone. Even for the profane
"constitutional" it serves where the Boulevards, where Piccadilly and
Broadway, fall short, and if it didn't offer to our use the grandest area in
the world it would still offer the most diverting. Few great works of art last
longer to the curiosity, to the perpetually transcended attention. You think
you have taken the whole thing in, but it expands, it rises
sublime again, and leaves your measure itself poor. You never let the ponderous
leather curtain bang down behind you--your weak lift of a scant edge of whose
padded vastness resembles the liberty taken in folding back the parchment
corner of some mighty folio page--without feeling all former visits to have
been but missed attempts at apprehension and the actual to achieve your first
real possession. The conventional question is ever as to whether one hasn't
been "disappointed in the size," but a few honest folk here and there,
I hope, will never cease to say no. The place struck me from the first as the
hugest thing conceivable--a real exaltation of one's idea of space; so that
one's entrance, even from the great empty square which either glares beneath
the deep blue sky or makes of the cool far-cast shadow of the immense front
something that resembles a big slate-coloured country on a map, seems not so
much a going in somewhere as a going out. The mere man of pleasure in quest of
new sensations might well not know where to better his encounter there of the
sublime shock that brings him, within the threshold, to an immediate gasping
pause. There are days when the vast nave looks mysteriously vaster than on
others and the gorgeous baldachino a longer journey beyond the far-spreading
tessellated plain of the pavement, and when the light has yet a quality which
lets things loom their largest, while the scattered figures--I mean the human,
for there are plenty of others--mark happily the scale of items and parts. Then
you have only to stroll and stroll and gaze and gaze; to watch the glorious
altar-canopy lift its bronze architecture, its colossal embroidered
contortions, like a temple within a temple, and feel yourself, at the bottom of
the abysmal shaft of the dome, dwindle to a crawling dot.
Much of the constituted beauty resides in the fact that it
is all general beauty, that you are appealed to by no specific details, or that
these at least, practically never importunate, are as taken for granted as the
lieutenants and captains are taken for granted in a great standing army--among
whom indeed individual aspects may figure here the rather shifting range of
decorative dignity in which details, when observed, often prove poor (though
never not massive and substantially precious) and sometimes prove ridiculous.
The sculptures, with the sole exception of Michael Angelo's ineffable
"Pieta," which lurks obscurely in a side-chapel--this indeed to my
sense the rarest artistic combination of the greatest things the hand of man
has produced--are either bad or indifferent; and the universal incrustation of
marble, though sumptuous enough, has a less brilliant effect than much later
work of the same sort, that for instance of St. Paul's without the Walls. The
supreme beauty is the splendidly sustained simplicity of the whole. The thing
represents a prodigious imagination extraordinarily strained, yet strained, at
its happiest pitch, without breaking. Its happiest pitch I say, because this is
the only creation of its strenuous author in presence of which you are in
presence of serenity. You may invoke the idea of ease at St. Peter's without a
sense of sacrilege--which you can hardly do, if you are at all spiritually
nervous, in Westminster Abbey or Notre Dame. The vast enclosed clearness has
much to do with the idea. There are no shadows to speak of, no marked effects
of shade; only effects of light innumerably--points at which this element seems
to mass itself in airy density and scatter itself in enchanting gradations and
cadences. It performs the office of gloom or of mystery in Gothic churches;
hangs like a rolling mist along the gilded vault of the nave, melts into bright
interfusion the mosaic scintillations of the dome, clings and clusters and
lingers, animates the whole huge and otherwise empty shell. A good Catholic, I
suppose, is the same Catholic anywhere, before the grandest as well as the
humblest altars; but to a visitor not formally enrolled St. Peter's speaks less
of aspiration than of full and convenient assurance. The soul infinitely expands
there, if one will, but all on its quite human level. It marvels at the reach
of our dreams and the immensity of our resources. To be so impressed and put in
our place, we say, is to be sufficiently "saved"; we can't be more
than the heaven itself; and what specifically celestial beauty such a show or
such a substitute may lack it makes up for in certainty and tangibility. And
yet if one's hours on the scene are not actually spent in praying, the spirit
seeks it again as for the finer comfort, for the blessing, exactly, of its
example, its protection and its exclusion. When you are weary of the swarming
democracy of your fellow-tourists, of the unremunerative aspects of human
nature on Corso and Pincio, of the oppressively frequent combination of
coronets on carriage panels and stupid faces in carriages, of addled brains and
lacquered boots, of ruin and dirt and decay, of priests and beggars and takers
of advantage, of the myriad tokens of a halting civilisation, the image of the
great temple depresses the balance of your doubts, seems to rise above even the
highest tide of vulgarity and make you still believe in the heroic will and the
heroic act. It's a relief, in other words, to feel that there's nothing but a
cab-fare between your pessimism and one of the greatest of human achievements.
[Illustration: THE COLONNADE OF ST. PETER, ROME.]
This might serve as a Lenten peroration to these remarks of
mine which have strayed so woefully from their jovial text, save that I ought
fairly to confess that my last impression of the Carnival was altogether
Carnivalesque.. The merry-making of Shrove Tuesday had
life and felicity; the dead letter of tradition broke out into nature and
grace. I pocketed my scepticism and spent a long afternoon on the Corso. Almost
every one was a masker, but you had no need to conform; the pelting rain of
confetti effectually disguised you. I can't say I found it all very
exhilarating; but here and there I noticed a brighter episode--a capering clown
inflamed with contagious jollity, some finer humourist forming a circle every
thirty yards to crow at his indefatigable sallies. One clever performer so
especially pleased me that I should have been glad to catch a glimpse of the
natural man. You imagined for him that he was taking a prodigious intellectual
holiday and that his gaiety was in inverse ratio to his daily mood. Dressed as
a needy scholar, in an ancient evening-coat and with a rusty black hat and
gloves fantastically patched, he carried a little volume carefully under his
arm. His humours were in excellent taste, his whole manner the perfection of
genteel comedy. The crowd seemed to relish him vastly, and he at once commanded
a glee-fully attentive audience. Many of his sallies I lost; those I caught
were excellent. His trick was often to begin by taking some one urbanely and
caressingly by the chin and complimenting him on the intelligenza della sua fisionomia. I kept near him as long as I could;
for he struck me as a real ironic artist, cherishing a disinterested, and yet
at the same time a motived and a moral, passion for the grotesque. I should
have liked, however--if indeed I shouldn't have feared--to see him the next
morning, or when he unmasked that night over his hard-earned supper in a smoky
trattoria. As the evening went on the crowd thickened and became a motley press
of shouting, pushing, scrambling, everything but squabbling, revellers. The
rain of missiles ceased at dusk, but the universal deposit of chalk and flour
was trampled into a cloud made lurid by flaring pyramids of the gas-lamps that
replaced for the occasion the stingy Roman luminaries. Early in the evening
came off the classic exhibition of the moccoletti, which I but half saw, like a
languid reporter resigned beforehand to be cashiered for want of enterprise. From
the mouth of a side-street, over a thousand heads, I caught a huge slow-moving
illuminated car, from which blue-lights and rockets and Roman candles were in
course of discharge, meeting all in a dim fuliginous glare far above the
house-tops. It was like a glimpse of some public orgy in ancient Babylon. In the small
hours of the morning, walking homeward from a private entertainment, I found
Ash Wednesday still kept at bay. The Corso, flaring with light, smelt like a
circus. Every one was taking friendly liberties with every one else and using
up the dregs of his festive energy in convulsive hootings and gymnastics. Here
and there certain indefatigable spirits, clad all in red after the manner of
devils and leaping furiously about with torches, were supposed to affright you.
But they shared the universal geniality and bequeathed me no midnight fears as
a pretext for keeping Lent, the carnevale dei preti, as I read in that
profanely radical sheet the Capitale. Of this too I have been having glimpses.
Going lately into Santa Francesca Romana, the picturesque church near the Temple of Peace, I found a feast for the eyes--a
dim crimson-toned light through curtained windows, a great festoon of tapers
round the altar, a bulging girdle of lamps before the sunken shrine beneath,
and a dozen white-robed Dominicans scattered in the happiest composition on the
pavement. It was better than the moccoletti.
1873.
I shall always remember the first I took: out of the Porta del Popolo, to where the Ponte Molle, whose single arch
sustains a weight of historic tradition, compels the sallow Tiber to flow
between its four great-mannered ecclesiastical statues, over the crest of the
hill and along the old posting-road to Florence.
It was mild midwinter, the season peculiarly of colour on the Roman Campagna;
and the light was full of that mellow purple glow, that tempered intensity,
which haunts the after-visions of those who have known Rome like the memory of some supremely
irresponsible pleasure. An hour away I pulled up and at the edge of a meadow
gazed away for some time into remoter distances. Then and there, it seemed to
me, I measured the deep delight of knowing the Campagna. But I saw more things
in it than I can easily tell. The country rolled away around me into slopes and
dells of long-drawn grace, chequered with purple and blue and blooming brown.
The lights and shadows were at play on the Sabine Mountains--an
alternation of tones so exquisite as to be conveyed only by some fantastic
comparison to sapphire and amber. In the foreground a contadino in his cloak
and peaked hat jogged solitary on his ass; and here and there in the distance,
among blue undulations, some white village, some grey tower, helped deliciously
to make the picture the typical "Italian landscape" of old-fashioned
art. It was so bright and yet so sad, so still and yet so charged, to the
supersensuous ear, with the murmur of an extinguished life, that you could only
say it was intensely and adorably strange, could only impute to the whole overarched
scene an unsurpassed secret for bringing tears of appreciation to no matter how
ignorant--archaeologically ignorant--eyes. To ride once, in these conditions,
is of course to ride again and to allot to the Campagna a generous share of the
time one spends in Rome.
It is a pleasure that doubles one's horizon, and one can
scarcely say whether it enlarges or limits one's impression of the city proper.
It certainly makes St. Peter's seem a trifle smaller and blunts the edge of
one's curiosity in the Forum. It must be the effect of the experience, at all
extended, that when you think of Rome afterwards you will think still
respectfully and regretfully enough of the Vatican and the Pincio, the streets
and the picture-making street life; but will even more wonder, with an
irrepressible contraction of the heart, when again you shall feel yourself
bounding over the flower-smothered turf, or pass from one framed picture to
another beside the open arches of the crumbling aqueducts. You look back at the
City so often from some grassy hill-top--hugely compact within its walls, with
St. Peter's overtopping all things and yet seeming small, and the vast girdle
of marsh and meadow receding on all sides to the mountains and the sea--that
you come to remember it at last as hardly more than a respectable parenthesis
in a great sweep of generalisation. Within the walls, on the other hand, you
think of your intended ride as the most romantic of all your possibilities; of
the Campagna generally as an illimitable experience. One's rides certainly give
Rome an
inordinate scope for the reflective--by which I suppose I mean after all the
aesthetic and the "esoteric"--life. To dwell in a city which, much as
you grumble at it, is after all very fairly a modern city; with crowds and shops
and theatres and cafes and balls and receptions and dinner-parties, and all the
modern confusion of social pleasures and pains; to have at your door the good
and evil of it all; and yet to be able in half an hour to gallop away and leave
it a hundred miles, a hundred years, behind, and to look at the tufted broom
glowing on a lonely tower-top in the still blue air, and the pale pink
asphodels trembling none the less for the stillness, and the shaggy-legged
shepherds leaning on their sticks in motionless brotherhood with the heaps of
ruin, and the scrambling goats and staggering little kids treading out wild
desert smells from the top of hollow-sounding mounds; and then to come back
through one of the great gates and a couple of hours later find yourself in the
"world," dressed, introduced, entertained, inquiring, talking about
"Middlemarch" to a young English lady or listening to Neapolitan
songs from a gentleman in a very low-cut shirt--all this is to lead in a manner
a double life and to gather from the hurrying hours more impressions than a
mind of modest capacity quite knows how to dispose of.
I touched lately upon this theme with a friend who, I
fancied, would understand me, and who immediately assured me that he had just
spent a day that this mingled diversity of sensation made to the days one
spends elsewhere what an uncommonly good novel may be to the daily paper.
"There was an air of idleness about it, if you will," he said,
"and it was certainly pleasant enough to have been wrong. Perhaps, being
after all unused to long stretches of dissipation, this was why I had a
half-feeling that I was reading an odd chapter in the history of a person very
much more of a héros de roman than myself." Then he proceeded to relate
how he had taken a long ride with a lady whom he extremely admired. "We
turned off from the Tor di Quinto
Road to that castellated farm-house you know
of--once a Ghibelline fortress--whither Claude Lorraine used to come to paint
pictures of which the surrounding landscape is still so artistically, so
compositionally, suggestive. We went into the inner court, a cloister almost,
with the carven capitals of its loggia columns, and looked at a handsome child
swinging shyly against the half-opened door of a room whose impenetrable
shadow, behind her, made her, as it were, a sketch in bituminous water-colours.
We talked with the farmer, a handsome, pale, fever-tainted fellow with a
well-to-do air that didn't in the least deter his affability from a turn
compatible with the acceptance of small coin; and then we galloped away and
away over the meadows which stretch with hardly a break to Veii. The day was
strangely delicious, with a cool grey sky and just a touch of moisture in the
air stirred by our rapid motion. The Campagna, in the colourless even light,
was more solemn and romantic than ever; and a ragged shepherd, driving a meagre
straggling flock, whom we stopped to ask our way of,
was a perfect type of pastoral, weather-beaten misery. He was precisely the
shepherd for the foreground of a scratchy etching. There were faint odours of
spring in the air, and the grass here and there was streaked with great patches
of daisies; but it was spring with a foreknowledge of autumn, a day to be
enjoyed with a substrain of sadness, the foreboding of regret, a day somehow to
make one feel as if one had seen and felt a great deal--quite, as I say, like a
heros de roman. Touching such characters, it was the illustrious Pelham, I
think, who, on being asked if he rode, replied that he left those violent
exercises to the ladies. But under such a sky, in such an air, over acres of
daisied turf, a long, long gallop is certainly a supersubtle joy. The elastic
bound of your horse is the poetry of motion; and if you are so happy as to add
to it not the prose of companionship riding comes almost to affect you as a
spiritual exercise. My gallop, at any rate," said my friend,
"threw me into a mood which gave an extraordinary zest to the rest of the
day." He was to go to a dinner-party at a villa on the edge of Rome, and Madam X--, who
was also going, called for him in her carriage. "It was a long
drive," he went on, "through the Forum, past the Colosseum. She told
me a long story about a most interesting person. Toward the end my eyes caught
through the carriage window a slab of rugged sculptures. We were passing under
the Arch of Constantine. In the hall pavement of the villa is a rare antique
mosaic--one of the largest and most perfect; the ladies on their way to the
drawing-room trail over it the flounces of Worth. We drove home late, and
there's my day."
On your exit from most of the gates of Rome you have generally half-an-hour's
progress through winding lanes, many of which are hardly less charming than the
open meadows. On foot the walls and high hedges would vex you and spoil your
walk; but in the saddle you generally overtop them, to an endless peopling of
the minor vision. Yet a Roman wall in the springtime is for that matter almost
as interesting as anything it conceals. Crumbling grain by grain, coloured and
mottled to a hundred tones by sun and storm, with its rugged structure of brick
extruding through its coarse complexion of peeling stucco, its creeping
lacework of wandering ivy starred with miniature violets, and its wild fringe
of stouter flowers against the sky--it is as little as possible a blank
partition; it is practically a luxury of landscape. At the moment at which I
write, in mid-April, all the ledges and cornices are wreathed with flaming
poppies, nodding there as if they knew so well what faded greys and yellows are
an offset to their scarlet. But the best point in a dilapidated enclosing
surface of vineyard or villa is of course the gateway, lifting its great arch
of cheap rococo scroll-work, its balls and shields and mossy dish-covers--as
they always perversely figure to me--and flanked with its dusky cypresses. I
never pass one without taking out my mental sketch-book and jotting it down as
a vignette in the insubstantial record of my ride. They are as sad and dreary
as if they led to the moated grange where Mariana waited in desperation for
something to happen; and it's easy to take the usual inscription over the porch
as a recommendation to those who enter to renounce all hope of anything but a
glass of more or less agreeably acrid vino romano. For what you chiefly see
over the walls and at the end of the straight short avenue of rusty cypresses
are the appurtenances of a vigna--a couple of acres of little upright sticks
blackening in the sun, and a vast sallow-faced, scantily windowed mansion, whose
expression denotes little of the life of the mind beyond what goes to the
driving of a hard bargain over the tasted hogsheads. If Mariana is there she
certainly has no pile of old magazines to beguile her leisure. The life of the
mind, if the term be in any application here not ridiculous, appears to any
asker of curious questions, as he wanders about Rome, the very thinnest deposit of the past.
Within the rococo gateway, which itself has a vaguely esthetic
self-consciousness, at the end of the cypress walk, you will probably see a
mythological group in rusty marble--a Cupid and Psyche, a Venus and Paris, an
Apollo and Daphne--the relic of an age when a Roman proprietor thought it fine
to patronise the arts. But I imagine you are safe in supposing it to constitute
the only allusion savouring of culture that has been made on the premises for
three or four generations.
There is a franker cheerfulness--though certainly a proper
amount of that forlornness which lurks about every object to which the Campagna
forms a background--in the primitive little taverns where, on the homeward
stretch, in the waning light, you are often glad to rein up and demand a bottle
of their best. Their best and their worst are indeed the same, though with a
shifting price, and plain vino bianco or vino rosso (rarely both) is the sole
article of refreshment in which they deal. There is a ragged bush over the
door, and within, under a dusky vault, on crooked cobble-stones, sit
half-a-dozen contadini in their indigo jackets and goatskin breeches and with
their elbows on the table. There is generally a rabble of infantile beggars at
the door, pretty enough in their dusty rags, with their fine eyes and intense
Italian smile, to make you forget your private vow of doing your individual best
I to make these people, whom you like so much, unlearn their old vices. Was
Porta Pia bombarded three years ago that Peppino should still grow up to whine
for a copper? But the Italian shells had no direct message for Peppino's
stomach--and you are going to a dinner-party at a villa. So Peppino
"points" an instant for the copper in the dust and grows up a Roman
beggar. The whole little place represents the most primitive form of hostelry;
but along any of the roads leading out of the city you may find establishments
of a higher type, with Garibaldi, superbly mounted and foreshortened, painted
on the wall, or a lady in a low-necked dress opening a fictive lattice with
irresistible hospitality, and a yard with the classic vine-wreathed arbour
casting thin shadows upon benches and tables draped and cushioned with the
white dust from which the highways from the gates borrow most of their local
colour. None the less, I say, you avoid the highroads, and, if you are a person
of taste, don't grumble at the occasional need of following the walls of the
city. City walls, to a properly constituted American, can never be an object of
indifference; and it is emphatically "no end of a sensation" to pace
in the shadow of this massive cincture of Rome.
I have found myself, as I skirted its base, talking of trivial things, but
never without a sudden reflection on the deplorable impermanence of first
impressions. A twelvemonth ago the raw plank fences of a Boston suburb,
inscribed with the virtues of healing drugs, bristled along my horizon: now I
glance with idle eyes at a compacted antiquity in which a more learned sense
may read portentous dates and signs--Servius, Aurelius, Honorius. But even to
idle eyes the prodigious, the continuous thing bristles with eloquent passages.
In some places, where the huge brickwork is black with time and certain strange
square towers look down at you with still blue eyes, the Roman sky peering
through lidless loopholes, and there is nothing but white dust in the road and
solitude in the air, I might take myself for a wandering Tartar touching on the
confines of the Celestial Empire. The wall of China must have very much such a
gaunt robustness. The colour of the Roman ramparts is everywhere fine, and
their rugged patchwork has been subdued by time and weather into a mellow
harmony that the brush only asks to catch up. On the northern side of the city,
behind the Vatican,
St. Peter's and the Trastevere, I have seen them glowing in the late afternoon
with the tones of ancient bronze and rusty gold. Here at various points they
are embossed with the Papal insignia, the tiara with its flying bands and
crossed keys; to the high style of which the grace that attaches to almost any
lost cause--even if not quite the "tender" grace of a day that is
dead--considerably adds a style. With the dome of St. Peter's resting on their
cornice and the hugely clustered architecture of the Vatican
rising from them as from a terrace, they seem indeed the valid bulwark of an
ecclesiastical city. Vain bulwark, alas! sighs the
sentimental tourist, fresh from the meagre entertainment of this latter Holy
Week. But he may find monumental consolation in this neighbourhood at a source
where, as I pass, I never fail to apply for it. At half-an-hour's walk beyond
Porta San Pancrazio, beneath the wall of the Villa Doria, is a delightfully
pompous ecclesiastical gateway of the seventeenth century, erected by Paul V to
commemorate his restoration of the aqueducts through which the stream bearing
his name flows towards the fine florid portico protecting its clear-sheeted outgush on the crest of the Janiculan. It arches across the
road in the most ornamental manner of the period, and one can hardly pause
before it without seeming to assist at a ten minutes' revival of old
Italy--without feeling as if one were in a cocked hat and sword and were coming
up to Rome, in another mood than Luther's, with a letter of recommendation to
the mistress of a cardinal.
The Campagna differs greatly on the two sides of the Tiber; and it is hard to say which, for the rider, has
the greater charm. The half-dozen rides you may take from Porta San Giovanni
possess the perfection of traditional Roman interest and lead you through a
far-strewn wilderness of ruins--a scattered maze of tombs and towers and nameless
fragments of antique masonry. The landscape here has two great features; close
before you on one side is the long, gentle swell of the Alban Hills, deeply,
fantastically blue in most weathers, and marbled with the vague white masses of
their scattered towns and villas. It would be difficult to draw the hard figure
to a softer curve than that with which the heights sweep from Albano to the
plain; this a perfect example of the classic beauty of line in the Italian
landscape--that beauty which, when it fills the background of a picture, makes
us look in the foreground for a broken column couched upon flowers and a
shepherd piping to dancing nymphs. At your side, constantly, you have the
broken line of the Claudian Aqueduct, carrying its broad arches far away into
the plain. The meadows along which it lies are not the smoothest in the world
for a gallop, but there is no pleasure greater than to wander near it. It
stands knee-deep in the flower-strewn grass, and its rugged piers are hung with
ivy as the columns of a church are draped for a festa. Every archway is a
picture, massively framed, of the distance beyond--of the snow-tipped Sabines
and lonely Soracte. As the spring advances the whole Campagna smiles and waves
with flowers; but I think they are nowhere more rank and lovely than in the
shifting shadow of the aqueducts, where they muffle the feet of the columns and
smother the half-dozen brooks which wander in and out like silver meshes
between the legs of a file of giants. They make a niche for themselves too in
every crevice and tremble on the vault of the empty conduits. The ivy
hereabouts in the springtime is peculiarly brilliant and delicate; and though
it cloaks and muffles these Roman fragments far less closely than the castles
and abbeys of England
it hangs with the light elegance of all Italian vegetation. It is partly
doubtless because their mighty outlines are still unsoftened that the aqueducts
are so impressive. They seem the very source of the solitude in which they
stand; they look like architectural spectres and loom through the light mists
of their grassy desert, as you recede along the line, with the same
insubstantial vastness as if they rose out of Egyptian sands. It is a great
neighbourhood of ruins, many of which, it must be confessed,
you have applauded in many an album. But station a peasant with sheepskin coat
and bandaged legs in the shadow of a tomb or tower best known to drawing-room
art, and scatter a dozen goats on the mound above him, and the picture has a
charm which has not yet been sketched away.
The other quarter of the Campagna has wider fields and
smoother turf and perhaps a greater number of delightful rides; the earth is
sounder, and there are fewer pitfalls and ditches. The land for the most part
lies higher and catches more wind, and the grass is here and there for great
stretches as smooth and level as a carpet. You have no Alban
Mountains before you, but you have in
the distance the waving ridge of the nearer Apennines, and west of them, along
the course of the Tiber, the long seaward
level of deep-coloured fields, deepening as they recede to the blue and purple
of the sea itself. Beyond them, of a very clear day, you may see the glitter of
the Mediterranean. These are the occasions
perhaps to remember most fondly, for they lead you to enchanting nooks, and the
landscape has details of the highest refinement. Indeed when my sense reverts
to the lingering impressions of so blest a time, it seems a fool's errand to
have attempted to express them, and a waste of words to do more than recommend
the reader to go citywards at twilight of the end of March, making for Porta
Cavalleggieri, and note what he sees. At this hour the Campagna is to the last
point its melancholy self, and I remember roadside
"effects" of a strange and intense suggestiveness. Certain mean,
mouldering villas behind grass-grown courts have an indefinably sinister look;
there was one in especial of which it was impossible not to argue that a
despairing creature must have once committed suicide there, behind bolted door
and barred window, and that no one has since had the pluck to go in and see why
he never came out. Every wayside mark of manners, of history, every stamp of
the past in the country about Rome,
touches my sense to a thrill, and I may thus exaggerate the appeal of very
common things. This is the more likely because the appeal seems ever to rise
out of heaven knows what depths of ancient trouble. To delight in the aspects
of sentient ruin might appear a heartless pastime, and the pleasure, I confess,
shows the note of perversity. The sombre and the hard are as common an
influence from southern things as the soft and the bright, I think; sadness
rarely fails to assault a northern observer when he misses what he takes for
comfort. Beauty is no compensation for the loss, only making it more poignant.
Enough beauty of climate hangs over these Roman cottages and
farm-houses--beauty of light, of atmosphere and of vegetation; but their charm
for the maker-out of the stories in things is the way the golden air shows off
their desolation. Man lives more with Nature in Italy than in New or than in
Old England; she does more work for him and gives him more holidays than in our
short-summered climes, and his home is therefore much more bare of devices for
helping him to do without her, forget her and forgive her. These reflections
are perhaps the source of the character you find in a moss-coated stone
stairway climbing outside of a wall; in a queer inner court, befouled with
rubbish and drearily bare of convenience; in an ancient quaintly carven well,
worked with infinite labour from an overhanging window; in an arbour of
time-twisted vines under which you may sit with your feet in the dirt and
remember as a dim fable that there are races for which the type of domestic
allurement is the parlour hearth-rug. For reasons apparent or otherwise these
things amuse me beyond expression, and I am never weary of staring into
gateways, of lingering by dreary, shabby, half-barbaric farm-yards, of feasting
a foolish gaze on sun-cracked plaster and unctuous indoor shadows. I mustn't
forget, however, that it's not for wayside effects that one rides away behind
St. Peter's, but for the strong sense of wandering over boundless space, of
seeing great classic lines of landscape, of watching them dispose themselves
into pictures so full of "style" that you can think of no painter who
deserves to have you admit that they suggest him--hardly knowing whether it is
better pleasure to gallop far and drink deep of air and grassy distance and the
whole delicious opportunity, or to walk and pause and linger, and try and grasp
some ineffaceable memory of sky and colour and outline. Your pace can hardly
help falling into a contemplative measure at the time, everywhere so wonderful,
but in Rome so
persuasively divine, when the winter begins palpably to soften and quicken. Far
out on the Campagna, early in February, you feel the first vague earthly
emanations, which in a few weeks come wandering into the heart of the city and
throbbing through the close, dark streets. Springtime in Rome is an immensely poetic affair; but you
must stand often far out in the ancient waste, between grass and sky, to
measure its deep, full, steadily accelerated rhythm. The winter has an
incontestable beauty, and is pre-eminently the time of colour--the time when it
is no affectation, but homely verity, to talk about the "purple" tone
of the atmosphere. As February comes and goes your purple is streaked with
green and the rich, dark bloom of the distance begins to lose its intensity.
But your loss is made up by other gains; none more precious than that
inestimable gain to the ear--the disembodied voice of the lark. It comes with
the early flowers, the white narcissus and the cyclamen, the half-buried
violets and the pale anemones, and makes the whole atmosphere ring like a vault
of tinkling glass. You never see the source of the sound, and are utterly
unable to localise his note, which seems to come from everywhere at once, to be
some hundred-throated voice of the air. Sometimes you fancy you just catch him,
a mere vague spot against the blue, an intenser throb
in the universal pulsation of light. As the weeks go on the flowers multiply
and the deep blues and purples of the hills, turning to azure and violet, creep
higher toward the narrowing snow-line of the Sabines. The temperature rises,
the first hour of your ride you feel the heat, but you beguile it with brushing
the hawthorn-blossoms as you pass along the hedges,
and catching at the wild rose and honeysuckle; and when you get into the
meadows there is stir enough in the air to lighten the dead weight of the sun.
The Roman air, however, is not a tonic medicine, and it seldom suffers exercise
to be all exhilarating. It has always seemed to me indeed part of the charm of
the latter that your keenest consciousness is haunted with a vague languor. Occasionally when the sirocco blows that sensation becomes strange
and exquisite. Then, under the grey sky, before the dim distances which
the south-wind mostly brings with it, you seem to ride forth into a world from
which all hope has departed and in which, in spite of the flowers that make
your horse's footfalls soundless, nothing is left save some queer probability
that your imagination is unable to measure, but from which it hardly shrinks.
This quality in the Roman element may now and then "relax" you almost
to ecstasy; but a season of sirocco would be an overdose of morbid pleasure.
You may at any rate best feel the peculiar beauty of the Campagna on those mild
days of winter when the mere quality and temper of the sunshine suffice to move
the landscape to joy, and you pause on the brown grass in the sunny stillness
and, by listening long enough, almost fancy you hear the shrill of the
midsummer cricket. It is detail and ornament that vary from month to month,
from week to week even, and make your returns to the same places a constant
feast of unexpectedness; but the great essential features of the prospect
preserve throughout the year the same impressive serenity. Soracte, be it January
or May, rises from its blue horizon like an island from the sea and with an
elegance of contour which no mood of the year can deepen or diminish. You know
it well; you have seen it often in the mellow backgrounds of Claude; and it has
such an irresistibly classic, academic air that while you look at it you begin
to take your saddle for a faded old arm-chair in a palace gallery. A month's
rides in different directions will show you a dozen prime Claudes. After I had
seen them all I went piously to the Doria gallery to refresh my memory of its
two famous specimens and to enjoy to the utmost their delightful air of
reference to something that had become a part of my personal experience.
Delightful it certainly is to feel the common element in one's own sensibility
and those of a genius whom that element has helped to do great things. Claude
must have haunted the very places of one's personal preference and adjusted
their divine undulations to his splendid scheme of romance, his view of the
poetry of life. He was familiar with aspects in which there wasn't a single
uncompromising line. I saw a few days ago a small finished sketch from his
hand, in the possession of an American artist, which was almost startling in
its clear reflection of forms unaltered by the two centuries that have dimmed
and cracked the paint and canvas.
This unbroken continuity of the impressions I have tried to
indicate is an excellent example of the intellectual background of all
enjoyment in Rome.
It effectually prevents pleasure from becoming vulgar, for your sensation
rarely begins and ends with itself; it reverberates--it recalls, commemorates, resuscitates something else. At least half the merit of
everything you enjoy must be that it suits you absolutely; but the larger half
here is generally that it has suited some one else and that you can never
flatter yourself you have discovered it. It has been addressed to some use a
million miles out of your range, and has had great adventures before ever
condescending to please you. It was in admission of this truth that my
discriminating friend who showed me the Claudes found it impossible to
designate a certain delightful region which you enter at the end of an hour's
riding from Porta Cavalleggieri as anything but Arcadia. The exquisite correspondence of the
term in this case altogether revived its faded bloom; here veritably the oaten
pipe must have stirred the windless air and the satyrs have laughed among the brookside reeds. Three or four long grassy dells stretch
away in a chain between low hills over which delicate trees are so discreetly
scattered that each one is a resting place for a shepherd. The elements of the
scene are simple enough, but the composition has extraordinary refinement. By
one of those happy chances which keep observation in Italy always in her best
humour a shepherd had thrown himself down under one of the trees in the very
attitude of Meliboeus. He had been washing his feet, I suppose, in the
neighbouring brook, and had found it pleasant afterwards to roll his short
breeches well up on his thighs. Lying thus in the shade, on his elbow, with his
naked legs stretched out on the turf and his soft peaked hat over his long hair
crushed back like the veritable bonnet of Arcady, he was exactly the figure of
the background of this happy valley. The poor fellow, lying there in rustic
weariness and ignorance, little fancied that he was a symbol of old-world
meanings to new-world eyes.
Such eyes may find as great a store of picturesque meanings
in the cork-woods of Monte Mario, tenderly loved of all equestrians. These are
less severely pastoral than our Arcadia,
and you might more properly lodge there a damosel of Ariosto than a nymph of
Theocritus. Among them is strewn a lovely wilderness of flowers and shrubs, and
the whole place has such a charming woodland air, that, casting about me the
other day for a compliment, I declared that it. reminded
me of New Hampshire.
My compliment had a double edge, and I had no sooner uttered it than I
smiled--or sighed--to perceive in all the undiscriminated botany about me the
wealth of detail, the idle elegance and grace of Italy alone, the natural stamp
of the land which has the singular privilege of making one love her
unsanctified beauty all but as well as those features of one's own country
toward which nature's small allowance doubles that of one's own affection. For
this effect of casting a spell no rides have more value than those you take in
Villa Doria or Villa Borghese; or don't take, possibly, if you prefer to
reserve these particular regions--the latter in especial--for your walking
hours. People do ride, however, in both villas, which deserve honourable
mention in this regard. Villa Doria, with its noble site, its splendid views,
its great groups of stone-pines, so clustered and yet so individual, its lawns
and flowers and fountains, its altogether princely disposition, is a place
where one may pace, well mounted, of a brilliant day, with an agreeable sense
of its being rather a more elegant pastime to balance in one's stirrups than to
trudge on even the smoothest gravel. But at Villa Borghese the walkers have the
best of it; for they are free of those adorable outlying corners and bosky
byways which the rumble of barouches never reaches. In March the place becomes
a perfect epitome of the spring. You cease to care much for the melancholy
greenness of the disfeatured statues which has been your chief winter's
intimation of verdure; and before you are quite conscious of the tender streaks
and patches in the great quaint grassy arena round which the Propaganda
students, in their long skirts, wander slowly, like dusky seraphs revolving the
gossip of Paradise, you spy the brave little violets uncapping their azure
brows beneath the high-stemmed pines. One's walks here would take us too far,
and one's pauses detain us too long, when in the quiet parts under the wall one
comes across a group of charming small school-boys in full-dress suits and
white cravats, shouting over their play in clear Italian, while a grave young
priest, beneath a tree, watches them over the top of his book. It sounds like
nothing, but the force behind it and the frame round it, the setting, the air,
the chord struck, make it a hundred wonderful things.
1873.
I made a note after my first stroll at Albano
to the effect that I had been talking of the "picturesque" all my
life, but that now for a change I beheld it. I had been looking all winter
across the Campagna at the free-flowing outline of the Alban Mount, with its
half-dozen towns shining on its purple side even as vague sun-spots in the
shadow of a cloud, and thinking it simply an agreeable incident in the varied
background of Rome. But now that during the last few days I have been treating
it as a foreground, have been suffering St. Peter's to play the part of a small
mountain on the horizon, with the Campagna swimming mistily through the
ambiguous lights and shadows of the interval, I find the interest as great as
in the best of the by-play of Rome. The walk I speak of was just out of the
village, to the south, toward the neighbouring town of L'Ariccia, neighbouring
these twenty years, since the Pope (the late Pope, I was on the point of
calling him) threw his superb viaduct across the deep ravine which divides it
from Albano. At the risk of seeming to fantasticate I confess that the Pope's
having built the viaduct--in this very recent antiquity--made me linger there
in a pensive posture and marvel at the march of history and at Pius the Ninth's
beginning already to profit by the sentimental allowances we make to vanished
powers. An ardent nero then would have had his own way
with me and obtained a frank admission that the Pope was indeed a father to his
people. Far down into the charming valley which slopes out of the ancestral
woods of the Chigis into the level Campagna winds the steep stone-paved road at
the bottom of which, in the good old days, tourists in no great hurry saw the
mules and oxen tackled to their carriage for the opposite ascent. And indeed
even an impatient tourist might have been content to lounge back in his jolting
chaise and look out at the mouldy foundations of the little city plunging into
the verdurous flank of the gorge. Questioned, as a cherisher of quaintness, as
to the best "bit" hereabouts, I should certainly name the way in
which the crumbling black houses of these ponderous villages plant their weary
feet on the flowery edges of all the steepest chasms. Before you enter one of
them you invariably find yourself lingering outside its pretentious old gateway
to see it clutched and stitched to the stony hillside by this rank embroidery
of the wildest and bravest things that grow. Just at this moment nothing is
prettier than the contrast between their dusky ruggedness and the tender, the
yellow and pink and violet fringe of that mantle. All this you may observe from
the viaduct at the Ariccia; but you must wander below to feel the full force of
the eloquence of our imaginary papalino. The pillars and arches of pale grey
peperino arise in huge tiers with a magnificent spring and solidity. The older
Romans built no better; and the work has a deceptive air of being one of their
sturdy bequests which help one to drop another sigh over the antecedents the
Italians of to-day are so eager to repudiate. Will those they give their
descendants be as good?
At the Ariccia, in any case, I found a little square with a
couple of mossy fountains, occupied on one side by a vast dusky-faced Palazzo
Chigi and on the other by a goodly church with an imposing dome. The dome,
within, covers the whole edifice and is adorned with some extremely elegant
stucco-work of the seventeenth century. It gave a great value to this fine old
decoration that preparations were going forward for a local festival and that
the village carpenter was hanging certain mouldy strips of crimson damask
against the piers of the vaults. The damask might have been of the seventeenth
century too, and a group of peasant-women were seeing it unfurled with evident
awe. I regarded it myself with interest--it seemed so the tattered remnant of a
fashion that had gone out for ever. I thought again of the poor disinherited
Pope, wondering whether, when such venerable frippery will no longer bear the
carpenter's nails, any more will be provided. It was hard to fancy anything but
shreds and patches in that musty tabernacle. Wherever you go in Italy you
receive some such intimation as this of the shrunken proportions of
Catholicism, and every church I have glanced into on my walks hereabouts has
given me an almost pitying sense of it. One finds one's self at last--without
fatuity, I hope--feeling sorry for the solitude of the remaining faithful. It's
as if the churches had been made so for the world, in its social sense, and the
world had so irrevocably moved away. They are in size out of all modern
proportion to the local needs, and the only thing at all alive in the
melancholy waste they collectively form is the smell of stale incense. There
are pictures on all the altars by respectable third-rate painters; pictures
which I suppose once were ordered and paid for and criticised by worshippers
who united taste with piety. At Genzano, beyond the Ariccia, rises on the grey
village street a pompous Renaissance temple whose
imposing nave and aisles would contain the population of a capital. But where
is the taste of the Ariccia and Genzano? Where are the choice spirits for whom
Antonio Raggi modelled the garlands of his dome and a hundred clever craftsmen
imitated Guido and Caravaggio? Here and there, from the pavement, as you pass,
a dusky crone interlards her devotions with more profane importunities, or a
grizzled peasant on rusty-jointed knees, tilted forward with his elbows on a
bench, reveals the dimensions of the patch in his blue breeches. But where is
the connecting link between Guido and Caravaggio and those poor souls for whom
an undoubted original is only a something behind a row of candlesticks, of no
very clear meaning save that you must bow to it? You find a vague memory of it
at best in the useless grandeurs about you, and you seem to be looking at a
structure of which the stubborn earth-scented foundations alone remain, with
the carved and painted shell that bends above them, while the central substance
has utterly crumbled away.
I shall seem to have adopted a more meditative pace than
befits a brisk constitutional if I say that I also fell a-thinking before the
shabby façade of the old Chigi
Palace. But it seemed
somehow in its grey forlornness to respond to the sadly superannuated
expression of the opposite church; and indeed in any condition what
self-respecting cherisher of quaintness can forbear to do a little romancing in
the shadow of a provincial palazzo? On the face of the matter, I know, there is
often no very salient peg to hang a romance on. A sort of dusky blankness invests
the establishment, which has often a rather imbecile old age. But a hundred
brooding secrets lurk in this inexpressive mask, and the Chigi Palace
did duty for me in the suggestive twilight as the most haunted of houses. Its
basement walls sloped outward like the beginning of a pyramid, and its lower
windows were covered with massive iron cages. Within the doorway, across the
court, I saw the pale glimmer of flowers on a terrace, and I made much, for the
effect of the roof, of a great covered loggia or belvedere with a dozen
window-panes missing or mended with paper. Nothing gives one a stronger
impression of old manners than an ancestral palace towering in this haughty
fashion over a shabby little town; you hardly stretch a point when you call it
an impression of feudalism. The scene may pass for feudal to American eyes, for
which a hundred windows on a facade mean nothing more exclusive than a hotel
kept (at the most invidious) on the European plan. The mouldy grey houses on
the steep crooked street, with their black cavernous archways pervaded by bad
smells, by the braying of asses and by human intonations hardly more musical,
the haggard and tattered peasantry staring at you with hungry-heavy eyes, the
brutish-looking monks (there are still enough to point a moral), the soldiers,
the mounted constables, the dirt, the dreariness, the misery, and the dark
over-grown palace frowning over it all from barred window and guarded
gateway--what more than all this do we dimly descry in a mental image of the dark
ages? For all his desire to keep the peace with the vivid image of things if it
be only vivid enough, the votary of this ideal may well occasionally turn over
such values with the wonder of what one takes them as paying for. They pay
sometimes for such sorry "facts of life." At Genzano, out of the very
midst of the village squalor, rises the Palazzo
Cesarini, separated from its gardens by a dirty lane. Between peasant and
prince the, contact is unbroken, and one would suppose Italian good-nature
sorely taxed by their mutual allowances; that the prince in especial must
cultivate a firm impervious shell. There are no comfortable townsfolk about him
to remind him of the blessings of a happy mediocrity of fortune. When he looks
out of his window he sees a battered old peasant against a sunny wall sawing
off his dinner from a hunch of black bread.
