summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 10:29:18 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 10:29:18 -0800
commite6a215e582b31a98cb5041adf5b66fd06caa3c46 (patch)
treea160e71932e9869c783dcd4422ab2add005cc559
parenteca60ed97a154e176a80edfb3f2c9b1ad6d37c89 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/54932-0.txt4375
-rw-r--r--old/54932-0.zipbin101567 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h.zipbin1634554 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/54932-h.htm5855
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/cover.jpgbin151747 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_004.jpgbin97871 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_005.jpgbin80386 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_035.jpgbin96790 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_047.jpgbin101734 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_059.jpgbin100457 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_073.jpgbin98111 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_087.jpgbin100377 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_145.jpgbin101842 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_155.jpgbin100858 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_163.jpgbin98977 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_187.jpgbin101561 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_207.jpgbin100517 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_217.jpgbin94104 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54932-h/images/i_227.jpgbin100587 -> 0 bytes
22 files changed, 17 insertions, 10230 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4adb163
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54932 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54932)
diff --git a/old/54932-0.txt b/old/54932-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 78a579d..0000000
--- a/old/54932-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4375 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Italian Backgrounds, by Edith Wharton
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Italian Backgrounds
-
-Author: Edith Wharton
-
-Illustrator: Ernest Clifford Peixotto
-
-Release Date: June 19, 2017 [EBook #54932]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mary Glenn Krause, MFR, Charlie Howard, and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Group from the Crucifixion
- San Vivaldo_
-]
-
-
-
-
- ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS
-
- BY
- EDITH WHARTON
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY E. C. PEIXOTTO
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
- MCMV
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1905, by
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
-
- _Published April, 1905_
-
- THE DE VINNE PRESS
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- AN ALPINE POSTING-INN 1
-
- A MIDSUMMER WEEK’S DREAM 15
-
- THE SANCTUARIES OF THE PENNINE ALPS 39
-
- WHAT THE HERMITS SAW 63
-
- A TUSCAN SHRINE 83
-
- SUB UMBRA LILIORUM 107
-
- MARCH IN ITALY 125
-
- PICTURESQUE MILAN 153
-
- ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS 171
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- GROUP FROM THE CRUCIFIXION--SAN VIVALDO _Frontispiece_
- FACING PAGE
- BY THE PORT OF LOVERE 20
-
- THE MUNICIPIO--BRESCIA 28
-
- CHIESA DEI MIRACOLI--BRESCIA 36
-
- THE INNER QUADRANGLE AT OROPA 46
-
- THE MAIN COURT OF THE SACRO MONTE AT VARALLO 56
-
- A CHARACTERISTIC STREET 110
-
- THE “LITTLE PALACE OF THE GARDEN” 116
-
- THE WORN RED LIONS OF THE ANCIENT PORCH 120
-
- AN ITALIAN SKY IN MARCH 140
-
- COURT OF THE PALAZZO MARINO, NOW THE MUNICIPIO 156
-
- THE TOWER OF S. STEFANO 162
-
- THE CHURCH AT SARONNO 168
-
-
-
-
-AN ALPINE POSTING-INN
-
-
-To the mind curious in contrasts--surely one of the chief pleasures of
-travel--there can be no better preparation for a descent into Italy
-than a sojourn among the upper Swiss valleys. To pass from the region
-of the obviously picturesque--the country contrived, it would seem, for
-the delectation of the _cœur à poésie facile_--to that sophisticated
-landscape where the face of nature seems moulded by the passions and
-imaginings of man, is one of the most suggestive transitions in the
-rapidly diminishing range of such experiences.
-
-Nowhere is this contrast more acutely felt than in one of the upper
-Grisons villages. The anecdotic Switzerland of the lakes is too
-remote from Italy, geographically and morally, to evoke a comparison.
-The toy chalet, with its air of self-conscious neatness, making one
-feel that if one lifted the roof it would disclose a row of tapes
-and scissors, or the shining cylinders of a musical box, suggests
-cabinet-work rather than architecture; the swept and garnished streets,
-the precise gardens, the subjugated vines, present the image of an
-old maid’s paradise that would be thrown into hopeless disarray by
-the introduction of anything so irregular as a work of art. In the
-Grisons, however, where only a bald grey pass divides one from Italy,
-its influence is felt, in a negative sense, in the very untidiness of
-the streets, the rank growth of weeds along the base of rough glaring
-walls, the drone of flies about candidly-exposed manure-heaps. More
-agreeably, the same influence shows itself in the rude old centaur-like
-houses, with their wrought-iron window-grilles and stone escutcheons
-surmounting the odorous darkness of a stable. These are the houses
-of people conscious of Italy, who have transplanted to their bleak
-heights, either from poverty of invention, or an impulse as sentimental
-as our modern habit of “collecting,” the thick walls, the small
-windows, the jutting eaves of dwellings designed under a sultry sky.
-So vivid is the reminiscence that one almost expects to see a cypress
-leaning against the bruised-peach-coloured walls of the village
-_douane_; but it is just here that the contrast accentuates itself.
-The cypress, with all it stands for, is missing.
-
-It is not easy, in the height of the Swiss season, to light on a nook
-neglected by the tourist; but at Splügen he still sweeps by in a cloud
-of diligence dust, or pauses only to gulp a flask of Paradiso and a
-rosy trout from the Suretta lakes. One’s enjoyment of the place is
-thus enhanced by the pleasing spectacle of the misguided hundreds who
-pass it by, and from the vantage of the solitary meadows above the
-village one may watch the throngs descending on Thusis or Chiavenna
-with something