I must confess, however, that "feudal" as it
amused me to find the little piazza of the Ariccia, it appeared to threaten in
no manner an exasperated rising. On the contrary, the afternoon being cool,
many of the villagers were contentedly muffled in those ancient cloaks, lined
with green baize, which, when tossed over the shoulder and surmounted with a
peaked hat, form one of the few lingering remnants of "costume" in
Italy; others were tossing wooden balls light-heartedly enough on the grass
outside the town. The egress on this side is under a great stone archway thrown
out from the palace and surmounted with the family arms. Nothing could better
confirm your theory that the townsfolk are groaning serfs. The road leads away
through the woods, like many of the roads hereabouts, among trees less
remarkable for their size than for their picturesque contortions and
posturings. The woods, at the moment at which I write, are full of the raw
green light of early spring, a jour vastly becoming to the various complexions
of the wild flowers that cover the waysides. I have never seen these untended
parterres in such lovely exuberance; the sturdiest pedestrian becomes a
lingering idler if he allows them to catch his eye. The pale purple cyclamen,
with its hood thrown back, stands up in masses as dense as tulip-beds; and here
and there in the duskier places great sheets of forget-me-not seem to exhale a
faint blue mist. These are the commonest plants; there are dozens more I know
no name for--a rich profusion in especial of a beautiful five-petalled flower
whose white texture is pencilled with hair-strokes certain fair copyists I know
of would have to hold their breath to imitate. An Italian oak has neither the
girth nor the height of its English brothers, but it contrives in proportion to
be perhaps even more effective. It crooks its back and twists its arms and
clinches its hundred fists with the queerest extravagance, and wrinkles its
bark into strange rugosities from which its first scattered sprouts of yellow
green seem to break out like a morbid fungus. But the tree which has the
greatest charm to northern eyes is the cold grey-green ilex, whose
clear crepuscular shade drops against a Roman sun a veil impenetrable, yet not
oppressive. The ilex has even less colour than the cypress, but it is much less
funereal, and a landscape in which it is frequent may still be said to smile
faintly, though by no means to laugh. It abounds in old
Italian gardens, where the boughs are trimmed and interlocked into vaulted
corridors in which, from point to point, as in the niches of some dimly
frescoed hall, you see mildewed busts stare at you with a solemnity which the
even grey light makes strangely intense. A humbler relative of the ilex, though
it does better things than help broken-nosed emperors to look dignified, is the
olive, which covers many of the neighbouring hillsides with its little smoky
puffs of foliage. A stroke of composition I never weary of is that long blue
stretch of the Campagna which makes a high horizon and rests on this vaporous
base of olive-tops. A reporter intent upon a simile
might liken it to the ocean seen above the smoke of watch-fires kindled on the
strand.
To do perfect justice to the wood-walk away from the Ariccia
I ought to touch upon the birds that were singing vespers as I passed. But the
reader would find my rhapsody as poor entertainment as the programme of a
concert he had been unable to attend. I have no more learning about bird-music
than would help me to guess that a dull dissyllabic refrain in the heart of the
wood came from the cuckoo; and when at moments I heard a twitter of fuller
tone, with a more suggestive modulation, I could only hope it was the nightingale.
I have listened for the nightingale more than once in places so charming that
his song would have seemed but the articulate expression of their beauty, and
have never heard much beyond a provoking snatch or two--a prelude that came to
nothing. In spite of a natural grudge, however, I generously believe him a
great artist or at least a great genius--a creature who despises any prompting
short of absolute inspiration. For the rich, the multitudinous melody around me
seemed but the offering to my ear of the prodigal spirit of tradition. The wood
was ringing with sound because it was twilight, spring and Italy. It was
also because of these good things and various others besides that I relished so
keenly my visit to the Capuchin convent upon which I emerged after half-an-hour
in the wood. It stands above the town on the slope of the Alban Mount, and its
wild garden climbs away behind it and extends its melancholy influence. Before
it is a small stiff avenue of trimmed live-oaks which conducts you to a grotesque
little shrine beneath the staircase ascending to the church. Just here, if you
are apt to grow timorous at twilight, you may take a very pretty fright; for as
you draw near you catch behind the grating of the shrine the startling
semblance of a gaunt and livid monk. A sickly lamplight plays down upon his
face, and he stares at you from cavernous eyes with a dreadful air of death in
life. Horror of horrors, you murmur, is this a Capuchin penance? You discover
of course in a moment that it is only a Capuchin joke, that the monk is a pious
dummy and his spectral visage a matter of the paint-brush. You resent his
intrusion on the surrounding loveliness; and as you proceed to demand
entertainment at their convent you pronounce the Capuchins very foolish fellows.
This declaration, as I made it, was supported by the conduct of the simple
brother who opened the door of the cloister in obedience to my knock and, on
learning my errand, demurred about admitting me at so late an hour. If I would
return on the morrow morning he'd be most happy. He broke into a blank grin
when I assured him that this was the very hour of my desire and that the garish
morning light would do no justice to the view. These were mysteries beyond his
ken, and it was only his good-nature (of which he had plenty) and not his
imagination that was moved. So that when, passing through the narrow cloister
and out upon the grassy terrace, I saw another cowled brother standing with
folded hands profiled against the sky, in admirable harmony with the scene, I
questioned his knowing the uses for which he is still most precious. This,
however, was surely too much to ask of him, and it was cause enough for
gratitude that, though he was there before me, he was not a fellow-tourist with
an opera-glass slung over his shoulder. There was support to my idea of the
convent in the expiring light, for the scene was in its way unsurpassable.
Directly below the terrace lay the deep-set circle of the Alban Lake,
shining softly through the light mists of evening. This beautiful pool--it is
hardly more--occupies the crater of a prehistoric volcano, a perfect cup,
shaped and smelted by furnace-fires. The rim of the cup, rising high and
densely wooded round the placid stone-blue water, has a sort of natural
artificiality. The sweep and contour of the long circle are admirable; never
was a lake so charmingly lodged. It is said to be of extraordinary depth; and
though stone-blue water seems at first a very innocent substitute for boiling
lava, it has a sinister look which betrays its dangerous antecedents. The winds
never reach it and its surface is never ruffled; but its deep-bosomed placidity
seems to cover guilty secrets, and you fancy it in communication with the
capricious and treacherous forces of nature. Its very colour is of a joyless
beauty, a blue as cold and opaque as a solidified sheet of lava. Streaked and
wrinkled by a mysterious motion of its own, it affects the very type of a
legendary pool, and I could easily have believed that I had only to sit long
enough into the evening to see the ghosts of classic nymphs and naiads cleave
its sullen flood and beckon me with irresistible arms. Is it because its shores
are haunted with these vague Pagan influences that two convents have risen
there to purge the atmosphere? From the Capuchin terrace you look across at the
grey Franciscan monastery of Palazzuola, which is not less romantic certainly
than the most obstinate myth it may have exorcised. The Capuchin garden is a
wild tangle of great trees and shrubs and clinging, trembling vines which in
these hard days are left to take care of themselves; a weedy garden, if there
ever was one, but none the less charming for that, in the deepening dusk, with
its steep grassy vistas struggling away into impenetrable shadow. I braved the
shadow for the sake of climbing upon certain little flat-roofed crumbling
pavilions that rise from the corners of the further wall and give you a wider
and lovelier view of lake and hills and sky.
I have perhaps justified to the reader the mild proposition
with which I started--convinced him, that is, that Albano
is worth a walk. It may be a different walk each day, moreover, and not
resemble its predecessors save by its keeping in the shade.
"Galleries" the roads are prettily called, and with the justice that
they are vaulted and draped overhead and hung with an immense succession of
pictures. As you follow the few miles from Genzano to Frascati you have
perpetual views of the Campagna framed by clusters of trees; the vast
iridescent expanse of which completes the charm and comfort of your verdurous
dusk. I compared it just now to the sea, and with a good deal of truth, for it has the same incalculable lights and shades, the same
confusion of glitter and gloom. But I have seen it at moments--chiefly in the
misty twilight--when it resembled less the waste of waters than something more
portentous, the land itself in fatal dissolution. I could believe the fields to
be dimly surging and tossing and melting away into quicksands, and that one's
very last chance of an impression was taking place. A view, however, which has
the merit of being really as interesting as it seems, is that of the Lake of Nemi;
which the enterprising traveller hastens to compare with its sister sheet of Albano. Comparison in this case is particularly odious,
for in order to prefer one lake to the other you have to discover faults where
there are none. Nemi is a smaller circle, but lies in a deeper cup, and if with
no grey Franciscan pile to guard its woody shores, at least, in the same
position, the little high-perched black town to which it gives its name and
which looks across at Genzano on the opposite shore as Palazzuola regards Castel Gandolfo. The walk from the Ariccia to Genzano is
charming, most of all when it reaches a certain grassy piazza from which three
public avenues stretch away under a double row of stunted and twisted elms. The
Duke Cesarini has a villa at Genzano--I mentioned it just now--whose gardens
overhang the lake; but he has also a porter in a faded rakish-looking livery who shakes his head at your proffered franc unless you can
reinforce it with a permit countersigned at Rome. For this annoying complication of
dignities he is justly to be denounced; but I forgive him for the sake of that
ancestor who in the seventeenth century planted this shady walk. Never was a
prettier approach to a town than by these low-roofed light-chequered corridors.
Their only defect is that they prepare you for a town of rather more rustic
coquetry than Genzano exhibits. It has quite the usual allowance, the common
cynicism, of accepted decay, and looks dismally as if its best families had all
fallen into penury together and lost the means of keeping anything better than
donkeys in their great dark, vaulted basements and mending their broken
window-panes with anything better than paper. It was on the occasion of this
drear Genzano that I had a difference of opinion with a friend who maintained
that there was nothing in the same line so pretty in Europe as a pretty New England village. The proposition seemed to a
cherisher of quaintness on the face of it inacceptable; but calmly considered
it has a measure of truth. I am not fond of chalk-white painted planks,
certainly; I vastly prefer the dusky tones of ancient stucco and peperino; but
I succumb on occasion to the charms of a vine-shaded porch, of tulips and
dahlias glowing in the shade of high-arching elms, of heavy-scented lilacs
bending over a white paling to brush your cheek.
"I prefer Siena to Lowell," said my friend; "but I prefer Farmington to such a
thing as this." In fact an Italian village is simply a miniature Italian
city, and its various parts imply a town of fifty times the size. At Genzano
are neither dahlias nor lilacs, and no odours but foul ones. Flowers and other
graces are all confined to the high-walled precincts of Duke Cesarini, to which
you must obtain admission twenty miles away. The houses on the other hand would
generally lodge a New England cottage, porch
and garden and high-arching elms included, in one of their cavernous basements.
These vast grey dwellings are all of a fashion denoting more generous social
needs than any they serve nowadays. They speak of better days and of a fabulous
time when Italy
was either not shabby or could at least "carry off" her shabbiness.
For what follies are they doing penance? Through what melancholy stages have
their fortunes ebbed? You ask these questions as you choose the shady side of
the long blank street and watch the hot sun glare upon
the dust-coloured walls and pause before the fetid gloom of open doors.
I should like to spare a word for mouldy little Nemi,
perched upon a cliff high above the lake, at the opposite side; but after all,
when I had climbed up into it from the water-side, passing beneath a great arch
which I suppose once topped a gateway, and counted its twenty or thirty
apparent inhabitants peeping at me from black doorways, and looked at the old
round tower at whose base the village clusters, and declared that it was all
queer, queer, desperately queer, I had said all that is worth saying about it.
Nemi has a much better appreciation of its lovely position than Genzano, where
your only view of the lake is from a dunghill behind one of the houses. At the
foot of the round tower is an overhanging terrace, from which you may feast
your eyes on the only freshness they find in these dusky human hives--the
blooming seam, as one may call it, of strong wild flowers which binds the
crumbling walls to the face of the cliff. Of Rocca di Papa I must say as
little, It consorted generally with the bravery of its name; but the only
object I made a note of as I passed through it on my way to Monte Cavo, which
rises directly above it, was a little black house with a tablet in its face
setting forth that Massimo d' Azeglio had dwelt there. The story of his sojourn
is not the least attaching episode in his delightful Ricordi. From the summit
of Monte Cavo is a prodigious view, which you may enjoy with whatever
good-nature is left you by the reflection that the modern Passionist convent
occupying this admirable site was erected by the Cardinal of York (grandson of
James II) on the demolished ruins of an immemorial temple of Jupiter: the last
foolish act of a foolish race. For me I confess this folly spoiled the convent,
and the convent all but spoiled the view; for I kept thinking how fine it would
have been to emerge upon the old pillars and sculptures from the lava pavement
of the Via Triumphalis, which wanders grass-grown and untrodden through the
woods. A convent, however, which nothing spoils is that of Palazzuola, to which
I paid my respects on this same occasion. It rises on a lower spur of Monte
Cavo, on the edge, as we have seen, of the Alban Lake, and though it occupies a
classic site, that of early Alba Longa, it displaced nothing more precious than
memories and legends so dim that the antiquarians are still quarrelling about
them. It has a meagre little church and the usual sham Perugino with a couple
of tinsel crowns for the Madonna and the Infant inserted into the canvas; and
it has also a musty old room hung about with faded portraits and charts and
queer ecclesiastical knick-knacks, which borrowed a mysterious interest from
the sudden assurance of the simple Franciscan brother who accompanied me that
it was the room of the Son of the King of Portugal. But my peculiar pleasure
was the little thick-shaded garden which adjoins the convent and commands from
its massive artificial foundations an enchanting view of the lake. Part of it
is laid out in cabbages and lettuce, over which a rubicund brother, with his
frock tucked up, was bending with a solicitude which he interrupted to remove
his skullcap and greet me with the unsophisticated sweet-humoured smile that
every now and then in Italy
does so much to make you forget the ambiguities of monachism. The rest is
occupied by cypresses and other funereal umbrage, making a dank circle round an
old cracked fountain black with water-moss. The parapet of the terrace is
furnished with good stone seats where you may lean on your elbows to gaze away
a sunny half-hour and, feeling the general charm of the scene, declare that the
best mission of such a country in the world has been simply to produce, in the
way of prospect and picture, these masterpieces of mildness. Mild here as a
dream the whole attained effect, mild as resignation, mild as one's thoughts of
another life. Such a session wasn't surely an experience of the irritable
flesh; it was the deep degustation, on a summer's day, of something immortally
expressed by a man of genius.
[Illustration: CASTEL GANDOLFO.]
From Albano you may take
your way through several ancient little cities to Frascati, a rival centre of
villeggiatura, the road following the hillside for a long morning's walk and
passing through alternations of denser and clearer shade--the dark vaulted
alleys of ilex and the brilliant corridors of fresh-sprouting oak. The Campagna
is beneath you continually, with the sea beyond Ostia
receiving the silver arrows of the sun upon its chased and burnished shield,
and mighty Rome,
to the north, lying at no great length in the idle immensity around it. The
highway passes below Castel Gandolfo, which stands perched on an eminence
behind a couple of gateways surmounted with the Papal tiara and twisted cordon;
and I have more than once chosen the roundabout road for the sake of passing
beneath these pompous insignia. Castel Gandolfo is indeed an ecclesiastical
village and under the peculiar protection of the Popes, whose huge
summer-palace rises in the midst of it like a rural Vatican. In speaking of the road to
Frascati I necessarily revert to my first impressions, gathered on the occasion
of the feast of the Annunziata, which falls on the 25th of March and is
celebrated by a peasants' fair. As Murray
strongly recommends you to visit this spectacle, at which you are promised a
brilliant exhibition of all the costumes of modern Latium, I took an early train to
Frascati and measured, in company with a prodigious stream of humble
pedestrians, the half-hour's interval to Grotta Ferrata, where the fair is
held. The road winds along the hillside, among the silver-sprinkled olives and
through a charming wood where the ivy seemed tacked upon the oaks by women's
fingers and the birds were singing to the late anemones. It was covered with a
very jolly crowd of vulgar pleasure-takers, and the only creatures not in a
state of manifest hilarity were the pitiful little overladen, overbeaten
donkeys (who surely deserve a chapter to themselves in any description of these
neighbourhoods) and the horrible beggars who were thrusting their sores and
stumps at you from under every tree. Every one was shouting, singing,
scrambling, making light of dust and distance and filling the air with that
childlike jollity which the blessed Italian temperament never goes roundabout
to conceal. There is no crowd surely at once so jovial and so
gentle as an Italian crowd, and I doubt if in any other country the tightly
packed third-class car in which I went out from Rome would have introduced me to so much
smiling and so little swearing. Grotta Ferrata is a very dirty little village,
with a number of raw new houses baking on the hot hillside and nothing to charm
the fond gazer but its situation and its old fortified abbey. After pushing
about among the shabby little booths and declining a number of fabulous
bargains in tinware, shoes and pork, I was glad to retire to a comparatively
uninvaded corner of the abbey and divert myself with the view. This grey
ecclesiastical stronghold is a thoroughly scenic affair, hanging over the
hillside on plunging foundations which bury themselves among the dense olives.
It has massive round towers at the corners and a grass-grown moat, enclosing a
church and a monastery. The fore-court, within the abbatial gateway, now serves
as the public square of the village and in fair-time of course witnesses the
best of the fun. The best of the fun was to be found in certain great vaults
and cellars of the abbey, where wine was in free flow from gigantic hogsheads.
At the exit of these trickling grottos shady trellises of bamboo and gathered
twigs had been improvised, and under them a grand guzzling proceeded. All of
which was so in the fine old style that I was roughly reminded of the
wedding-feast of Gamacho. The banquet was far less substantial of course, but
it had a note as of immemorial manners that couldn't fail to suggest romantic
analogies to a pilgrim from the land of no cooks. There was a feast of reason
close at hand, however, and I was careful to visit the famous frescoes of
Domenichino in the adjoining church. It sounds rather brutal perhaps to say
that, when I came back into the clamorous little piazza, the sight of the
peasants swilling down their sour wine appealed to me more than the
masterpieces--Murray
calls them so--of the famous Bolognese. It amounts after all to saying that I
prefer Teniers to Domenichino; which I am willing to let pass for the truth.
The scene under the rickety trellises was the more suggestive of Teniers that
there were no costumes to make it too Italian. Murray's attractive statement on this point
was, like many of his statements, much truer twenty years ago than to-day.
Costume is gone or fast going; I saw among the women not a single crimson
bodice and not a couple of classic head-cloths. The poorer sort, dressed in
vulgar rags of no fashion and colour, and the smarter ones in calico gowns and
printed shawls of the vilest modern fabric, had honoured their dusky tresses
but with rich applications of grease. The men are still in jackets and
breeches, and, with their slouched and pointed hats and open-breasted shirts
and rattling leather leggings, may remind one sufficiently of the Italian peasant as he figured in the woodcuts familiar to our
infancy. After coming out of the church I found a delightful nook--a queer little
terrace before a more retired and tranquil drinking-shop--where I called for a
bottle of wine to help me to guess why I "drew the line" at
Domenichino.
This little terrace was a capricious excrescence at the end
of the piazza, itself simply a greater terrace; and one reached it,
picturesquely, by ascending a short inclined plane of grass-grown cobble-stones
and passing across a little dusky kitchen through whose narrow windows the
light of the mighty landscape beyond touched up old earthen pots. The terrace
was oblong and so narrow that it held but a single small table, placed
lengthwise; yet nothing could be pleasanter than to place one's bottle on the
polished parapet. Here you seemed by the time you had emptied it to be swinging
forward into immensity--hanging poised above the Campagna. A beautiful gorge
with a twinkling stream wandered down the hill far below you, beyond which
Marino and Castel Gandolfo peeped above the
trees. In front you could count the towers of Rome
and the tombs of the Appian Way. I don't know
that I came to any very distinct conclusion about Domenichino; but it was
perhaps because the view was perfection that he struck me as more than ever
mediocrity. And yet I don't think it was one's bottle of wine, either, that
made one after all maudlin about him; it was the sense of the foolishly usurped
in his tenure of fame, of the derisive in his ever having been put forward. To
say so indeed savours of flogging a dead horse, but it is surely an unkind
stroke of fate for him that Murray
assures ten thousand Britons every winter in the most emphatic manner that his
Communion of St. Jerome is the "second finest picture in the world. If
this were so one would certainly here in Rome,
where such institutions are convenient, retire into the very nearest convent;
with such a world one would have a standing quarrel. And yet this sport of
destiny is an interesting case, in default of being an interesting painter, and
I would take a moderate walk, in most moods, to see one of his pictures. He is so
supremely good an example of effort detached from inspiration and school-merit
divorced from spontaneity, that one of his fine frigid
performances ought to hang in a conspicuous place in every academy of design.
Few things of the sort contain more urgent lessons or point a more precious
moral; and I would have the head-master in the drawing-school take each
ingenuous pupil by the hand and lead him up to the Triumph of David or the
Chase of Diana or the red-nosed Persian Sibyl and make him some such little speech
as the following: "This great picture, my son, was hung here to show you
how you must never paint; to give you a perfect specimen of what in its
boundless generosity the providence of nature created for our fuller
knowledge--an artist whose development was a negation. The great thing in art
is charm, and the great thing in charm is spontaneity. Domenichino, having
talent, is here and there an excellent model--he was devoted, conscientious,
observant, industrious; but now that we've seen pretty
well what can simply be learned do its best, these things help him little with
us, because his imagination was cold. It loved nothing, it lost itself in
nothing, its efforts never gave it the heartache. It
went about trying this and that, concocting cold pictures after cold receipts,
dealing in the second-hand, in the ready-made, and putting into its
performances a little of everything but itself. When you see so many things in
a composition you might suppose that among them all some charm might be born;
yet they're really but the hundred mouths through which you may hear the
unhappy thing murmur 'I'm dead!' It's by the simplest thing it has that a
picture lives--by its temper. Look at all the great talents, Domenichino as
well as at Titian; but think less of dogma than of plain nature,
and I can almost promise you that yours will remain true." This is very
little to what the aesthetic sage I have imagined might say; and we are after
all unwilling to let our last verdict be an unkind one on any great bequest of
human effort. The faded frescoes in the chapel at Grotta Ferrata leave us a
memory the more of man's effort to dream beautifully; and they thus mingle
harmoniously enough with our multifold impressions of Italy, where
dreams and realities have both kept such pace and so strangely diverged. It was
absurd--that was the truth--to be critical at all among the appealing old
Italianisms round me and to treat the poor exploded Bolognese more harshly
than, when I walked back to Frascati, I treated the charming old water-works of
the Villa Aldobrandini. I confound these various products of antiquated art in
a genial absolution, and should like especially to tell how fine it was to
watch this prodigious fountain come tumbling down its channel of mouldy
rock-work, through its magnificent vista of ilex, to the fantastic old
hemicycle where a dozen tritons and naiads sit posturing to receive it. The sky
above the ilexes was incredibly blue and the ilexes themselves incredibly
black; and to see the young white moon peeping above the trees you could easily
have fancied it was midnight. I should like furthermore to expatiate on Villa
Mondragone, the most grandly impressive hereabouts, of all such domestic
monuments. The Casino in the midst is as big as the Vatican, which it strikingly
resembles, and it stands perched on a terrace as vast as the parvise of St.
Peter's, looking straight away over black cypress-tops into the shining
vastness of the Campagna. Everything somehow seemed immense and solemn; there
was nothing small but certain little nestling blue shadows on the Sabine
Mountains, to which the terrace seems to carry you wonderfully near. The place
been for some time lost to private uses, since it figures fantastically in a
novel of George Sand--La Daniella--and now, in quite another way, as a Jesuit
college for boys. The afternoon was perfect, and as it waned it filled the dark
alleys with a wonderful golden haze. Into this came leaping
and shouting a herd of little collegians with a couple of long-skirted Jesuits
striding at their heels. We all know--I make the point for my
antithesis--the monstrous practices of these people; yet as I watched the group
I verily believe I declared that if I had a little son he should go to
Mondragone and receive their crooked teachings for the sake of the other
memories, the avenues of cypress and ilex, the view of the Campagna, the
atmosphere of antiquity. But doubtless when a sense of "mere
character," shameless incomparable character, has brought one to this it
is time one should pause.
One may at the blest end of May say without injustice to
anybody that the state of mind of many a forestiero in Rome is one of intense impatience for the
moment when all other forestieri shall have taken themselves off. One may confess
to this state of mind and be no misanthrope. The place has passed so completely
for the winter months into the hands of the barbarians that that estimable
character the passionate pilgrim finds it constantly harder to keep his passion
clear. He has a rueful sense of impressions perverted and adulterated; the
all-venerable visage disconcerts us by a vain eagerness to see itself mirrored
in English, American, German eyes. It isn't simply that you are never first or
never alone at the classic or historic spots where you have dreamt of
persuading the shy genius loci into confidential utterance; it isn't simply
that St. Peter's, the Vatican, the Palatine, are for ever ringing with the
false note of the languages without style: it is the general oppressive feeling
that the city of the soul has become for the time a monstrous mixture of
watering-place and curiosity-shop and that its most ardent life is that of the
tourists who haggle over false intaglios and yawn through palaces and temples.
But you are told of a happy time when these abuses begin to pass away, when Rome becomes Rome
again and you may have her all to yourself. "You may like her more or less
now," I was assured at the height of the season; "but you must wait
till the month of May, when she'll give you all she has, to love her. Then the
foreigners, or the excess of them, are gone; the galleries and ruins are empty,
and the place," said my informant, who was a happy Frenchman of the
Académie de France, "renait a ellememe."
Indeed I was haunted all winter by an irresistible prevision of what Rome must be in declared
spring. Certain charming places seemed to murmur: "Ah, this is nothing!
Come back at the right weeks and see the sky above us almost black with its
excess of blue, and the new grass already deep, but still vivid, and the white
roses tumble in odorous spray and the warm radiant air distil gold for the
smelting-pot that the genius loci then dips his brush into before making play
with it, in his inimitable way, for the general effect of complexion."
A month ago I spent a week in the country, and on my return,
the first time I approached the Corso, became conscious of a change. Something
delightful had happened, to which at first I couldn't give a name, but which
presently shone out as the fact that there were but half as many people present
and that these were chiefly the natural or the naturalised. We had been docked
of half our irrelevance, our motley excess, and now physically, morally,
æesthetically there was elbow-room. In the afternoon I went to the Pincio, and
the Pincio was almost dull. The band was playing to a dozen ladies who lay in
landaus poising their lace-fringed parasols; but they had scarce more than a
light-gloved dandy apiece hanging over their carriage doors. By the parapet to
the great terrace that sweeps the city stood but three or four interlopers
looking at the sunset and with their Baedekers only just showing in their
pockets--the sunsets not being down among the tariffed articles in these
precious volumes. I went so far as to hope for them that, like myself, they were, under every precaution, taking some
amorous intellectual liberty with the scene.
Practically I violate thus the instinct of monopoly, since
it's a shame not to publish that Rome
in May is indeed exquisitely worth your patience. I have just been so gratified
at finding myself in undisturbed possession for a couple of hours of the Museum
of the Lateran that I can afford to be magnanimous. It's almost as if the old
all-papal paradise had come back. The weather for a month has been perfect, the
sky an extravagance of blue, the air lively enough,
the nights cool, nippingly cool. and the whole ancient
greyness lighted with an irresistible smile. Rome, which in some moods,
especially to new-comers, seems a place of almost sinister gloom, has an
occasional art, as one knows her better, of brushing away care by the grand
gesture with which some splendid impatient mourning matron--just the Niobe of
Nations, surviving, emerging and looking about her again--might pull off and
cast aside an oppression of muffling crape. This admirable power still
temperamentally to react and take notice lurks in all her darkness and dirt and
decay--a something more careless and hopeless than our thrifty northern cheer,
and yet more genial and urbane than the Parisian spirit of blague. The
collective Roman nature is a healthy and hearty one, and you feel it abroad in
the streets even when the sirocco blows and the medium of life seems to proceed
more or less from the mouth of a furnace. But who shall analyse even the
simplest Roman impression? It is compounded of so many things, it says so much,
it involves so much, it so quickens the intelligence and so flatters the heart,
that before we fairly grasp the case the imagination has marked it for her own and exposed us to a perilous likelihood of
talking nonsense about it.
The smile of Rome, as I have called it, and its insidious
message to those who incline to ramble irresponsibly and take things as they
come, is ushered in with the first breath of spring, and then grows and grows
with the advancing season till it wraps the whole place in its tenfold charm.
As the process develops you can do few better things than go often to Villa
Borghese and sit on the grass--on a stout bit of drapery--and watch its
exquisite stages. It has a frankness and a sweetness
beyond any relenting of our clumsy climates even when ours leave off their
damnable faces and begin. Nature departs from every reserve with a confidence
that leaves one at a loss where, as it were, to look--leaves one, as I say,
nothing to do but to lay one's head among the anemones at the base of a
high-stemmed pine and gaze up crestward and sky-ward along its slanting silvery
column. You may watch the whole business from a dozen of these choice standpoints
and have a different villa for it every day in the week. The Doria, the
Ludovisi, the Medici, the Albani, the Wolkonski, the Chigi, the Mellini, the
Massimo--there are more of them, with all their sights and sounds and odours
and memories, than you have senses for. But I prefer none of them to the
Borghese, which is free to all the world at all times and yet never crowded;
for when the whirl of carriages is great in the middle regions you may find a
hundred untrodden spots and silent corners, tenanted at the worst by a group of
those long-skirted young Propagandists who stalk about with solemn angularity,
each with a book under his arm, like silhouettes from a medieval missal, and
"compose" so extremely well with the still more processional cypresses
and with stretches of golden-russet wall overtopped by ultramarine. And yet if
the Borghese is good the Medici is strangely charming, and you may stand in the
little belvedere which rises with such surpassing oddity out of the dusky heart
of the Boschetto at the latter establishment--a miniature presentation of the
wood of the Sleeping Beauty--and look across at the Ludovisi pines lifting
their crooked parasols into a sky of what a painter would call the most morbid
blue, and declare that the place where they grow is the most delightful in the
world. Villa Ludovisi has been all winter the residence of the lady familiarly
known in Roman society as "Rosina," Victor Emmanuel's morganatic
wife, the only familiarity it would seem, that she allows, for the grounds were
rigidly closed, to the inconsolable regret of old Roman sojourners. Just as the
nightingales began to sing, however, the quasi-august padrona departed, and the
public, with certain restrictions, have been admitted to hear them. The place
takes, where it lies, a princely ease, and there could be no better example of
the expansive tendencies of ancient privilege than the fact that its whole vast
extent is contained by the city walls. It has in this respect very much the
same enviable air of having got up early that marks the great intramural
demesne of Magdalen College at Oxford.
The stern old ramparts of Rome
form the outer enclosure of the villa, and hence a series of "striking
scenic effects" which it would be unscrupulous flattery to say you can
imagine. The grounds are laid out in the formal last-century manner; but
nowhere do the straight black cypresses lead off the gaze into vistas of a
melancholy more charged with associations--poetic, romantic, historic; nowhere
are there grander, smoother walls of laurel and myrtle.
I recently spent an afternoon hour at the little Protestant
cemetery close to St. Paul's
Gate, where the ancient and the modern world are insidiously contrasted. They
make between them one of the solemn places of Rome--although indeed when funereal things
are so interfused it seems ungrateful to call them sad. Here is a mixture of
tears and smiles, of stones and flowers, of mourning cypresses and radiant sky,
which gives us the impression of our looking back at death from the brighter
side of the grave. The cemetery nestles in an angle of the city wall, and the
older graves are sheltered by a mass of ancient brickwork, through whose narrow
loopholes you peep at the wide purple of the Campagna. Shelley's grave is here,
buried in roses--a happy grave every way for the very type and figure of the
Poet. Nothing could be more impenetrably tranquil than this little corner in
the bend of the protecting rampart, where a cluster of modern ashes is held
tenderly in the rugged hand of the Past. The past is tremendously embodied in
the hoary pyramid of Caius Cestius, which rises hard by, half within the wall
and half without, cutting solidly into the solid blue of the sky and casting
its pagan shadow upon the grass of English graves--that of Keats, among
them--with an effect of poetic justice. It is a wonderful confusion of
mortality and a grim enough admonition of our helpless promiscuity in the
crucible of time. But the most touching element of all is the appeal of the
pious English inscriptions among all these Roman memories; touching because of
their universal expression of that trouble within trouble, misfortune in a
foreign land. Something special stirs the heart through the fine Scriptural
language in which everything is recorded. The echoes of massive Latinity with
which the atmosphere is charged suggest nothing more majestic and monumental. I
may seem unduly to refine, but the injunction to the reader in the monument to
Miss Bathurst, drowned in the Tiber in 1824, "If thou art young and lovely,
build not thereon, for she who lies beneath thy feet in death was the loveliest
flower ever cropt in its bloom," affects us irresistibly as a case for
tears on the spot. The whole elaborate inscription indeed says something over
and beyond all it does say. The English have the reputation of being the most
reticent people in the world, and as there is no smoke without fire I suppose
they have done something to deserve it; yet who can say that one doesn't
constantly meet the most startling examples of the insular faculty to
"gush"? In this instance the mother of the deceased takes the public
into her confidence with surprising frankness and omits no detail, seizing the
opportunity to mention by the way that she had already lost her husband by a
most mysterious visitation. The appeal to one's attention and the confidence in
it are withal most moving. The whole record has an old-fashioned gentility that
makes its frankness tragic. You seem to hear the garrulity of passionate grief.
To be choosing these positive commonplaces of the Roman tone
for a theme when there are matters of modern moment going on may seem none the
less to require an apology. But I make no claim to your special correspondent's
faculty for getting an "inside" view of things, and I have hardly
more than a pictorial impression of the Pope's illness and of the discussion of
the Law of the Convents. Indeed I am afraid to speak of the Pope's illness at
all, lest I should say something egregiously heartless about it, recalling too
forcibly that unnatural husband who was heard to wish that his wife would
"either" get well--! He had his reasons, and Roman tourists have
theirs in the shape of a vague longing for something spectacular at St.
Peter's. If it takes the sacrifice of somebody to produce it let somebody then
be sacrificed. Meanwhile we have been having a glimpse of the spectacular side
of the Religious Corporations Bill. Hearing one morning a great hubbub in the
Corso I stepped forth upon my balcony. A couple of hundred men were strolling
slowly down the street with their hands in their pockets, shouting in unison
"Abbasso il ministero!" and huzzaing in chorus. Just beneath my
window they stopped and began to murmur "Al Quirinale, al Quirinale!"
The crowd surged a moment gently and then drifted to the Quirinal,
where it scuffled harmlessly with half-a-dozen of the king's soldiers. It ought
to have been impressive, for what was it, strictly, unless the seeds of
revolution? But its carriage was too gentle and its cries too musical to send
the most timorous tourist to packing his trunk. As I began with saying: in Rome, in May, everything
has an amiable side, even popular uprisings.
December 28, 1872.--In Rome again for the last three
days--that second visit which, when the first isn't followed by a fatal illness
in Florence,
the story goes that one is doomed to pay. I didn't drink of the Fountain of
Trevi on the eve of departure the other time; but I feel as if I had drunk of
the Tiber itself. Nevertheless as I drove from
the station in the evening I wondered what I should think of it at this first
glimpse hadn't I already known it. All manner of evil
perhaps. Paris,
as I passed along the Boulevards three evenings before to take the train, was
swarming and glittering as befits a great capital. Here, in the black, narrow,
crooked, empty streets, I saw nothing I would fain regard as eternal. But there
were new gas-lamps round the spouting Triton in Piazza Barberini and a
newspaper stall on the corner of the Condotti and the Corso--salient signs of
the emancipated state. An hour later I walked up to Via Gregoriana by Piazza di
Spagna. It was all silent and deserted, and the great flight of steps looked
surprisingly small. Everything seemed meagre, dusky, provincial.
Could Rome
after all really be a world-city? That queer old rococo garden gateway at the
top of the Gregoriana stirred a dormant memory; it awoke into a consciousness
of the delicious mildness of the air, and very soon, in a little crimson
drawing-room, I was reconciled and re-initiated.... Everything is dear (in the
way of lodgings), but it hardly matters, as everything is taken and some one
else paying for it. I must make up my mind to a bare perch. But it seems poorly
perverse here to aspire to an "interior" or to be conscious of the
economic side of life. The æesthetic is so intense that you feel you should
live on the taste of it, should extract the nutritive essence of the
atmosphere. For positively it's such an atmosphere! The weather is perfect, the
sky as blue as the most exploded tradition fames it, the whole air glowing and
throbbing with lovely colour.... The glitter of Paris is now all gaslight. And oh the
monotonous miles of rain-washed asphalte!
December 30th.--I have had nothing to do with the
"ceremonies." In fact I believe there have hardly been any--no
midnight mass at the Sistine chapel, no silver trumpets at St. Peter's.
Everything is remorselessly clipped and curtailed--the Vatican in
deepest mourning. But I saw it in its superbest scarlet in '69.... I went
yesterday with L. to the Colonna gardens--an adventure that would have
reconverted me to Rome
if the thing weren't already done. It's a rare old place--rising in mouldy
bosky terraces and mossy stairways and winding walks from the back of the palace
to the top of the Quirinal. It's the grand
style of gardening, and resembles the present natural manner as a chapter of
Johnsonian rhetoric resembles a piece of clever contemporary journalism. But
it's a better style in horticulture than in literature; I prefer one of the
long-drawn blue-green Colonna vistas, with a maimed and mossy-coated garden
goddess at the end, to the finest possible quotation from a last-century
classic. Perhaps the best thing there is the old orangery with its trees in
fantastic terra-cotta tubs. The late afternoon light was gilding the monstrous
jars and suspending golden chequers among the golden-fruited leaves. Or perhaps
the best thing is the broad terrace with its mossy balustrade and its benches;
also its view of the great naked Torre di Nerone (I think), which might look
stupid if the rosy brickwork didn't take such a colour in the blue air. Delightful, at any rate, to stroll and talk there in the afternoon
sunshine.
January 2nd, 1873. --Two or three drives with A.--one to St. Paul's without the Walls and back by a couple of old
churches on the Aventine. I was freshly struck
with the rare distinction of the little Protestant cemetery at the Gate, lying
in the shadow of the black sepulchral Pyramid and the thick-growing black
cypresses. Bathed in the clear Roman light the place is heartbreaking for what
it asks you--in such a world as this--to renounce. If it should "make one
in love with death to lie there," that's only if death should be
conscious. As the case stands, the weight of a tremendous past presses upon the
flowery sod, and the sleeper's mortality feels the contact of all the mortality
with which the brilliant air is tainted.... The restored Basilica is incredibly
splendid. It seems a last pompous effort of formal Catholicism, and there are
few more striking emblems of later Rome--the Rome foredoomed to see Victor Emmanuel in the Quirinal,
the Rome of
abortive councils and unheeded anathemas. It rises there, gorgeous and useless,
on its miasmatic site, with an air of conscious bravado--a florid advertisement
of the superabundance of faith. Within it's magnificent, and its magnificence
has no shabby spots--a rare thing in Rome.
Marble and mosaic, alabaster and malachite, lapis and porphyry, incrust it from
pavement to cornice and flash back their polished lights at each other with
such a splendour of effect that you seem to stand at
the heart of some immense prismatic crystal. One has to come to Italy to know
marbles and love them. I remember the fascination of the first great show of
them I met in Venice--at
the Scalzi and Gesuiti. Colour has in no other form so cool and unfading a
purity and lustre. Softness of tone and hardness of substance--isn't that the
sum of the artist's desire? G., with his beautiful caressing, open-lipped Roman
utterance, so easy to understand and, to my ear, so finely suggestive of
genuine Latin, not our horrible Anglo-Saxon and Protestant kind, urged upon us
the charms of a return by the Aventine and the sight of a couple of old
churches. The best is Santa Sabina, a very fine old structure of the fifth
century, mouldering in its dusky solitude and consuming its own antiquity. What
a massive heritage Christianity and Catholicism are leaving here! What a
substantial fact, in all its decay, this memorial Christian temple outliving
its uses among the sunny gardens and vineyards! It has a noble nave, filled
with a stale smell which (like that of the onion) brought tears to my eyes, and
bordered with twenty-four fluted marble columns of Pagan origin. The crudely
primitive little mosaics along the entablature are extremely curious. A
Dominican monk, still young, who showed us the church, seemed a creature
generated from its musty shadows I odours. His physiognomy was wonderfully de
l'emploi, and his voice, most agreeable, had the strangest jaded humility. His
lugubrious salute and sanctimonious impersonal appropriation of my departing
franc would have been a master-touch on the stage. While we were still in the
church a bell rang that he had to go and answer, and as he came back and
approached us along the nave he made with his white gown and hood and his
cadaverous face, against the dark church background, one of those pictures
which, thank the Muses, have not yet been reformed out of Italy. It was the
exact illustration, for insertion in a text, of heaven knows how many old romantic and conventional literary Italianisms--plays,
poems, mysteries of Udolpho. We got back into the carriage and talked of
profane things and went home to dinner--drifting recklessly, it seemed to me,
from aesthetic luxury to social.
On the 31st we went to the musical vesper-service at the
Gesu--hitherto done so splendidly before the Pope and the cardinals. The manner
of it was eloquent of change--no Pope, no cardinals, and indifferent music; but
a great mise-en-scène nevertheless. The church is gorgeous; late Renaissance,
of great proportions, and full, like so many others, but in a pre-eminent
degree, of seventeenth and eighteenth century Romanism. It doesn't impress the
imagination, but richly feeds the curiosity, by which I mean one's sense of the
curious; suggests no legends, but innumerable anecdotes à la Stendhal. There is
a vast dome, filled with a florid concave fresco of tumbling foreshortened
angels, and all over the ceilings and cornices a wonderful outlay of dusky
gildings and mouldings. There are various Bernini saints and seraphs in
stucco-sculpture, astride of the tablets and door-tops, backing against their
rusty machinery of coppery nimbi and egg-shaped cloudlets. Marble, damask and
tapers in gorgeous profusion. The high altar a great screen
of twinkling chandeliers. The choir perched in a little loft high up in
the right transept, like a balcony in a side-scene at the opera, and indulging
in surprising roulades and flourishes.... Near me sat a handsome,
opulent-looking nun--possibly an abbess or prioress of noble lineage. Can a
holy woman of such a complexion listen to a fine operatic barytone in a
sumptuous temple and receive none but ascetic impressions? What a cross-fire of
influences does Catholicism provide!
January 4th.--A drive with A. out of Porta
San Giovanni and along Via Appia Nuova. More and more beautiful as you
get well away from the walls and the great view opens out before you--the
rolling green-brown dells and flats of the Campagna, the long, disjointed
arcade of the aqueducts, the deep-shadowed blue of the Alban Hills, touched
into pale lights by their scattered towns. We stopped at the ruined basilica of
San Stefano, an affair of the fifth century, rather meaningless without a
learned companion. But the perfect little sepulchral chambers of the Pancratii,
disinterred beneath the church, tell their own tale--in their hardly dimmed
frescoes, their beautiful sculptured coffin and great sepulchral slab. Better
still the tomb of the Valerii adjoining it--a single chamber with an arched
roof, covered with stucco mouldings perfectly intact, exquisite figures and
arabesques as sharp and delicate as if the plasterer's scaffold had just been
taken from under them. Strange enough to think of these things--so many of them
as there are--surviving their immemorial eclipse in this perfect shape and
coming up like long-lost divers on the sea of time.
January 16th.--A delightful walk last
Sunday with F. to Monte Mario. We drove to Porta Angelica, the little
gate hidden behind the right wing of Bernini's colonnade, and strolled thence
up the winding road to the Villa Mellini, where one of the greasy peasants
huddled under the wall in the sun admits you for half franc into the finest old
ilex-walk in Italy.
It is all vaulted grey-green shade with blue Campagna stretches in the
interstices. The day was perfect; the still sunshine, as we sat at the twisted
base of the old trees, seemed to have the drowsy hum of mid-summer --with that
charm of Italian vegetation that comes to us as its confession of having
scenically served, to weariness at last, for some pastoral these many centuries
a classic. In a certain cheapness and thinness of substance--as compared with
the English stoutness, never left athirst--it reminds me of our own, and it is
relatively dry enough and pale enough to explain the contempt of many
unimaginative Britons. But it has an idle abundance and wantonness, a romantic
shabbiness and dishevelment. At the Villa Mellini is the famous lonely pine
which "tells" so in the landscape from other points, bought off from
the axe by (I believe) Sir George Beaumont, commemorated in a like connection
in Wordsworth's great sonnet. He at least was not an unimaginative Briton. As
you stand under it, its far-away shallow dome, supported on a single column
almost white enough to be marble, seems to dwell in the dizziest depths of the
blue. Its pale grey-blue boughs and its silvery stem make a wonderful harmony
with the ambient air. The Villa Mellini is full of the elder Italy of one's
imagination--the Italy of Boccaccio and Ariosto. There are twenty places where
the Florentine story-tellers might have sat round on the grass. Outside the
villa walls, beneath the over-crowding orange-boughs, straggled old Italy as
well--but not in Boccaccio's velvet: a row of ragged and livid contadini, some
simply stupid in their squalor, but some downright brigands of romance, or of
reality, with matted locks and terribly sullen eyes.
A couple of days later I walked for old acquaintance' sake
over to San Onofrio on the Janiculan. The approach is one of the dirtiest
adventures in Rome,
and though the view is fine from the little terrace, the church and convent are
of a meagre and musty pattern. Yet here--almost like pearls in a dunghill--are
hidden mementos of two of the most exquisite of Italian minds. Torquato Tasso
spent the last months of his life here, and you may visit his room and various
warped and faded relics. The most interesting is a cast of his face taken after
death--looking, like all such casts, almost more than mortally gallant and
distinguished. But who should look all ideally so if not he? In a little
shabby, chilly corridor adjoining is a fresco of Leonardo, a Virgin and Child with
the donatorio. It is very small, simple and faded, but it has all the artist's
magic, that mocking, illusive refinement and hint of a vague arriere-pensee
which mark every stroke of Leonardo's brush. Is it the perfection of irony or
the perfection of tenderness? What does he mean, what does he affirm, what does he deny? Magic wouldn't be magic, nor the author of such things stand so absolutely alone, if
we were ready with an explanation. As I glanced from the picture to the poor
stupid little red-faced brother at my side I wondered if the thing mightn't
pass for an elegant epigram on monasticism. Certainly, at any rate, there is
more intellect in it than under all the monkish tonsures it has seen coming and
going these three hundred years.
January 21st.--The last three or four days I have regularly
spent a couple of hours from noon baking myself in the sun of the Pincio to get
rid of a cold. The weather perfect and the crowd (especially
to-day) amazing. Such a staring, lounging, dandified, amiable crowd! Who
does the vulgar stay-at-home work of Rome?
All the grandees and half the foreigners are there in their carriages, the
bourgeoisie on foot staring at them and the beggars lining all the approaches.
The great difference between public places in America
and Europe is in the number of unoccupied
people of every age and condition sitting about early and late on benches and
gazing at you, from your hat to your boots, as you pass. Europe
is certainly the continent of the practised stare. The ladies on the Pincio
have to run the gauntlet; but they seem to do so complacently enough. The
European woman is brought up to the sense of having a definite part in the way
of manners or manner to play in public. To lie back in a barouche alone,
balancing a parasol and seeming to ignore the extremely immediate gaze of two
serried ranks of male creatures on each side of her path, save here and there
to recognise one of them with an imperceptible nod, is one of her daily duties.
The number of young men here who, like the coenobites of old, lead the purely
contemplative life is enormous. They muster in especial force on the Pincio,
but the Corso all day is thronged with them. They are well-dressed,
good-humoured, good-looking, polite; but they seem
never to do a harder stroke of work than to stroll from the Piazza Colonna to
the Hotel de Rome or vice versa. Some of them don't even stroll, but stand
leaning by the hour against the doorways, sucking the knobs of their canes,
feeling their back hair and settling their shirt-cuffs. At my cafe in the
morning several stroll in already (at nine o'clock) in light, in
"evening" gloves. But they order nothing, turn on their heels, glance
at the mirrors and stroll out again. When it rains they herd under the
portes-cochères and in the smaller cafes.... Yesterday Prince Humbert's little
primogenito was on the Pincio in an open landau with his governess. He's a
sturdy blond little man and the image of the King. They had stopped to listen
to the music, and the crowd was planted about the carriage-wheels, staring and
criticising under the child's snub little nose. It appeared bold cynical
curiosity, without the slightest manifestation of "loyalty," and it
gave me a singular sense of the vulgarisation of Rome under the new regime. When the Pope drove
abroad it was a solemn spectacle; even if you neither kneeled nor uncovered you
were irresistibly impressed. But the Pope never stopped to listen to opera
tunes, and he had no little popelings, under the charge of superior
nurse-maids, whom you might take liberties with. The family
at the Quirinal make something of a
merit, I believe, of their modest and inexpensive way of life. The merit is
great; yet, representationally, what a change for the worse from an order which
proclaimed stateliness a part of its essence! The divinity that doth hedge a
king must be pretty well on the wane. But how many more fine old traditions
will the extremely sentimental traveller miss in the Italians over whom that
little jostled prince in the landau will have come into his kinghood? ... The
Pincio continues to beguile; it's a great resource. I am for ever being
reminded of the "aesthetic luxury," as I called it above, of living
in Rome. To be
able to choose of an afternoon for a lounge (respectfully speaking) between St.
Peter's and the high precinct you approach by the gate just beyond Villa
Medici--counting nothing else--is a proof that if in Rome you may suffer from ennui, at least your
ennui has a throbbing soul in it. It is something to say for the Pincio that
you don't always choose St. Peter's. Sometimes I lose patience with its parade
of eternal idleness, but at others this very idleness is balm to one's
conscience. Life on just these terms seems so easy, so monotonously sweet, that
you feel it would be unwise, would be really unsafe, to change. The Roman air
is charged with an elixir, the Roman cup seasoned with some insidious drop, of
which the action is fatally, yet none the less agreeably, "lowering."
January 26th.--With S. to the Villa
Medici--perhaps on the whole the most enchanting place in Rome. The part of the garden called
the Boschetto has an incredible, impossible charm; an upper terrace, behind
locked gates, covered with a little dusky forest of evergreen oaks. Such a dim
light as of a fabled, haunted place, such a soft suffusion of tender grey-green
tones, such a company of gnarled and twisted little miniature trunks--dwarfs
playing with each other at being giants--and such a shower of golden sparkles
drifting in from the vivid west! At the end of the wood is a steep, circular
mound, up which the short trees scramble amain, with a long mossy staircase
climbing up to a belvedere. This staircase, rising suddenly out of the leafy
dusk to you don't see where, is delightfully fantastic. You expect to see an
old woman in a crimson petticoat and with a distaff come hobbling down and turn
into a fairy and offer you three wishes. I should name for my own first wish
that one didn't have to be a Frenchman to come and live and dream and work at
the Académie de France. Can there be for a while a happier destiny than that of
a young artist conscious of talent and of no errand but to educate, polish and
perfect it, transplanted to these sacred shades? One has fancied Plato's
Academy--his gleaming colonnades, his blooming gardens and Athenian sky; but
was it as good as this one, where Monsieur Hebert does the Platonic? The
blessing in Rome is not that this or that or the other isolated object is so
very unsurpassable; but that the general air so contributes to interest, to impressions
that are not as any other impressions anywhere in the world. And from this
general air the Villa Medici has distilled an essence of its own--walled it in
and made it delightfully private. The great façade on the gardens is like an
enormous rococo clock-face all incrusted with images and arabesques and
tablets. What mornings and afternoons one might spend there, brush in hand,
unpreoccupied, untormented, pensioned, satisfied--either persuading one's self
that one would be "doing something" in consequence or not caring if
one shouldn't be.
At a later date--middle of March.--A ride with S. W. out of
the Porta Pia to the meadows beyond the Ponte Nomentana--close to the site of
Phaon's villa where Nero in hiding had himself stabbed. It all spoke as things
here only speak, touching more chords than one can now really know or say. For
these are predestined memories and the stuff that regrets are made of; the mild
divine efflorescence of spring, the wonderful landscape, the talk suspended for
another gallop.... Returning, we dismounted at the gate of the Villa Medici and
walked through the twilight of the vaguely perfumed, bird-haunted alleys to
H.'s studio, hidden in the wood like a cottage in a fairy tale. I spent there a
charming half-hour in the fading light, looking at the pictures while my
companion discoursed of her errand. The studio is small and more like a little
salon; the painting refined, imaginative, somewhat morbid, full
of consummate French ability. A portrait, idealised and etherealised, but a
likeness of Mme. de---(from last year's Salon) in white satin, quantities of
lace, a coronet, diamonds and pearls; a striking combination of brilliant
silvery tones. A "Femme Sauvage," a naked dusky girl in a wood, with
a wonderfully clever pair of shy, passionate eyes. The author is different
enough from any of the numerous American artists. They may be producers, but
he's a product as well--a product of influences of a sort of which we have as
yet no general command. One of them is his charmed lapse of life in that
unprofessional-looking little studio, with his enchanted wood on one side and
the plunging wall of Rome
on the other.
January 30th.--A drive the other day with a friend to Villa
Madama, on the side of Monte Mario; a place like a page out of one of
Browning's richest evocations of this clime and civilisation. Wondrous in its
haunting melancholy, it might have inspired half "The Ring and the
Book" at a stroke. What a grim commentary on history such a scene--what an
irony of the past! The road up to it through the outer enclosure is almost
impassable with mud and stones. At the end, on a terrace, rises the once
elegant Casino, with hardly a whole pane of glass in its façade, reduced to its
sallow stucco and degraded ornaments. The front away from Rome has in the
basement a great loggia, now walled in from the weather, preceded by a grassy
be littered platform with an immense sweeping view of the Campagna; the
sad-looking, more than sad-looking, evil-looking, Tiber beneath (the colour of
gold, the sentimentalists say, the colour of mustard, the realists); a great
vague stretch beyond, of various complexions and uses; and on the horizon the
ever-iridescent mountains. The place has become the shabbiest farm-house, with
muddy water in the old pièces d'eau and dunghills on the old parterres. The
"feature" is the contents of the loggia: a vaulted roof and walls
decorated by Giulio Romano; exquisite stucco-work and still brilliant frescoes;
arabesques and figurini, nymphs and fauns, animals and flowers--gracefully
lavish designs of every sort. Much of the colour--especially
the blues--still almost vivid, and all the work wonderfully ingenious, elegant
and charming. Apartments so decorated can have been meant only for the
recreation of people greater than any we know, people for whom life was
impudent ease and success. Margaret Farnese was the lady of the house, but
where she trailed her cloth of gold the chickens now scamper between your legs
over rotten straw. It is all inexpressibly dreary. A stupid peasant scratching
his head, a couple of critical Americans picking their steps, the walls
tattered and befouled breast-high, dampness and decay striking in on your
heart, and the scene overbowed by these heavenly frescoes, moulering there in
their airy artistry! It's poignant; it provokes tears; it tells so of the waste
of effort. Something human seems to pant beneath the grey pall of time and to
implore you to rescue it, to pity it, to stand by it somehow. But you leave it
to its lingering death without compunction, almost with pleasure; for the place
seems vaguely crime-haunted--paying at least the penalty of some hard
immorality. The end of a Renaissance pleasure-house. Endless for the didactic observer the moral, abysmal for the
storyseeker the tale.
February 12th.--Yesterday to the Villa
Albani. Over-formal and (as my companion says) too much like a
tea-garden; but with beautiful stairs and splendid geometrical lines of immense
box-hedge, intersected with high pedestals supporting little antique busts. The
light to-day magnificent; the Alban Hills of an intenser broken purple than I
had yet seen them--their white towns blooming upon it like vague projected
lights. It was like a piece of very modern painting, and a good example of how
Nature has at times a sort of mannerism which ought to make us careful how we
condemn out of hand the more refined and affected artists. The
collection of marbles in the Casino (Winckelmann's) admirable and to be seen
again. The famous Antinous crowned with lotus a strangely beautiful and
impressive thing. The "Greek manner," on the showing of something now
and again encountered here, moves one to feel that even for purely romantic and
imaginative effects it surpasses any since invented. If there be not
imagination, even in our comparatively modern sense of the word, in the baleful
beauty of that perfect young profile there is none in "Hamlet" or in
"Lycidas." There is five hundred times as much as in "The
Transfiguration." With this at any rate to point to it's not for sculpture
not professedly to produce any emotion producible by painting. There are
numbers of small and delicate fragments of bas-reliefs of exquisite grace, and
a huge piece (two combatants--one, on horseback, beating down another--murder
made eternal and beautiful) attributed to the Parthenon and certainly as
grandly impressive as anything in the Elgin marbles. S. W. suggested again the
Roman villas as a "subject." Excellent if one could find a feast of
facts à la Stendhal. A lot of vague ecstatic descriptions and anecdotes
wouldn't at all pay. There have been too many already. Enough facts are
recorded, I suppose; one should discover them and soak in them for a
twelvemonth. And yet a Roman villa, in spite of statues, ideas and atmosphere,
affects me as of a scanter human and social portee, a shorter, thinner
reverberation, than an old English country-house, round which experience seems
piled so thick. But this perhaps is either hair-splitting or "racial"
prejudice.
[Illustration: ENTRANCE TO THE VATICAN,
ROME]
March 9th. --The Vatican is still deadly cold; a
couple of hours there yesterday with R. W. E. Yet he, illustrious and enviable
man, fresh from the East, had no overcoat and wanted none. Perfect bliss, I
think, would be to live in Rome
without thinking of overcoats. The Vatican seems very familiar, but
strangely smaller than of old. I never lost the sense before of confusing
vastness. Sancta simplicitas! All my old friends however stand there in
undimmed radiance, keeping most of them their old pledges. I am perhaps more
struck now with the enormous amount of padding--the number of third-rate,
fourth-rate things that weary the eye desirous to approach freshly the twenty
and thirty best. In spite of the padding there are dozens of treasures that one
passes regretfully; but the impression of the whole place is the great
thing--the feeling that through these solemn vistas flows
the source of an incalculable part of our present conception of Beauty.
April 10th. --Last night, in the rain, to the Teatro Valle
to see a comedy of Goldoni in Venetian dialect--"I Quattro Rustighi."
I could but half follow it; enough, however, to be sure that, for all its
humanity of irony, it wasn't so good as Molière. The
acting was capital--broad, free and natural; the play of talk easier even than
life itself; but, like all the Italian acting I have seen, it was wanting in finesse, that shade of the shade by which,
and by which alone, one really knows art. I contrasted the affair with the
evening in December last that I walked over (also in the rain) to the Odeon and
saw the "Plaideurs" and the "Malade lmaginaire." There,
too, was hardly more than a handful of spectators; but what rich, ripe, fully
representational and above all intellectual comedy, and what polished, educated
playing! These Venetians in particular, however, have a marvellous entrain of
their own; they seem even less than the French to recite. In
some of the women--ugly, with red hands and shabby dresses--an extraordinary
gift of natural utterance, of seeming to invent joyously as they go.
Later.--Last evening in H.'s box at the Apollo to hear
Ernesto Rossi in "Othello." He shares supremacy with Salvini in
Italian tragedy. Beautiful great theatre with boxes you can walk about in;
brilliant audience. The Princess Margaret was there--I have never been to the
theatre that she was not--and a number of other princesses in neighbouring
boxes. G. G. came in and instructed us that they were the M., the L., the P.,
&c. Rossi is both very bad and very fine; bad where anything like taste and
discretion is required, but "all there," and more than there, in
violent passion. The last act reduced too much, however, to mere exhibitional
sensibility. The interesting thing to me was to observe the Italian conception
of the part--to see how crude it was, how little it expressed the hero's moral
side, his depth, his dignity--anything more than his being a creature terrible
in mere tantrums. The great point was his seizing Iago's head and whacking it
half-a-dozen times on the floor, and then flinging him twenty yards away. It
was wonderfully done, but in the doing of it and in the evident relish for it
in the house there was I scarce knew what force of easy and thereby rather
cheap expression.
April 27th.--A morning with L. B. at Villa
Ludovisi, which we agreed that we shouldn't soon forget. The villa now
belongs to the King, who has lodged his morganatic wife there. There is nothing
so blissfully right in Rome,
nothing more consummately consecrated to style. The grounds and gardens are
immense, and the great rusty-red city wall stretches away behind them and makes
the burden of the seven hills seem vast without making them seem small. There
is everything--dusky avenues trimmed by the clippings of centuries, groves and
dells and glades and glowing pastures and reedy fountains and great flowering
meadows studded with enormous slanting pines. The day was delicious, the trees
all one melody, the whole place a revelation of what Italy and hereditary pomp can do
together. Nothing could be more in the grand manner than this garden view of
the city ramparts, lifting their fantastic battlements above the trees and
flowers. They are all tapestried with vines and made to serve as sunny
fruit-walls--grim old defence as they once were; now giving nothing but a splendid
buttressed privacy. The sculptures in the little Casino are few, but there are
two great ones--the beautiful sitting Mars and the head of the great Juno, the
latter thrust into a corner behind a shutter. These things it's almost
impossible to praise; we can only mark them well and keep them clear, as we
insist on silence to hear great music.... If I don't praise Guercino's Aurora in the greater
Casino, it's for another reason; this is certainly a very muddy masterpiece. It
figures on the ceiling of a small low hall; the painting is coarse and the
ceiling too near. Besides, it's unfair to pass straight from the Greek
mythology to the Bolognese. We were left to roam at will through the house; the
custode shut us in and went to walk in the park. The apartments were all open,
and I had an opportunity to reconstruct, from its milieu at least, the
character of a morganatic queen. I saw nothing to indicate that it was not
amiable; but I should have thought more highly of the lady's discrimination if
she had had the Juno removed from behind her shutter. In such a house, girdled
about with such a park, me thinks I could be
amiable--and perhaps discriminating too. The Ludovisi Casino is small, but the
perfection of the life of ease might surely be led there. There are English
houses enough in wondrous parks, but they expose you to too many small needs
and observances--to say nothing of a red-faced butler dropping his h's. You are
oppressed with the detail of accommodation. Here the billiard-table is
old-fashioned, perhaps a trifle crooked; but you have Guercino above your head,
and Guercino, after all, is almost as good as Guido. The rooms, I noticed, all
pleased by their shape, by a lovely proportion, by a mass of delicate
ornamentation on the high concave ceilings. One might live over again in them
some deliciously benighted life of a forgotten type--with graceful old sale,
and immensely thick walls, and a winding stone staircase, and a view from the
loggia at the top; a view of twisted parasol-pines balanced, high above a
wooden horizon, against a sky of faded sapphire.
May 17th.--It was wonderful yesterday at St. John Lateran.
The spring now has turned to perfect summer; there are cascades of verdure over
all the walls; the early flowers are a fading memory, and the new grass
knee-deep in the Villa Borghese. The winter aspect of the region about the
Lateran is one of the best things in Rome;
the sunshine is nowhere so golden and the lean shadows nowhere so purple as on the long grassy walk to Santa Croce. But
yesterday I seemed to see nothing but green and blue. The expanse before Santa
Croce was vivid green; the Campagna rolled away in great green billows, which
seemed to break high about the gaunt aqueducts; and the Alban Hills, which in
January and February keep shifting and melting along the whole scale of azure,
were almost monotonously fresh, and had lost some of their finer modelling. But
the sky was ultramarine and everything radiant with light and warmth--warmth
which a soft steady breeze kept from excess. I strolled some time about the
church, which has a grand air enough, though I don't seize the point of view of
Miss----, who told me the other day how vastly finer she thought it than St.
Peter's. But on Miss----'s lips this seemed a very pretty paradox. The choir
and transepts have a sombre splendour, and I like the old vaulted passage with
its slabs and monuments behind the choir. The charm of charms at St. John
Lateran is the admirable twelfth-century cloister, which was never more
charming than yesterday. The shrubs and flowers about the ancient well were
blooming away in the intense light, and the twisted pillars and chiselled
capitals of the perfect little colonnade seemed to enclose them like the
sculptured rim of a precious vase. Standing out among the flowers you may look
up and see a section of the summit of the great façade of the church. The robed
and mitred apostles, bleached and rain-washed by the ages, rose into the blue
air like huge snow figures. I spent at the incorporated museum a subsequent
hour of fond vague attention, having it quite to myself. It is rather scantily
stocked, but the great cool halls open out impressively one after the other,
and the wide spaces between the statues seem to suggest at first that each is a
masterpiece. I was in the loving mood of one's last days in Rome, and when I had nothing else to admire I
admired the magnificent thickness of the embrasures of the doors and windows.
If there were no objects of interest at all in the Lateran the palace would be
worth walking through every now and then, to keep up one's idea of solid
architecture. I went over to the Scala Santa, where was no one but a very
shabby priest sitting like a ticket-taker at the door. But he let me pass, and
I ascended one of the profane lateral stairways and treated myself to a glimpse
of the Sanctum Sanctorum. Its threshold is crossed but once or twice a year, I
believe, by three or four of the most exalted divines, but you may look into it
freely enough through a couple of gilded lattices. It is very sombre and
splendid, and conveys the impression of a very holy place. And yet somehow it
suggested irreverent thoughts; it had to my fancy--perhaps on account of the
lattice--an Oriental, a Mahometan note. I expected every moment to see a
sultana appear in a silver veil and silken trousers and sit down on the crimson
carpet.
Farewell, packing, the sharp pang of going. One would like
to be able after five months in Rome
to sum up for tribute and homage, one's experience, one's gains, the whole
adventure of one's sensibility. But one has really vibrated too much--the
addition of so many items isn't easy. What is simply clear is the sense of an
acquired passion for the place and of an incalculable number of gathered
impressions. Many of these have been intense and momentous, but one has trodden
on the other--there are always the big fish that swallow up the little--and one
can hardly say what has become of them. They store themselves noiselessly away,
I suppose, in the dim but safe places of memory and "taste," and we
live in a quiet faith that they will emerge into vivid relief if life or art
should demand them. As for the passion we needn't perhaps trouble ourselves
about that. Fifty swallowed palmfuls of the Fountain of Trevi couldn't make us
more ardently sure that we shall at any cost come back.
1873.
If I find my old notes, in all these Roman connections,
inevitably bristle with the spirit of the postscript, so I give way to this
prompting to the extent of my scant space and with the sense of other occasions
awaiting me on which I shall have to do no less. The impression of Rome was
repeatedly to renew itself for the author of these now rather antique and
artless accents; was to overlay itself again and again with almost heavy
thicknesses of experience, the last of which is, as I write, quite fresh to
memory; and he has thus felt almost ashamed to drop his subject (though it be
one that tends so easily to turn to the infinite) as if the law of change had
in all the years had nothing to say to his case. It's of course but of his case
alone that he speaks--wondering little what he may make of it for the profit of
others by an attempt, however brief, to point the moral of the matter, or in
other words compare the musing mature visitor's "feeling about Rome"
with that of the extremely agitated, even if though extremely inexpert,
consciousness reflected in the previous pages. The actual, the current Rome
affects him as a world governed by new conditions altogether and ruefully
pleading that sorry fact in the ear of the antique wanderer wherever he may yet
mournfully turn for some re-capture of what he misses. The city of his first
unpremeditated rapture shines to memory, on the other hand, in the manner of a
lost paradise the rustle of whose gardens is still just audible enough in the
air to make him wonder if some sudden turn, some recovered vista, mayn't lead
him back to the thing itself. My genial, my helpful tag, at this point, would
doubtless properly resolve itself, for the reader, into a clue toward some such
successful ingenuity of quest; a remark I make, I may add, even while
reflecting that the Paradise isn't apparently
at all "lost" to visitors not of my generation. It is the seekers of
that remote and romantic tradition who have seen it, from one period of ten, or
even of five, years to another, systematically and remorselessly built out from
their view. Their helpless plaint, their sense of the generally irrecoverable
and unspeakable, is not, however, what I desire here most to express; I should
like, on the contrary, with ampler opportunity, positively to enumerate the
cases, the cases of contact, impression, experience, in which the cold ashes of
a long-chilled passion may fairly feel themselves made to glow again. No one
who has ever loved Rome as Rome could be loved in youth and before her poised
basketful of the finer appeals to fond fancy was actually upset, wants to stop
loving her; so that our bleeding and wounded, though perhaps not wholly
moribund, loyalty attends us as a hovering admonitory, anticipatory ghost, one
of those magnanimous life-companions who before complete extinction designate
to the other member of the union their approved successor. So it is at any rate
that I conceive the pilgrim old enough to have become aware in all these later
years of what he misses to be counselled and pacified in the interest of
recognitions that shall a little make up for it.
It was this wisdom I was putting into practice, no doubt,
for instance, when I lately resigned myself to motoring of a splendid June day
"out to" Subiaco; as a substitute for a resignation that had
anciently taken, alas, but the form of my never getting there at all.
Everything that day, moreover, seemed right, surely; everything on certain
other days that were like it through their large indebtedness, at this, that
and the other point, to the last new thing, seemed so right that they come back
to me now, after a moderate interval, in the full light of that unchallenged
felicity. I couldn't at all gloriously recall, for instance, as I floated to
Subiaco on vast brave wings, how on the occasion of my first visit to Rome,
thirty-eight years before, I had devoted certain evenings, evenings of artless
"preparation" in my room at the inn, to the perusal of Alphonse
Dantier's admirable Monastères Bénédictins d'ltalie, taking piously for granted
that I should get myself somehow conveyed to Monte Cassino and to Subiaco at
least: such an affront to the passion of curiosity, the generally infatuated
state then kindled, would any suspicion of my foredoomed, my all but
interminable, privation during visits to come have seemed to me. Fortune, in
the event, had never favoured my going, but I was to give myself up at last to
the sense of her quite taking me by the hand, and that is how I now think of
our splendid June day at Subiaco. The note of the wondrous place itself is
conventional "wild" Italy raised to the highest intensity, the
ideally, the sublimely conventional and wild, complete and supreme in itself,
without a disparity or a flaw; which character of perfect picturesque orthodoxy
seemed more particularly to begin for me, I remember, as we passed, on our way,
through that indescribable and indestructible Tivoli, where the jumble of the
elements of the familiarly and exploitedly, the all too notoriously fair and
queer, was more violent and vociferous than ever--so the whole spectacle there
seemed at once to rejoice in cockneyfication and to resist it. There at least I
had old memories to renew--including that in especial, from a few years back,
of one of the longest, hottest, dustiest return-drives to Rome that the Campagna on a sirocco day was
ever to have treated me to.
[Illustration: VILLA D'ESTE, TIVOLI]
That was to be more than made up on this later occasion by
an hour of early evening, snatched on the run back to Rome, that remains with
me as one of those felicities we are wise to leave for ever, just as they are,
just, that is, where they fell, never attempting to renew or improve them. So
happy a chance was it that ensured me at the afternoon's end a solitary stroll
through the Villa d' Este, where the day's invasion, whatever it might have
been, had left no traces and where I met nobody in the great rococo passages
and chambers, and in the prodigious alleys and on the repeated flights of
tortuous steps, but the haunting Genius of Style, into whose noble battered old
face, as if it had come out clearer in the golden twilight and on recognition
of response so deeply moved, I seemed to exhale my sympathy. This was truly,
amid a conception and order of things all mossed over from disuse, but still
without a form abandoned or a principle disowned, one of the hours that one
doesn't forget. The ruined fountains seemed strangely to wait, in the stillness
and under cover of the approaching dusk, not to begin ever again to play, also,
but just only to be tenderly imagined to do so; quite as everything held its
breath, at the mystic moment, for the drop of the cruel and garish exposure,
for the Spirit of the place to steal forth and go his round. The vistas of the
innumerable mighty cypresses ranged themselves, in their files and companies,
like beaten heroes for their captain's, review; the great artificial
"works" of every description, cascades, hemicycles, all graded and
grassed and stone-seated as for floral games, mazes and bowers and alcoves and
grottos, brave indissoluble unions of the planted and the builded symmetry,
with the terraces and staircases that overhang and the arcades and cloisters
that underspread, made common cause together as for one's taking up a little,
in kindly lingering wonder, the "feeling" out of which they have
sprung. One didn't see it, under the actual influence, one wouldn't for the
world have seen it, as that they longed to be justified, during a few minutes
in the twenty-four hours, of their absurdity of pomp and circumstance--but only
that they asked for company, once in a way, as they were so splendidly formed
to give it, and that the best company, in a changed world, at the end of time,
what could they hope it to be but just the lone, the dawdling person of taste,
the visitor with a flicker of fancy, not to speak of a pang of pity, to spare
for them? It was in the flicker of fancy, no doubt, that as I hung about the
great top-most terrace in especial, and then again took my way through the high
gaunt corridors and the square and bare alcoved and recessed saloons, all
overscored with such a dim waste of those painted, those delicate and
capricious decorations which the loggie of the Vatican promptly borrowed from
the ruins of the Palatine, or from whatever other revealed and inspiring
ancientries, and which make ghostly confession here of that descent, I gave the
rein to my sense of the sinister too, of that vague after-taste as of evil
things that lurks so often, for a suspicious sensibility, wherever the terrible
game of the life of the Renaissance was played as the Italians played it;
wherever the huge tessellated chessboard seems to stretch about us; swept bare,
almost always violently swept bare, of its chiselled and shifting figures, of
every value and degree, but with this echoing desolation itself representing
the long gasp, as it were, of overstrained time, the great after-hush that
follows on things too wonderful or dreadful.
I am putting here, however, my cart before my horse, for the
hour just glanced at was but a final tag to a day of much brighter curiosity,
and which seemed to take its baptism, as we passed through prodigious perched
and huddled, adorably scattered and animated and even crowded Tivoli, from the
universal happy spray of the drumming Anio waterfalls, all set in their
permanent rainbows and Sibylline temples and classic allusions and Byronic
quotations; a wondrous romantic jumble of such things and quite others--heterogeneous
inns and clamorous guingettes and factories grabbing at the torrent, to say
nothing of innumerable guides and donkeys and white-tied, swallow-tailed
waiters dashing out of grottos and from under cataracts, and of the air, on the
part of the whole population, of standing about, in the most characteristic
contadino manner, to pounce on you and take you somewhere, snatch you from
somebody else, shout something at you, the aqueous and other uproar permitting,
and then charge you for it, your innocence aiding. I'm afraid our run the rest
of the way to Subiaco remains with me but as an after-sense of that
exhilaration, in spite of our rising admirably higher, all the while, and
plunging constantly deeper into splendid solitary gravities, supreme romantic
solemnities and sublimities, of landscape. The Benedictine convent, which
clings to certain more or less vertiginous ledges and slopes of a vast
precipitous gorge, constitutes, with the whole perfection of its setting, the
very ideal of the tradition of that extraordinary in the romantic handed down
to us, as the most attaching and inviting spell of Italy, by all the old
academic literature of travel and art of the Salvator Rosas and Claudes. This
is the main tribute I may pay in a few words to an impression of which a sort
of divine rightness of oddity, a pictorial felicity that was almost not of this
world, but of a higher degree of distinction altogether, affected me as the
leading note; yet about the whole exquisite complexity of which I can't pretend
to be informing.
All the elements of the scene melted for me together; even
from the pause for luncheon on a grassy wayside knoll, over heaven knows what
admirable preparatory headlong slopes and ravines and iridescent distances,
under spreading chestnuts and in the high air that was cool and sweet, to the
final pedestrian climb of sinuous mountain-paths that the shining limestone and
the strong green of shrub and herbage made as white as silver. There the
miraculous home of St. Benedict awaited us in the form of a builded and
pictured-over maze of chapels and shrines, cells and corridors, stupefying
rock-chambers and caves, places all at an extraordinary variety of different
levels and with labyrinthine intercommunications; there the spirit of the centuries
sat like some invisible icy presence that only permits you to stare and wonder.
I stared, I wondered, I went up and down and in and out and lost myself in the
fantastic fable of the innumerable hard facts themselves; and whenever I could,
above all, I peeped out of small windows and hung over chance terraces for the
love of the general outer picture, the splendid fashion in which the fretted
mountains of marble, as they might have been, round about, seemed to inlay
themselves, for the effect of the "distinction" I speak of, with
vegetations of dark emerald. There above all--or at least in what such aspects
did further for the prodigy of the Convent, whatever that prodigy might for do
them--was, to a life-long victim of Italy, almost verily as never before, the
operation of the old love-philtre; there were the inexhaustible sources of
interest and charm.
[Illustration: SUBIACO]
These mystic fountains broke out for me elsewhere, again and
again, I rejoice to say--and perhaps more particularly, to be frank about it,
where the ground about them was pressed with due emphasis of appeal by the firm
wheels of the great winged car. I motored, under invitation and protection,
repeatedly back into the sense of the other years, that sense of the "old"
and comparatively idle Rome of my particular infatuated prime which I was
living to see superseded, and this even when the fond vista bristled with
innumerable "signs of the times," unmistakable features of the new
era, that, by I scarce know what perverse law, succeeded in ministering to a
happy effect. Some of these false notes proceed simply from the immense growth
of every sort of facilitation--so that people are much more free than of old to
come and go and do, to inquire and explore, to pervade and generally "infest";
with a consequent loss, for the fastidious individual, of his blest earlier
sense, not infrequent, of having the occasion and the impression, as he used
complacently to say, all to himself. We none of us had anything quite all to
ourselves during an afternoon at Ostia, on a beautiful June Sunday; it was a
different affair, rather, from the long, the comparatively slow and quite
unpeopled drive that I was to remember having last taken early in the autumn
thirty years before, and which occupied the day--with the aid of a hamper from
once supreme old Spillman, the provider for picnics to a vanished world (since
I suspect the antique ideal of "a picnic in the Campagna," the
fondest conception of a happy day, has lost generally much of its glamour). Our
idyllic afternoon, at any rate, left no chord of sensibility that could
possibly have been in question untouched--not even that of tea on the shore at
Fiumincino, after we had spent an hour among the ruins of Ostia and seen our
car ferried across the Tiber, almost saffron-coloured here and swirling towards
its mouth, on a boat that was little more than a big rustic raft and that yet
bravely resisted the prodigious weight. What shall I say, in the way of the
particular, of the general felicity before me, for the sweetness of the hour to
which the incident just named, with its strange and amusing juxtapositions of
the patriarchally primitive and the insolently supersubtle, the earliest and
the latest efforts of restless science, were almost immediately to succeed?
We had but skirted the old gold-and-brown walls of Castel
Fusano, where the massive Chigi tower and the immemorial stone-pines and the
afternoon sky and the desolate sweetness and concentrated rarity of the picture
all kept their appointment, to fond memory, with that especial form of Roman
faith, the fine aesthetic conscience in things, that is never, never broken. We
had wound through tangled lanes and met handsome sallow country-folk lounging
at leisure, as became the Sunday, and ever so pleasantly and garishly clothed,
if not quite consistently costumed, as just on purpose to feed our wanton
optimism; and then we had addressed ourselves with a soft superficiality to the
open, the exquisite little Ostian reliquary, an exhibition of stony vaguenesses
half straightened out. The ruins of the ancient port of Rome, the still
recoverable identity of streets and habitations and other forms of civil life,
are a not inconsiderable handful, though making of the place at best a very
small sister to Pompeii; but a soft superficiality is ever the refuge of my shy
sense before any ghost of informed reconstitution, and I plead my surrender to
it with the less shame that I believe I "enjoy" such scenes even on
such futile pretexts as much as it can be appointed them by the invidious
spirit of History to be enjoyed. It may be said, of course, that enjoyment,
question-begging term at best, isn't in these austere connections
designated--but rather some principle of appreciation that can at least give a
coherent account of itself. On that basis then--as I
could, I profess, but revel in the looseness of my apprehension, so wide it
seemed to fling the gates of vision and divination--I won't pretend to dot, as
it were, too many of the i's of my incompetence. I was competent only to have
been abjectly interested. On reflection, moreover, I see that no impression of
over-much company invaded the picture till the point was exactly reached for
its contributing thoroughly to character and amusement; across at Fiumincino,
which the age of the bicycle has made, in a small way, the handy Gravesend or
Coney Island of Rome, the cafés and birrerie were at high pressure, and the
bustle all motley and friendly beside the melancholy river, where the
water-side life itself had twenty quaint and vivid notes and where a few
upstanding objects, ancient or modern, looked eminent and interesting against
the delicate Roman sky that dropped down and down to the far-spreading marshes
of malaria. Besides which "company" is ever intensely gregarious, hanging
heavily together and easily outwitted; so that we had but to proceed a scant
distance further and meet the tideless Mediterranean, where it tumbled in a
trifle breezily on the sands, to be all to ourselves with our tea-basket, quite
as in the good old fashion--only in truth with the advantage that the
contemporary tea-basket is so much improved.
I jumble my memories as a tribute to the whole idyll--I give
the golden light in which they come back to me for what it is worth; worth, I
mean, as allowing that the possibilities of charm of the Witch of the Seven
Hills, as we used to call her in magazines, haven't all been vulgarised away.
It was precisely there, on such an occasion and in such a place, that this
might seem signally to have happened; whereas in fact the mild suburban riot,
in which the so gay but so light potations before the array of little houses of
entertainment were what struck one as really making most for mildness, was
brushed over with a fabled grace, was harmonious, felicitous, distinguished,
quite after the fashion of some thoroughly trained chorus or phalanx of opera
or ballet. Bicycles were stacked up by the hundred; the youth of Rome are
ardent cyclists, with a great taste for flashing about in more or less denuded
or costumed athletic and romantic bands and guilds, and on our return cityward,
toward evening, along the right bank of the river, the road swarmed with the
patient wheels and bent backs of these budding cives Romani quite to the effect
of its finer interest. Such at least, I felt, could only be one's acceptance of
almost any feature of a scene bathed in that extraordinarily august air that
the waning Roman day is so insidiously capable of taking on when any other
element of style happens at all to contribute. Weren't they present, these
other elements, in the great classic lines and folds, the fine academic or
historic attitudes of the darkening land itself as it hung about the old
highway, varying its vague accidents, but achieving always perfect
"composition"? I shamelessly add that cockneyfied impression, at all
events, to what I have called my jumble; Rome, to which we all swept on
together in the wondrous glowing medium, saved everything, spreading afar her
wide wing and applying after all but her supposed grand gift of the secret of
salvation. We kept on and on into the great dim rather sordidly papal streets
that approach the quarter of St. Peter's; to the accompaniment, finally, of
that markedly felt provocation of fond wonder which had never failed to lie in
wait for me under any question of a renewed glimpse of the huge unvisited rear
of the basilica. There was no renewed glimpse just then, in the gloaming; but
the region I speak of had been for me, in fact, during the previous weeks, less
unvisited than ever before, so that I had come to count an occasional walk
round and about it as quite of the essence of the convenient small change with
which the heterogeneous City may still keep paying you. These frequentations in
the company of a sculptor friend had been incidental to our reaching a small
artistic foundry of fine metal, an odd and interesting little establishment
placed, as who should say in the case of such a mere left-over scrap of a large
loose margin, nowhere: it lurked so unsuspectedly, that is, among the various
queer things that Rome comprehensively refers to as "behind St.
Peter's."
We had passed then, on the occasion of our several
pilgrimages, in beneath the great flying, or at least straddling buttresses to
the left of the mighty façade, where you enter that great idle precinct of fine
dense pavement and averted and sacrificed grandeur, the reverse of the
monstrous medal of the front. Here the architectural monster rears its back and
shoulders on an equal scale and this whole unregarded world of colossal
consistent symmetry and hidden high finish gives you the measure of the vast
total treasure of items and features. The outward face of all sorts of inward
majesties of utility and ornament here above all correspondingly reproduces
itself; the expanses of golden travertine--the freshness of tone, the cleanness
of surface, in the sunny air, being extraordinary--climb and soar and spread
under the crushing weight of a scheme carried out in every ponderous
particular. Never was such a show of wasted art, of pomp for pomp's sake, as
where all the chapels bulge and all the windows, each one a separate
constructional masterpiece, tower above almost grassgrown vacancy; with the
full and immediate effect, of course, of reading us a lesson on the value of
lawful pride. The pride is the pride of indifference as to whether a greatness
so founded be gaped at in all its features or not. My friend and I were alone
to gape at them most often while, for the unfailing impression of them, on our
way to watch the casting of our figure, we extended our circuit of the place.
To which I may add, as another example of that tentative, that appealing twitch
of the garment of Roman association of which one kept renewing one's
consciousness, the half-hour at the little foundry itself was all
charming--with its quite shabby and belittered and ramshackle recall of the old
Roman "art-life" of one's early dreams. Everything was somehow in the
picture, the rickety sheds, the loose paraphernalia, the sunny, grassy yard
where a goat was browsing; then the queer interior gloom of the pits, frilled
with little overlooking scaffoldings and bridges, for the sinking fireward of
the image that was to take on hardness; and all the pleasantness and quickness,
the beguiling refinement, of the three or four light fine "hands" of
whom the staff consisted and into whose type and tone one liked to read, with
whatever harmless extravagance, so many signs that a lively sense of stiff
processes, even in humble life, could still leave untouched the traditional rare
feeling for the artistic. How delightful such an occupation in such a general
setting--those of my friend, I at such moments irrepressibly moralised; and how
one might after such a fashion endlessly go and come and ask nothing better; or
if better, only so to the extent of another impression I was to owe to him:
that of an evening meal spread, in the warm still darkness that made no candle
flicker, on the wide high space of an old loggia that overhung, in one quarter,
the great obelisked Square preceding one of the Gates, and in the other the
Tiber and the far Trastevere and more things than I can say--above all, as it
were, the whole backward past, the mild confused romance of the Rome one had
loved and of which one was exactly taking leave under protection of the
friendly lanterned and garlanded feast and the commanding, all-embracing
roof-garden. It was indeed a reconciling, it was an
altogether penetrating, last hour.
1909.
One day in midwinter, some years since, during a journey
from Rome to Florence perforce too rapid to allow much
wayside sacrifice to curiosity, I waited for the train at Narni. There was time
to stroll far enough from the station to have a look at the famous old bridge of Augustus, broken short off in mid-Tiber.
While I stood admiring the measure of impression was made to overflow by the
gratuitous grace of a white-cowled monk who came trudging up the road that
wound to the gate of the town. Narni stood, in its own presented felicity, on a
hill a good space away, boxed in behind its perfect grey wall, and the monk, to
oblige me, crept slowly along and disappeared within the aperture. Everything
was distinct in the clear air, and the view exactly as
like the bit of background by an Umbrian master as it ideally should have been.
The winter is bare and brown enough in southern Italy and the earth reduced to
more of a mere anatomy than among ourselves, for whom the very crânerie of its
exposed state, naked and unashamed, gives it much of the robust serenity, not
of a fleshless skeleton, but of a fine nude statue. In these regions at any
rate, the tone of the air, for the eye, during the brief desolation, has often
an extraordinary charm: nature still smiles as with the deputed and provisional
charity of colour and light, the duty of not ceasing to cheer man's heart. Her
whole behaviour, at the time, cast such a spell on the broken bridge, the
little walled town and the trudging friar, that I turned away with the
impatient vow and the fond vision of how I would take the journey again and
pause to my heart's content at Narni, at Spoleto, at Assisi,
at Perugia, at Cortona, at Arezzo. But we have generally to clip our
vows a little when we come to fulfil them; and so it befell that when my blest
springtime arrived I had to begin as resignedly as possible, yet with
comparative meagreness, at Assisi.
[Illustration: ASSISI.]
I suppose enjoyment would have a simple zest which it often
lacks if we always did things at the moment we want to, for it's mostly when we
can't that we're thoroughly sure we would, and we can answer too little for
moods in the future conditional. Winter at least seemed to me to have put
something into these seats of antiquity that the May sun had more or less
melted away--a desirable strength of tone, a depth upon depth of queerness and
quaintness. Assisi
had been in the January twilight, after my mere snatch at Narni, a vignette out
of some brown old missal. But you'll have to be a fearless explorer now to find
of a fine spring day any such cluster of curious objects as doesn't seem made
to match before anything else Mr. Baedeker's polyglot estimate of its chief
recommendations. This great man was at Assisi in
force, and a brand-new inn for his accommodation has just been opened cheek by
jowl with the church
of St. Francis. I don't
know that even the dire discomfort of this harbourage makes it seem less
impertinent; but I confess I sought its protection, and the great view seemed
hardly less beautiful from my window than from the gallery of the convent. This
view embraces the whole wide reach of Umbria,
which becomes as twilight deepens a purple counterfeit of the misty sea. The
visitor's first errand is with the church; and it's fair furthermore to admit
that when he has crossed that threshold the position and quality of his hotel
cease for the time to be matters of moment. This two-fold temple
of St. Francis is one of the very
sacred places of Italy,
and it would be hard to breathe anywhere an air more heavy with holiness. Such
seems especially the case if you happen thus to have come from Rome, where everything ecclesiastical is, in
aspect, so very much of this world--so florid, so elegant, so full of
accommodations and excrescences. The mere site here makes for authority, and
they were brave builders who laid the foundation-stones. The thing rises
straight from a steep mountain-side and plunges forward on its great
substructure of arches even as a crowned headland may frown over the main.
Before it stretches a long, grassy piazza, at the end of which you look up a
small grey street, to see it first climb a little way the rest of the hill and
then pause and leave a broad green slope, crested, high in the air, with a
ruined castle. When I say before it I mean before the upper church; for by way
of doing something supremely handsome and impressive the sturdy architects of
the thirteenth century piled temple upon temple and bequeathed a double version
of their idea. One may imagine them to have intended perhaps an architectural
image of the relation between heart and head. Entering the lower church at the
bottom of the great flight of steps which leads from the upper door, you seem
to push at least into the very heart of Catholicism.
For the first minutes after leaving the clearer gloom you
catch nothing but a vista of low black columns closed by the great fantastic
cage surrounding the altar, which is thus placed, by your impression, in a sort
of gorgeous cavern. Gradually you distinguish details, become accustomed to the
penetrating chill, and even manage to make out a few frescoes
; but the general effect remains splendidly sombre and subterranean. The
vaulted roof is very low and the pillars dwarfish, though immense in girth, as
befits pillars supporting substantially a cathedral. The tone of the place is a
triumph of mystery, the richest harmony of lurking shadows and dusky corners,
all relieved by scattered images and scintillations. There was little light but
what came through the windows of the choir over which the red curtains had been
dropped and were beginning to glow with the downward sun. The choir was guarded
by a screen behind which a dozen venerable voices droned vespers
; but over the top of the screen came the heavy radiance and played
among the ornaments of the high fence round the shrine, casting the shadow of
the whole elaborate mass forward into the obscured nave. The darkness of vaults
and side-chapels is overwrought with vague frescoes, most of them by Giotto and
his school, out of which confused richness the terribly distinct little faces
characteristic of these artists stare at you with a solemn formalism. Some are
faded and injured, and many so ill-lighted and ill-placed that you can only
glance at them with decent conjecture; the great group, however--four paintings
by Giotto on the ceiling above the altar--may be examined with some success.
Like everything of that grim and beautiful master they deserve examination; but
with the effect ever of carrying one's appreciation in and in, as it were,
rather than of carrying it out and out, off and off, as happens for us with
those artists who have been helped by the process of "evolution" to
grow wings. This one, "going in" for emphasis at any price, stamps
hard, as who should say, on the very spot of his idea--thanks to which fact he
has a concentration that has never been surpassed. He was in other words, in
proportion to his means, a genius supremely expressive; he makes the very shade
of an intended meaning or a represented attitude so unmistakable that his
figures affect us at moments as creatures all too suddenly, too alarmingly, too
menacingly met. Meagre, primitive, undeveloped, he yet is immeasurably strong;
he even suggests that if he had lived the due span of years later Michael
Angelo might have found a rival. Not that he is given, however, to complicated
postures or superhuman flights. The something strange that troubles and haunts
us in his work springs rather from a kind of fierce familiarity.
It is part of the wealth of the lower church that it
contains an admirable primitive fresco by an artist of genius rarely
encountered, Pietro Cavallini, pupil of Giotto. This represents the
Crucifixion; the three crosses rising into a sky spotted with the winged heads
of angels while a dense crowd presses below. You will nowhere see anything more
direfully lugubrious, or more approaching for direct force, though not of
course for amplitude of style, Tintoretto's great renderings of the scene in Venice. The abject
anguish of the crucified and the straddling authority and brutality of the
mounted guards in the foreground are contrasted in a fashion worthy of a great
dramatist. But the most poignant touch is the tragic grimaces of the little
angelic heads that fall like hailstones through the dark air. It is genuine
realistic weeping, the act of irrepressible "crying," that the
painter has depicted, and the effect is pitiful at the same time as grotesque.
There are many more frescoes besides; all the chapels on one side are lined
with them, but these are chiefly interesting in their general impressiveness--as
they people the dim recesses with startling presences, with apparitions out of
scale. Before leaving the place I lingered long near the door, for I was sure I
shouldn't soon again enjoy such a feast of scenic composition. The opposite end
glowed with subdued colour; the middle portion was vague and thick and brown,
with two or three scattered worshippers looming through the obscurity; while,
all the way down, the polished pavement, its uneven slabs glittering dimly in
the obstructed light, was of the very essence of expensive picture. It is
certainly desirable, if one takes the lower church of St. Francis
to represent the human heart, that one should find a few bright places there.
But if the general effect is of brightness terrorised and smothered, is the
symbol less valid? For the contracted, prejudiced, passionate heart let it stand.
One thing at all events we can say, that we should rejoice
to boast as capacious, symmetrical and well-ordered a head as the upper
sanctuary. Thanks to these merits, in spite of a brave array of Giottesque work
which has the advantage of being easily seen, it lacks the great character of
its counterpart. The frescoes, which are admirable, represent certain leading
events in the life of St. Francis, and suddenly remind you, by one of those
anomalies that are half the secret of the consummate mise-en-scene of
Catholicism, that the apostle of beggary, the saint whose only tenement in life
was the ragged robe which barely covered him, is the hero of this massive
structure. Church upon church, nothing less will adequately shroud his
consecrated clay. The great reality of Giotto's designs adds
to the helpless wonderment with which we feel the passionate pluck of the Hero,
the sense of being separated from it by an impassable gulf, the reflection on
all that has come and gone to make morality at that vertiginous pitch
impossible. There are no such high places of humility left to climb to. An
observant friend who has lived long in Italy lately declared to me, however,
that she detested the name of this moralist, deeming him chief propagator of
the Italian vice most trying to the would-be lover of the people, the want of
personal self-respect. There is a solidarity in the
use of soap, and every cringing beggar, idler, liar and pilferer flourished for
her under the shadow of the great Francisan indifference to it. She was
possibly right; at Rome, at Naples, I might have admitted she was right; but at
Assisi, face to face with Giotto's vivid chronicle, we admire too much in its
main subject the exquisite play of that subject's genius--we don't remit to
him, and this for very envy, a single throb of his consciousness. It took in,
that human, that divine embrace, everything but soap.
I should find it hard to give an orderly account of my next
adventures or impressions at Assisi,
which could n't well be anything more than mere
romantic flanerie. One may easily plead as the final result of a meditation at
the shrine of St. Francis a great and even an amused charity. This state of
mind led me slowly up and down for a couple of hours through the steep little
streets, and at last stretched itself on the grass with me in the shadow of the
great ruined castle that decorates so grandly the eminence above the town. I
remember edging along the sunless side of the small mouldy houses and pausing
very often to look at nothing in particular. It was all very hot, very hushed, very resignedly but very persistently old. A wheeled vehicle
in such a place is an event, and the forestiero's interrogative tread in the
blank sonorous lanes has the privilege of bringing the inhabitants to their
doorways. Some of the better houses, however, achieve a sombre stillness that
protests against the least curiosity as to what may happen in any such century
as this. You wonder, as you pass, what lingering old-world social types
vegetate there, but you won't find out; albeit that in one very silent little
street I had a glimpse of an open door which I have not forgotten. A
long-haired peddler who must have been a Jew, and who yet carried without
prejudice a burden of mass-books and rosaries, was offering his wares to a
stout old priest. The priest had opened the door rather stingily and appeared
half-heartedly to dismiss him. But the peddler held up something I couldn't
see; the priest wavered with a timorous concession to profane curiosity and
then furtively pulled the agent of sophistication, or whatever it might be,
into the house. I should have liked to enter with that worthy.
I saw later some gentlemen of Assisi who also seemed bored enough to have
found entertainment in his tray. They were at the door of the cafe on the
Piazza, and were so thankful to me for asking them the way to the cathedral
that, answering all in chorus, they lighted up with smiles as sympathetic as if
I had done them a favour. Of that type were my mild, my delicate adventures.
The Piazza has a fine old portico of an ancient Temple of Minerva--six
fluted columns and a pediment, of beautiful proportions, but sadly battered and
decayed. Goethe, I believe, found it much more interesting than the mighty
mediaeval church, and Goethe, as a cicerone, doubtless could have persuaded one
that it was so; but in the humble society of Murray we shall most of us find a richer
sense in the later monument. I found quaint old meanings enough in the dark
yellow facade of the small cathedral as I sat on a stone bench by the oblong
green stretched before it. This is a pleasing piece of Italian Gothic and, like
several of its companions at Assisi,
has an elegant wheel window and a number of grotesque little carvings of
creatures human and bestial. If with Goethe I were to balance anything against
the attractions of the double church I should choose the ruined castle on the
hill above the town. I had been having glimpses of it all the afternoon at the
end of steep street-vistas, and promising myself half-an-hour beside its grey
walls at sunset. The sun was very late setting, and my half-hour became a long
lounge in the lee of an abutment which arrested the gentle uproar of the wind.
The castle is a splendid piece of ruin, perched on the summit of the mountain
to whose slope Assisi
clings and dropping a pair of stony arms to enclose the little town in its
embrace. The city wall, in other words, straggles up the steep green hill and
meets the crumbling skeleton of the fortress. On the side off from the town the
mountain plunges into a deep ravine, the opposite face of which is formed by
the powerful undraped shoulder of Monte Subasio, a fierce reflector of the sun.
Gorge and mountain are wild enough, but their frown expires in the teeming
softness of the great vale of Umbria.
To lie aloft there on the grass, with silver-grey ramparts at one's back and
the warm rushing wind in one's ears, and watch the beautiful plain mellow into
the tones of twilight, was as exquisite a form of repose as ever fell to a
tired tourist's lot.
[Illustration: PERUGIA.]
Perugia
too has an ancient stronghold, which one must speak of in earnest as that
unconscious humorist the classic American traveller is supposed invariably to
speak of the Colosseum: it will be a very handsome building when it's finished.
Even Perugia is going the way of all Italy--straightening
out her streets, preparing her ruins, laying her venerable ghosts. The castle
is being completely remis a neuf--a Massachusetts
schoolhouse could n't cultivate a "smarter" ideal. There are shops in
the basement and fresh putty on all the windows; so that the only thing proper
to a castle it has kept is its magnificent position and range, which you may
enjoy from the broad platform where the Perugini assemble at eventide. Perugia is chiefly known to fame as the city of Raphael's master; but it
has a still higher claim to renown and ought to figure in the gazetteer of fond
memory as the little City of the infinite View. The small dusky, crooked place
tries by a hundred prompt pretensions, immediate contortions, rich mantling
flushes and other ingenuities, to waylay your attention and keep it at home;
but your consciousness, alert and uneasy from the first moment, is all abroad
even when your back is turned to the vast alternative or when fifty house-walls
conceal it, and you are for ever rushing up by-streets and peeping round
corners in the hope of another glimpse or reach of it. As it stretches away before
you in that eminent indifference to limits which is at the same time at every
step an eminent homage to style, it is altogether too free and fair for
compasses and terms. You can only say, and rest upon it, that you prefer it to
any other visible fruit of position or claimed empire of the eye that you are
anywhere likely to enjoy.
For it is such a wondrous mixture of blooming plain and
gleaming river and wavily-multitudinous mountain vaguely dotted with pale grey
cities, that, placed as you are, roughly speaking, in the centre of Italy, you
all but span the divine peninsula from sea to sea. Up the long vista of the
Tiber you look--almost to Rome; past Assisi, Spello, Foligno, Spoleto, all
perched on their respective heights and shining through the violet haze. To the
north, to the east, to the west, you see a hundred variations of the prospect,
of which I have kept no record. Two notes only I have made: one--though who
hasn't made it over and over again?--on the exquisite elegance of mountain
forms in this endless play of the excrescence, it being exactly as if there
were variation of sex in the upheaved mass, with the effect here mainly of
contour and curve and complexion determined in the feminine sense. It further
came home to me that the command of such an outlook on the world goes far,
surely, to give authority and centrality and experience, those of the great
seats of dominion, even to so scant a cluster of attesting objects as here. It
must deepen the civic consciousness and take off the edge of ennui. It performs
this kindly office, at any rate, for the traveller who may overstay his
curiosity as to Perugino and the Etruscan relics. It continually solicits his
wonder and praise--it reinforces the historic page. I spent a week in the
place, and when it was gone I had had enough of Perugino, but had n't had
enough of the View.
I should perhaps do the reader a service by telling him just
how a week at Perugia
may be spent. His first care must be to ignore the very dream of haste, walking
everywhere very slowly and very much at random, and to impute an esoteric sense
to almost anything his eye may happen to encounter. Almost everything in fact
lends itself to the historic, the romantic, the æsthetic fallacy--almost
everything has an antique queerness and richness that ekes out the reduced
state; that of a grim and battered old adventuress, the heroine of many shames
and scandals, surviving to an extraordinary age and a considerable penury, but
with ancient gifts of princes and other forms of the wages of sin to show, and
the most beautiful garden of all the world to sit and doze and count her beads
in and remember. He must hang a great deal about the huge Palazzo Pubblico,
which indeed is very well worth any acquaintance you may scrape with it. It
masses itself gloomily above the narrow street to an immense elevation, and
leads up the eye along a cliff-like surface of rugged wall, mottled with old
scars and new repairs, to the loggia dizzily perched on its cornice. He must
repeat his visit to the Etruscan Gate, by whose immemorial composition he must
indeed linger long to resolve it back into the elements originally attending
it. He must uncap to the irrecoverable, the inimitable style of the statue of
Pope Julius III before the cathedral, remembering that Hawthorne fabled his
Miriam, in an air of romance from which we are well-nigh as far to-day as from
the building of Etruscan gates, to have given rendezvous to Kenyon at its base.
Its material is a vivid green bronze, and the mantle and tiara are covered with
a delicate embroidery worthy of a silver-smith.
Then our leisurely friend must bestow on Perugino's frescoes
in the Exchange, and on his pictures in the University, all the placid
contemplation they deserve. He must go to the theatre every evening, in an
orchestra-chair at twenty-two soldi, and enjoy the curious didacticism of
"Amore senza Stima," "Severita e Debolezza," "La
Societa Equivoca," and other popular specimens of contemporaneous Italian
comedy--unless indeed the last-named be not the edifying title applied, for
peninsular use, to "Le Demi-Monde" of the younger Dumas. I shall be
very much surprised if, at the end of a week of this varied entertainment, he
hasn't learnt how to live, not exactly in, but with, Perugia. His strolls will abound in small
accidents and mercies of vision, but of which a dozen pencil-strokes would be a
better memento than this poor word-sketching. From the hill on which the town
is planted radiate a dozen ravines, down whose sides the houses slide and
scramble with an alarming indifference to the cohesion of their little rugged
blocks of flinty red stone. You ramble really nowhither without emerging on
some small court or terrace that throws your view across a gulf of tangled
gardens or vineyards and over to a cluster of serried black dwellings which
have to hollow in their backs to keep their balance on the opposite ledge. On
archways and street-staircases and dark alleys that bore through a density of
massive basements, and curve and climb and plunge as they go, all to the truest
mediaeval tune, you may feast your fill. These are the local, the
architectural, the compositional commonplaces.. Some
of the little streets in out-of-the-way corners are so rugged and brown and
silent that you may imagine them passages long since hewn by the pick-axe in a
deserted stone-quarry. The battered black houses, of the colour of buried
things--things buried, that is, in accumulations of time, closer packed, even
as such are, than spadefuls of earth--resemble exposed sections of natural rock;
none the less so when, beyond some narrow gap, you catch the blue and silver of
the sublime circle of landscape.
[Illustration: ETRUSCAN GATEWAY, PERUGIA.]
But I ought n't to talk of mouldy alleys, or yet of azure
distances, as if they formed the main appeal to taste in this accomplished
little city. In the Sala del Cambio, where in ancient
days the money-changers rattled their embossed coin and figured up their
profits, you may enjoy one of the serenest aesthetic pleasures that the golden
age of art anywhere offers us. Bank parlours, I believe, are always handsomely
appointed, but are even those of Messrs. Rothschild such models of mural
bravery as this little counting-house of a bygone fashion? The bravery is
Perugino's own; for, invited clearly to do his best, he left it as a lesson to
the ages, covering the four low walls and the vault with scriptural and
mythological figures of extraordinary beauty. They are ranged in artless
attitudes round the upper half of the room--the sibyls, the prophets, the
philosophers, the Greek and Roman heroes--looking down with broad serene faces,
with small mild eyes and sweet mouths that commit them to nothing in particular
unless to being comfortably and charmingly alive, at the incongruous
proceedings of a Board of Brokers. Had finance a very high tone in those days,
or were genius and faith then simply as frequent as capital and enterprise are
among ourselves? The great distinction of the Sala del Cambio is that it has a friendly Yes for both these
questions. There was a rigid transactional probity, it seems to say; there was also a high tide of inspiration. About the artist
himself many things come up for us--more than I can attempt in their order; for
he was not, I think, to an attentive observer, the mere smooth and entire and
devout spirit we at first are inclined to take him for. He has that about him
which leads us to wonder if he may not, after all, play a proper part enough
here as the patron of the money-changers. He is the delight of a million of
young ladies; but who knows whether we should n't find in his works, might we
"go into" them a little, a trifle more of manner than of conviction,
and of system than of deep sincerity?
This, I allow, would put no great affront on them, and one
speculates thus partly but because it's a pleasure to hang about him on any
pretext, and partly because his immediate effect is to make us quite
inordinately embrace the pretext of his lovely soul. His portrait, painted on
the wall of the Sala (you may see it also in Rome
and Florence)
might at any rate serve for the likeness of Mr. Worldly-Wiseman in Bunyan's
allegory. He was fond of his glass, I believe, and he made his art lucrative.
This tradition is not refuted by his preserved face, and after some
experience--or rather after a good deal, since you can't have a little of
Perugino, who abounds wherever old masters congregate, so that one has
constantly the sense of being "in" for all there is--you may find an
echo of it in the uniform type of his creatures, their monotonous grace, their
prodigious invariability. He may very well have wanted to produce figures of a
substantial, yet at the same time of an impeccable innocence; but we feel that
he had taught himself how even beyond his own belief in them, and had arrived
at a process that acted at last mechanically. I confess at the same time that,
so interpreted, the painter affects me as hardly less interesting, and one
can't but become conscious of one's style when one's style has become, as it
were, so conscious of one's, or at least of its own, fortune. If he was the
inventor of a remarkably calculable facture, a calculation that never fails is
in its way a grace of the first order, and there are things in this special
appearance of perfection of practice that make him the forerunner of a mighty
and more modern race. More than any of the early painters who strongly charm,
you may take all his measure from a single specimen. The other samples
infallibly match, reproduce unerringly the one type he had mastered, but which
had the good fortune to be adorably fair, to seem to have dawned on a vision
unsullied by the shadows of earth. Which truth, moreover, leaves Perugino all
delightful as composer and draughtsman; he has in each of these characters a
sort of spacious neatness which suggests that the whole conception has been
washed clean by some spiritual chemistry the last thing before reaching the
canvas; after which it has been applied to that surface with a rare economy of
time and means. Giotto and Fra Angelico, beside him, are full of interesting
waste and irrelevant passion. In the sacristy of the charming church of San Pietro--a
museum of pictures and carvings--is a row of small heads of saints formerly
covering the frame of the artist's Ascension, carried off by the French. It is
almost miniature work, and here at least Perugino triumphs in sincerity, in
apparent candour, as well as in touch. Two of the holy men are reading their
breviaries, but with an air of infantine innocence quite consistent with their
holding the book upside down.
Between Perugia and Cortona
lies the large weedy water of Lake Thrasymene, turned into a witching word for ever by Hannibal's recorded victory over Rome. Dim as such records have become to us
and remote such realities, he is yet a passionless pilgrim who does n't, as he
passes, of a heavy summer's day, feel the air and the light and the very
faintness of the breeze all charged and haunted with them, all interfused as
with the wasted ache of experience and with the vague historic gaze. Processions
of indistinguishable ghosts bore me company to Cortona itself, most sturdily
ancient of Italian towns. It must have been a seat of ancient knowledge even
when Hannibal and Flaminius came to the shock of battle, and have looked down
afar from its grey ramparts on the contending swarm with something of the
philosophic composure suitable to a survivor of Pelasgic and Etruscan
revolutions. These grey ramparts are in great part still visible, and form the
chief attraction of Cortona. It is perched on the very pinnacle of a mountain,
and I wound and doubled interminably over the face of the great hill, while the
jumbled roofs and towers of the arrogant little city still seemed nearer to the
sky than to the railway-station. "Rather rough," Murray pronounces the local inn; and rough
indeed it was; there was scarce a square foot of it that you would have cared
to stroke with your hand. The landlord himself, however, was all smoothness and
the best fellow in the world; he took me up into a rickety old loggia on the
tip-top of his establishment and played showman as to half the kingdoms of the
earth. I was free to decide at the same time whether my loss or my gain was the
greater for my seeing Cortona through the medium of a festa. On the one hand
the museum was closed (and in a certain sense the smaller and obscurer the town
the more I like the museum); the churches--an interesting note of manners and
morals--were impenetrably crowded, though, for that matter, so was the cafe,
where I found neither an empty stool nor the edge of a table. I missed a sight
of the famous painted Muse, the art-treasure of Cortona and supposedly the most
precious, as it falls little short of being the only, sample of the Greek
painted picture that has come down to us. On the other hand, I saw--but this is
what I saw.
[Illustration: A
STREET, CORTONA.]
A part of the mountain-top is occupied by the church of St. Margaret, and this was St.
Margaret's day. The houses pause roundabout it and leave a grassy slope,
planted here and there with lean black cypresses. The contadini from near and
far had congregated in force and were crowding into the church or winding up
the slope. When I arrived they were all kneeling or uncovered; a bedizened
procession, with banners and censers, bearing abroad, I believe, the relics of
the saint, was re-entering the church. The scene made one of those pictures
that Italy
still brushes in for you with an incomparable hand and from an inexhaustible
palette when you find her in the mood. The day was superb--the sky blazed
overhead like a vault of deepest sapphire. The grave brown peasantry, with no
great accent of costume, but with sundry small ones--decked, that is, in cheap
fineries of scarlet and yellow--made a mass of motley colour in the high
wind-stirred light. The procession halted in the pious hush,
and the lovely land around and beneath us melted away, almost to either sea, in
tones of azure scarcely less intense than the sky. Behind the church was an
empty crumbling citadel, with half-a-dozen old women keeping the gate for coppers. Here were views and breezes and sun and shade and
grassy corners to the heart's content, together with one could n't say what
huge seated mystic melancholy presence, the after-taste of everything the still
open maw of time had consumed. I chose a spot that fairly combined all these
advantages, a spot from which I seemed to look, as who should say, straight
down the throat of the monster, no dark passage now, but with all the glorious
day playing into it, and spent a good part of my stay at Cortona lying there at
my length and observing the situation over the top of a volume that I must have
brought in my pocket just for that especial wanton luxury of the resource
provided and slighted. In the afternoon I came down and hustled a while through
the crowded little streets, and then strolled forth under the scorching sun and
made the outer circuit of the wall. There I found tremendous uncemented blocks;
they glared and twinkled in the powerful light, and I
had to put on a blue eye-glass in order to throw into its proper perspective
the vague Etruscan past, obtruded and magnified in such masses quite as with
the effect of inadequately-withdrawn hands and feet in photographs.
I spent the next day at Arezzo, but I confess in very much the same uninvestigating
fashion--taking in the "general impression," I dare say, at every
pore, but rather systematically leaving the dust of the ages unfingered on the
stored records: I should doubtless, in the poor time at my command, have
fingered it to so little purpose. The seeker for the story of things has
moreover, if he be worth his salt, a hundred insidious arts; and in that case
indeed--by which I mean when his sensibility has come duly to adjust
itself--the story assaults him but from too many sides. He even feels at
moments that he must sneak along on tiptoe in order not to have too much of it.
Besides which the case all depends on the kind of use, the range of
application, his tangled consciousness, or his intelligible genius, say, may
come to recognize for it. At Arezzo, however
this might be, one was far from Rome, one was
well within genial Tuscany,
and the historic, the romantic decoction seemed to
reach one's lips in less stiff doses. There at once was the "general
impression"--the exquisite sense of the scarce expressible Tuscan quality,
which makes immediately, for the whole pitch of one's perception, a grateful, a
not at all strenuous difference, attaches to almost any coherent group of
objects, to any happy aspect of the scene, for a main note, some mild recall,
through pleasant friendly colour, through settled ample form, through something
homely and economic too at the very heart of "style," of an identity
of temperament and habit with those of the divine little Florence that one originally
knew. Adorable Italy
in which, for the constant renewal of interest, of attention, of affection,
these refinements of variety, these so harmoniously-grouped and
individually-seasoned fruits of the great garden of history, keep presenting
themselves! It seemed to fall in with the cheerful Tuscan mildness for
instance--sticking as I do to that ineffectual expression of the Tuscan charm,
of the yellow-brown Tuscan dignity at large--that the ruined castle on the hill
(with which agreeable feature Arezzo is no less furnished than Assisi and
Cortona) had been converted into a great blooming, and I hope all profitable,
podere or market-garden. I lounged away the half-hours there under a spell as
potent as the "wildest" forecast of propriety--propriety to all the
particular conditions--could have figured it. I had seen Santa Maria della
Pieve and its campanile of quaint colonnades, the stately, dusky
cathedral--grass-plotted and residenced about almost after the fashion of an
English "close"--and John of Pisa's elaborate marble shrine; I had
seen the museum and its Etruscan vases and majolica platters. These were very
well, but the old pacified citadel somehow, through a day of soft saturation,
placed me most in relation. Beautiful hills surrounded it, cypresses cast straight
shadows at its corners, while in the middle grew a wondrous Italian tangle of
wheat and corn, vines and figs, peaches and cabbages, memories and images,
anything and everything.
1873.
SIENA EARLY AND
LATE
I
Florence being oppressively
hot and delivered over to the mosquitoes, the occasion seemed to favour that
visit to Siena
which I had more than once planned and missed. I arrived late in the evening,
by the light of a magnificent moon, and while a couple of benignantly-mumbling
old crones were making up my bed at the inn strolled forth in quest of a first
impression. Five minutes brought me to where I might gather it unhindered as it
bloomed in the white moonshine. The great Piazza of Siena is famous, and though
in this day of multiplied photographs and blunted surprises and profaned
revelations none of the world's wonders can pretend, like Wordsworth's phantom
of delight, really to "startle and waylay," yet as I stepped upon the
waiting scene from under a dark archway I was conscious of no loss of the edge
of a precious presented sensibility. The waiting scene, as I have called it,
was in the shape of a shallow horse-shoe--as the untravelled reader who has
turned over his travelled friends' portfolios will respectfully remember; or,
better, of a bow in which the high wide face of the Palazzo Pubblico forms the
cord and everything else the arc. It was void of any human presence that could
figure to me the current year; so that, the moonshine assisting, I had
half-an-hour's infinite vision of mediæval Italy. The Piazza being built on
the side of a hill--or rather, as I believe science affirms, in the cup of a
volcanic crater--the vast pavement converges downwards in slanting radiations
of stone, the spokes of a great wheel, to a point directly before the Palazzo,
which may mark the hub, though it is nothing more ornamental than the mouth of
a drain. The great monument stands on the lower side and might seem, in spite
of its goodly mass and its embattled cornice, to be rather defiantly
out-countenanced by vast private constructions occupying the opposite eminence.
This might be, without the extraordinary dignity of the architectural gesture
with which the huge high-shouldered pile asserts itself.
On the firm edge of the palace, from bracketed base to grey-capped
summit against the sky, where grows a tall slim tower which soars and soars
till it has given notice of the city's greatness over the blue mountains that
mark the horizon. It rises as slender and straight as a pennoned lance planted
on the steel-shod toe of a mounted knight, and keeps all to itself in the blue
air, far above the changing fashions of the market, the proud consciousness or
rare arrogance once built into it. This beautiful tower, the finest thing in
Siena and, in its rigid fashion, as permanently fine thus as a really handsome
nose on a face of no matter what accumulated age, figures there still as a
Declaration of Independence beside which such an affair as ours, thrown off at
Philadelphia, appears to have scarce done more than helplessly give way to
time. Our Independence has become a dependence
on a thousand such dreadful things as the incorrupt declaration of Siena strikes us as
looking for ever straight over the level of. As it stood silvered by the
moonlight, while my greeting lasted, it seemed to speak, all as from soul to
soul, very much indeed as some ancient worthy of a lower order, buttonholing
one on the coveted chance and at the quiet hour, might have done, of a state of
things long and vulgarly superseded, but to the pride and power, the once
prodigious vitality, of which who could expect any one effect to testify more
incomparably, more indestructibly, quite, as it were, more immortally? The
gigantic houses enclosing the rest of the Piazza took up the tale and mingled
with it their burden. "We are very old and a trifle weary, but we were
built strong and piled high, and we shall last for many an age. The present is
cold and heedless, but we keep ourselves in heart by brooding over our store of
memories and traditions. We are haunted houses in every creaking timber and
aching stone." Such were the gossiping connections I established with Siena before I went to
bed.
Since that night I have had a week's daylight knowledge of
the surface of the subject at least, and don't know how I can better present it
than simply as another and a vivider page of the lesson that the ever-hungry
artist has only to trust old Italy for her to feed him at every single step
from her hand--and if not with one sort of sweetly-stale grain from that wondrous
mill of history which during so many ages ground finer than any other on earth,
why then always with something else. Siena
has at any rate "preserved appearances"--kept the greatest number of
them, that is, unaltered for the eye--about as consistently as one can imagine
the thing done. Other places perhaps may treat you to as drowsy an odour of
antiquity, but few exhale it from so large an area. Lying massed within her
walls on a dozen clustered hill-tops, she shows you at every turn in how much
greater a way she once lived; and if so much of the grand manner is extinct,
the receptacle of the ashes still solidly rounds itself. This heavy general
stress of all her emphasis on the past is what she constantly keeps in your
eyes and your ears, and if you be but a casual observer and admirer the
generalised response is mainly what you give her. The casual observer, however
beguiled, is mostly not very learned, not over-equipped in advance with data;
he hasn't specialised, his notions are necessarily vague, the chords of his
imagination, for all his good-will, are inevitably muffled and weak. But such
as it is, his received, his welcome impression serves his turn so far as the
life of sensibility goes, and reminds him from time to time that even the lore
of German doctors is but the shadow of satisfied curiosity. I have been living
at the inn, walking about the streets, sitting in the Piazza; these are the
simple terms of my experience. But streets and inns in Italy are the
vehicles of half one's knowledge; if one has no fancy for their lessons one may
burn one's note-book. In Siena
everything is Sienese. The inn has an English sign over the door--a little
battered plate with a rusty representation of the lion and the unicorn; but
advance hopefully into the mouldy stone alley which serves as vestibule and you
will find local colour enough. The landlord, I was told, had been servant in an
English family, and I was curious to see how he met the probable argument of
the casual Anglo-Saxon after the latter's first twelve hours in his
establishment. As he failed to appear I asked the waiter if he,
weren't at home. "Oh," said the latter, "he's a piccolo grasso vecchiotto who doesn't like to move." I'm afraid
this little fat old man has simply a bad conscience. It's no small burden for
one who likes the Italians--as who doesn't, under this restriction?--to have so
much indifference even to rudimentary purifying processes to dispose of. What
is the real philosophy of dirty habits, and are foul surfaces merely superficial?
If unclean manners have in truth the moral meaning which I suspect in them we
must love Italy
better than consistency. This a number of us are
prepared to do, but while we are making the sacrifice it is as well we should
be aware.
We may plead moreover for these impecunious heirs of the
past that even if it were easy to be clean in the midst of their mouldering
heritage it would be difficult to appear so. At the risk of seeming to flaunt
the silly superstition of restless renovation for the sake of renovation, which
is but the challenge of the infinitely precious principle of duration, one is
still moved to say that the prime result of one's contemplative strolls in the
dusky alleys of such a place is an ineffable sense of disrepair. Everything is
cracking, peeling, fading, crumbling, rotting. No
young Sienese eyes rest upon anything youthful; they open into a world battered
and befouled with long use. Everything has passed its meridian except the
brilliant façade of the cathedral, which is being diligently retouched and
restored, and a few private palaces whose broad fronts seem to have been lately
furbished and polished. Siena
was long ago mellowed to the pictorial tone; the operation of time is now to
deposit shabbiness upon shabbiness. But it's for the most part a patient,
sturdy, sympathetic shabbiness, which soothes rather than irritates the nerves,
and has in many cases doubtless as long a career to run as most of our pert and
shallow freshnesses. It projects at all events a deeper shadow into the constant
twilight of the narrow streets--that vague historic dusk, as I may call it, in
which one walks and wonders. These streets are hardly more than sinuous flagged
alleys, into which the huge black houses, between their almost meeting
cornices, suffer a meagre light to filter down over rough-hewn stone, past
windows often of graceful Gothic form, and great pendent iron rings and twisted
sockets for torches. Scattered over their many-headed hill, they suffer the
roadway often to incline to the perpendicular, becoming so impracticable for
vehicles that the sound of wheels is only a trifle less anomalous than it would
be in Venice.
But all day long there comes up to my window an incessant shuffling of feet and
clangour of voices. The weather is very warm for the season, all
the world is out of doors, and the Tuscan tongue (which in Siena is reputed to have a
classic purity) wags in every imaginable key. It doesn't rest even at night,
and I am often an uninvited guest at concerts and conversazioni at two o'clock in
the morning. The concerts are sometimes charming. I not only don't curse my
wakefulness, but go to my window to listen. Three men come carolling by,
trolling and quavering with voices of delightful sweetness, or a lonely
troubadour in his shirt-sleeves draws such artful love-notes from his clear,
fresh tenor, that I seem for the moment to be behind the scenes at the opera,
watching some Rubini or Mario go "on" and waiting for the round of
applause. In the intervals a couple of friends or enemies stop--Italians always
make their points in conversation by pulling up, letting you walk on a few
paces, to turn and find them standing with finger on nose and engaging your
interrogative eye--they pause, by a happy instinct, directly under my window,
and dispute their point or tell their story or make their confidence. One
scarce is sure which it may be; everything has such an explosive promptness,
such a redundancy of inflection and action. But everything for that matter
takes on such dramatic life as our lame colloquies never know--so that almost
any uttered communications here become an acted play, improvised, mimicked,
proportioned and rounded, carried bravely to its dénoûment. The speaker seems
actually to establish his stage and face his foot-lights, to create by a
gesture a little scenic circumscription about him; he rushes to and fro and
shouts and stamps and postures, he ranges through every phase of his
inspiration. I noted the other evening a striking instance of the spontaneity
of the Italian gesture, in the person of a small Sienese of I hardly know what
exact age--the age of inarticulate sounds and the experimental use of a spoon.
It was a Sunday evening, and this little man had accompanied his parents to the
café. The Caffè Greco at Siena is a most delightful institution; you get a
capital demi-tasse for three sous, and an excellent ice for eight, and while
you consume these easy luxuries you may buy from a little hunchback the local
weekly periodical, the Vita Nuova, for three centimes (the two centimes left
from your sou, if you are under the spell of this magical frugality, will do to
give the waiter). My young friend was sitting on his father's knee and helping
himself to the half of a strawberry-ice with which his mamma had presented him.
He had so many misadventures with his spoon that this lady at length
confiscated it, there being nothing left of the ice but a little crimson liquid
which he might dispose of by the common instinct of childhood. But he was no
friend, it appeared, to such freedoms; he was a perfect little gentleman and he
resented it being expected of him that he should drink down his remnant. He
protested therefore, and it was the manner of his protest that struck me. He
didn't cry audibly, though he made a very wry face. It was no stupid squall,
and yet he was too young to speak. It was a penetrating concord of
inarticulately pleading, accusing sounds, accompanied by gestures of the most
exquisite propriety. These were perfectly mature; he did everything that a man
of forty would have done if he had been pouring out a flood of sonorous
eloquence. He shrugged his shoulders and wrinkled his eyebrows, tossed out his
hands and folded his arms, obtruded his chin and bobbed about his head--and at
last, I am happy to say, recovered his spoon. If I had had a solid little
silver one I would have presented it to him as a testimonial to a perfect,
though as yet unconscious, artist.
My actual tribute to him, however, has diverted me from what
I had in mind--a much weightier matter--the great private palaces which are the
massive majestic syllables, sentences, periods, of the
strange message the place addresses to us. They are extraordinarily spacious
and numerous, and one wonders what part they can play
in the meagre economy of the actual city. The Siena of to-day is a mere
shrunken semblance of the rabid little republic which in the thirteenth century
waged triumphant war with Florence, cultivated the arts with splendour, planned
a cathedral (though it had ultimately to curtail the design) of proportions
almost unequalled, and contained a population of two hundred thousand souls.
Many of these dusky piles still bear the names of the old mediaeval magnates
the vague mild occupancy of whose descendants has the effect of armour of proof
worn over "pot" hats and tweed jackets and trousers. Half-a-dozen of
them are as high as the Strozzi and Riccardi palaces in Florence; they couldn't well be higher. The
very essence of the romantic and the scenic is in the way these colossal
dwellings are packed together in their steep streets, in the depths of their
little enclosed, agglomerated city. When we, in our day and country, raise a
structure of half the mass and dignity, we leave a great space about it in the
manner of a pause after a showy speech. But when a Sienese countess, as things
are here, is doing her hair near the window, she is a wonderfully near
neighbour to the cavalier opposite, who is being shaved by his valet. Possibly
the countess doesn't object to a certain chosen publicity at her toilet; what does
an Italian gentleman assure me but that the aristocracy make very free with
each other? Some of the palaces are shown, but only when the occupants are at
home, and now they are in villeggiatura. Their villeggiatura lasts eight months
of the year, the waiter at the inn informs me, and they spend little more than
the carnival in the city. The gossip of an inn-waiter ought perhaps to be
beneath the dignity of even such thin history as this; but I confess that when,
as a story-seeker always and ever, I have come in from my strolls with an
irritated sense of the dumbness of stones and mortar, it has been to listen
with avidity, over my dinner, to the proffered confidences of the worthy man
who stands by with a napkin. His talk is really very fine, and he prides
himself greatly on his cultivated tone, to which he calls my attention. He has
very little good to say about the Sienese nobility. They are "proprio
d'origine egoista"--whatever that may be--and there are many who can't
write their names. This may be calumny; but I doubt whether the most blameless
of them all could have spoken more delicately of a lady of peculiar personal
appearance who had been dining near me. "She's too fat," I grossly
said on her leaving the room. The waiter shook his head with a little sniff:
"È troppo materiale." This lady and her companion were the party
whom, thinking I might relish a little company--I had been dining alone for a
week--he gleefully announced to me as newly arrived Americans. They were
Americans, I found, who wore, pinned to their heads in permanence, the black
lace veil or mantilla, conveyed their beans to their mouth with a knife, and
spoke a strange raucous Spanish. They were in fine compatriots from Montevideo.
[Illustration: THE RED
PALACE, SIENA.]
The genius of old Siena,
however, would make little of any stress of such distinctions; one
representative of a far-off social platitude being about as much in order as
another as he stands before the great loggia of the Casino di Nobili, the club
of the best society. The nobility, which is very numerous and very rich, is
still, says the apparently competent native I began by quoting, perfectly
feudal and uplifted and separate. Morally and intellectually, behind the walls
of its palaces, the fourteenth century, it's thrilling to think, hasn't ceased
to hang on. There is no bourgeoisie to speak of; immediately after the aristocracy come the poor people, who are very poor indeed.
My friend's account of these matters made me wish more than ever, as a lover of
the preserved social specimen, of type at almost any price, that one weren't, a
helpless victim of the historic sense, reduced simply to staring at black
stones and peeping up stately staircases; and that when one had examined the
street-face of the palace, Murray in hand, one might walk up to the great
drawing-room, make one's bow to the master and mistress, the old abbe and the
young count, and invite them to favour one with a sketch of their social
philosophy or a few first-hand family anecdotes.
The dusky labyrinth of the streets, we must in default of
such initiations content ourselves with noting, is interrupted by two great
candid spaces: the fan-shaped piazza, of which I just now said a word, and the
smaller square in which the cathedral erects its walls of many-coloured marble.
Of course since paying the great piazza my compliments by moonlight I have
strolled through it often at sunnier and shadier hours. The market is held
there, and wherever Italians buy and sell, wherever they count and chaffer--as
indeed you. hear them do right and left, at almost any
moment, as you take your way among them--the pulse of life beats fast. It has
been doing so on the spot just named, I suppose, for the last five hundred
years, and during that time the cost of eggs and earthen pots has been
gradually but inexorably increasing. The buyers nevertheless wrestle over their
purchases as lustily as so many fourteenth-century burghers suddenly waking up
in horror to current prices. You have but to walk aside, however, into the Palazzo
Pubblico really to feel yourself a thrifty old medievalist. The state affairs
of the Republic were formerly transacted here, but it now gives shelter to
modern law-courts and other prosy business. I was marched through a number of
vaulted halls and chambers, which, in the intervals of the administrative
sessions held in them, are peopled only by the great mouldering archaic
frescoes--anything but inanimate these even in their present ruin--that cover
the walls and ceiling. The chief painters of the Sienese school lent a hand in
producing the works I name, and you may complete there the connoisseurship in
which, possibly, you will have embarked at the Academy. I say
"possibly" to be very judicial, my own observation having led me no
great length. I have rather than otherwise cherished the thought that the
Sienese school suffers one's eagerness peacefully to slumber--benignantly
abstains in fact from whipping up a languid curiosity and a tepid faith.
"A formidable rival to the Florentine," says some book--I forget
which--into which I recently glanced. Not a bit of it
thereupon boldly say I; the Florentines may rest on their laurels and
the lounger on his lounge. The early painters of the two groups have indeed
much in common; but the Florentines had the good fortune to see their efforts
gathered up and applied by a few pre-eminent spirits, such as never came to the
rescue of the groping Sienese. Fra Angelico and Ghirlandaio said all their
feebler confrères dreamt of and a great deal more beside, but the inspiration
of Simone Memmi and Ambrogio Lorenzetti and Sano di Pietro has a painful air of
never efflorescing into a maximum. Sodoma and Beccafumi are to my taste a
rather abortive maximum. But one should speak of them all gently--and I do,
from my soul; for their labour, by their lights, has wrought a precious
heritage of still-living colour and rich figure-peopled shadow for the echoing
chambers of their old civic fortress. The faded frescoes cover the walls like
quaintly-storied tapestries; in one way or another they cast their spell. If
one owes a large debt of pleasure to pictorial art one comes to think tenderly
and easily of its whole evolution, as of the conscious experience of a single
mysterious, striving spirit, and one shrinks from saying rude things about any
particular phase of it, just as one would from referring without precautions to
some error or lapse in the life of a person one esteemed. You don't care to
remind a grizzled veteran of his defeats, and why should we linger in Siena to talk about Beccafumi?
I by no means go so far as to say, with an amateur with whom I have just been
discussing the matter, that "Sodoma is a precious poor painter and
Beccafumi no painter at all"; but, opportunity being limited, I am willing
to let the remark about Beccafumi pass for true. With regard to Sodoma, I
remember seeing four years ago in the choir of the Cathedral of Pisa a certain
small dusky specimen of the painter--an Abraham and Isaac, if I am not
mistaken--which was charged with a gloomy grace. One rarely meets him in
general collections, and I had never done so till the other day. He was not
prolific, apparently; he had however his own elegance, and his rarity is a part
of it.
Here in Siena
are a couple of dozen scattered frescoes and three or four canvases; his
masterpiece, among others, an harmonious Descent from
the Cross. I wouldn't give a fig for the equilibrium of the figures or the
ladders; but while it lasts the scene is all intensely solemn and graceful and
sweet--too sweet for so bitter a subject. Sodoma's women are strangely sweet;
an imaginative sense of morbid appealing attitude--as notably in the
sentimental, the pathetic, but the none the less pleasant, "Swooning of
St. Catherine," the great Sienese heroine, at San Domenico--seems to me
the author's finest accomplishment. His frescoes have all the same almost
appealing evasion of difficulty, and a kind of mild melancholy which I am
inclined to think the sincerest part of them, for it strikes me as practically
the artist's depressed suspicion of his own want of force. Once he determined,
however, that if he couldn't be strong he would make capital of his weakness,
and painted the Christ bound to the Column, of the Academy. Here he got much
nearer and I have no doubt mixed his colours with his tears; but the result
can't be better described than by saying that it is, pictorially, the first of
the modern Christs. Unfortunately it hasn't been the last.
[Illustration: SAN DOMINICO, SIENA]
The main strength of Sienese art went possibly into the erection
of the Cathedral, and yet even here the strength is not of the greatest strain.
If, however, there are more interesting temples in Italy, there are few more richly
and variously scenic and splendid, the comparative meagreness of the
architectural idea being overlaid by a marvellous wealth of ingenious detail.
Opposite the church--with the dull old archbishop's palace on one side and a
dismantled residence of the late Grand Duke of Tuscany on the other--is an
ancient hospital with a big stone bench running all along its front. Here I
have sat a while every morning for a week, like a philosophic convalescent,
watching the florid façade of the cathedral glitter against the deep blue sky.
It has been lavishly restored of late years, and the fresh white marble of the
densely clustered pinnacles and statues and beasts and flowers flashes in the
sunshine like a mosaic of jewels. There is more of this goldsmith's work in
stone than I can remember or describe; it is piled up over three great doors
with immense margins of exquisite decorative sculpture--still in the ancient
cream-coloured marble--and beneath three sharp pediments embossed with images
relieved against red marble and tipped with golden mosaics. It is in the
highest degree fantastic and luxuriant--it is on the whole very lovely. As a
triumph of the many-hued it prepares you for the interior, where the same
parti-coloured splendour is endlessly at play--a confident complication of
harmonies and contrasts and of the minor structural refinements and braveries.
The internal surface is mainly wrought in alternate courses of black and white
marble; but as the latter has been dimmed by the centuries to a fine mild brown
the place is all a concert of relieved and dispersed glooms. Save for
Pinturicchio's brilliant frescoes in the Sacristy there are no pictures to
speak of; but the pavement is covered with many elaborate designs in black and
white mosaic after cartoons by Beccafumi. The patient skill of these
compositions makes them a rare piece of decoration; yet even here the friend
whom I lately quoted rejects this over-ripe fruit of the Sienese school. The
designs are nonsensical, he declares, and all his admiration is for the cunning
artisans who have imitated the hatchings and shadings and hair-strokes of the
pencil by the finest curves of inserted black stone. But the true romance of
handiwork at Siena
is to be seen in the wondrous stalls of the choir, under the coloured light of
the great wheel-window. Wood-carving has ever been a cherished craft of the place,
and the best masters of the art during the fifteenth century lavished
themselves on this prodigious task. It is the frost-work on one's window-panes
interpreted in polished oak. It would be hard to find, doubtless, a more moving
illustration of the peculiar patience, the sacred candour, of the great time.
Into such artistry as this the author seems to put more of his personal
substance than into any other; he has to wrestle not only with his subject, but
with his material. He is richly fortunate when his subject is charming--when
his devices, inventions and fantasies spring lightly to his hand; for in the
material itself, after age and use have ripened and polished and darkened it to
the richness of ebony and to a greater warmth there is
something surpassingly delectable and venerable. Wander behind the altar at Siena when the chanting
is over and the incense has faded, and look well at the stalls of the Barili.
1873.
II
I leave the impression noted in the foregoing pages to tell
its own small story, but have it on my conscience to wonder, in this
connection, quite candidly and publicly and by way of due penance, at the
scantness of such first-fruits of my sensibility. I was to see Siena repeatedly in the years to follow, I
was to know her better, and I would say that I was to do her an ampler justice
didn't that remark seem to reflect a little on my earlier poor judgment. This
judgment strikes me to-day as having fallen short--true as it may be that I
find ever a value, or at least an interest, even in the moods and humours and
lapses of any brooding, musing or fantasticating observer to whom the finer
sense of things is on the whole not closed. If he has on a given occasion
nodded or stumbled or strayed, this fact by itself speaks to me of him--speaks
to me, that is, of his faculty and his idiosyncrasies, and I care nothing for
the application of his faculty unless it be, first of all, in itself
interesting. Which may serve as my reply to any objection here breaking out--on
the ground that if a spectator's languors are evidence, of a sort, about that
personage, they are scarce evident about the case before him, at least if the
case be important. I let my perhaps rather weak expression of the sense of Siena stand, at any
rate--for the sake of what I myself read into it; but I should like to amplify
it by other memories, and would do so eagerly if I might here enjoy the space.
The difficulty for these rectifications is that if the early vision has failed
of competence or of full felicity, if initiation has thus been slow, so, with
renewals and extensions, so, with the larger experience, one hindrance is
exchanged for another. There is quite such a possibility as having lived into a
relation too much to be able to make a statement of it.
I remember on one occasion arriving very late of a summer
night, after an almost unbroken run from London, and the note of that
approach--I was the only person alighting at the station below the great hill
of the little fortress city, under whose at once frowning and gaping gate I
must have passed, in the warm darkness and the absolute stillness, very much
after the felt fashion of a person of importance about to be enormously
incarcerated--gives me, for preservation thus belated, the pitch, as I may call
it, at various times, though always at one season, of an almost systematised
esthetic use of the place. It wasn't to be denied that the immensely better
"accommodations" instituted by the multiplying, though alas more
bustling, years had to be recognised as supplying a basis, comparatively
prosaic if one would, to that luxury. No sooner have I written which words,
however, than I find myself adding that one "wouldn't," that one
doesn't--doesn't, that is, consent now to regard the then "new" hotel
(pretty old indeed by this time) as anything but an aid to a free play of
perception. The strong and rank old Arme d'Inghilterra, in the darker street,
has passed away; but its ancient rival the Aquila Nera put forth claims to
modernisation, and the Grand Hotel, the still fresher flower of modernity near
the gate by which you enter from the station, takes on to my present
remembrance a mellowness as of all sorts of comfort, cleanliness and kindness.
The particular facts, those of the visit I began here by alluding to and those
of still others, at all events, inveterately made in June or early in July,
enter together in a fusion as of hot golden-brown objects seen through the
practicable crevices of shutters drawn upon high, cool, darkened rooms where
the scheme of the scene involved longish days of quiet work, with late
afternoon emergence and contemplation waiting on the better or the worse
conscience. I thus associate the compact world of the admirable hill-top, the
world of a predominant golden-brown, with a general invocation of sensibility
and fancy, and think of myself as going forth into the lingering light of
summer evenings all attuned to intensity of the idea of compositional beauty,
or in other words, freely speaking, to the question of colour, to intensity of
picture. To communicate with Siena in this charming way was thus, I admit, to
have no great margin for the prosecution of inquiries, but I am not sure that
it wasn't, little by little, to feel the whole combination of elements better
than by a more exemplary method, and this from beginning to end of the scale.
More of the elements indeed, for memory, hang about the days
that were ushered in by that straight flight from the north than about any
other series--if partly, doubtless, but because of my having then stayed
longest. I specify it at all events for fond reminiscence as the year, the only
year, at which I was present at the Palio, the earlier one, the series of
furious horse-races between elected representatives of different quarters of
the town taking place toward the end of June, as the second and still more
characteristic exhibition of the same sort is appointed to the month of August;
a spectacle that I am far from speaking of as the finest flower of my old and
perhaps even a little faded cluster of impressions, but which smudges that
special sojourn as with the big thumb--mark of a slightly soiled and decidedly
ensanguined hand. For really, after all, the great loud gaudy romp or heated
frolic, simulating ferocity if not achieving it, that is the annual pride of the
town, was not intrinsically, to my-view, extraordinarily impressive--in spite
of its bristling with all due testimony to the passionate Italian clutch of any
pretext for costume and attitude and utterance, for mumming and masquerading
and raucously representing; the vast cheap vividness rather somehow refines
itself, and the swarm and hubbub of the immense square melt, to the uplifted
sense of a very high-placed balcony of the overhanging Chigi palace, where
everything was superseded but the intenser passage, across the ages, of the
great Renaissance tradition of architecture and the infinite sweetness of the
waning golden day. The Palio, indubitably, was criard--and the more so for
quite monopolising, at Siena, the note of crudity; and much of it demanded doubtless
of one's patience a due respect for the long local continuity of such things;
it drops into its humoured position, however, in any retrospective command of
the many brave aspects of the prodigious place. Not that I am pretending here,
even for rectification, to take these at all in turn; I only go on a little
with my rueful glance at the marked gaps left in my original report of
sympathies entertained.
I bow my head for instance to the mystery of my not having
mentioned that the coolest and freshest flower of the day was ever that of
one's constant renewal of a charmed homage to Pinturicchio, coolest and
freshest and signally youngest and most matutinal (as distinguished from merely
primitive or crepuscular) of painters, in the library or sacristy of the
Cathedral. Did I always find time before work to spend half-an-hour of
immersion, under that splendid roof, in the clearest and tenderest, the very
cleanest and "straightest," as it masters our envious credulity, of
all storied fresco-worlds? This wondrous apartment, a monument in itself to the
ancient pride and power of the Church, and which contains an unsurpassed
treasure of gloriously illuminated missals, psalters and other vast parchment
folios, almost each of whose successive leaves gives the impression of rubies,
sapphires and emeralds set in gold and practically embedded in the page, offers
thus to view, after a fashion splendidly sustained, a pictorial record of the
career of Pope Pius II, Aeneas Sylvius of the Siena Piccolomini (who gave him
for an immediate successor a second of their name), most profanely literary of
Pontiffs and last of would-be Crusaders, whose adventures and achievements
under Pinturicchio's brush smooth themselves out for us very much to the tune
of the "stories" told by some fine old man of the world, at the
restful end of his life, to the cluster of his grandchildren. The end of AEneas
Sylvius was not restful; he died at Ancona
in troublous times, preaching war, and attempting to make it, against the then
terrific Turk; but over no great worldly personal legend, among those of men of
arduous affairs, arches a fairer, lighter or more pacific memorial vault than
the shining Libreria of Siena. I seem to remember having it and its
unfrequented enclosing precinct so often all to myself that I must indeed
mostly have resorted to it for a prompt benediction on the day. Like no other
strong solicitation, among artistic appeals to which one may compare it up and
down the whole wonderful country, is the felt neighbouring presence of the
overwrought Cathedral in its little proud possessive town: you may so often
feel by the week at a time that it stands there really for your own personal
enjoyment, your romantic convenience, your small wanton aesthetic use. In such
a light shines for me, at all events, under such an accumulation and
complication of tone flushes and darkens and richly recedes for me, across the
years, the treasure-house of many-coloured marbles in the untrodden, the
drowsy, empty Sienese square. One could positively do, in the free exercise of
any responsible fancy or luxurious taste, what one would with it.
But that proposition holds true, after all, for almost any
mild pastime of the incurable student of loose meanings and stray relics and
odd references and dim analogies in an Italian hill-city bronzed and seasoned
by the ages. I ought perhaps, for justification of the right to talk, to have
plunged into the Siena archives of which, on one occasion, a kindly custodian
gave me, in rather dusty and stuffy conditions, as the incident vaguely comes
back to me, a glimpse that was like a moment's stand at the mouth of a deep,
dark mine. I didn't descend into the pit; I did, instead of this, a much idler
and easier thing: I simply went every afternoon, my stint of work over, I like
to recall, for a musing stroll upon the Lizza--the Lizza which had its own
unpretentious but quite insidious art of meeting the lover of old stories
halfway. The great and subtle thing, if you are not a strenuous specialist, in
places of a heavily charged historic consciousness, is to profit by the sense
of that consciousness--or in other words to cultivate a relation with the
oracle--after the fashion that suits yourself; so that if the general
after-taste of experience, experience at large, the fine distilled essence of
the matter, seems to breathe, in such a case, from the very stones and to make
a thick strong liquor of the very air, you may thus gather as you pass what is
most to your purpose; which is more the indestructible mixture of lived things,
with its concentrated lingering odour, than any interminable list of numbered
chapters and verses. Chapters and verses, literally scanned, refuse
coincidence, mostly, with the divisional proprieties of your own pile of
manuscript--which is but another way of saying, in short, that if the Lizza is
a mere fortified promontory of the great Sienese hill, serving at once as a
stronghold for the present military garrison and as a planted and benched and
band-standed walk and recreation-ground for the citizens, so I could never,
toward close of day, either have enough of it or yet feel the vaguest
saunterings there to be vain. They were vague with the qualification always of
that finer massing, as one wandered off, of the bronzed and seasoned element,
the huge rock pedestal, the bravery of walls and gates and towers and palaces
and loudly asserted dominion; and then of that pervaded or mildly infested air
in which one feels the experience of the ages, of which I just spoke, to be
exquisitely in solution; and lastly of the wide, strange, sad, beautiful
horizon, a rim of far mountains that always pictured, for the leaner on old
rubbed and smoothed parapets at the sunset hour, a country not exactly blighted
or deserted, but that had had its life, on an immense scale, and had gone, with
all its memories and relics, into rather austere, in fact into almost grim and
misanthropic, retirement. This was a manner and a mood, at any rate, in all the
land, that favoured in the late afternoons the divinest landscape blues and
purples--not to speak of its favouring still more my practical contention that
the whole guarded headland in question, with the immense ramparts of golden
brown and red that dropped into vineyards and orchards and cornfields and all
the rustic elegance of the Tuscan podere, was knitting for me a chain of
unforgettable hours; to the justice of which claim let these divagations
testify.
It wasn't, however, that one mightn't without disloyalty to
that scheme of profit seek impressions further afield--though indeed I may best
say of such a matter as the long pilgrimage to the pictured convent of Monte
Oliveto that it but played on the same fine chords as the overhanging, the
far-gazing Lizza. What it came to was that one simply put to the friendly test,
as it were, the mood and manner of the country. This remembrance is precious,
but the demonstration of that sense as of a great heaving region stilled by
some final shock and returning thoughtfully, in fact tragically, on itself,
couldn't have been more pointed. The long-drawn rural road I refer to,
stretching over hill and dale and to which I devoted the whole of the longest
day of the year--I was in a small single-horse conveyance, of which I had
already made appreciative use, and with a driver as disposed as myself ever to
sacrifice speed to contemplation--is doubtless familiar now with the rush of
the motor-car; the thought of whose free dealings with the solitude of Monte
Oliveto makes me a little ruefully reconsider, I confess, the spirit in which I
have elsewhere in these pages, on behalf of the lust, the landscape lust, of
the eyes, acknowledged our general increasing debt to that vehicle. For that we
met nothing whatever, as I seem at this distance of time to recall, while we
gently trotted and trotted through the splendid summer hours and a dry
desolation that yet somehow smiled and smiled, was part of the charm and the
intimacy of the whole impression--the impression that culminated at last,
before the great cloistered square, lonely, bleak and stricken, in the almost
aching vision, more frequent in the Italy of to-day than anywhere in the world,
of the uncalculated waste of a myriad forms of piety, forces of labour,
beautiful fruits of genius. However, one gaped above all things for the
impression, and what one mainly asked was that it should be strong of its kind.
That was the case, I think I couldn't but feel, at every moment of the couple
of hours I spent in the vast, cold, empty shell, out of which the Benedictine
brotherhood sheltered there for ages had lately been turned by the strong arm
of a secular State. There was but one good brother left, a very lean and tough
survivor, a dusky, elderly, friendly Abbate, of an indescribable type and a
perfect manner, of whom I think I felt immediately thereafter that I should
have liked to say much, but as to whom I must have yielded to the fact that
ingenious and vivid commemoration was even then in store for him. Literary
portraiture had marked him for its own, and in the short story of Un Saint, one
of the most finished of contemporary French nouvelles, the art and the sympathy
of Monsieur Paul Bourget preserve his interesting image. He figures in the
beautiful tale, the Abbate of the desolate cloister and of those comparatively
quiet years, as a clean, clear type of sainthood; a circumstance this in itself
to cause a fond analyst of other than "Latin" race (model and painter
in this case having their Latinism so strongly in common) almost endlessly to
meditate. Oh, the unutterable differences in any scheme or estimate of
physiognomic values, in any range of sensibility to expressional association,
among observers of different, of inevitably more or less opposed, traditional
and "racial" points of view! One had heard convinced Latins--or at
least I had!--speak of situations of trust and intimacy in which they couldn't
have endured near them a Protestant or, as who should say for instance, an
Anglo-Saxon; but I was to remember my own private attempt to measure such a
change of sensibility as might have permitted the prolonged close approach of
the dear dingy, half-starved, very possibly all heroic, and quite ideally
urbane Abbate. The depth upon depth of things, the cloud upon cloud of
associations, on one side and the other, that would
have had to change first!
To which I may add nevertheless that since one ever
supremely invoked intensity of impression and abundance of character, I feasted
my fill of it at Monte Oliveto, and that for that matter this would have
constituted my sole refreshment in the vast icy void of the blighted refectory
if I hadn't bethought myself of bringing with me a scrap of food, too scantly
apportioned, I recollect--very scantly indeed, since my cocchiere was to share
with me--by my purveyor at Siena. Our tragic--even if so tenderly tragic--entertainer
had nothing to give us; but the immemorial cold of the enormous monastic
interior in which we smilingly fasted would doubtless not have had for me
without that such a wealth of reference. I was to have "liked" the
whole adventure, so I must somehow have liked that; by which remark I am
recalled to the special treasure of the desecrated temple, those
extraordinarily strong and brave frescoes of Luca Signorelli and Sodoma that
adorn, in admirable condition, several stretches of cloister wall. These
creations in a manner took care of themselves; aided by the blue of the sky
above the cloister-court they glowed, they insistently lived; I remember the
frigid prowl through all the rest of the bareness, including that of the big
dishonoured church and that even of the Abbate's abysmally resigned testimony
to his mere human and personal situation; and then, with such a force of
contrast and effect of relief, the great sheltered sun-flares and
colour-patches of scenic composition and design where a couple of hands
centuries ago turned to dust had so wrought the defiant miracle of life and
beauty that the effect is of a garden blooming among ruins. Discredited
somehow, since they all would, the destroyers themselves, the ancient piety,
the general spirit and intention, but still bright and assured and
sublime--practically, enviably immortal--the other, the still subtler, the all
aesthetic good faith.
1909.
Florence too has its
"season," not less than Rome,
and I have been rejoicing for the past six weeks in the fact that this
comparatively crowded parenthesis hasn't yet been opened. Coming here in the
first days of October I found the summer still in almost unmenaced possession,
and ever since, till within a day or two, the weight of its hand has been
sensible. Properly enough, as the city of flowers, Florence mingles the
elements most artfully in the spring--during the divine crescendo of March and
April, the weeks when six months of steady shiver have still not shaken New
York and Boston free of the long Polar reach. But the very quality of the
decline of the year as we at present here feel it suits peculiarly the mood in
which an undiscourageable gatherer of the sense of things, or taster at least
of "charm," moves through these many-memoried streets and galleries
and churches. Old things, old places, old people, or at least old races, ever
strike us as giving out their secrets most freely in such moist, grey,
melancholy days as have formed the complexion of the past fortnight. With
Christmas arrives the opera, the only opera worth speaking of--which indeed
often means in Florence the only opera worth talking through; the gaiety, the
gossip, the reminders in fine of the cosmopolite and watering-place character
to which the city of the Medici long ago began to bend her antique temper.
Meanwhile it is pleasant enough for the tasters of charm, as I say, and for the
makers of invidious distinctions, that the Americans haven't all arrived,
however many may be on their way, and that the weather has a monotonous
overcast softness in which, apparently, aimless contemplation grows less and
less ashamed. There is no crush along the Cascine, as on the sunny days of
winter, and the Arno, wandering away toward
the mountains in the haze, seems as shy of being looked at as a good picture in
a bad light. No light, to my eyes, nevertheless, could be better than this,
which reaches us, all strained and filtered and refined, exquisitely coloured
and even a bit conspicuously sophisticated, through the heavy air of the past
that hangs about the place for ever.
I first knew Florence early enough, I am happy to say, to
have heard the change for the worse, the taint of the modern order, bitterly
lamented by old haunters, admirers, lovers--those qualified to present a
picture of the conditions prevailing under the good old Grand-Dukes, the two
last of their line in especial, that, for its blest reflection of sweetness and
mildness and cheapness and ease, of every immediate boon in life to be enjoyed
quite for nothing, could but draw tears from belated listeners. Some of these
survivors from the golden age--just the beauty of which indeed was in the gold,
of sorts, that it poured into your lap, and not in the least in its own
importunity on that head--have needfully lingered on, have seen the ancient
walls pulled down and the compact and belted mass of which the Piazza della
Signoria was the immemorial centre expand, under the treatment of enterprising
syndics, into an ungirdled organism of the type, as they viciously say, of
Chicago; one of those places of which, as their grace of a circumference is
nowhere, the dignity of a centre can no longer be predicated. Florence loses
itself to-day in dusty boulevards and smart beaux quartiers, such as Napoleon
III and Baron Haussmann were to set the fashion of to a too mediæval
Europe--with the effect of some precious page of antique text swallowed up in a
marginal commentary that smacks of the style of the newspaper. So much for what
has happened on this side of that line of demarcation which, by an odd law,
makes us, with our preference for what we are pleased to call the picturesque,
object to such occurrences even as occurrences. The real truth is that
objections are too vain, and that he would be too rude a critic here, just now,
who shouldn't be in the humour to take the thick with the thin and to try at
least to read something of the old soul into the new forms.
There is something to be said moreover for your liking a
city (once it's a question of your actively circulating) to pretend to comfort
you more by its extent than by its limits; in addition to which Florence was
anciently, was in her palmy days peculiarly, a daughter of change and movement
and variety, of shifting moods, policies and régimes--just as the Florentine
character, as we have it to-day, is a character that takes all things easily
for having seen so many come and go. It saw the national capital, a few years
since, arrive and sit down by the Arno, and took no further thought than
sufficed for the day; then it saw, the odd visitor depart and whistled her
cheerfully on her way to Rome.
The new boulevards of the Sindaco Peruzzi come, it may be said, but they don't
go; which, after all, it isn't from the æsthetic point of view strictly
necessary they should. A part of the essential amiability of Florence, of her genius for making you take
to your favour on easy terms everything that in any way belongs to her, is that
she has already flung an element of her grace over all their undried mortar and
plaster. Such modern arrangements as the Piazza d' Azeglio and the viale or
Avenue of the Princess Margaret please not a little, I think--for what they
are!--and do so even in a degree, by some fine local privilege just because
they are Florentine. The afternoon lights rest on them as if to thank them for
not being worse, and their vistas. are liberal where
they look toward the hills. They carry you close to these admirable elevations,
which hang over Florence on all sides, and if in the foreground your sense is a
trifle perplexed by the white pavements dotted here and there with a policeman
or a nursemaid, you have only to reach beyond and see Fiesole turn to violet,
on its ample eminence, from the effect of the opposite sunset.
Facing again then to Florence proper you have local colour
enough and to spare--which you enjoy the more, doubtless, from standing off to
get your light and your point of view. The elder streets abutting on all this
newness bore away into the heart of the city in narrow, dusky perspectives that
quite refine, in certain places, by an art of their own, on the romantic
appeal. There are temporal and other accidents thanks to which, as you pause to
look down them and to penetrate the deepening shadows that accompany their
retreat, they resemble little corridors leading out from the past, mystical
like the ladder in Jacob's dream; so that when you see a single figure advance
and draw nearer you are half afraid to wait till it arrives--it must be too
much of the nature of a ghost, a messenger from an underworld. However this may
be, a place paved with such great mosaics of slabs and lined with palaces of so
massive a tradition, structures which, in their large dependence on pure
proportion for interest and beauty, reproduce more than other modern styles the
simple nobleness of Greek architecture, must ever have placed dignity first in
the scale of invoked effect and laid up no great treasure of that ragged
picturesqueness--the picturesqueness of large poverty--on which we feast our
idle eyes at Rome and Naples. Except in the unfinished fronts of the churches,
which, however, unfortunately, are mere ugly blankness, one finds less of the
poetry of ancient over-use, or in other words less romantic southern
shabbiness, than in most Italian cities. At two or three points, none the less,
this sinister grace exists in perfection--just such perfection as so often
proves that what is literally hideous may be constructively delightful and what
is intrinsically tragic play on the finest chords of appreciation. On the north
side of the Arno, between Ponte Vecchio and
Ponte Santa Trinita, is a row of immemorial houses that back on the river, in
whose yellow flood they bathe their sore old feet. Anything more battered and
befouled, more cracked and disjointed, dirtier, drearier, poorer, it would be
impossible to conceive. They look as if fifty years ago the liquid mud had
risen over their chimneys and then subsided again and left them coated for ever
with its unsightly slime. And yet forsooth, because the river is yellow, and
the light is yellow, and here and there, elsewhere, some mellow mouldering
surface, some hint of colour, some accident of atmosphere, takes up the foolish
tale and repeats the note--because, in short, it is Florence, it is Italy, and
the fond appraiser, the infatuated alien, may have had in his eyes, at birth
and afterwards, the micaceous sparkle of brown-stone fronts no more interesting
than so much sand-paper, these miserable dwellings, instead of suggesting
mental invocations to an enterprising board of health, simply create their own
standard of felicity and shamelessly live in it. Lately, during the misty
autumn nights, the moon has shone on them faintly and refined their shabbiness
away into something ineffably strange and spectral. The turbid stream sweeps
along without a sound, and the pale tenements hang
above it like a vague miasmatic exhalation. The dimmest back-scene at the
opera, when the tenor is singing his sweetest, seems hardly to belong to a
world more detached from responsibility.
[Illustration: ON THE ARNO, FLORENCE.]
What it is that infuses so rich an interest into the general
charm is difficult to say in a few words; yet as we wander hither and thither
in quest of sacred canvas and immortal bronze and stone we still feel the
genius of the place hang about. Two industrious English ladies, the Misses
Horner, have lately published a couple of volumes of "Walks" by the
Arno-side, and their work is a long enumeration of great artistic deeds. These
things remain for the most part in sound preservation, and, as the weeks go by
and you spend a constant portion of your days among them the sense of one of
the happiest periods of human Taste--to put it only at that--settles upon your
spirit. It was not long; it lasted, in its splendour, for less than a century;
but it has stored away in the palaces and churches of Florence a heritage of
beauty that these three enjoying centuries since haven't yet exhausted. This
forms a clear intellectual atmosphere into which you may turn aside from the
modern world and fill your lungs as with the breath of a forgotten creed. The
memorials of the past here address us moreover with a friendliness, win us by
we scarcely know what sociability, what equal amenity, that we scarce find
matched in other great esthetically endowed communities and periods. Venice,
with her old palaces cracking under the weight of their treasures, is, in her
influence, insupportably sad; Athens, with her maimed marbles and dishonoured
memories, transmutes the consciousness of sensitive observers, I am told, into
a chronic heartache; but in one's impression of old Florence the abiding
felicity, the sense of saving sanity, of something sound and human,
predominates, offering you a medium still conceivable for life. The reason of
this is partly, no doubt, the "sympathetic" nature, the temperate
joy, of Florentine art in general--putting the sole Dante, greatest of literary
artists, aside; partly the tenderness of time, in its lapse, which, save in a
few cases, has been as sparing of injury as if it knew that when it should have
dimmed and corroded these charming things it would have nothing so sweet again
for its tooth to feed on. If the beautiful Ghirlandaios and Lippis are fading,
this generation will never know it. The large Fra Angelico in the Academy is as
clear and keen as if the good old monk stood there wiping his brushes; the
colours seem to sing, as it were, like new-fledged birds in June. Nothing is
more characteristic of early Tuscan art than the high-reliefs of Luca della Robbia; yet there isn't one of them that, except for
the unique mixture of freshness with its wisdom, of candour with its
expertness, mightn't have been modelled yesterday.
But perhaps the best image of the absence of stale
melancholy or wasted splendour, of the positive presence of what I have called
temperate joy, in the Florentine impression and genius, is the bell-tower of
Giotto, which rises beside the cathedral. No beholder of it will have forgotten
how straight and slender it stands there, how strangely rich in the common
street, plated with coloured marble patterns, and yet so far from simple or
severe in design that we easily wonder how its author, the painter of
exclusively and portentously grave little pictures, should have fashioned a
building which in the way of elaborate elegance, of the true play of taste,
leaves a jealous modern criticism nothing to miss. Nothing can be imagined at
once more lightly and more pointedly fanciful; it might have been handed over
to the city, as it stands, by some Oriental genie tired of too much detail. Yet
for all that suggestion it seems of no particular time--not grey and hoary like
a Gothic steeple, not cracked and despoiled like a Greek temple; its marbles
shining so little less freshly than when they were laid together, and the
sunset lighting up its cornice with such a friendly radiance, that you come at
last to regard it simply as the graceful, indestructible soul of the place made
visible. The Cathedral, externally, for all its solemn hugeness, strikes the
same note of would-be reasoned elegance and cheer; it has conventional
grandeur, of course, but a grandeur so frank and
ingenuous even in its parti-pris. It has seen so much, and outlived so much,
and served so many sad purposes, and yet remains in aspect so full of the fine
Tuscan geniality, the feeling for life, one may almost
say the feeling for amusement, that inspired it. Its vast many-coloured marble
walls become at any rate, with this, the friendliest note of all Florence; there is an
unfailing charm in walking past them while they lift their great acres of
geometrical mosaic higher in the air than you have time or other occasion to
look. You greet them from the deep street as you greet the side of a mountain
when you move in the gorge--not twisting back your head to keep looking at the
top, but content with the minor accidents, the nestling hollows and soft
cloud-shadows, the general protection of the valley.
Florence
is richer in pictures than we really know till we have begun to look for them
in outlying corners. Then, here and there, one comes upon lurking values and
hidden gems that it quite seems one might as a good New Yorker quietly
"bag" for the so aspiring Museum of that city without their being
missed. The Pitti Palace is of course a collection of masterpieces; they jostle
each other in their splendour, they perhaps even, in their merciless multitude,
rather fatigue our admiration. The Uffizi is almost as fine a show, and
together with that long serpentine artery which crosses the Arno
and connects them, making you ask yourself, whichever way you take it, what
goal can be grand enough to crown such a journey, they form the great central
treasure-chamber of the town. But I have been neglecting them of late for love
of the Academy, where there are fewer copyists and tourists, above all fewer
pictorial lions, those whose roar is heard from afar and who strike us as
expecting overmuch to have it their own way in the jungle. The pictures at the
Academy are all, rather, doves--the whole impression is less pompously
tropical. Selection still leaves one too much to say, but I noted here, on my
last occasion, an enchanting Botticelli so obscurely hung, in one of the
smaller rooms, that I scarce knew whether most to enjoy or to resent its
relegation. Placed, in a mean black frame, where you wouldn't have looked for a
masterpiece, it yet gave out to a good glass every characteristic of one.
Representing as it does the walk of Tobias with the angel, there are really
parts of it that an angel might have painted; but I doubt whether it is
observed by half-a-dozen persons a year. That was my excuse for my wanting to
know, on the spot, though doubtless all sophistically, what dishonour, could
the transfer be artfully accomplished, a strong American light and a brave gilded
frame would, comparatively speaking, do it. There and then it would, shine with
the intense authority that we claim for the fairest things--would exhale its
wondrous beauty as a sovereign example. What it comes to is that this master is
the most interesting of a great band--the only Florentine save Leonardo and
Michael in whom the impulse was original and the invention rare. His
imagination is of things strange, subtle and complicated--things it at first
strikes us that we moderns have reason to know, and that it has taken us all
the ages to learn; so that we permit ourselves to wonder how a
"primitive" could come by them. We soon enough reflect, however, that
we ourselves have come by them almost only through him, exquisite spirit that
he was, and that when we enjoy, or at least when we encounter, in our William
Morrises, in our Rossettis and Burne-Joneses, the note of the haunted or
over-charged consciousness, we are but treated, with other matters, to repeated
doses of diluted Botticelli. He practically set with his own hand almost all
the copies to almost all our so-called pre-Raphaelites,
earlier and later, near and remote.
Let us at the same time, none the less,
never fail of response to the great Florentine geniality at large. Fra
Angelico, Filippo Lippi, Ghirlandaio, were not "subtly" imaginative,
were not even riotously so; but what other three were ever more gladly
observant, more vividly and richly true? If there should some time be a weeding
out of the world's possessions the best works of the early Florentines will
certainly be counted among the flowers. With the ripest performances of the
Venetians--by which I don't mean the over-ripe--we can but take them for the
most valuable things in the history of art. Heaven forbid we should be narrowed
down to a cruel choice; but if it came to a question of keeping or losing
between half-a-dozen Raphaels and half-a-dozen things it would be a joy to pick
out at the Academy, I fear that, for myself, the memory of the Transfiguration,
or indeed of the other Roman relics of the painter, wouldn't save the Raphaels.
And yet this was so far from the opinion of a patient artist whom I saw the
other day copying the finest of Ghirlandaios--a beautiful Adoration of the
Kings at the Hospital of the Innocenti. Here was another sample of the buried
art-wealth of Florence.
It hangs in an obscure chapel, far aloft, behind an altar, and though now and
then a stray tourist wanders in and puzzles a while over the vaguely-glowing
forms, the picture is never really seen and enjoyed. I found an aged Frenchman
of modest mien perched on a little platform beneath it, behind a great hedge of
altar-candlesticks, with an admirable copy all completed. The difficulties of
his task had been well-nigh insuperable, and his performance seemed to me a
real feat of magic. He could scarcely move or turn, and could find room for his
canvas but by rolling it together and painting a small piece at a time, so that
he never enjoyed a view of his ensemble. The original is gorgeous with colour
and bewildering with decorative detail, but not a gleam of
the painter's crimson was wanting, not a curl in his gold arabesques. It
seemed to me that if I had copied a Ghirlandaio in such conditions I would at
least maintain for my own credit that he was the first painter in the world.
"Very good of its kind," said the weary old man with a shrug of reply
for my raptures; "but oh, how far short of Raphael!" However that may
be, if the reader chances to observe this consummate copy in the so commendable
Museum devoted in Paris to such works, let him stop before it with a due
reverence; it is one of the patient things of art. Seeing it wrought there, in
its dusky nook, under such scant convenience, I found no bar in the painter's
foreignness to a thrilled sense that the old art-life of Florence isn't yet extinct. It still at least
works spells and almost miracles.
1873.
I
Yesterday that languid organism known as the Florentine
Carnival put on a momentary semblance of vigour, and decreed a general corso
through the town. The spectacle was not brilliant, but it suggested some
natural reflections. I encountered the line of carriages in the square before
Santa Croce, of which they were making the circuit. They rolled solemnly by,
with their inmates frowning forth at each other in apparent wrath at not
finding each other more worth while. There were no masks, no costumes, no
decorations, no throwing of flowers or sweetmeats. It was as if each
carriageful had privately and not very heroically resolved not to be at costs,
and was rather discomfited at finding that it was getting no better
entertainment than it gave. The middle of the piazza was filled with little
tables, with shouting mountebanks, mostly disguised in battered bonnets and
crinolines, offering chances in raffles for plucked fowls and kerosene lamps. I
have never thought the huge marble statue of Dante, which overlooks the scene,
a work of the last refinement; but, as it stood there on its high pedestal,
chin in hand, frowning down on all this cheap foolery, it seemed to have a
great moral intention. The carriages followed a prescribed course--through Via
Ghibellina, Via del Proconsolo, past the Badia and the Bargello, beneath the
great tessellated cliffs of the Cathedral, through Via Tornabuoni and out into
ten minutes' sunshine beside the Arno. Much of
all this is the gravest and stateliest part of Florence, a quarter of supreme dignity, and
there was an almost ludicrous incongruity in seeing Pleasure leading her train
through these dusky historic streets. It was most uncomfortably cold, and in
the absence of masks many a fair nose was fantastically tipped with purple. But
as the carriages crept solemnly along they seemed to keep a funeral march--to
follow an antique custom, an exploded faith, to its tomb. The Carnival is dead,
and these good people who had come abroad to make merry were funeral mutes and
grave-diggers. Last winter in Rome
it showed but a galvanised life, yet compared with this humble exhibition it
was operatic. At Rome
indeed it was too operatic. The knights on horseback there were a bevy of
circus-riders, and I'm sure half the mad revellers repaired every night to the
Capitol for their twelve sous a day.
I have just been reading over the Letters of the President
de Brosses. A hundred years ago, in Venice, the
Carnival lasted six months; and at Rome
for many weeks each year one was free, under cover of a mask, to perpetrate the
most fantastic follies and cultivate the most remunerative vices. It's very
well to read the President's notes, which have indeed a singular interest; but
they make us ask ourselves why we should expect the Italians to persist in
manners and practices which we ourselves, if we had responsibilities in the
matter, should find intolerable. The Florentines at any rate spend no more money nor faith on the carnivalesque. And yet this
truth has a qualification; for what struck me in the whole spectacle yesterday,
and prompted these observations, was not at all the more or less of costume of
the occupants of the carriages, but the obstinate survival of the merrymaking
instinct in the people at large. There could be no better example of it than
that so dim a shadow of entertainment should keep all Florence standing and strolling, densely
packed for hours, in the cold streets. There was nothing to see that mightn't
be seen on the Cascine any fine day in the year--nothing but a name, a
tradition, a pretext for sweet staring idleness. The faculty of making much of
common things and converting small occasions into great pleasures is, to a son
of communities strenuous as ours are strenuous, the most salient characteristic
of the so-called Latin civilisations. It charms him and vexes him, according to
his mood; and for the most part it represents a moral gulf between his own temperamental
and indeed spiritual sense of race, and that of Frenchmen and Italians, far
wider than the watery leagues that a steamer may annihilate. But I think his
mood is wisest when he accepts the "foreign" easy surrender to all
the senses as the sign of an unconscious philosophy of life, instilled by the
experience of centuries--the philosophy of people who have lived long and much,
who have discovered no short cuts to happiness and no effective circumvention
of effort, and so have come to regard the average lot as a ponderous fact that
absolutely calls for a certain amount of sitting on the lighter tray of the
scales. Florence
yesterday then took its holiday in a natural, placid fashion that seemed to
make its own temper an affair quite independent of the splendour of the
compensation decreed on a higher line to the weariness of its legs. That the
corso was stupid or lively was the shame or the glory of the powers
"above"--the fates, the gods, the forestieri, the town-councilmen,
the rich or the stingy. Common Florence,
on the narrow footways, pressed against the houses, obeyed a natural need in
looking about complacently, patiently, gently, and never pushing, nor
trampling, nor swearing, nor staggering. This liberal margin
for festivals in Italy
gives the masses a more than man-of-the-world urbanity in taking their
pleasure.
Meanwhile it occurs to me that by a remote New
England fireside an unsophisticated young person of either sex is reading in an old volume of travels or an old romantic
tale some account of these anniversaries and appointed revels as old Catholic
lands offer them to view. Across the page swims a vision of sculptured
palace-fronts draped in crimson and gold and shining in a southern sun; of a
motley train of maskers sweeping on in voluptuous confusion and pelting each
other with nosegays and love-letters. Into the quiet room, quenching the rhythm
of the Connecticut
clock, floats an uproar of delighted voices, a medley
of stirring foreign sounds, an echo of far-heard music of a strangely alien
cadence. But the dusk is falling, and the unsophisticated young person closes
the book wearily and wanders to the window. The dusk is falling on the beaten
snow. Down the road is a white wooden meeting-house, looking grey among the
drifts. The young person surveys the prospect a while, and then wanders back
and stares at the fire. The Carnival of Venice, of Florence,
of Rome; colour
and costume, romance and rapture! The young person gazes in the firelight at
the flickering chiaroscuro of the future, discerns at last the glowing phantasm
of opportunity, and determines with a wild heart-beat to go and see it
all--twenty years hence!
II
A couple of days since, driving to Fiesole,
we came back by the castle
of Vincigliata. The
afternoon was lovely; and, though there is as yet (February 10th) no visible
revival of vegetation, the air was full of a vague vernal perfume, and the warm
colours of the hills and the yellow western sunlight flooding the plain seemed
to contain the promise of Nature's return to grace. It's true that above the
distant pale blue gorge of Vallombrosa the mountain-line was tipped with snow;
but the liberated soul of Spring was nevertheless at
large. The view from Fiesole
seems vaster and richer with each visit. The hollow in which Florence lies, and
which from below seems deep and contracted, opens out into an immense and
generous valley and leads away the eye into a hundred gradations of distance.
The place itself showed, amid its chequered fields and gardens, with as many
towers and spires as a chess-board half cleared. The domes and towers were
washed over with a faint blue mist. The scattered columns of smoke, interfused
with the sinking sunlight, hung over them like streamers and pennons of silver
gauze; and the Arno, twisting and curling and
glittering here and there, was a serpent cross-striped with silver.
Vincigliata is a product of the millions, the leisure and
the eccentricity, I suppose people say, of an English
gentleman--Mr. Temple Leader, whose name should be commemorated. You reach the
castle from Fiesole by a narrow road, returning
toward Florence
by a romantic twist through the hills and passing nothing on its way save thin
plantations of cypress and cedar. Upward of twenty years ago, I believe, this
gentleman took a fancy to the crumbling shell of a mediæval fortress on a
breezy hill-top overlooking the Val d' Arno and forthwith bought it and began
to "restore" it. I know nothing of what the original ruin may have
cost; but in the dusky courts and chambers of the present elaborate structure
this impassioned archæologist must have buried a fortune. He has, however, the
compensation of feeling that he has erected a monument which, if it is never to
stand a feudal siege, may encounter at least some critical over-hauling. It is
a disinterested work of art and really a triumph of æsthetic culture. The
author has reproduced with minute accuracy a sturdy home-fortress of the
fourteenth century, and has kept throughout such rigid terms with his model
that the result is literally uninhabitable to degenerate moderns. It is simply
a massive facsimile, an elegant museum of archaic images, mainly but most
amusingly counterfeit, perched on a spur of the Apennines.
The place is most politely shown. There is a charming cloister, painted with
extremely clever "quaint" frescoes, celebrating the deeds of the
founders of the castle--a cloister that is everything delightful a cloister
should be except truly venerable and employable. There is a beautiful castle
court, with the embattled tower climbing into the blue far above it, and a
spacious loggia with rugged medallions and mild-hued Luca della
Robbias fastened unevenly into the walls. But the apartments are the great
success, and each of them as good a "reconstruction" as a tale of
Walter Scott; or, to speak frankly, a much better one. They are all low-beamed
and vaulted, stone-paved, decorated in grave colours and lighted, from narrow,
deeply recessed windows, through small leaden-ringed plates of opaque glass.
The details are infinitely ingenious and elaborately grim,
and the indoor atmosphere of mediaevalism most forcibly revived. No
compromising fact of domiciliary darkness and cold is spared us, no producing
condition of mediaeval manners not glanced at. There are oaken benches round
the room, of about six inches in depth, and gaunt fauteuils of wrought leather,
illustrating the suppressed transitions which, as George
Eliot says, unite all contrasts--offering a visible link between the
modern conceptions of torture and of luxury. There are fireplaces nowhere but
in the kitchen, where a couple of sentry-boxes are inserted on either side of
the great hooded chimney-piece, into which people might creep and take their
turn at being toasted and smoked. One may doubt whether this dearth of the hearthstone
could have raged on such a scale, but it's a happy stroke in the representation
of an Italian dwelling of any period. It shows how the graceful fiction that Italy is all
"meridional" flourished for some time before being refuted by
grumbling tourists. And yet amid this cold comfort you feel the incongruous
presence of a constant intuitive regard for beauty. The shapely spring of the
vaulted ceilings; the richly figured walls, coarse and hard in substance as
they are; the charming shapes of the great platters and flagons in the deep
recesses of the quaintly carved black dressers; the wandering hand of ornament,
as it were, playing here and there for its own diversion in unlighted
corners--such things redress, to our fond credulity, with all sorts of grace,
the balance of the picture.
And yet, somehow, with what dim, unillumined vision one
fancies even such inmates as those conscious of finer needs than the mere
supply of blows and beef and beer would meet passing their heavy eyes over such
slender household beguilements! These crepuscular chambers at Vincigliata are a
mystery and a challenge; they seem the mere propounding of an answerless
riddle. You long, as you wander through them, turning up your coat-collar and
wondering whether ghosts can catch bronchitis, to answer it with some positive
notion of what people so encaged and situated "did," how they looked
and talked and carried themselves, how they took their pains and pleasures, how
they counted off the hours. Deadly ennui seems to ooze out of the stones and
hang in clouds in the brown corners. No wonder men relished a fight and panted
for a fray. "Skull-smashers" were sweet, ears ringing with pain and
ribs cracking in a tussle were soothing music, compared with the cruel quietude
of the dim-windowed castle. When they came back they could only have slept a
good deal and eased their dislocated bones on those meagre oaken ledges. Then
they woke up and turned about to the table and ate their portion of roasted
sheep. They shouted at each other across the board and flung the wooden plates
at the servingmen. They jostled and hustled and hooted and bragged; and then,
after gorging and boozing and easing their doublets, they squared their elbows
one by one on the greasy table and buried their scarred foreheads and dreamed
of a good gallop after flying foes. And the women?
They must have been strangely simple--simpler far than any moral archraeologist
can show us in a learned restoration. Of course, their simplicity had its
graces and devices; but one thinks with a sigh that, as the poor things turned
away with patient looks from the viewless windows to the same, same looming
figures on the dusky walls, they hadn't even the consolation of knowing that
just this attitude and movement, set off by their peaked coifs, their falling
sleeves and heavily-twisted trains, would sow the seed of yearning envy--of
sorts--on the part of later generations.
There are moods in which one feels the impulse to enter a
tacit protest against too gross an appetite for pure aesthetics in this
starving and sinning world. One turns half away, musingly, from certain
beautiful useless things. But the healthier state of mind surely is to lay no
tax on any really intelligent manifestation of the curious, and exquisite.
Intelligence hangs together essentially, all along the line; it only needs time
to make, as we say, its connections. The massive pastiche of Vincigliata has no
superficial use; but, even if it were less complete, less successful, less
brilliant, I should feel a reflective kindness for it. So disinterested and
expensive a toy is its own justification; it belongs to the heroics of
dilettantism.
III
One grows to feel the collection of pictures at the Pitti Palace
splendid rather than interesting. After walking through it once or twice you
catch the key in which it is pitched--you know what you are likely not to find
on closer examination; none of the works of the uncompromising period, nothing
from the half-groping geniuses of the early time, those whose colouring was
sometimes harsh and their outlines sometimes angular. Vague to me the principle
on which the pictures were originally gathered and of the aesthetic creed of
the princes who chiefly selected them. A princely creed I should roughly call
it--the creed of people who believed in things presenting a fine face to
society; who esteemed showy results rather than curious processes, and would
have hardly cared more to admit into their collection a work by one of the
laborious precursors of the full efflorescence than to see a bucket and broom
left standing in a state saloon. The gallery contains in literal fact some
eight or ten paintings of the early Tuscan School--notably two admirable
specimens of Filippo Lippi and one of the frequent circular pictures of the
great Botticelli--a Madonna, chilled with tragic prescience, laying a pale
cheek against that of a blighted Infant. Such a melancholy mother as this of
Botticelli would have strangled her baby in its cradle to rescue it from the
future. But of Botticelli there is much to say. One of the Filippo Lippis is
perhaps his masterpiece--a Madonna in a small rose-garden (such a "flowery
close" as Mr. William Morris loves to haunt), leaning over an Infant who
kicks his little human heels on the grass while half-a-dozen curly-pated angels
gather about him, looking back over their shoulders with the candour of
children in tableaux vivants, and one of them drops an armful of gathered roses
one by one upon the baby. The delightful earthly innocence of these winged
youngsters is quite inexpressible. Their heads are twisted about toward the
spectator as if they were playing at leap-frog and were expecting a companion
to come and take a jump. Never did "young" art, never did subjective
freshness, attempt with greater success to represent those phases. But these
three fine works are hung over the tops of doors in a dark back room--the
bucket and broom are thrust behind a curtain. It seems to me, nevertheless,
that a fine Filippo Lippi is good enough company for an Allori or a Cigoli, and
that that too deeply sentient Virgin of Botticelli might happily balance the
flower-like irresponsibility of Raphael's "Madonna of the Chair."
Taking the Pitti collection, however, simply for what it
pretends to be, it gives us the very flower of the sumptuous, the courtly, the grand-ducal. It is chiefly official art, as one may say,
but it presents the fine side of the type--the brilliancy, the facility, the
amplitude, the sovereignty of good taste. I agree on the whole with a nameless
companion and with what he lately remarked about his own humour on these
matters; that, having been on his first acquaintance with pictures nothing if
not critical, and held the lesson incomplete and the opportunity slighted if he
left a gallery without a headache, he had come, as he grew older, to regard
them more as the grandest of all pleasantries and less as the most strenuous of
all lessons, and to remind himself that, after all, it is the privilege of art
to make us friendly to the human mind and not to make us suspicious of it. We
do in fact as we grow older unstring the critical bow a little and strike a
truce with invidious comparisons. We work off the juvenile impulse to heated
partisanship and discover that one spontaneous producer isn't different enough
from another to keep the all-knowing Fates from smiling over our loves and our
aversions. We perceive a certain human solidarity in all cultivated effort, and
are conscious of a growing accommodation of judgment--an easier disposition,
the fruit of experience, to take the joke for what it is worth as it passes. We
have in short less of a quarrel with the masters we don't delight in, and less
of an impulse to pin all our faith on those in whom, in more zealous days, we
fancied that we made our peculiar meanings. The meanings no longer seem quite
so peculiar. Since then we have arrived at a few in the depths of our own
genius that are not sensibly less striking.
And yet it must be added that all this depends vastly on
one's mood--as a traveller's impressions do, generally, to a degree which those
who give them to the world would do well more explicitly to declare. We have
our hours of expansion and those of contraction, and yet while we follow the
traveller's trade we go about gazing and judging with unadjusted confidence. We
can't suspend judgment; we must take our notes, and the notes are florid or
crabbed, as the case may be. A short time ago I spent a week in an ancient city
on a hill-top, in the humour, for which I was not to blame, which produces
crabbed notes. I knew it at the time, but couldn't help it. I went through all
the motions of liberal appreciation; I uncapped in all the churches and on the
massive ramparts stared all the views fairly out of countenance; but my
imagination, which I suppose at bottom had very good reasons of its own and
knew perfectly what it was about, refused to project into the dark old town and
upon the yellow hills that sympathetic glow which forms half the substance of
our genial impressions. So it is that in museums and palaces we are alternate
radicals and conservatives. On some days we ask but to be somewhat sensibly
affected; on others, Ruskin-haunted, to be spiritually steadied. After a long
absence from the Pitti
Palace I went back there
the other morning and transferred myself from chair to chair in the great
golden-roofed saloons--the chairs are all gilded and covered with faded
silk--in the humour to be diverted at any price. I needn't mention the things
that diverted me; I yawn now when I think of some of them. But an artist, for instance,
to whom my kindlier judgment has made permanent concessions is that charming
Andrea del Sarto. When I first knew him, in my cold
youth, I used to say without mincing that I didn't like him. Cet
âge est sans pitié. The fine sympathetic, melancholy, pleasing painter! He has
a dozen faults, and if you insist pedantically on your rights the conclusive
word you use about him will be the word weak. But if you are a generous soul
you will utter it low--low as the mild grave tone of his own
sought harmonies. He is monotonous, narrow, incomplete; he has but a dozen
different figures and but two or three ways of distributing them; he seems able
to utter but half his thought, and his canvases lack apparently some final
return on the whole matter--some process which his impulse failed him before he
could bestow. And yet in spite of these limitations his genius is both itself
of the great pattern and lighted by the air of a great period. Three gifts he
had largely: an instinctive, unaffected, unerring grace; a large and rich, and
yet a sort of withdrawn and indifferent sobriety; and best of all, as well as
rarest of all, an indescribable property of relatedness as to the moral world.
Whether he was aware of the connection or not, or in what measure, I cannot say;
but he gives, so to speak, the taste of it. Before his handsome vague-browed
Madonnas; the mild, robust young saints who kneel in his foregrounds and look
round at you with a conscious anxiety which seems to say that, though in the
picture, they are not of it, but of your own sentient life of commingled love
and weariness; the stately apostles, with comely heads and harmonious
draperies, who gaze up at the high-seated Virgin like early astronomers at a
newly seen star--there comes to you the brush of the dark wing of an inward
life. A shadow falls for the moment, and in it you feel the chill of moral
suffering. Did the Lippis suffer, father or son? Did Raphael suffer? Did
Titian? Did Rubens suffer? Perish the thought--it wouldn't be fair to us that
they should have had everything. And I note in our poor second-rate Andrea an
element of interest lacking to a number of stronger talents.
Interspersed with him at the Pitti hang
the stronger and the weaker in splendid abundance. Raphael is there,
strong in portraiture--easy, various, bountiful genius that he was--and (strong
here isn't the word, but) happy beyond the common dream in his beautiful
"Madonna of the Chair." The general instinct of posterity seems to
have been to treat this lovely picture as a semi-sacred, an almost miraculous,
manifestation. People stand in a worshipful silence before it, as they would
before a taper-studded shrine. If we suspend in imagination on the right of it
the solid, realistic, unidealised portrait of Leo the Tenth (which hangs in
another room) and transport to the left the fresco of the School of Athens from
the Vatican, and then reflect that these were three separate fancies of a
single youthful, amiable genius we recognise that such a producing
consciousness must have been a "treat." My companion already quoted
has a phrase that he "doesn't care for Raphael," but confesses, when
pressed, that he was a most remarkable young man. Titian has a dozen portraits
of unequal interest. I never particularly noticed till lately--it is very ill
hung--that portentous image of the Emperor Charles the Fifth. He was a burlier,
more imposing personage than his usual legend figures, and in his great puffed
sleeves and gold chains and full-skirted over-dress he seems to tell of a tread
that might sometimes have been inconveniently resonant. But the purpose to have
his way and work his will is there--the great stomach for divine right, the old
monarchical temperament. The great Titian, in portraiture, however, remains
that formidable young man in black, with the small compact head, the delicate
nose and the irascible blue eye. Who was he? What was he? "Ritratto
virile" is all the catalogue is able to call the
picture. "Virile! " Rather! you vulgarly exclaim. You may weave what romance you please
about it, but a romance your dream must be. Handsome, clever, defiant,
passionate, dangerous, it was not his own fault if he hadn't adventures and to
spare. He was a gentleman and a warrior, and his adventures balanced between
camp and court. I imagine him the young orphan of a noble house, about to come
into mortgaged estates. One wouldn't have cared to be his guardian, bound to
paternal admonitions once a month over his precocious transactions with the
Jews or his scandalous abduction from her convent of such and such a noble
maiden.
The Pitti Gallery contains none of Titian's golden-toned
groups; but it boasts a lovely composition by Paul Veronese, the dealer in
silver hues--a Baptism of Christ. W---- named it to me
the other day as the picture he most enjoyed, and surely painting seems here to
have proposed to itself to discredit and annihilate--and even on the occasion
of such a subject--everything but the loveliness of life. The picture bedims
and enfeebles its neighbours. We ask ourselves whether painting as such can go
further. It is simply that here at last the art stands complete. The early
Tuscans, as well as Leonardo, as Raphael, as Michael, saw the great spectacle
that surrounded them in beautiful sharp-edged elements and parts. The great
Venetians felt its indissoluble unity and recognised that form and colour and
earth and air were equal members of every possible subject; and beneath their
magical touch the hard outlines melted together and the blank intervals bloomed
with meaning. In this beautiful Paul Veronese of the Pitti everything is part
of the charm--the atmosphere as well as the figures, the look of radiant
morning in the white-streaked sky as well as the living human limbs, the cloth
of Venetian purple about the loins of the Christ as well as the noble humility
of his attitude. The relation to Nature of the other Italian schools differs
from that of the Venetian as courtship--even ardent courtship--differs from
marriage.
IV
I went the other day to the secularised Convent of San
Marco, paid my franc at the profane little wicket which creaks away at the
door--no less than six custodians, apparently, are needed to turn it, as if it
may have a recusant conscience--passed along the bright, still cloister and
paid my respects to Fra Angelico's Crucifixion, in that dusky chamber in the
basement. I looked long; one can hardly do otherwise. The fresco deals with the
pathetic on the grand scale, and after taking in its beauty you feel as little
at liberty to go away abruptly as you would to leave church during the sermon.
You may be as little of a formal Christian as Fra Angelico was much of one; you
yet feel admonished by spiritual decency to let so yearning a view of the
Christian story work its utmost will on you. The three crosses rise high against a strange completely crimson sky, which
deepens mysteriously the tragic expression of the scene, though I remain
perforce vague as to whether this lurid background be a fine intended piece of
symbolism or an effective accident of time. In the first case the extravagance
quite triumphs. Between the crosses, under no great rigour of composition, are
scattered the most exemplary saints--kneeling, praying, weeping, pitying,
worshipping. The swoon of the Madonna is depicted at the left, and this gives
the holy presences, in respect to the case, the strangest historical or actual
air. Everything is so real that you feel a vague impatience and almost ask
yourself how it was that amid the army of his consecrated servants our Lord was
permitted to suffer. On reflection you see that the painter's design, so far as
coherent, has been simply to offer an immense representation of Pity, and all
with such concentrated truth that his colours here seem dissolved in tears that
drop and drop, however softly, through all time. Of this single yearning
consciousness the figures are admirably expressive. No later painter learned to
render with deeper force than Fra Angelico the one state of the spirit he could
conceive--a passionate pious tenderness. Immured in his quiet convent, he
apparently never received an intelligible impression of evil; and his
conception of human life was a perpetual sense of sacredly loving and being
loved. But how, immured in his quiet convent, away from the streets and the
studios, did he become that genuine, finished, perfectly professional painter?
No one is less of a mere mawkish amateur. His range was broad, from this really
heroic fresco to the little trumpeting seraphs, in their opaline robes,
enamelled, as it were, on the gold margins of his pictures.
I sat out the sermon and departed, I hope, with the gentle
preacher's blessing. I went into the smaller refectory, near by, to refresh my
memory of the beautiful Last Supper of Domenico Ghirlandaio. It would be
putting things coarsely to say that I adjourned thus from a sernlon to a
comedy, though Ghirlandaio's theme, as contrasted with the blessed Angelico's,
was the dramatic spectacular side of human life. How keenly he observed it and
how richly he rendered it, the world about him of colour and costume, of
handsome heads and pictorial groupings! In his admirable school there is no
painter one enjoys--pace Ruskin--more sociably and irresponsibly. Lippo Lippi
is simpler, quainter, more frankly expressive; but we
retain before him a remnant of the sympathetic discomfort provoked by the
masters whose conceptions were still a trifle too large for their means. The
pictorial vision in their minds seems to stretch and strain their undeveloped
skill almost to a sense of pain. In Ghirlandaio the skill and the imagination
are equal, and he gives us a delightful impression of enjoying his own
resources. Of all the painters of his time he affects us least as positively
not of ours. He enjoyed a crimson mantle spreading and tumbling in curious
folds and embroidered with needlework of gold, just as he enjoyed a handsome
well-rounded head, with vigorous dusky locks, profiled in courteous adoration.
He enjoyed in short the various reality of things, and
had the good fortune to live in an age when reality flowered into a thousand
amusing graces--to speak only of those. He was not especially addicted to
giving spiritual hints; and yet how hard and meagre they seem, the professed
and finished realists of our own day, with the spiritual bonhomie or candour
that makes half Ghirlandaio's richness left out! The Last Supper at San Marco
is an excellent example of the natural reverence of an artist of that time with
whom reverence was not, as one may say, a specialty. The main idea with him has
been the variety, the material bravery and positively social charm of the
scene, which finds expression, with irrepressible generosity, in the
accessories of the background. Instinctively he imagines an opulent
garden--imagines it with a good faith which quite tides him over the reflection
that Christ and his disciples were poor men and unused to sit at meat in
palaces. Great full-fruited orange-trees peep over the wall before which the
table is spread, strange birds fly through the air, while a peacock perches on
the edge of the partition and looks down on the sacred repast. It is striking
that, without any at all intense religious purpose, the figures, in their
varied naturalness, have a dignity and sweetness of attitude that admits of
numberless reverential constructions. I should call all this the happy tact of
a robust faith.
On the staircase leading up to the little painted cells of
the Beato Angelico, however, I suddenly faltered and paused. Somehow I had
grown averse to the intenser zeal of the Monk of Fiesole. I wanted no more of
him that day. I wanted no more macerated friars and spear-gashed sides.
Ghirlandaio's elegant way of telling his story had put me in the humour for
something more largely intelligent, more profanely pleasing. I departed, walked
across the square, and found it in the Academy, standing in a particular spot
and looking up at a particular high-hung picture. It is difficult to speak
adequately, perhaps even intelligibly, of Sandro Botticelli. An accomplished
critic--Mr. Pater, in his Studies on the History of the Renaissance--has lately
paid him the tribute of an exquisite, a supreme, curiosity. He was rarity and
distinction incarnate, and of all the multitudinous masters of his group
incomparably the most interesting, the one who detains and perplexes and
fascinates us most. Exquisitely fine his imagination--infinitely audacious and
adventurous his fancy. Alone among the painters of his time he strikes us as
having invention. The glow and thrill of expanding observation--this was the
feeling that sent his comrades to their easels; but Botticelli's moved him to
reactions and emotions of which they knew nothing, caused his faculty to sport
and wander and explore on its own account. These impulses have fruits often so
ingenious and so lovely that it would be easy to talk nonsense about them. I
hope it is not nonsense, however, to say that the picture to which I just
alluded (the "Coronation of the Virgin," with a group of life-sized
saints below and a garland of miniature angels above) is one of the supremely beautiful
productions of the human mind. It is hung so high that you need a good glass to
see it; to say nothing of the unprecedented delicacy of the work. The lower
half is of moderate interest; but the dance of hand-clasped angels round the
heavenly couple above has a beauty newly exhaled from the deepest sources of
inspiration. Their perfect little hands are locked with ineffable elegance;
their blowing robes are tossed into folds of which each line is a study; their
charming feet have the relief of the most delicate sculpture. But, as I have
already noted, of Botticelli there is much, too much to say--besides which Mr.
Pater has said all. Only add thus to his inimitable grace of design that the
exquisite pictorial force driving him goes a-Maying not on wanton errands of
its own, but on those of some mystic superstition which trembles for ever in
his heart.
[Illustration: THE GREAT EAVES, FLORENCE]
V
The more I look at the old Florentine domestic architecture
the more I like it--that of the great examples at least; and if I ever am able
to build myself a lordly pleasure-house I don't see how in conscience I can
build it different from these. They are sombre and frowning, and look a trifle
more as if they were meant to keep people out than to let them in; but what equally
"important" type--if there be an equally important--is more
expressive of domiciliary dignity and security and yet attests them with a
finer æesthetic economy? They are impressively "handsome," and yet
contrive to be so by the simplest means. I don't say at the smallest pecuniary
cost--that's another matter. There is money buried in the thick walls and
diffused through the echoing excess of space. The merchant nobles of the
fifteenth century had deep and full pockets, I suppose, though the present bearers
of their names are glad to let out their palaces in suites of apartments which
are occupied by the commercial aristocracy of another republic. One is told of
fine old mouldering chambers of which possession is to be enjoyed for a sum not
worth mentioning. I am afraid that behind these so gravely harmonious fronts
there is a good deal of dusky discomfort, and I speak now simply of the large
serious faces themselves as you can see them from the street; see them ranged
cheek to cheek, in the grey historic light of Via dei Bardi, Via Maggio, Via
degli Albizzi. The force of character, the familiar severity and majesty,
depend on a few simple features: on the great iron-caged windows of the
rough-hewn basement; on the noble stretch of space between the summit of one
high, round-topped window and the bottom of that above; on the high-hung
sculptured shield at the angle of the house; on the flat far-projecting roof;
and, finally, on the magnificent tallness of the whole building, which so
dwarfs our modern attempts at size. The finest of these Florentine palaces are,
I imagine, the tallest habitations in Europe
that are frankly and amply habitations--not mere shafts for machinery of the
American grain-elevator pattern. Some of the creations of M. Haussmann in Paris
may climb very nearly as high; but there is all the difference in the world
between the impressiveness of a building which takes breath, as it were, some
six or seven times, from storey to storey, and of one that erects itself to an
equal height in three long-drawn pulsations. When a house is ten windows wide
and the drawing-room floor is as high as a chapel it can afford but three
floors. The spaciousness of some of those ancient drawing-rooms is that of a
Russian steppe. The "family circle," gathered anywhere within
speaking distance, must resemble a group of pilgrims encamped in the desert on
a little oasis of carpet. Madame Gryzanowska, living at the top of a house in
that dusky, tortuous old Borgo Pinti, initiated me the other
evening most good-naturedly, lamp in hand, into the far-spreading
mysteries of her apartment. Such quarters seem a translation into space of the
old-fashioned idea of leisure. Leisure and "room" have been passing
out of our manners together, but here and there, being of stouter structure,
the latter lingers and survives.
Here and there, indeed, in this blessed Italy,
reluctantly modern in spite alike of boasts and lamentations, it seems to have
been preserved for curiosity's and fancy's sake, with a vague, sweet odour of
the embalmer's spices about it. I went the other morning to the Corsini Palace. The proprietors obviously are
great people. One of the ornaments of Rome
is their great white-faced palace in the dark Trastevere and its voluminous
gallery, none the less delectable for the poorness of the pictures. Here they
have a palace on the Arno, with another large,
handsome, respectable and mainly uninteresting collection. It contains indeed
three or four fine examples of early Florentines. It was not especially for the
pictures that I went, however; and certainly not for the pictures that I
stayed. I was under the same spell as the inveterate companion with whom I
walked the other day through the beautiful private apartments of the Pitti
Palace and who said: "I suppose I care for nature, and I know there have
been times when I have thought it the greatest pleasure in life to lie under a
tree and gaze away at blue hills. But just now I had rather lie on that faded
sea-green satin sofa and gaze down through the open door at that retreating
vista of gilded, deserted, haunted chambers. In other words I prefer a good
'interior' to a good landscape. The impression has a greater intensity--the
thing itself a more complex animation. I like fine old rooms that have been
occupied in a fine old way. I like the musty upholstery, the antiquated
knick-knacks, the view out of the tall deep-embrasured
windows at garden cypresses rocking against a grey sky. If you don't know why,
I'm afraid I can't tell you." It seemed to me at the Palazzo Corsini that
I did know why. In places that have been lived in so long and so much and in
such a fine old way, as my friend said--that is under social conditions so
multifold and to a comparatively starved and democratic sense so curious--the
past seems to have left a sensible deposit, an aroma, an atmosphere. This
ghostly presence tells you no secrets, but it prompts you to try and guess a
few. What has been done and said here through so many years, what has been
ventured or suffered, what has been dreamed or despaired of? Guess the riddle
if you can, or if you think it worth your ingenuity. The rooms at Palazzo
Corsini suggest indeed, and seem to recall, but a monotony of peace and plenty.
One of them imaged such a noble perfection of a home-scene that I dawdled there
until the old custodian came shuffling back to see whether possibly I was
trying to conceal a Caravaggio about my person: a great crimson-draped
drawing-room of the amplest and yet most charming proportions; walls hung with
large dark pictures, a great concave ceiling frescoed and moulded with dusky
richness, and half-a-dozen south windows looking out on the Arno, whose swift
yellow tide sends up the light in a cheerful flicker. I fear that in my
appreciation of the particular effect so achieved I uttered a monstrous
folly--some momentary willingness to be maimed or crippled all my days if I
might pass them in such a place. In fact half the pleasure of inhabiting this
spacious saloon would be that of using one's legs, of strolling up and down
past the windows, one by one, and making desultory journeys from station to
station and corner to corner. Near by is a colossal ball-room, domed and
pilastered like a Renaissance cathedral, and super-abundantly decorated with
marble effigies, all yellow and grey with the years.
VI
In the Carthusian Monastery outside the Roman Gate,
mutilated and profaned though it is, one may still snuff up a strong if stale
redolence of old Catholicism and old Italy. The road to it is ugly, being
encumbered with vulgar waggons and fringed with tenements suggestive of an
Irish-American suburb. Your interest begins as you come in sight of the convent
perched on its little mountain and lifting against the sky, around the
bell-tower of its gorgeous chapel, a coronet of clustered cells. You make your
way into the lower gate, through a clamouring press of deformed beggars who
thrust at you their stumps of limbs, and you climb the steep hillside through a
shabby plantation which it is proper to fancy was better tended in the monkish
time. The monks are not totally abolished, the government having the grace to
await the natural extinction of the half-dozen old brothers who remain, and who
shuffle doggedly about the cloisters, looking, with their white robes and their
pale blank old faces, quite anticipatory ghosts of their future selves. A
prosaic, profane old man in a coat and trousers serves you, however, as
custodian. The melancholy friars have not even the privilege of doing you the
honours of their dishonour. One must imagine the pathetic effect of their
former silent pointings to this and that conventual treasure under stress of
the feeling that such pointings were narrowly numbered. The convent is vast and
irregular--it bristles with those picture-making arts and accidents which one notes
as one lingers and passes, but which in Italy the overburdened memory
learns to resolve into broadly general images. I rather deplore its position at
the gates of a bustling city--it ought rather to be lodged in some lonely fold
of the Apennines. And yet to look out from the
shady porch of one of the quiet cells upon the teeming vale of the Arno and the
clustered towers of Florence
must have deepened the sense of monastic quietude.
The chapel, or rather the church, which is of great
proportions and designed by Andrea Orcagna, the primitive painter, refines upon
the consecrated type or even quite glorifies it. The massive cincture of black
sculptured stalls, the dusky Gothic roof, the high-hung, deep-toned pictures
and the superb pavement of verd-antique and dark red marble, polished into
glassy lights, must throw the white-robed figures of the gathered friars into
the highest romantic relief. All this luxury of worship has nowhere such value
as in the chapels of monasteries, where we find it contrasted with the
otherwise so ascetic economy of the worshippers. The paintings and gildings of
their church, the gem-bright marbles and fantastic carvings, are really but the
monastic tribute to sensuous delight--an imperious need for which the fond
imagination of Rome
has officiously opened the door. One smiles when one thinks how largely a fine
starved sense for the forbidden things of earth, if it makes the most of its
opportunities, may gratify this need under cover of devotion. Nothing is too
base, too hard, too sordid for real humility, but nothing too elegant, too
amiable, too caressing, caressed, caressable, for the
exaltation of faith. The meaner the convent cell the richer the convent chapel.
Out of poverty and solitude, inanition and cold, your honest friar may rise at
his will into a Mahomet's Paradise of
luxurious analogies.
There are further various dusky subterranean oratories where
a number of bad pictures contend faintly with the friendly gloom. Two or three
of these funereal vaults, however, deserve mention. In one of them, side by
side, sculptured by Donatello in low relief, lie the white marble effigies of
the three members of the Accaiuoli family who founded the convent in the
thirteenth century. In another, on his back, on the pavement, rests a grim old
bishop of the same stout race by the same honest craftsman. Terribly grim he
is, and scowling as if in his stony sleep he still dreamed of his hates and his
hard ambitions. Last and best, in another low chapel, with the trodden pavement
for its bed, shines dimly a grand image of a later bishop--Leonardo Buonafede,
who, dying in 1545, owes his monument to Francesco di San Gallo. I have seen
little from this artist's hand, but it was clearly of the cunningest. His model
here was a very sturdy old prelate, though I should say a very genial old man.
The sculptor has respected his monumental ugliness, but has suffused it with a
singular homely charm--a look of confessed physical comfort in the privilege of
paradise. All these figures have an inimitable reality, and their lifelike
marble seems such an incorruptible incarnation of the genius of the place that
you begin to think of it as even more reckless than cruel on the part of the
present public powers to have begun to pull the establishment down, morally
speaking, about their ears. They are lying quiet yet a while; but when the last
old friar dies and the convent formally lapses, won't they rise on their stiff
old legs and hobble out to the gates and thunder forth anathemas before which
even a future and more enterprising régime may be disposed to pause?
Out of the great central cloister open the snug little
detached dwellings of the absent fathers. When I said just now that the Certosa
in Val d'Ema gives you a glimpse of old Italy I was thinking of this great
pillared quadrangle, lying half in sun and half in shade, of its tangled
garden-growth in the centre, surrounding the ancient customary well, and of the
intense blue sky bending above it, to say nothing of the indispensable old
white-robed monk who pokes about among the lettuce and parsley. We have seen
such places before; we have visited them in that divinatory glance which strays
away into space for a moment over the top of a suggestive book. I don't quite
know whether it's more or less as one's fancy would have it that the monkish
cells are no cells at all, but very tidy little appartements complets,
consisting of a couple of chambers, a sitting-room and a spacious loggia,
projecting out into space from the cliff-like wall of the monastery and sweeping
from pole to pole the loveliest view in the world. It's poor work, however,
taking notes on views, and I will let this one pass. The little chambers are
terribly cold and musty now. Their odour and atmosphere are
such as one used, as a child, to imagine those of the school-room during
Saturday and Sunday.
VII
In the Roman streets, wherever you turn, the facade of a
church in more or less degenerate flamboyance is the principal feature of the
scene; and if, in the absence of purer motives, you are weary of aesthetic
trudging over the corrugated surface of the Seven Hills, a system of pavement
in which small cobble-stones anomalously endowed with angles and edges are
alone employed, you may turn aside at your pleasure and take a reviving sniff
at the pungency of incense. In Florence, one
soon observes, the churches are relatively few and the dusky house-fronts more
rarely interrupted by specimens of that extraordinary architecture which in Rome passes for sacred.
In Florence, in
other words, ecclesiasticism is less cheap a commodity and not dispensed in the
same abundance at the street-corners. Heaven forbid, at the same time, that I
should undervalue the Roman churches, which are for the most part
treasure-houses of history, of curiosity, of promiscuous and associational
interest. It is a fact, nevertheless, that, after St. Peter's, I know but one
really beautiful church by the Tiber, the
enchanting basilica of St. Mary Major. Many have structural character, some a
great allure, but as a rule they all lack the dignity of the best of the
Florentine temples. Here, the list being immeasurably shorter and the seed less
scattered, the principal churches are all beautiful. And yet I went into the
Annunziata the other day and sat there for half-an-hour because, forsooth, the
gildings and the marbles and the frescoed dome and the great rococo shrine near
the door, with its little black jewelled fetish, reminded me so poignantly of
Rome. Such is the city properly styled eternal--since it is eternal, at least,
as regards the consciousness of the individual. One loves it in its
sophistications--though for that matter isn't it all rich and precious
sophistication?--better than other places in their purity.
Coming out of the Annunziata you look past the bronze statue
of the Grand Duke Ferdinand I (whom Mr. Browning's heroine used to watch
for--in the poem of "The Statue and the Bust"--from the red palace
near by), and down a street vista of enchanting picturesqueness. The street is
narrow and dusky and filled with misty shadows, and at its opposite end rises the vast bright-coloured side of the Cathedral. It
stands up in very much the same mountainous fashion as the far-shining mass of
the bigger prodigy at Milan, of which your first glimpse as you leave your
hotel is generally through another such dark avenue; only that, if we talk of
mountains, the white walls of Milan must be likened to snow and ice from their
base, while those of the Duomo of Florence may be the image of some mighty
hillside enamelled with blooming flowers. The big bleak interior here has a
naked majesty which, though it may fail of its effect at first, becomes after a
while extraordinarily touching. Originally disconcerting, it soon inspired me
with a passion. Externally, at any rate, it is one of the loveliest works of
man's hands, and an overwhelming proof into the bargain that when elegance
belittles grandeur you have simply had a bungling artist.
Santa Croce within not only triumphs here, but would triumph
anywhere. "A trifle naked if you like," said my irrepressible
companion, "but that's what I call architecture, just as I don't call
bronze or marble clothes (save under urgent stress of portraiture)
statuary." And indeed we are far enough away from the clustering odds and
ends borrowed from every art and every province without which the ritually
builded thing doesn't trust its spell to work in Rome. The vastness, the lightness, the open
spring of the arches at Santa Croce, the beautiful shape of the high and narrow
choir, the impression made as of mass without weight and the gravity yet
reigning without gloom--these are my frequent delight, and the interest grows
with acquaintance. The place is the great Florentine Valhalla, the final home
or memorial harbour of the native illustrious dead, but that consideration of
it would take me far. It must be confessed moreover that, between his
coarsely-imagined statue out in front and his horrible
monument in one of the aisles, the author of The Divine Comedy, for instance,
is just hereabouts rather an extravagant figure. "Ungrateful Florence," declaims
Byron. Ungrateful indeed--would she were more so! the
susceptible spirit of the great exile may be still aware enough to exclaim; in
common, that is, with most of the other immortals sacrificed on so very large a
scale to current Florentine "plastic" facility. In explanation of
which remark, however, I must confine myself to noting that, as almost all the
old monuments at Santa Croce are small, comparatively small, and interesting
and exquisite, so the modern, well nigh without exception, are
disproportionately vast and pompous, or in other words distressingly vague and
vain. The aptitude of hand, the compositional assurance, with which such things
are nevertheless turned out, constitutes an anomaly replete with suggestion for
an observer of the present state of the arts on the soil and in the air that
once befriended them, taking them all together, as even the soil and the air of
Greece scarce availed to do. But on this head, I repeat, there would be too
much to say; and I find myself checked by the same warning at the threshold of
the church in Florence
really interesting beyond Santa Croce, beyond all others. Such, of course,
easily, is Santa Maria Novella, where the chapels are lined and plated with
wonderful figured and peopled fresco-work even as most of those in Rome with precious
inanimate substances. These overscored retreats of devotion, as dusky, some of
them, as eremitic caves swarming with importunate visions, have kept me divided
all winter between the love of Ghirlandaio and the fear of those seeds of
catarrh to which their mortal chill seems propitious till far on into the
spring. So I pause here just on the praise of that delightful painter--as to
the spirit of whose work the reflections I have already made are but confirmed
by these examples. In the choir at Santa Maria Novella, where the incense
swings and the great chants resound, between the gorgeous coloured window and
the florid grand altar, he still "goes in," with all his might, for
the wicked, the amusing world, the world of faces and forms and characters, of
every sort of curious human and rare material thing.
[Illustration: BOBOLI
GARDEN, FLORENCE.]
VIII
I had always felt the Boboli Gardens charming enough for me
to "haunt" them; and yet such is the interest of Florence in every
quarter that it took another corso of the same cheap pattern as the last to
cause me yesterday to flee the crowded streets, passing under that archway of
the Pitti Palace which might almost be the gate of an Etruscan city, so that I
might spend the afternoon among the mouldy statues that compose with their
screens of cypress, looking down at our clustered towers and our background of
pale blue hills vaguely freckled with white villas. These pleasure-grounds of
the austere Pitti pile, with its inconsequent charm of being so rough-hewn and
yet somehow so elegantly balanced, plead with a voice all their own the general
cause of the ample enclosed, planted, cultivated private preserve--preserve of
tranquillity and beauty and immunity--in the heart of a city; a cause, I allow,
for that matter, easy to plead anywhere, once the pretext is found, the large,
quiet, distributed town-garden, with the vague hum of big grudging boundaries
all about it, but with everything worse excluded, being of course the most
insolently-pleasant thing in the world. In addition to which, when the garden
is in the Italian manner, with flowers rather remarkably omitted, as too flimsy
and easy and cheap, and without lawns that are too smart, paths that are too
often swept and shrubs that are too closely trimmed, though with a fanciful
formalism giving style to its shabbiness, and here and there a dusky ilex-walk,
and here and there a dried-up fountain, and everywhere a piece of mildewed
sculpture staring at you from a green alcove, and just in the right place,
above all, a grassy amphitheatre curtained behind with black cypresses and
sloping downward in mossy marble steps--when, I say, the place possesses these
attractions, and you lounge there of a soft Sunday afternoon, the racier
spectacle of the streets having made your fellow-loungers few and left you to
the deep stillness and the shady vistas that lead you wonder where, left you to
the insidious irresistible mixture of nature and art, nothing too much of
either, only a supreme happy resultant, a divine tertium quid: under these
conditions, it need scarce be said the revelation invoked descends upon you.
The Boboli Gardens are not large--you wonder how compact little Florence finds room for
them within her walls. But they are scattered, to their extreme, their
all-romantic advantage and felicity, over a group of steep undulations between
the rugged and terraced palace and a still-surviving stretch of city wall,
where the unevenness of the ground much adds to their apparent size. You may
cultivate in them the fancy of their solemn and haunted character, of something
faint and dim and even, if you like, tragic, in their prescribed, their
functional smile; as if they borrowed from the huge monument that overhangs
them certain of its ponderous memories and regrets. This course is open to you,
I mention, but it isn't enjoined, and will doubtless indeed not come up for you
at all if it isn't your habit, cherished beyond any other, to spin your
impressions to the last tenuity of fineness. Now that I bethink myself I must
always have happened to wander here on grey and melancholy days. It remains
none the less true that the place contains, thank goodness--or at least thank
the grave, the infinitely-distinguished traditional taste of Florence--no
cheerful, trivial object, neither parterres, nor pagodas, nor peacocks, nor
swans. They have their famous amphitheatre already referred to, with its
degrees or stone benches of a thoroughly aged and mottled complexion and its
circular wall of evergreens behind, in which small cracked images and vases,
things that, according to association, and with the law of the same quite
indefinable, may make as much on one occasion for exquisite dignity as they may
make on another for (to express it kindly) nothing at all. Something was once
done in this charmed and forsaken circle--done or meant to be done; what was
it, dumb statues, who saw it with your blank eyes?
Opposite stands the huge flat-roofed palace, putting forward two great
rectangular arms and looking, with its closed windows and its foundations of
almost unreduced rock, like some ghost of a sample of a ruder Babylon. In the wide court-like space between
the wings is a fine old white marble fountain that never plays. Its dusty
idleness completes the general air of abandonment. Chancing on such a cluster
of objects in Italy--glancing
at them in a certain light and a certain mood--I get (perhaps on too easy
terms, you may think) a sense of history that takes away my breath. Generations
of Medici have stood at these closed windows, embroidered and brocaded
according to their period, and held fetes champetres and floral games on the
greensward, beneath the mouldering hemicycle. And the Medici were
great people! But what remains of it all now is a mere tone in the air, a faint
sigh in the breeze, a vague expression in things, a passive--or call it rather,
perhaps, to be fair, a shyly, pathetically responsive--accessibility to the
yearning guess. Call it much or call it little, the ineffaceability of this
deep stain of experience, it is the interest of old places and the bribe to the
brooding analyst. Time has devoured the doers and their doings, but there still
hangs about some effect of their passage. We can "layout" parks on virgin
soil, and cause them to bristle with the most expensive importations, but we
unfortunately can't scatter abroad again this seed of the eventual human soul
of a place--that comes but in its time and takes too long to grow. There is
nothing like it when it has come.
The cities I refer to are Leghorn,
Pisa, Lucca and Pistoia, among which I
have been spending the last few days. The most striking fact as to Leghorn, it must be conceded at the outset, is that, being
in Tuscany,
it should be so scantily Tuscan. The traveller curious in local colour must
content himself with the deep blue expanse of the Mediterranean.
The streets, away from the docks, are modern, genteel and rectangular; Liverpool might acknowledge them if it weren't for their clean-coloured,
sun-bleached stucco. They are the offspring of the new industry which is death
to the old idleness. Of interesting architecture, fruit of the old idleness or
at least of the old leisure, Leghorn
is singularly destitute. It has neither a church worth one's attention, nor a
municipal palace, nor a museum, and it may claim the distinction, unique in Italy, of being
the city of no pictures. In a shabby corner near the docks stands a statue of
one of the elder Grand Dukes of Tuscany, appealing to posterity on grounds now
vague--chiefly that of having placed certain Moors
under tribute. Four colossal negroes, in very bad
bronze, are chained to the base of the monument, which forms with their
assistance a sufficiently fantastic group; but to patronise the arts is not the
line of the Livornese, and for want of the slender annuity which would keep its
precinct sacred this curious memorial is buried in dockyard rubbish. I must add
that on the other hand there is a very well-conditioned and, in attitude and
gesture, extremely natural and familiar statue of Cavour in one of the city
squares, and in another a couple of effigies of recent Grand Dukes,
represented, that is dressed, or rather undressed, in the character of heroes
of Plutarch. Leghorn
is a city of magnificent spaces, and it was so long a journey from the sidewalk
to the pedestal of these images that I never took the time to go and read the
inscriptions. And in truth, vaguely, I bore the originals a grudge, and wished
to know as little about them as possible; for it seemed to me that as patres
patrae, in their degree, they might have decreed that the great blank,
ochre-faced piazza should be a trifle less ugly. There is a distinct amenity,
however, in any experience of Italy
almost anywhere, and I shall probably in the future not be above sparing a
light regret to several of the hours of which the one I speak of was composed.
I shall remember a large cool bourgeois villa in the garden of a noiseless
suburb--a middle-aged Villa Franco (I owe it as a genial pleasant pension the
tribute of recognition), roomy and stony, as an Italian villa should be. I
shall remember that, as I sat in the garden, and, looking up from my book, saw
through a gap in the shrubbery the red house-tiles against the deep blue sky
and the grey underside of the ilex-leaves turned up by the Mediterranean
breeze, it was all still quite Tuscany, if Tuscany in the minor key.
If you should naturally desire, in such conditions, a higher
intensity, you have but to proceed, by a very short journey, to Pisa--where, for that
matter, you will seem to yourself to have hung about a good deal already, and
from an early age. Few of us can have had a childhood so
unblessed by contact with the arts as that one of its occasional diversions
shan't have been a puzzled scrutiny of some alabaster model of the Leaning Tower under a glass cover in a
back-parlour. Pisa
and its monuments have, in other words, been industriously vulgarised, but it
is astonishing how well they have survived the process. The charm of the place
is in fact of a high order and but partially foreshadowed by the famous
crookedness of its campanile. I felt it irresistibly and yet almost
inexpressibly the other afternoon, as I made my way to the classic corner of
the city through the warm drowsy air which nervous people come to inhale as a
sedative. I was with an invalid companion who had had no sleep to speak of for
a fortnight. "Ah! stop the carriage," she
sighed, or yawned, as I could feel, deliciously, "in the shadow of this
old slumbering palazzo, and let me sit here and close my eyes, and taste for an
hour of oblivion." Once strolling over the grass, however, out of which
the quartette of marble monuments rises, we awaked responsively enough to the
present hour. Most people remember the happy remark of tasteful, old-fashioned
Forsyth (who touched a hundred other points in his "Italy"
scarce less happily) as to the fact that the four famous objects are
"fortunate alike in their society and their solitude." It must be
admitted that they are more fortunate in their society than we felt ourselves
to be in ours; for the scene presented the animated appearance for which, on
any fine spring day, all the choicest haunts of ancient quietude in Italy are
becoming yearly more remarkable. There were clamorous beggars at all the
sculptured portals, and bait for beggars, in abundance, trailing in and out of
them under convoy of loquacious ciceroni. I forget just how I apportioned the
responsibility, of intrusion, for it was not long before fellow-tourists and
fellow-countrymen became a vague, deadened, muffled presence, that of the
dentist's last words when he is giving you ether. They suffered mystic
disintegration in the dense, bright, tranquil air, so charged with its own
messages. The Cathedral and its companions are fortunate indeed in
everything--fortunate in the spacious angle of the grey old city-wall which
folds about them in their sculptured elegance like a strong protecting arm;
fortunate in the broad greensward which stretches from the marble base of
Cathedral and cemetery to the rugged foot of the rampart; fortunate in the
little vagabonds who dot the grass, plucking daisies and exchanging Italian
cries; fortunate in the pale-gold tone to which time and the soft sea-damp have
mellowed and darkened their marble plates; fortunate, above all, in an
indescribable grace of grouping, half hazard, half design, which insures them,
in one's memory of things admired, very much the same isolated corner that they
occupy in the charming city.
Of the smaller cathedrals of Italy
I know none I prefer to that of Pisa;
none that, on a moderate scale, produces more the impression of a great church.
It has without so modest a measurability, represents
so clean and compact a mass, that you are startled when you cross the threshold
at the apparent space it encloses. An architect of genius, for all that he
works with colossal blocks and cumbrous pillars, is certainly the most cunning
of conjurors. The front of the Duomo is a small pyramidal screen, covered with
delicate carvings and chasings, distributed over a series of short columns
upholding narrow arches. It might be a sought imitation of goldsmith's work in
stone, and the area covered is apparently so small that extreme fineness has
been prescribed. How it is therefore that on the inner side of this façade the
wall should appear to rise to a splendid height and to support one end of a
ceiling as remote in its gilded grandeur, one could almost fancy, as that of
St. Peter's; how it is that the nave should stretch away in such solemn
vastness, the shallow transepts emphasise the grand impression and the apse of
the choir hollow itself out like a dusky cavern fretted with golden
stalactites, is all matter for exposition by a keener architectural analyst
than I. To sit somewhere against a pillar where the vista is large and the
incidents cluster richly, and vaguely revolve these mysteries without answering
them, is the best of one's usual enjoyment of a great church. It takes no deep
sounding to conclude indeed that a gigantic Byzantine Christ in mosaic, on the
concave roof of the choir, contributes largely to the particular impression
here as of very old and choice and original and individual things. It has even
more of stiff solemnity than is common to works of its school, and prompts to
more wonder than ever on the nature of the human mind at a time when such
unlovely shapes could satisfy its conception of holiness. Truly pathetic is the
fate of these huge mosaic idols, thanks to the change that has overtaken our manner
of acceptance of them. Strong the contrast between the
original sublimity of their pretensions and the way in which they flatter that
free sense of the grotesque which the modern imagination has smuggled even into
the appreciation of religious forms. They were meant to yield scarcely
to the Deity itself in grandeur, but the only part they play now is to stare
helplessly at our critical, our aesthetic patronage of them. The spiritual
refinement marking the hither end of a progress had n't, however, to wait for
us to signalise it; it found expression three centuries ago in the beautiful
specimen of the painter Sodoma on the wall of the choir. This latter, a small
Sacrifice of Isaac, is one of the best examples of its
exquisite author, and perhaps, as chance has it, the most perfect opposition
that could be found in the way of the range of taste to the effect of the great
mosaic. There are many painters more powerful than Sodoma--painters who, like
the author of the mosaic, attempted and compassed grandeur; but none has a more
persuasive grace, none more than he was to sift and chasten a conception till
it should affect one with the sweetness of a perfectly distilled perfume.
Of the patient successive efforts of painting to arrive at
the supreme refinement of such a work as the Sodoma the Campo Santo hard by
offers a most interesting memorial. It presents a long, blank marble wall to
the relative profaneness of the Cathedral close, but within it is a perfect
treasure-house of art. This quadrangular defence surrounds an open court where
weeds and wild roses are tangled together and a sunny stillness seems to rest
consentingly, as if Nature had been won to consciousness of the precious relics
committed to her. Something in the quality of the place recalls the collegiate
cloisters of Oxford,
but it must be added that this is the handsomest compliment to that seat of
learning. The open arches of the quadrangles of Magdalen and Christ Church
are not of mellow Carrara
marble, nor do they offer to sight columns, slim and elegant, that seem to
frame the unglazed windows of a cathedral. To be buried in the Campo Santo of
Pisa, I may however further qualify, you need only be, or to have more or less
anciently been, illustrious, and there is a liberal allowance both as to the
character and degree of your fame. The most obtrusive object in one of the long
vistas is a most complicated monument to Madame Catalani, the singer, recently
erected by her possibly too-appreciative heirs. The wide pavement is a mosaic
of sepulchral slabs, and the walls, below the base of the paling frescoes, are
incrusted with inscriptions and encumbered with urns and antique sarcophagi.
The place is at once a cemetery and a museum, and its especial charm is its
strange mixture of the active and the passive, of art and rest, of life and
death. Originally its walls were one vast continuity
of closely pressed frescoes; but now the great capricious scars and stains have
come to outnumber the pictures, and the cemetery has grown to be a burial-place
of pulverised masterpieces as well as of finished lives. The fragments of
painting that remain are fortunately the best; for one is safe in believing
that a host of undimmed neighbours would distract but little from the two great
works of Orcagna. Most people know the "Triumph of Death" and the
"Last Judgment" from descriptions and engravings; but to measure the
possible good faith of imitative art one must stand there and see the painter's
howling potentates dragged into hell in all the vividness of his bright hard
colouring; see his feudal courtiers, on their palfreys, hold their noses at
what they are so fast coming to; see his great Christ, in judgment, refuse
forgiveness with a gesture commanding enough, really inhuman enough, to make
virtue merciless for ever. The charge that Michael Angelo borrowed his cursing
Saviour from this great figure of Orcagna is more valid than most accusations
of plagiarism; but of the two figures one at least could be spared. For direct,
triumphant expressiveness these two superb frescoes have probably never been
surpassed. The painter aims at no very delicate meanings, but he drives certain
gross ones home so effectively that for a parallel to his process one must look
to the art of the actor, the emphasising "point"-making mime. Some of
his female figures are superb--they represent creatures of a formidable
temperament.
There are charming women, however, on the other side of the
cloister--in the beautiful frescoes of Benozzo Gozzoli. If Orcagna's work was
appointed to survive the ravage of time it is a happy chance that it should be
balanced by a group of performances of such a different temper. The contrast is
the more striking that in subject the inspiration of both painters is strictly,
even though superficially, theological. But Benozzo cares, in his theology, for
nothing but the story, the scene and the drama--the chance to pile up palaces
and spires in his backgrounds against pale blue skies cross-barred with pearly,
fleecy clouds, and to scatter sculptured arches and shady trellises over the
front, with every incident of human life going forward lightly and gracefully
beneath them. Lightness and grace are the painter's great qualities, marking
the hithermost limit of unconscious elegance, after which "style" and
science and the wisdom of the serpent set in. His charm is natural fineness; a
little more and we should have refinement--which is a very different thing.
Like all les délicats of this world, as M. Renan calls them, Benozzo has
suffered greatly. The space on the walls he originally covered with his Old
Testament stories is immense; but his exquisite handiwork has peeled off by the
acre, as one may almost say, and the latter compartments of the series are
swallowed up in huge white scars, out of which a helpless head or hand peeps
forth like those of creatures sinking into a quicksand. As for Pisa at large, although it is not exactly
what one would call a mouldering city--for it has a certain well-aired
cleanness and brightness, even in its supreme tranquillity--it affects the
imagination very much in the same way as the Campo Santo. And, in truth, a city
so ancient and deeply historic as Pisa
is at every step but the burial-ground of a larger life than its present one.
The wide empty streets, the goodly Tuscan palaces--which look as if about all
of them there were a genteel private understanding, independent of placards,
that they are to be let extremely cheap--the delicious relaxing air, the
full-flowing yellow river, the lounging Pisani, smelling, metaphorically, their
poppy-flowers, seemed to me all so many admonitions to resignation and
oblivion. And this is what I mean by saying that the charm of Pisa (apart from its cluster of monuments) is
a charm of a high order. The architecture has but a modest dignity; the lions
are few; there are no fixed points for stopping and gaping. And yet the
impression is profound; the charm is a moral charm. If I were ever to be
incurably disappointed in life, if I had lost my health, my money, or my
friends, if I were resigned forevermore to pitching my expectations in a minor
key, I should go and invoke the Pisan peace. Its quietude would seem something
more than a stillness--a hush. Pisa may be a dull place to live in, but it's
an ideal place to wait for death.
Nothing could be more charming than the country between Pisa and Lucca--unless
possibly the country between Lucca and Pistoia. If Pisa is dead Tuscany, Lucca is Tuscany
still living and enjoying, desiring and intending. The town is a charming
mixture of antique "character" and modern inconsequence; and! not only the town, but the country--the blooming romantic
country which you admire from the famous promenade on the city-wall. The wall
is of superbly solid and intensely "toned" brickwork and of
extraordinary breadth, and its summit, planted with goodly trees and swelling
here and there into bastions and outworks and little open gardens, surrounds
the city with a circular lounging-place of a splendid dignity. This well-kept,
shady, ivy-grown rampart reminded me of certain mossy corners of England; but
it looks away to a prospect of more than English loveliness--a broad green
plain where the summer yields a double crop of grain, and a circle of bright
blue mountains speckled with high-hung convents and profiled castles and nestling
villas, and traversed by valleys of a deeper and duskier blue. In one of the
deepest and shadiest of these recesses one of the most "sympathetic"
of small watering-places is hidden away yet a while longer from easy
invasion--the Baths to which Lucca has lent its name. Lucca is pre-eminently a city of churches;
ecclesiastical architecture being indeed the only one of the arts to which it
seems to have given attention. There are curious bits of domestic architecture,
but no great palaces, and no importunate frequency of pictures. The Cathedral,
however, sums up the merits of its companions and is a singularly noble and
interesting church. Its peculiar boast is a wonderful inlaid front, on which
horses and hounds and hunted beasts are lavishly figured in black marble over a
white ground. What I chiefly appreciated in the grey solemnity of the nave and
transepts was the superb effect of certain second-storey Gothic arches--those
which rest on the pavement being Lombard.
These arches are delicate and slender, like those of the cloister at Pisa, and they play their
part in the dusky upper air with real sublimity.
At Pistoia there is of course a Cathedral, and there is
nothing unexpected in its being, externally at least, highly impressive; in its
having a grand campanile at its door, a gaudy baptistery, in alternate layers
of black and white marble, across the way, and a stately civic palace on either
side. But even had I the space to do otherwise I should prefer to speak less of
the particular objects of interest in the place than of the pleasure I found it
to lounge away in the empty streets the quiet hours of a warm afternoon. To say
where I lingered longest would be to tell of a little square before the
hospital, out of which you look up at the beautiful frieze in coloured
earthernware by the brothers Della Robbia, which runs across the front of the
building. It represents the seven orthodox offices of charity and, with its
brilliant blues and yellows and its tender expressiveness, brightens up
amazingly, to the sense and soul, this little grey comer of the mediaeval city.
Pi stoia is still mediaeval. How grass-grown it seemed, how drowsy, how full of
idle vistas and melancholy nooks! If nothing was
supremely wonderful, everything was delicious.
[Illustration: THE HOSPITAL, PISTOIA.]
1874.
I
I had scanted charming Pisa even as I had scanted great
Siena in my original small report of it, my scarce more than stammering notes
of years before; but even if there had been meagreness of mere gaping
vision--which there in fact hadn't been--as well as insufficieny of public
tribute, the indignity would soon have ceased to weigh on my conscience. For to
this affection I was to return again still oftener than to the strong call of
Siena my eventual frequentations of Pisa, all merely impressionistic and
amateurish as they might be--and I pretended, up and down the length of the
land, to none other--leave me at the hither end of time with little more than a
confused consciousness of exquisite quality on the part of the small sweet
scrap of a place of ancient glory; a consciousness so pleadingly content to be
general and vague that I shrink from pulling it to pieces. The Republic of Pisa
fought with the Republic of Florence, through the ages so ferociously and all
but invincibly that what is so pale and languid in her to-day may well be the
aspect of any civil or, still more, military creature bled and bled and bled at
the "critical" time of its life. She has verily a just languor and is
touchingly anæmic; the past history, or at any rate the present perfect
acceptedness, of which condition hangs about her with the last grace of
weakness, making her state in this particular the very secret of her
irresistible appeal. I was to find the appeal, again and again, one of the
sweetest, tenderest, even if not one of the fullest and richest impressions
possible; and if I went back whenever I could it was very much as one doesn't
indecently neglect a gentle invalid friend. The couch of the invalid friend,
beautifully, appealingly resigned, has been wheeled, say, for the case, into
the warm still garden, and your visit but consists of your sitting beside it
with kind, discreet, testifying silences. Such is the figurative form under
which the once rugged enemy of Florence, stretched at her length by the rarely
troubled Arno, to-day presents herself; and I find my analogy complete even to
my sense of the mere mild séance, the inevitably tacit communion or rather
blank interchange, between motionless cripple and hardly more incurable
admirer.
The terms of my enjoyment of Pisa scarce departed from that
ideal--slow contemplative perambulations, rather late in the day and after work
done mostly in the particular decent inn-room that was repeatedly my portion;
where the sunny flicker of the river played up from below to the very ceiling,
which, by the same sign, anciently and curiously raftered and hanging over my
table at a great height, had been colour-pencilled into ornament as fine (for
all practical purposes) as the page of a missal. I add to this, for
remembrance, an inveteracy of evening idleness and of reiterated ices in front
of one of the quiet cafés--quiet as everything at Pisa is quiet, or will
certainly but in these latest days have ceased to be; one in especial so beautifully,
so mysteriously void of bustle that almost always the neighbouring presence and
admirable chatter of some group of the local University students would fall
upon my ear, by the half-hour at a time, not less as a privilege, frankly, than
as a clear-cut image of the young Italian mind and life, by which I lost
nothing. I use such terms as "admirable" and "privilege,"
in this last most casual of connections--which was moreover no connection at
all but what my attention made it--simply as an acknowledgment of the interest
that might play there through some inevitable thoughts. These were, for that
matter, intensely in keeping with the ancient scene and air: they dealt with
the exquisite difference between that tone and type of ingenuous adolescence--in
the mere relation of charmed audition--and other forms of juvenility of whose
mental and material accent one had elsewhere met the assault. Civilised,
charmingly civilised, were my loquacious neighbours--as how had n't they to be,
one asked one's self, through the use of a medium of speech that is in itself a
sovereign saturation? There was the beautiful congruity of the happily-caught
impression; the fact of my young men's general Tuscanism of tongue, which
related them so on the spot to the whole historic consensus of things. It
wasn't dialect--as it of course easily might have been elsewhere, at Milan, at
Turin, at Bologna, at Naples; it was the clear Italian in which all the rest of
the surrounding story was told, all the rest of the result of time recorded;
and it made them delightful, prattling, unconscious men of the particular
little constituted and bequeathed world which everything else that was charged
with old meanings and old beauty referred to--all the more that their talk was
never by any chance of romping games or deeds of violence, but kept flowering,
charmingly and incredibly, into eager ideas and literary opinions and
philosophic discussions and, upon my honour, vital questions.
They have taken me too far, for so light a reminiscence; but
I claim for the loose web of my impressions at no point a heavier texture.
Which comes back to what I was a moment ago
saying--that just in proportion as you "feel" the morbid charm of Pisa you press on it
gently, and this somehow even under stress of whatever respectful attention. I
found this last impulse, at all events, so far as I was concerned, quite
contentedly spend itself in a renewed sense of the simple large pacified
felicity of such an afternoon aspect as that of the Lung' Arno, taken up or down
its course; whether to within sight of small Santa Maria della Spina, the tiny,
the delicate, the exquisite Gothic chapel perched where the quay drops
straight, or, in the other direction, toward the melting perspective of the
narrow local pleasure-ground, the rather thin and careless bosky grace of which
recedes, beside the stream whose very turbidity pleases, to a middle distance
of hot and tangled and exuberant rural industry and a proper blue horizon of
Carrara mountains. The Pisan Lung' Arno is shorter and less featured and framed
than the Florentine, but it has the fine accent of a marked curve and is quite
as bravely Tuscan; witness the type of river-fronting palace which, in
half-a-dozen massive specimens, the last word of the anciently "handsome,"
are of the essence of the physiognomy of the place. In the glow of which
retrospective admission I ask myself how I came, under my first flush,
reflected in other pages, to fail of justice to so much proud domestic
architecture--in the very teeth moreover of the fact that I was for ever paying
my compliments, in a wistful, wondering way, to the fine Palazzo Lanfranchi,
occupied in 1822 by the migratory Byron, and whither Leigh Hunt, as
commemorated in the latter's Autobiography, came out to join him in an odd
journalistic scheme.
Of course, however, I need scarcely add, the centre of my
daily revolution--quite thereby on the circumference--was the great Company of
Four in their sequestered corner; objects of regularly recurrent pious
pilgrimage, if for no other purpose than to see whether each would each time
again so inimitably carry itself as one of a group of wonderfully-worked old
ivories. Their charm of relation to each other and to everything else that
concerns them, that of the quartette of monuments, is more or less
inexpressible all round; but not the least of it, ever, is in their beautiful
secret for taking at different hours and seasons, in different states of the
light, the sky, the wind, the weather--in different states, even, it used
verily to seem to me, of an admirer's imagination or temper or
nerves--different complexional appearances, different shades and pallors,
different glows and chills. I have seen them look almost viciously black, and I
have seen them as clear and fair as pale gold. And these things, for the most
part, off on the large grassy carpet spread for them, and with the elbow of the
old city-wall, not elsewhere erect, respectfully but protectingly crooked
about, to the tune of a usual unanimity save perhaps in the case of the Leaning
Tower--so abnormal a member of any respectable family this structure at best
that I always somehow fancied its three companions, the Cathedral, the
Baptistery and the Campo Santo, capable of quiet common understandings, for the
major or the minor effect, into which their odd fellow, no hint thrown out to
him, was left to enter as he might. If one haunted the place,
one ended by yielding to the conceit that, beautifully though the others of the
group may be said to behave about him, one sometimes caught them in the act of
tacitly combining to ignore him--as if he had, after so long, begun to give on
their nerves. Or is that absurdity but my shamefaced form of admission
that, for all the wonder of him, he finally gave on mine? Frankly--I would put
it at such moments--he becomes at last an optical bore or betise.
[Illustration: THE LOGGIA, LUCCA.]
II
To Lucca
I was not to return often--I was to return only once; when that compact and
admirable little city, the very model of a small pays de Cocagne, overflowing
with everything that makes for ease, for plenty, for beauty, for interest and
good example, renewed for me, in the highest degree, its genial and robust
appearance. The perfection of this renewal must indeed have been, at bottom,
the ground of my rather hanging back from possible excess of acquaintance--with
the instinct that so right and rich and rounded a little impression had better
be left than endangered. I remember positively saying to myself the second time
that no brown-and-gold Tuscan city, even, could be as happy as Lucca
looked--save always, exactly, Lucca; so that, on the chance of any shade of
human illusion in the case, I wouldn't, as a brooding analyst, go within fifty
miles of it again. Just so, I fear I must confess, it was this mere face-value
of the place that, when I went back, formed my sufficiency; I spent all my
scant time--or the greater part, for I took a day to drive over to the
Bagni--just gaping at its visible attitude. This may be described as that of
simply sitting there, through the centuries, at the receipt of perfect
felicity; on its splendid solid seat of russet masonry, that is--for its great
republican ramparts of long ago still lock it tight--with its wide garden-land,
its ancient appanage or hereditary domain, teeming and blooming with everything
that is good and pleasant for man, all about, and with a ring of graceful and
noble, yet comparatively unbeneficed uplands and mountains watching it, for
very envy, across the plain, as a circle of bigger boys, in the playground, may
watch a privileged or pampered smaller one munch a particularly fine apple.
Half smothered thus in oil and wine and corn and all the fruits of the earth,
Lucca seems fairly to laugh for good-humour, and it's as if one can't say more
for her than that, thanks to her putting forward for you a temperament somehow
still richer than her heritage, you forgive her at every turn her fortune. She
smiles up at you her greeting as you dip into her wide lap, out of which you
may select almost any rare morsel whatever. Looking back at my own choice
indeed I see it must have suffered a certain embarrassment--that of the sense
of too many things; for I scarce remember choosing at all, any more than I
recall having had to go hungry. I turned into all the churches--taking care,
however, to pause before one of them, though before which I now irrecoverably
forget, for verification of Ruskin's so characteristically magnified rapture
over the high and rather narrow and obscure hunting-frieze on its front--and in
the Cathedral paid my respects at every turn to the greatest of Lucchesi,
Matteo Civitale, wisest, sanest, homeliest, kindest of quattro-cento sculptors,
to whose works the Duomo serves almost as a museum. But my nearest approach to
anything so invidious as a discrimination or a
preference, under the spell of so felt an equilibrium, must have been the act
of engaging a carriage for the Baths.
That inconsequence once perpetrated, let me add, the
impression was as right as any other--the impression of the drive through the
huge general tangled and fruited podere of the countryside; that of the pair of
jogging hours that bring the visitor to where the wideish gate of the valley of
the Serchio opens. The question after this became quite other; the narrowing,
though always more or less smiling gorge that draws you on and on is a
different, a distinct proposition altogether, with its own individual grace of
appeal and association. It is the association, exactly, that would even now, on
this page, beckon me forward, or perhaps I should rather say backward--weren't
more than a glance at it out of the question--to a view of that easier and not
so inordinately remote past when "people spent the summer" in these
perhaps slightly stuffy shades. I speak of that age, I think of it at least, as
easier than ours, in spite of the fact that even as I made my pilgrimage the
mark of modern change, the railway in construction, had begun to be distinct,
though the automobile was still pretty far in the future. The relations and
proportions of everything are of course now altered--I indeed, I confess, wince
at the vision of the cloud of motor-dust that must in the fine season hang over
the whole connection. That represents greater promptness of approach to the
bosky depths of Ponte-a-Serraglio and the Bagni Caldi, but it throws back the
other time, that of the old jogging relation, of the Tuscan grand-ducal
"season" and the small cosmopolite sociability, into quite Arcadian
air and the comparatively primitive scale. The "easier" Italy of our
infatuated precursors there wears its glamour of facility not through any
question of "the development of communications," but through the very
absence of the dream of that boon, thanks to which every one (among the
infatuated) lived on terms of so much closer intercourse with the general
object of their passion. After we had crossed the Serchio that beautiful day we
passed into the charming, the amiably tortuous, the thickly umbrageous, valley
of the Lima, and then it was that I seemed fairly to remount the stream of
time; figuring to myself wistfully, at the small scattered centres of
entertainment--modest inns, pensions and other places of convenience clustered
where the friendly torrent is bridged or the forested slopes adjust
themselves--what the summer days and the summer rambles and the summer dreams
must have been, in the blest place, when "people" (by which I mean
the contingent of beguiled barbarians) didn't know better, as we say, than to
content themselves with such a mild substitute, such a soft, sweet and
essentially elegant apology, for adventure. One wanted not simply to hang about
a little, but really to live back, as surely one might, have done by staying
on, into the so romantically strong, if mechanically weak, Italy of the
associations of one's youth. It was a pang to have to revert to the present
even in the form of Lucca--which
says everything.
III
If undeveloped communications were to become enough for me
at those retrospective moments, I might have felt myself supplied to my taste,
let me go on to say, at the hour of my making, with great resolution, an
attempt on high-seated and quite grandly out-of-the-way Volterra: a
reminiscence associated with quite a different year and, I should perhaps
sooner have bethought myself, with my fond experience of Pisa--inasmuch as it
was during a pause under that bland and motionless wing that I seem to have had
to organise in the darkness of a summer dawn my approach to the old Etruscan
stronghold. The railway then existed, but I rose in the dim small hours to take
my train; moreover, so far as that might too much savour of an incongruous
facility, the fault was in due course quite adequately repaired by an apparent
repudiation of any awareness of such false notes on the part of the town. I may
not invite the reader to penetrate with me by so much as a step the boundless
backward reach of history to which the more massive of the Etruscan gates of
Volterra, the Porta all' Arco, forms the solidest of thresholds; since I
perforce take no step myself, and am even exceptionally condemned here to
impressionism unashamed. My errand was to spend a Sunday with an Italian
friend, a native in fact of the place, master of a house there in which he
offered me hospitality; who, also arriving from Florence the night before, had
obligingly come on with me from Pisa, and whose consciousness of a due
urbanity, already rather overstrained, and still well before noon, by the
accumulation of our matutinal vicissitudes and other grounds for patience, met
all ruefully at the station the supreme shock of an apparently great desolate
world of volcanic hills, of blank, though "engineered," undulations,
as the emergence of a road testified, unmitigated by the smallest sign of a
wheeled vehicle. The station, in other words, looked out at that time (and I
daresay the case hasn't strikingly altered) on a mere bare huge hill-country,
by some remote mighty shoulder of which the goal of our pilgrimage, so
questionably "served" by the railway, was hidden from view. Served as
well by a belated omnibus, a four-in-hand of lame and lamentable quality, the
place, I hasten to add, eventually put forth some show of being; after a
complete practical recognition of which, let me at once further mention, all
the other, the positive and sublime, connections of Volterra established
themselves for me without my lifting a finger.
The small shrunken, but still lordly prehistoric city is
perched, when once you have rather painfully zigzagged to within sight of it,
very much as an eagle's eyrie, oversweeping the land and the sea; and to that
type of position, the ideal of the airy peak of vantage, with all accessories
and minor features a drop, a slide and a giddiness, its individual items and
elements strike you at first as instinctively conforming. This impression was
doubtless after a little modified for me; there were levels, there were small
stony practicable streets, there were walks and strolls, outside the gates and
roundabout the cyclopean wall, to the far end of downward-tending protrusions
and promontories, natural buttresses and pleasant terrene headlands, friendly
suburban spots (one would call them if the word had less detestable references)
where games of bowls and overtrellised wine-tables could put in their note; in
spite of which however my friend's little house of hospitality, clean and
charming and oh, so immemorially Tuscan, was as perpendicular and ladder-like
as so compact a residence could be; it kept up for me beautifully--as regards
posture and air, though humanly and socially it rather cooed like a
dovecote--the illusion of the vertiginously "balanced" eagle's nest.
The air, in truth, all the rest of that splendid day, must have been the key to
the promptly-produced intensity of one's relation to every aspect of the charming
episode; the light, cool, keen air of those delightful high places, in Italy,
that tonically correct the ardours of July, and which at our actual altitude
could but affect me as the very breath of the grand local legend. I might have
"had" the little house, our particular eagle's nest, for the summer,
and even on such touching terms; and I well remember the force of the
temptation to take it, if only other complications had permitted; to spend the
series of weeks with that admirable interesting freshness in my lungs:
interesting, I especially note, as the strong appropriate medium in which a
continuity with the irrecoverable but still effective past had been so robustly
preserved. I couldn't yield, alas, to the conceived felicity, which had
half-a-dozen appealing aspects; I could only, while thus feeling how the
atmospheric medium itself made for a positively initiative exhilaration, enjoy
my illusion till the morrow. The exhilaration therefore supplies to memory the
whole light in which, for the too brief time, I went about "seeing"
Volterra; so that my glance at the seated splendour reduces itself, as I have
said, to the merest impressionism; nothing more was to be looked for, on the
stretched surface of consciousness, from one breezy wash of the brush. I find
there the clean strong image simplified to the three or four unforgettable
particulars of the vast rake of the view; with the Maremma, of evil fame, more
or less immediately below, but with those islands of the sea, Corsica and Elba,
the names of which are sharply associational beyond any others, dressing the
far horizon in the grand manner, and the Ligurian coast-line melting northward
into beauty and history galore; with colossal uncemented blocks of Etruscan
gates and walls plunging you--and by their very interest--into a sweet
surrender of any privilege of appreciation more crushing than your general
synthetic stare; and with the rich and perfectly arranged museum, an
unsurpassed exhibition of monumental treasure from Etruscan tombs, funereal
urns mainly, reliquaries of an infinite power to move and charm us still,
contributing to this same so designed, but somehow at the same time so
inspired, collapse of the historic imagination under too heavy a pressure, or
abeyance of "private judgment" in too unequal a relation.
IV
I remember recovering private judgment indeed in the course
of two or three days following the excursion I have just noted; which must have
shaped themselves in some sort of consonance with the idea that as we were
hereabouts in the very middle of dim Etruria a common self-respect prescribed
our somehow profiting by the fact. This kindled in us the spirit of
exploration, but with results of which I here attempt to record, so utterly
does the whole impression swoon away, for present memory, into vagueness,
confusion and intolerable heat, Our self-respect was of the common order, but
the blaze of the July sun was, even for Tuscany, of the uncommon; so that the
project of a trudging quest for Etruscan tombs in shadeless wastes yielded to
its own temerity. There comes back to me nevertheless at the same time, from
the mild misadventure, and quite as through this positive humility of failure,
the sense of a supremely intimate revelation of Italy in undress, so to speak
(the state, it seemed, in which one would most fondly, most ideally, enjoy
her); Italy no longer in winter starch and sobriety, with winter manners and
winter prices and winter excuses, all addressed to the forestieri and the
philistines; but lolling at her length, with her graces all relaxed, and
thereby only the more natural; the brilliant performer, in short, en famille,
the curtain down and her salary stopped for the season--thanks to which she is
by so much more the easy genius and the good creature as she is by so much less
the advertised prima donna. She received us nowhere more sympathetically, that
is with less ceremony or self-consciousness, I seem to recall, than at
Montepulciano, for instance--where it was indeed that the recovery of private
judgment I just referred to couldn't help taking place. What we were doing, or
what we expected to do, at Montepulciano I keep no other trace of than is bound
up in a present quite tender consciousness that I wouldn't for the world not
have been there. I think my reason must have been largely just in the beauty of
the name (for could any beauty be greater?), reinforced no doubt by the fame of
the local vintage and the sense of how we should quaff it on the spot. Perhaps
we quaffed it too constantly; since the romantic picture reduces itself for me
but to two definite appearances; that of the more priggish discrimination so
far reasserting itself as to advise me that Montepulciano was dirty, even
remarkably dirty; and that of her being not much else besides but perched and
brown and queer and crooked, and noble withal (which is what almost any Tuscan
city more easily than not acquits herself of; all the while she may on such
occasions figure, when one looks off from her to the end of dark street-vistas
or catches glimpses through high arcades, some big battered, blistered,
overladen, overmasted ship, swimming in a violet sea).
If I have lost the sense of what we were doing, that could
at all suffer commemoration, at Montepulciano, so I sit helpless before the
memory of small stewing Torrita, which we must somehow have expected to yield,
under our confidence, a view of shy charms, but which did n't yield, to my
recollection, even anything that could fairly be called a breakfast or a
dinner. There may have been in the neighbourhood a rumour of Etruscan tombs;
the neighbourhood, however, was vast, and that possibility not to be verified,
in the conditions, save after due refreshment. Then it was, doubtless, that the
question of refreshment so beckoned us, by a direct appeal, straight across
country, from Perugia, that, casting consistency, if not to the winds, since
alas there were none, but to the lifeless air, we made the sweltering best of
our way (and it took, for the distance, a terrible time) to the Grand Hotel of
that city. This course shines for me, in the retrospect, with a light even more
shameless than that in which my rueful conscience then saw it; since we thus
exchanged again, at a stroke, the tousled bonne fille of our vacational Tuscany
for the formal and figged-out presence of Italy on her good behaviour. We had
never seen her conform more to all the proprieties, we felt, than under this
aspect of lavish hospitality to that now apparently quite inveterate swarm of
pampered forestieri, English and Americans in especial, who, having had Roman
palaces and villas deliciously to linger in, break the northward journey, when
once they decide to take it, in the Umbrian paradise. They were, goodness
knows, within their rights, and we profited, as anyone may easily and cannily
profit at that time, by the sophistications paraded for them; only I feel, as I
pleasantly recover it all, that though we had arrived perhaps at the most
poetical of watering-places we had lost our finer clue. (The difference from
other days was immense, all the span of evolution from the ancient malodorous
inn which somehow did n't matter, to that new type of polyglot caravanserai
which everywhere insists on mattering--mattering, even in places where other
interests abound, so much more than anything else.) That clue, the finer as I
say, I would fain at any rate to-day pick up for its close attachment to
another Tuscan city or two--for a felt pull from strange little San Gimignano
delle belle Torre in especial; by which I mean from the memory of a summer
Sunday spent there during a stay at Siena. But I have already superabounded,
for mere love of my general present rubric--the real thickness of experience
having a good deal evaporated, so that the Tiny
Town of the Many Towers
hangs before me, not to say, rather, far behind me, after the manner of an
object directly meeting the wrong or diminishing lens of one's telescope.
It did everything, on the occasion of that pilgrimage, that
it was expected to do, presenting itself more or less in the guise of some rare
silvery shell, washed up by the sea of time, cracked and battered and
dishonoured, with its mutilated marks of adjustment to the extinct type of
creature it once harboured figuring against the sky as maimed gesticulating
arms flourished in protest against fate. If the centuries, however, had pretty
well cleaned out, vulgarly speaking, this amazing little fortress-town, it
wasn't that a mere aching void was bequeathed us, I recognise as I consult a
somewhat faded impression; the whole scene and occasion come back to me as the
exhibition, on the contrary, of a stage rather crowded and agitated, of no
small quantity of sound and fury, of concussions, discussions, vociferations,
hurryings to and fro, that could scarce have reached a higher pitch in the old
days of the siege and the sortie. San Gimignano affected me, to a certainty, as
not dead, I mean, but as inspired with that strange and slightly sinister new
life that is now, in case after case, up and down the peninsula, and even in
presence of the dryest and most scattered bones, producing the miracle of
resurrection. The effect is often--and I find it strikingly involved in this
particular reminiscence--that of the buried hero himself positively waking up
to show you his bones for a fee, and almost capering about in his appeal to
your attention. What has become of the soul of San Gimignano who shall
say?--but, of a genial modern Sunday, it is as if the heroic skeleton, risen
from the dust, were in high activity, officious for your entertainment and your
detention, clattering and changing plates at the informal friendly inn,
personally conducting you to a sight of the admirable Santa Fina of
Ghirlandaio, as I believe is supposed, in a dim chapel of the Collegiata
church; the poor young saint, on her low bed, in a state of ecstatic vision
(the angelic apparition is given), acconpanied by a few figures and accessories
of the most beautiful and touching truth. This image is what has most vividly
remained with me, of the day I thus so ineffectually recover; the precious
ill-set gem or domestic treasure of Santa Fina, and then the wonderful drive,
at eventide, back to Siena: the progress through the darkening land that was
like a dense fragrant garden, all fireflies and warm emanations and dimly-seen
motionless festoons, extravagant vines and elegant branches intertwisted for
miles, with couples and companies of young countryfolk almost as fondly united
and raising their voices to the night as if superfluously to sing out at you
that they were happy, and above all were Tuscan. On reflection, and to be just,
I connect the slightly incongruous loudness that hung about me under the
Beautiful Towers with the really too coarse competition for my favour among the
young vetturini who lay in wait for my approach, and with an eye to my subsequent
departure, on my quitting, at some unremembered spot, the morning train from
Siena, from which point there was then still a drive. That onset was of a fine
mediaeval violence, but the subsiding echoes of it alone must have afterwards
borne me company; mingled, at the worst, with certain reverberations of the
animated rather than concentrated presence of sundry young sketchers and
copyists of my own nationality, which element in the picture conveyed beyond
anything else how thoroughly it was all to sit again henceforth in the eye of
day. My final vision perhaps was of a sacred reliquary not so much rudely as
familiarly and "humorously" torn open. The note had, with all its
references, its own interest; but I never went again.
[Illustration: TOWERS OF SAN GIMIGNANO.]
RAVENNA
I write these lines on a cold Swiss mountain-top, shut in by
an intense white mist from any glimpse of the underworld of lovely Italy; but as I
jotted down the other day in the ancient capital of Honorius and Theodoric the
few notes of which they are composed, I let the original date stand for local
colour's sake. Its mere look, as I transcribe it, emits a grateful glow in the
midst of the Alpine rawness, and gives a depressed imagination something
tangible to grasp while awaiting the return of fine weather. For
Ravenna was
glowing, less than a week since, as I edged along the narrow strip of shadow
binding one side of the empty, white streets. After a long, chill spring
the summer this year descended upon Italy with a sudden jump and an
ominous hot breath. I stole away from Florence
in the night, and even on top of the Apennines,
under the dull starlight and in the rushing train, one could but sit and pant
perspiringly.
At Bologna
I found a festa, or rather two festas, a civil and a religious, going on in
mutual mistrust and disparagement. The civil, that of the Statuto, was the one
fully national Italian holiday as by law established--the day that signalises
everywhere over the land at once its achieved and hard-won unification; the religious
was a jubilee of certain local churches. The latter is observed by the
Bolognese parishes in couples, and comes round for each couple but once in ten
years--an arrangement by which the faithful at large insure themselves a
liberal recurrence of expensive processions. It was n't my business to
distinguish the sheep from the goats, the pious from the profane, the prayers
from the scoffers; it was enough that, melting together under the scorching
sun, they filled the admirably solid city with a flood of spectacular life. The
combination at one point was really dramatic. While a long procession of
priests and young virgins in white veils, bearing tapers, marshalled itself in
one of the streets, a review of the King's troops went forward outside the town.
On its return a large detachment of cavalry passed across the space where the
incense was burning, the pictured banners swaying and
the litany being droned, and checked the advance of the little ecclesiastical
troop. The long vista of the street, between the porticoes, was festooned with
garlands and scarlet and tinsel; the robes and crosses and canopies of the
priests, the clouds of perfumed smoke and the white veils of the maidens, were
resolved by the hot bright air into a gorgeous medley of colour, across which
the mounted soldiers rattled and flashed as if it had been a conquering army
trampling on an embassy of propitiation. It was, to tell the truth, the first
time an' Italian festa had really exhibited to my eyes the genial glow and the
romantic particulars promised by song and story; and I confess that those eyes
found more pleasure in it than they were to find an hour later in the
picturesque on canvas as one observes it in the Pinacoteca. I found myself
scowling most unmercifully at Guido and Domenichino.
For Ravenna,
however, I had nothing but smiles--grave, reflective, philosophic smiles, I
hasten to add, such as accord with the historic dignity, not to say the mortal
sunny sadness, of the place. I arrived there in the evening, before, even at drowsy
Ravenna, the
festa of the Statuto had altogether put itself to bed. I immediately strolled
forth from the inn, and found it sitting up a while longer on the piazza,
chiefly at the cafe door, listening to the band of the garrison by the light of
a dozen or so of feeble tapers, fastened along the front of the palace of the
Government. Before long, however, it had dispersed and departed, and I was left
alone with the grey illumination and with an affable citizen whose testimony as
to the manners and customs of Ravenna
I had aspired to obtain. I had, borrowing confidence from prompt observation,
suggested deferentially that it was n't the liveliest place in the world, and
my friend admitted that it was in fact not a seat of ardent life. But had I
seen the Corso? Without seeing the Corso one did n't exhaust the possibilities. The Corso of Ravenna, of a hot summer night,
had an air of surprising seclusion and repose. Here and there in an upper
closed window glimmered a light; my companion's footsteps and my own were the
only sounds; not a creature was within sight. The suffocating air helped me to
believe for a moment that I walked in the Italy of Boccaccio, hand-in-hand with
the plague, through a city which had lost half its population by pestilence and
the other half by flight. I turned back into my inn profoundly satisfied. This
at last was the old-world dulness of a prime distillation; this at last was
antiquity, history, repose.
The impression was largely confirmed and enriched on the
following day; but it was obliged at an early stage of my visit to give
precedence to another--the lively perception, namely, of the thinness of my
saturation with Gibbon and the other sources of legend. At Ravenna the waiter at the café and the
coachman who drives you to the Pine-Forest allude to Galla Placidia and
Justinian as to any attractive topic of the hour; wherever you turn you
encounter some fond appeal to your historic presence of mind. For myself I
could only attune my spirit vaguely to so ponderous a challenge, could only
feel I was breathing an air of prodigious records and relics. I conned my
guide-book and looked up at the great mosaics, and then fumbled at poor Murray
again for some intenser light on the court of Justinian; but I can imagine that
to a visitor more intimate with the originals of the various great almond-eyed
mosaic portraits in the vaults of the churches these extremely curious works of
art may have a really formidable interest. I found in the place at large, by
daylight, the look of a vast straggling depopulated village. The streets with
hardly an exception are grass-grown, and though I walked about all day I failed
to encounter a single wheeled vehicle. I remember no shop but the little
establishment of an urbane photographer, whose views of the Pineta, the great
legendary pine-forest just without the town, gave me an irresistible desire to
seek that refuge. There was no architecture to speak of; and though there are a
great many large domiciles with aristocratic names they stand cracking and baking
in the sun in no very comfortable fashion. The houses have for the most part an
all but rustic rudeness; they are low and featureless and shabby, as well as
interspersed with high garden walls over which the long arms of tangled vines
hang motionless into the stagnant streets. Here and there in all this
dreariness, in some particularly silent and grassy corner, rises an old brick
church with a front more or less spoiled, by cheap modernisation, and a strange
cylindrical campanile pierced with small arched windows and extremely
suggestive of the fifth century. These churches constitute the palpable
interest of Ravenna,
and their own principal interest, after thirteen centuries of well-intentioned
spoliation, resides in their unequalled collection of early Christian mosaics.
It is an interest simple, as who should say, almost to harshness, and leads
one's attention along a straight and narrow way. There are older churches in Rome, and churches which, looked at as museums, are more
variously and richly informing; but in Rome
you stumble at every step on some curious pagan memorial, often beautiful
enough to make your thoughts wander far from the strange stiff primitive
Christian forms.
Ravenna,
on the other hand, began with the Church, and all her monuments and relics are
harmoniously rigid. By the middle of the first century she possessed an
exemplary saint, Apollinaris, a disciple of Peter, to whom her two finest
places of worship are dedicated. It was to one of these, jocosely entitled the
"new," that I first directed my steps. I lingered outside a while and
looked at the great red, barrel-shaped bell-towers, so rusty, so crumbling, so
archaic, and yet so resolute to ring in another century or two, and then went
in to the coolness, the shining marble columns, the queer old sculptured slabs
and sarcophagi and the long mosaics that scintillated, under the roof, along
the wall of the nave. San Apollinare Nuovo, like most of its companions, is a
magazine of early Christian odds and ends; fragments of yellow marble incrusted
with quaint sculptured emblems of primitive dogma; great rough troughs,
containing the bones of old bishops; episcopal chairs with the marble worn
narrow by centuries of pressure from the solid episcopal person; slabs from the
fronts of old pulpits, covered with carven hierogylphics of an almost Egyptian
abstruseness--lambs and stags and fishes and beasts of theological affinities
even less apparent. Upon all these strange things the strange figures in the
great mosaic panorama look down, with coloured cheeks and staring eyes,
lifelike enough to speak to you and answer your wonderment and tell you in bad
Latin of the decadence that it was in such and such a fashion they believed and
worshipped. First, on each side, near the door, are houses and ships and
various old landmarks of Ravenna; then begins a long procession, on one side,
of twenty-two white-robed virgins and three obsequious magi, terminating in a
throne bearing the Madonna and Child, surrounded by four angels; on the other
side, of an equal number of male saints (twenty-five, that is) holding crowns
in their hands and leading to a Saviour enthroned between angels of singular
expressiveness. What it is these long slim seraphs express I cannot quite say,
but they have an odd, knowing, sidelong look out of the narrow ovals of their
eyes which, though not without sweetness, would certainly make me murmur a
defensive prayer or so were I to find myself alone in the church towards dusk.
All this work is of the latter part of the sixth century and brilliantly
preserved. The gold backgrounds twinkle as if they had been inserted yesterday,
and here and there a figure is executed almost too much in the modern manner to
be interesting; for the charm of mosaic work is, to my sense, confined altogether
to the infancy of the art. The great Christ, in the series of which I speak, is
quite an elaborate picture, and yet he retains enough of the orthodox stiffness
to make him impressive in the simpler, elder sense. He is clad in a purple
robe, even as an emperor, his hair and beard are artfully curled, his eyebrows
arched, his complexion brilliant, his whole aspect such a one as the popular
mind may have attributed to Honorius or Valentinian. It is all very Byzantine,
and yet I found in it much of that interest which is inseparable, to a facile
imagination, from all early representations of our Lord. Practically they are
no more authentic than the more or less plausible inventions of Ary Scheffer
and Holman Hunt; in spite of which they borrow a certain value, factitious
perhaps but irresistible, from the mere fact that they are twelve or thirteen
centuries less distant from the original. It is something that this was the way
the people in the sixth century imagined Jesus to have looked; the image has
suffered by so many the fewer accretions. The great purple-robed monarch on the
wall of Ravenna
is at least a very potent and positive Christ, and the only objection I have to
make to him is that though in this character he must have had a full
apportionment of divine foreknowledge he betrays no apprehension of Dr.
Channing and M. Renan. If one's preference lies, for distinctness' sake,
between the old plainness and the modern fantasy, one must admit that the
plainness has here a very grand outline.
[Illustration: SANT APOLLINAR NUOVO, RAVENNA.]
I spent the rest of the morning in charmed transition
between the hot yellow streets and the cool grey interiors of the churches. The
greyness everywhere was lighted up by the scintillation, on vault and
entablature, of mosaics more or less archaic, but always brilliant and
elaborate, and everywhere too by the same deep amaze of the fact that, while
centuries had worn themselves away and empires risen and fallen, these little
cubes of coloured glass had stuck in their allotted places and kept their
freshness. I have no space for a list of the various shrines so distinguished,
and, to tell the truth, my memory of them has already become a very generalised
and undiscriminated record. The total aspect of the place, its sepulchral
stillness, its absorbing perfume of evanescence and decay and mortality,
confounds the distinctions and blurs the details. The Cathedral, which is vast
and high, has been excessively modernised, and was being still more so by a
lavish application of tinsel and cotton-velvet in preparation for the centenary
feast of St. Apollinaris, which befalls next month. Things on this occasion are
to be done handsomely, and a fair Ravennese informed me that a single family
had contributed three thousand francs towards a month's vesper-music. It seemed
to me hereupon that I should like in the August twilight to wander into the
quiet nave of San Apollinare, and look up at the great mosaics through the
resonance of some fine chanting. I remember distinctly enough, however, the
tall basilica of San Vitale, of octagonal shape, like an exchange or
custom-house--modelled, I believe, upon St. Sophia at Constantinople.
It has a great span of height and a great solemnity, as well as a choir densely
pictured over on arch and apse with mosaics of the time of Justinian. These are
regular pictures, full of movement, gesture and perspective, and just enough
sobered in hue by time to bring home their remoteness. In the
middle of the church, under the great dome, sat an artist whom I envied, making
at an effective angle a study of the choir and its broken lights, its decorated
altar and its incrusted twinkling walls. The picture, when finished,
will hang, I suppose, on the library wall of some person of taste; but even if
it is much better than is probable--I did n't look at it--all his taste won't
tell the owner, unless he has been there, in just what a soundless, mouldering,
out-of-the-way corner of old Italy it was painted. An even better place for an
artist fond of dusky architectural nooks, except that here the dusk is
excessive and he would hardly be able to tell his green from his red, is the
extraordinary little church of the Santi Nazaro e Celso, otherwise known as the
mausoleum of Galla Placidia. This is perhaps on the whole the spot in Ravenna where the
impression is of most sovereign authority and most thrilling force. It consists
of a narrow low-browed cave, shaped like a Latin cross, every inch of which
except the floor is covered with dense symbolic mosaics. Before you and on each
side, through the thick brown light, loom three enormous barbaric sarcophagi,
containing the remains of potentates of the Lower Empire. It is as if history
had burrowed under ground to escape from research and you had fairly run it to
earth. On the right lie the ashes of the Emperor Honorius, and in the middle
those of his sister, Galla Placidia, a lady who, I believe, had great
adventures. On the other side rest the bones of Constantius III. The place
might be a small natural grotto lined with glimmering mineral substances, and
there is something quite tremendous in being shut up so closely with these
three imperial ghosts. The shadow of the great Roman name broods upon the huge
sepulchres and abides for ever within the narrow walls.
But still other memories hang about than those of primitive
bishops and degenerate emperors. Byron lived here and Dante died here, and the
tomb of the one poet and the dwelling of the other are among the advertised
appeals. The grave of Dante, it must be said, is anything but Dantesque, and
the whole precinct is disposed with that odd vulgarity of taste which
distinguishes most modern Italian tributes to greatness. The author of The
Divine Comedy commemorated in stucco, even in a slumbering corner of Ravenna, is not
"sympathetic." Fortunately of all poets he least needs a monument, as
he was pre-eminently an architect in diction and built himself his temple of
fame in verses more solid than Cyclopean blocks. If Dante's
tomb is not Dantesque, so neither is Byron's house Byronic, being a homely,
shabby, two-storied dwelling, directly on the street, with as little as
possible of isolation and mystery. In Byron's time it was an inn, and it
is rather a curious reflection that "Cain" and the "Vision of
Judgment" should have been written at an hotel.
The fact supplies a commanding precedent for self-abstraction to tourists at
once sentimental and literary. I must declare indeed that my acquaintance with Ravenna considerably
increased my esteem for Byron and helped to renew my faith in the sincerity of
his inspiration. A man so much de son temps as the author of the above-named
and other pieces can have spent two long years in this stagnant city only by
the help of taking a great deal of disinterested pleasure in his own genius. He
had indeed a notable pastime--the various churches are adorned with monuments
of ancestral Guicciolis--but it is none the less obvious that Ravenna, fifty years ago, would have been an
intolerably dull residence to a foreigner of distinction unequipped with intellectual
resources. The hour one spends with Byron's memory then is almost
compassionate. After all, one says to one's self as one turns away from the
grandiloquent little slab in front of his house and looks down the deadly
provincial vista of the empty, sunny street, the author of so many superb
stanzas asked less from the world than he gave it. One of his diversions was to
ride in the Pineta, which, beginning a couple of miles from the city, extends
some twenty-five miles along the sands of the Adriatic.
I drove out to it for Byron's sake, and Dante's, and Boccaccio's, all of whom
have interwoven it with their fictions, and for that of a possible whiff of
coolness from the sea. Between the city and the forest, in the midst of
malarious rice-swamps, stands the finest of the Ravennese churches, the stately
temple of San Apollinare in Classe. The Emperor
Augustus constructed hereabouts a harbour for fleets, which the ages have
choked up, and which survives only in the title of this ancient church. Its
extreme loneliness makes it doubly impressive. They opened the great doors for
me, and let a shaft of heated air go wander up the beautiful nave between the
twenty-four lustrous, pearly columns of cipollino marble, and mount the wide
staircase of the choir and spend itself beneath the mosaics of the vault. I
passed a memorable half-hour sitting in this wave of tempered light, looking
down the cool grey avenue of the nave, out of the open door, at the vivid green
swamps, and listening to the melancholy stillness. I rambled for an hour in the
Wood of Associations, between the tall smooth, silvery stems of the pines, and
beside a creek which led me to the outer edge of the wood and a view of white
sails, gleaming and gliding behind the sand-hills. It was infinitely, it was
nobly "quaint," but, as the trees stand at wide intervals and bear
far aloft in the blue air but a little parasol of foliage, I suppose that, of a
glaring summer day, the forest itself was only the more characteristic of its
clime and country for being perfectly shadeless.
[Illustration: RAVENNA
PINETA.]
1873.
Before and above all was the sense that, with the narrow
limits of past adventure, I had never yet had such an impression of what the
summer could be in the south or the south in the summer; but I promptly found
it, for the occasion, a good fortune that my terms of comparison were
restricted. It was really something, at a time when the stride of the traveller
had become as long as it was easy, when the seven-league boots positively hung,
for frequent use, in the closet of the most sedentary, to have kept one's self
so innocent of strange horizons that the Bay of Naples in June might still seem
quite final. That picture struck me--a particular corner of it at least, and
for many reasons--as the last word; and it is this last word that comes back to
me, after a short interval, in a green, grey northern nook, and offers me again
its warm, bright golden meaning before it also inevitably catches the chill.
Too precious, surely, for us not to suffer it to help us as it may is the
faculty of putting together again in an order the sharp minutes and hours that
the wave of time has been as ready to pass over as the salt sea to wipe out the
letters and words your stick has traced in the sand. Let me, at any rate, recover a sufficient number of such signs to make a
sort of sense.
I
Far aloft on the great rock was pitched, as the first note,
and indeed the highest, of the wondrous concert, the amazing creation of the
friend who had offered me hospitality, and whom, more almost than I had ever
envied anyone anything, I envied the privilege of being able to reward a
heated, artless pilgrim with a revelation of effects so incalculable. There was
none but the loosest prefigurement as the creaking and puffing little boat,
which had conveyed me only from Sorrento, drew closer beneath the prodigious
island--beautiful, horrible and haunted--that does most, of all the happy
elements and accidents, towards making the Bay of Naples, for the study of
composition, a lesson in the grand style. There was only, above and below,
through the blue of the air and sea, a great confused shining of hot cliffs and
crags and buttresses, a loss, from nearness, of the splendid couchant outline
and the more comprehensive mass, and an opportunity--oh, not lost, I assure
you--to sit and meditate, even moralise, on the empty deck, while a happy
brotherhood of American and German tourists, including, of course, many
sisters, scrambled down into little waiting, rocking tubs and, after a few
strokes, popped systematically into the small orifice of the Blue Grotto. There
was an appreciable moment when they were all lost to view in that receptacle,
the daily "psychological" moment during which it must so often befall
the recalcitrant observer on the deserted deck to find himself
aware of how delightful it might be if none of them should come out again. The
charm, the fascination of the idea is not a little--though also not wholly--in
the fact that, as the wave rises over the aperture, there is the most
encouraging appearance that they perfectly may not. There it is. There is no
more of them. It is a case to which nature has, by the neatest stroke and with
the best taste in the world, just quietly attended.
Beautiful, horrible, haunted: that is the essence of what,
about itself, Capri
says to you--dip again into your Tacitus and see why; and yet, while you roast
a little under the awning and in the vaster shadow, it is not because the trail
of Tiberius is ineffaceable that you are most uneasy. The trail of Germanicus
in Italy
to-day ramifies further and bites perhaps even deeper; a proof of which is,
precisely, that his eclipse in the Blue Grotto is inexorably brief, that here
he is popping out again, bobbing enthusiastically back
and scrambling triumphantly back. The spirit, in truth, of his effective
appropriation of Capri has a broad-faced candour against which there is no
standing up, supremely expressive as it is of the well-known "love that
kills," of Germanicus's fatal susceptibility. If I were to let myself,
however, incline to that aspect of the serious case of Capri
I should embark on strange depths. The straightness and simplicity, the
classic, synthetic directness of the German passion for Italy, make this
passion probably the sentiment in the world that is in the act of supplying
enjoyment in the largest, sweetest mouthfuls; and there is something
unsurpassably marked in the way that on this irresistible shore it has seated
itself to ruminate and digest. It keeps the record in its own loud accents; it
breaks out in the folds of the hills and on the crests of the crags into every
manner of symptom and warning. Huge advertisements and portents stare across
the bay; the acclivities bristle with breweries and "restorations"
and with great ugly Gothic names. I hasten, of course, to add that some such
general consciousness as this may well oppress, under any sky, at the century's
end, the brooding tourist who makes himself a prey by staying anywhere, when
the gong sounds, "behind." It is behind, in the track and the
reaction, that he least makes out the end of it all, perceives that to visit
anyone's country for anyone's sake is more and more to find some one quite
other in possession. No one, least of all the brooder himself, is in his own.
II
I certainly, at any rate, felt the force of this truth when,
on scaling the general rock with the eye of apprehension, I made out at a point
much nearer its summit than its base the gleam of a dizzily-perched white
sea-gazing front which I knew for my particular landmark and which promised so
much that it would have been welcome to keep even no more than half. Let me
instantly say that it kept still more than it promised, and by no means least
in the way of leaving far below it the worst of the outbreak of restorations
and breweries. There is a road at present to the upper village, with which till
recently communication was all by rude steps cut in the rock and diminutive
donkeys scrambling on the flints; one of those fine flights of construction
which the great road-making "Latin races" take, wherever they
prevail, without advertisement or bombast; and even while I followed along the
face of the cliff its climbing consolidated ledge, I asked myself how I could
think so well of it without consistently thinking better still of the temples
of beer so obviously destined to enrich its terminus. The perfect answer to
that was of course that the brooding tourist is never bound to be consistent.
What happier law for him than this very one, precisely, when on at last
alighting, high up in the blue air, to stare and gasp and almost disbelieve, he
embraced little by little the beautiful truth particularly, on this occasion,
reserved for himself, and took in the stupendous
picture? For here above all had the thought and the hand come from far
away--even from ultima Thule, and yet were in possession triumphant and
acclaimed. Well, all one could say was that the way they had felt their
opportunity, the divine conditions of the place, spoke of the advantage of some
such intellectual perspective as a remote original standpoint alone perhaps can
give. If what had finally, with infinite patience, passion, labour, taste, got
itself done there, was like some supreme reward of an old dream of Italy,
something perfect after long delays, was it not verily in ultima Thule that the
vow would have been piously enough made and the germ tenderly enough nursed?
For a certain art of asking of Italy
all she can give, you must doubtless either be a rare raffine or a rare genius,
a sophisticated Norseman or just a Gabriele d' Annunzio.
All she can give appeared to me, assuredly, for that day and
the following, gathered up and enrolled there: in the wondrous cluster and
dispersal of chambers, corners, courts, galleries, arbours, arcades, long white
ambulatories and vertiginous points of view. The greatest charm of all perhaps
was that, thanks to the particular conditions, she seemed to abound, to
overflow, in directions in which I had never yet enjoyed the chance to find her
so free. The indispensable thing was therefore, in observation, in reflection,
to press the opportunity hard, to recognise that as the abundance was splendid,
so, by the same stroke, it was immensely suggestive. It dropped into one's lap,
naturally, at the end of an hour or two, the little white flower of its
formula: the brooding tourist, in other words, could only continue to brood
till he had made out in a measure, as I may say, what was so wonderfully the
matter with him. He was simply then in the presence, more than ever yet, of the
possible poetry of the personal and social life of the south, and the fun would
depend much--as occasions are fleeting--on his arriving in time, in the
interest of that imagination which is his only field of sport, at adequate new
notations of it. The sense of all this, his obscure and special fun in the
general bravery, mixed, on the morrow, with the long, human hum of the bright,
hot day and filled up the golden cup with questions and answers. The feast of
St. Antony, the patron of the upper town, was the one thing in the air, and of
the private beauty of the place, there on the narrow shelf, in the shining,
shaded loggias and above the blue gulfs, all comers were to be made free.
III
The church-feast of its saint is of course for Anacapri, as
for any self-respecting Italian town, the great day of the year, and the
smaller the small "country," in native parlance, as well as the
simpler, accordingly, the life, the less the chance for leakage, on other
pretexts, of the stored wine of loyalty. This pure fluid, it was easy to feel
overnight, had not sensibly lowered its level; so that nothing indeed, when the
hour came, could well exceed the outpouring. All up and down the Sorrentine
promontory the early summer happens to be the time of the saints, and I had
just been witness there of a week on every day of which one might have
travelled, through kicked-up clouds and other demonstrations, to a different
hot holiday. There had been no bland evening that, somewhere or other, in the
hills or by the sea, the white dust and the red glow didn't rise to the dim
stars. Dust, perspiration, illumination, conversation--these were the regular
elements. "They're very civilised," a friend who knows them as well
as they can be known had said to me of the people in general; "plenty of
fireworks and plenty of talk--that's all they ever want." That they were
"civilised"--on the side on which they were most to show--was
therefore to be the word of the whole business, and nothing could have, in
fact, had more interest than the meaning that for the thirty-six hours I read
into it.
Seen from below and diminished by distance, Anacapri makes
scarce a sign, and the road that leads to it is not traceable over the rock;
but it sits at its ease on its high, wide table, of which it covers--and with
picturesque southern culture as well--as much as it finds convenient. As much
of it as possible was squeezed all the morning, for St. Antony, into the
piazzetta before the church, and as much more into that edifice as the robust
odour mainly prevailing there allowed room for. It was the odour that was in
prime occupation, and one could only wonder how so many men, women and children
could cram themselves into so much smell. It was surely the smell, thick and
resisting, that was least successfully to be elbowed. Meanwhile the good saint,
before he could move into the air, had, among the tapers and the tinsel, the
opera-music and the pulpit poundings, bravely to snuff it up. The shade outside
was hot, and the sun was hot; but we waited as densely for him to come out, or
rather to come "on," as the pit at the opera waits for the great
tenor. There were people from below and people from the mainland and people
from Pomerania and a brass band from Naples.
There were other figures at the end of longer strings--strings that, some of
them indeed, had pretty well given way and were now but little snippets
trailing in the dust. Oh, the queer sense of the good old Capri
of artistic legend, of which the name itself was, in the more benighted
years--years of the contadina and the pifferaro--a bright evocation! Oh, the
echo, on the spot, of each romantic tale! Oh, the loafing painters, so bad and
so happy, the conscious models, the vague personalities! The "beautiful Capri girl" was of course not missed, though not
perhaps so beautiful as in her ancient glamour, which
none the less didn't at all exclude the probable presence--with his legendary
light quite undimmed--of the English lord in disguise who will at no distant
date marry her. The whole thing was there; one held it in one's hand.
The saint comes out at last, borne aloft in long procession
and under a high canopy: a rejoicing, staring, smiling saint, openly delighted
with the one happy hour in the year on which he may take his own walk. Frocked
and tonsured, but not at all macerated, he holds in his hand a small wax puppet
of an infant Jesus and shows him to all their friends, to whom he nods and
bows: to whom, in the dazzle of the sun he literally seems to grin and wink,
while his litter sways and his banners flap and every one gaily greets him. The
ribbons and draperies flutter, and the white veils of the marching maidens, the
music blares and the guns go off and the chants resound, and it is all as holy
and merry and noisy as possible. The procession--down to the delightful little
tinselled and bare-bodied babies, miniature St. Antonys irrespective of sex,
led or carried by proud papas or brown grandsires--includes so much of the
population that you marvel there is such a muster to look on--like the charades
given in a family in which every one wants to act. But it is all indeed in a
manner one house, the little high-niched island community, and nobody
therefore, even in the presence of the head of it, puts on an air of solemnity.
Singular and suggestive before everything else is the absence of any approach
to our notion of the posture of respect, and this among people whose manners in
general struck one as so good and, in particular, as so cultivated. The office
of the saint--of which the festa is but the annual reaffirmation--involves not
the faintest attribute of remoteness or mystery.
While, with my friend, I waited for him, we went for
coolness into the second church of the place, a considerable and bedizened structure,
with the rare curiosity of a wondrous pictured pavement of majolica, the garden
of Eden done in large coloured tiles or squares, with every beast, bird and
river, and a brave diminuendo, in especial, from portal to altar, of
perspective, so that the animals and objects of the foreground are big and
those of the successive distances differ with much propriety. Here in the
sacred shade the old women were knitting, gossipping, yawning, shuffling about;
here the children were romping and "larking"; here, in a manner, were
the open parlour, the nursery, the kindergarten and the conversazione of the
poor. This is everywhere the case by the southern sea. I remember near Sorrento a wayside chapel
that seemed the scene of every function of domestic life, including cookery and
others. The odd thing is that it all appears to interfere so little with that
special civilised note--the note of manners--which is so constantly touched. It
is barbarous to expectorate in the temple of your faith, but that doubtless is an
extreme case. Is civilisation really measured by the number of things people do
respect? There would seem to be much evidence against it. The oldest societies,
the societies with most traditions, are naturally not the least ironic, the
least blasees, and the African tribes who take so many things into account that
they fear to quit their huts at night are not the fine flower.
IV
Where, on the other hand, it was impossible not to feel to
the full all the charming riguardi--to use their own good word--in which our
friends could abound, was, that afternoon, in the extraordinary temple of art
and hospitality that had been benignantly opened to me. Hither, from three
o'clock to seven, all the world, from the small in
particular to the smaller and the smallest, might freely flock, and here, from
the first hour to the last, the huge straw-bellied flasks of purple wine were
tilted for all the thirsty. They were many, the thirsty, they were three
hundred, they were unending; but the draughts they drank were neither countable
nor counted. This boon was dispensed in a long, pillared portico, where
everything was white and light save the blue of the great bay as it played up
from far below or as you took it in, between shining columns, with your elbows
on the parapet. Sorrento and Vesuvius were over against you; Naples furthest
off, melted, in the middle of the picture, into shimmering vagueness and
innocence; and the long arm of Posilippo and the presence of the other islands,
Procida, the stricken Ischia, made themselves felt to the left. The grand air
of it all was in one's very nostrils and seemed to come from sources too
numerous and too complex to name. It was antiquity in solution, with every
brown, mild figure, every note of the old speech, every tilt of the great
flask, every shadow cast by every classic fragment, adding its touch to the
impression. What was the secret of the surprising amenity?--to the essence of
which one got no nearer than simply by feeling afresh the old story of the deep
interfusion of the present with the past. You had felt that often before, and
all that could, at the most, help you now was that, more than ever yet, the
present appeared to become again really classic, to
sigh with strange elusive sounds of Virgil and Theocritus. Heaven only knows
how little they would in truth have had to say to it, but we yield to these
visions as we must, and when the imagination fairly turns in its pain almost
any soft name is good enough to soothe it.
It threw such difficulties but a step back to say that the
secret of the amenity was "style"; for what in the world was the
secret of style, which you might have followed up and down the abysmal old
Italy for so many a year only to be still vainly calling for it? Everything, at
any rate, that happy afternoon, in that place of poetry, was bathed and blessed
with it. The castle of Barbarossa had been on the height behind; the villa of
black Tiberius had overhung the immensity from the right; the white arcades and
the cool chambers offered to every step some sweet old "piece" of the
past, some rounded porphyry pillar supporting a bust, some shaft of pale
alabaster upholding a trellis, some mutilated marble image, some bronze that
had roughly resisted. Our host, if we came to that, had the secret; but he
could only express it in grand practical ways. One of them was precisely this
wonderful "afternoon tea," in which tea only--that, good as it is,
has never the note of style--was not to be found. The beauty and the poetry, at
all events, were clear enough, and the extraordinary uplifted distinction; but
where, in all this, it may be asked, was the element of "horror" that
I have spoken of as sensible?--what obsession that was not charming could find
a place in that splendid light, out of which the long summer squeezes every
secret and shadow? I'm afraid I'm driven to plead that these evils were exactly
in one's imagination, a predestined victim always of the cruel, the fatal
historic sense. To make so much distinction, how much history had been
needed!--so that the whole air still throbbed and ached with it, as with an
accumulation of ghosts to whom the very climate was pitiless, condemning them
to blanch for ever in the general glare and grandeur, offering them no dusky
northern nook, no place at the friendly fireside, no shelter of legend or song.
V
My friend had, among many original relics, in one of his
white galleries--and how he understood the effect and the "value" of
whiteness!--two or three reproductions of the finest bronzes of the Naples
museum, the work of a small band of brothers whom he had found himself
justified in trusting to deal with their problem honourably and to bring forth
something as different as possible from the usual compromise of commerce. They
had brought forth, in especial, for him, a copy of the young resting,
slightly-panting Mercury which it was a pure delight to live with, and they had
come over from Naples on St. Antony's eve, as they had done the year before, to
report themselves to their patron, to keep up good relations, to drink Capri
wine and to join in the tarantella. They arrived late, while we were at supper;
they received their welcome and their billet, and I am not sure it was not the
conversation and the beautiful manners of these obscure young men that most
fixed in my mind for the time the sense of the side of life that, all around,
was to come out strongest. It would be artless, no doubt, to represent them as
high types of innocence or even of energy--at the same time that, weighing them
against some ruder folk of our own race, we might perhaps have made bold to
place their share even of these qualities in the scale. It was an impression
indeed never infrequent in Italy, of which I might, in these days, first have
felt the force during a stay, just earlier, with a friend at Sorrento--a friend
who had good-naturedly "had in," on his wondrous terrace, after
dinner, for the pleasure of the gaping alien, the usual local quartette,
violins, guitar and flute, the musical barber, the musical tailor, sadler,
joiner, humblest sons of the people and exponents of Neapolitan song.
Neapolitan song, as we know, has been blown well about the world, and it is
late in the day to arrive with a ravished ear for it. That, however, was
scarcely at all, for me, the question: the question, on the Sorrento
terrace, so high up in the cool Capri night,
was of the present outlook, in the world, for the races with whom
it has been a tradition, in intercourse, positively to please.
The personal civilisation, for intercourse, of the musical
barber and tailor, of the pleasant young craftsmen of my other friend's
company, was something that could be trusted to make. the
brooding tourist brood afresh--to say more to him in fact, all the rest of the
second occasion, than everything else put together. The happy address, the
charming expression, the indistinctive discretion, the complete eclipse, in
short, of vulgarity and brutality--these things easily became among these
people the supremely suggestive note, begetting a hundred hopes and fears as to
the place that, with the present general turn of affairs about the globe, is
being kept for them. They are perhaps what the races politically feeble have
still most to contribute--but what appears to be the happy prospect for the
races politically feeble? And so the afternoon waned, among the mellow marbles
and the pleasant folk---the purple wine flowed, the golden light faded, song
and dance grew free and circulation slightly embarrassed. But the great
impression remained and finally was exquisite. It was all purple wine, all art
and song, and nobody a grain the worse. It was fireworks and conversation--the
former, in the piazzetta, were to come later; it was civilisation and amenity.
I took in the greater picture, but I lost nothing else; and I talked with the
contadini about antique sculpture. No, nobody was a grain the worse; and I had
plenty to think of. So it was I was quickened to remember that we others, we of
my own country, as a race politically not weak, had --by what I had somewhere
just heard--opened "three hundred 'saloons'" at Manila.
VI
The "other" afternoons I here pass on to--and I
may include in them, for that matter, various mornings scarce less charmingly
sacred to memory--were occasions of another and a later year; a brief but all
felicitous impression of Naples itself, and of the approach to it from Rome, as
well as of the return to Rome by a different wonderful way, which I feel I
shall be wise never to attempt to "improve on." Let me muster
assurance to confess that this comparatively recent and superlatively rich
reminiscence gives me for its first train of ineffable images those of a
motor-run that, beginning betimes of a splendid June day, and seeing me, with
my genial companions, blissfully out of Porta San Paolo, hung over us thus its
benediction till the splendour had faded in the lamplit rest of the Chiaja.
"We'll go by the mountains," my friend, of the chariot of fire, had
said, "and we'll come back, after three days, by the sea"; which
handsome promise flowered into such flawless performance that I could but feel
it to have closed and rounded for me, beyond any further rehandling, the
long-drawn rather indeed than thick-studded chaplet of my visitations of
Naples--from the first, seasoned with the highest sensibility of youth, forty
years ago, to this last the other day. I find myself noting with interest--and
just to be able to emphasise it is what inspires me with these remarks --that,
in spite of the milder and smoother and perhaps, pictorially speaking,
considerably emptier, Neapolitan face of things, things in general, of our
later time, I recognised in my final impression a grateful, a beguiling
serenity. The place is at the best wild and weird and sinister, and yet seemed
on this occasion to be seated more at her ease in her immense natural dignity.
My disposition to feel that, I hasten to add, was doubtless my own secret; my
three beautiful days, at any rate, filled themselves with the splendid harmony,
several of the minor notes of which ask for a place, such as it may be, just here.
Wondrously, it was a clean and cool and, as who should say,
quiet and amply interspaced Naples--in
tune with itself, no harsh jangle of forestieri vulgarising the concert. I
seemed in fact, under the blaze of summer, the only stranger--though the blaze of
summer itself was, for that matter, everywhere but a higher pitch of light and
colour and tradition, and a lower pitch of everything else; even, it struck me,
of sound and fury. The appeal in short was genial, and, faring out to Pompeii of a Sunday afternoon,
I enjoyed there, for the only time I can recall, the sweet chance of a late
hour or two, the hour of the lengthening shadows, absolutely alone. The
impression remains ineffaceable--it was to supersede half-a-dozen other mixed
memories, the sense that had remained with me, from far back, of a pilgrimage
always here beset with traps and shocks and vulgar importunities, achieved
under fatal discouragements. Even Pompeii, in fine, haunt of all the cockneys
of creation, burned itself, in the warm still eventide, as clear as glass, or
as the glow of a pale topaz, and the particular cockney who roamed without a
plan and at his ease, but with his feet on Roman slabs, his hands on Roman
stones, his eyes on the Roman void, his consciousness really at last of some
good to him, could open himself as never before to the fond luxurious fallacy
of a close communion, a direct revelation. With which there were other moments
for him not less the fruit of the slow unfolding of time; the clearest of these
again being those enjoyed on the terrace of a small island-villa--the island a
rock and the villa a wondrous little rock-garden, unless a better term would be
perhaps rock-salon, just off the extreme point of Posilippo and where, thanks
to a friendliest hospitality, he was to hang ecstatic, through another sublime
afternoon, on the wave of a magical wand. Here, as happened, were charming
wise, original people even down to delightful amphibious American children,
enamelled by the sun of the Bay as for figures of miniature Tritons and Nereids
on a Renaissance plaque; and above all, on the part of the general prospect, a
demonstration of the grand style of composition and effect that one was never
to wish to see bettered. The way in which the Italian scene on such occasions as
this seems to purify itself to the transcendent and perfect idea alone--idea of
beauty, of dignity, of comprehensive grace, with all accidents merged, all
defects disowned, all experience outlived, and to gather itself up into the
mere mute eloquence of what has just incalculably been, remains for ever the
secret and the lesson of the subtlest daughter of History. All one could do, at
the heart of the overarching crystal, and in presence of the relegated City,
the far-trailing Mount, the grand Sorrentine headland, the islands incomparably
stationed and related, was to wonder what may well become of the so many other
elements of any poor human and social complexus, what might become of any
successfully working or only struggling and floundering civilisation at all,
when high Natural Elegance proceeds to take such exclusive charge and
recklessly assume, as it were, all the responsibilities.
VII
This indeed had been quite the thing I was asking myself all
the wondrous way down from Rome, and was to ask myself afresh, on the return,
largely within sight of the sea, as our earlier course had kept to the
ineffably romantic inland valleys, the great decorated blue vistas in which the
breasts of the mountains shine vaguely with strange high-lying city and castle and
church and convent, even as shoulders of no diviner line might be hung about
with dim old jewels. It was odd, at the end of time, long after those
initiations, of comparative youth, that had then struck one as extending the
very field itself of felt charm, as exhausting the possibilities of fond
surrender, it was odd to have positively a new basis of enjoyment, a new gate
of triumphant passage, thrust into one's consciousness and opening to one's
use; just as I confess I have to brace myself a little to call by such fine
names our latest, our ugliest and most monstrous aid to motion. It is true of
the monster, as we have known him up to now, that one can neither quite praise
him nor quite blame him without a blush--he reflects so the nature of the
company he's condemned to keep. His splendid easy power addressed to noble aims
makes him assuredly on occasion a purely beneficent creature. I parenthesise at
any rate that I know him in no other light--counting out of course the
acquaintance that consists of a dismayed arrest in the road, with back
flattened against wall or hedge, for the dusty, smoky, stenchy shock of his
passage. To no end is his easy power more blest than to that of ministering to
the ramifications, as it were, of curiosity, or to that, in other words, of
achieving for us, among the kingdoms of the earth, the grander and more genial,
the comprehensive and complete introduction. Much as was ever to be said for
our old forms of pilgrimage--and I am convinced that they are far from wholly
superseded--they left, they had to leave, dreadful gaps in our yearning,
dreadful lapses in our knowledge, dreadful failures in our energy; there were
always things off and beyond, goals of delight and dreams of desire, that
dropped as a matter of course into the unattainable, and over to which our
wonder-working agent now flings the firm straight bridge. Curiosity has lost,
under this amazing extension, its salutary renouncements perhaps; contemplation
has become one with action and satisfaction one with desire--speaking always in
the spirit of the inordinate lover of an enlightened use of our eyes. That may
represent, for all I know, an insolence of advantage on which there will be
eventual heavy charges, as yet obscure and incalculable, to pay, and I glance
at the possibility only to avoid all thought of the lesson of the long run, and
to insist that I utter this dithyramb but in the immediate flush and fever of
the short. For such a beat of time as our fine courteous and contemplative
advance upon Naples,
and for such another as our retreat northward under the same fine law of
observation and homage, the bribed consciousness could only decline to question
its security. The sword of Damocles suspended over that presumption, the
skeleton at the banquet of extravagant ease, would have been that even at our
actual inordinate rate--leaving quite apart "improvements" to
come--such savings of trouble begin to use up the world; some hard grain of
difficulty being always a necessary part of the composition of pleasure. The hard
grain in our old comparatively pedestrian mixture, before this business of our
learning not so much even to fly (which might indeed involve trouble) as to be
mechanically and prodigiously flown, quite another matter, was the element of
uncertainty, effort and patience; the handful of silver nails which, I admit,
drove many an impression home. The seated motorist misses the silver nails, I
fully acknowledge, save in so far as his aesthetic (let alone his moral)
conscience may supply him with some artful subjective substitute; in which case
the thing becomes a precious secret of his own.
However, I wander wild--by which I mean I look too far
ahead; my intention having been only to let my sense of the merciless June
beauty of Naples Bay at the sunset hour and on the island terrace associate
itself with the whole inexpressible taste of our two motor-days' feast of
scenery. That queer question of the exquisite grand manner as the most
emphasised all of things--of what it may, seated so predominant in nature,
insidiously, through the centuries, let generations and populations "in
for," hadn't in the least waited for the special emphasis I speak of to
hang about me. I must have found myself more or less consciously entertaining
it by the way--since how couldn't it be of the very essence of the truth,
constantly and intensely before us, that Italy is really so much the most
beautiful country in the world, taking all things together, that others must
stand off and be hushed while she speaks? Seen thus in great comprehensive
iridescent stretches, it is the incomparable wrought fusion, fusion of human
history and mortal passion with the elements of earth and air, of colour,
composition and form, that constitutes her appeal and gives it the supreme
heroic grace. The chariot of fire favours fusion rather than promotes analysis,
and leaves much of that first June picture for me, doubtless, a great accepted
blur of violet and silver. The various hours and successive aspects, the
different strong passages of our reverse process, on the other hand, still
figure for me even as some series of sublime landscape-frescoes--if the great
Claude, say, had ever used that medium--in the immense gallery of a palace; the
homeward run by Capua, Terracina, Gaeta and its storied headland fortress,
across the deep, strong, indescribable Pontine Marshes, white-cattled,
strangely pastoral, sleeping in the afternoon glow, yet stirred by the near
sea-breath. Thick somehow to the imagination as some full-bodied sweetness of
syrup is thick to the palate the atmosphere of that region--thick with the
sense of history and the very taste of time; as if the haunt and home (which
indeed it is) of some great fair bovine aristocracy attended and guarded by
halberdiers in the form of the mounted and long-lanced herdsmen, admirably
congruous with the whole picture at every point, and never more so than in
their manner of gaily taking up, as with bell-voices of golden bronze, the
offered wayside greeting.
[Illustration: TERRACINA]
There had been this morning among the impressions of our
first hour an unforgettable specimen of that general type--the image of one of
those human figures on which our perception of the romantic so often pounces in
Italy as on the genius of the scene personified; with this advantage, that as
the scene there has, at its best, an unsurpassable distinction, so the
physiognomic representative, standing for it all, and with an animation, a
complexion, an expression, a fineness and fulness of humanity that appear to
have gathered it in and to sum it up, becomes beautiful by the same simple
process, very much, that makes the heir to a great capitalist rich. Our early
start, our roundabout descent from Posilippo by shining Baire for avoidance of
the city, had been an hour of enchantment beyond any notation I can here
recover; all lustre and azure, yet all composition and classicism, the prospect
developed and spread, till after extraordinary upper reaches pf radiance and
horizons of pearl we came at the turn of a descent upon a stalwart young
gamekeeper, or perhaps substantial young farmer, who, well-appointed and
blooming, had unslung his gun and, resting on it beside a hedge, just lived for
us, in the rare felicity of his whole look, during that moment and while, in
recognition, or almost, as we felt, in homage, we instinctively checked our
speed. He pointed, as it were, the lesson, giving the supreme right accent or
final exquisite turn to the immense magnificent phrase; which from those
moments on, and on and on, resembled doubtless nothing so much as a page
written, by a consummate verbal economist and master of style, in the noblest
of all tongues. Our splendid human plant by the wayside had flowered thus into
style--and there wasn't to be, all day, a lapse of eloquence, a wasted word or
a cadence missed.
These things are personal memories, however, with the logic
of certain insistences of that sort often difficult to seize. Why should I have
kept so sacredly uneffaced, for instance, our small afternoon wait at tea-time
or, as we made it, coffee-time, in the little brown piazzetta of Velletri, just
short of the final push on through the flushed Castelli Romani and the drop and
home-stretch across the darkening Campagna? We had been dropped into the very
lap of the ancient civic family, after the inveterate fashion of one's sense of
such stations in small Italian towns. There was a narrow raised terrace, with
steps, in front of the best of the two or three local cafes, and in the soft
enclosed, the warm waning light of June various benign contemplative worthies
sat at disburdened tables and, while they smoked long black weeds, enjoyed us
under those probable workings of subtlety with which we invest so many quite
unimaginably blank (I dare say) Italian simplicities. The charm was, as always in
Italy,
in the tone and the air and the happy hazard of things, which made any positive
pretension or claimed importance a comparatively trifling question. We slid, in
the steep little place, more or less down hill; we wished, stomachically, we
had rather addressed ourselves to a tea-basket; we suffered importunity from
unchidden infants who swarmed about our chairs and romped about our feet; we
stayed no long time, and "went to see" nothing; yet we communicated
to intensity, we lay at our ease in the bosom of the past, we practised
intimacy, in short, an intimacy so much greater than the mere accidental and
ostensible: the difficulty for the right and grateful expression of which makes
the old, the familiar tax on the luxury of loving Italy.
1900-1909.
THE END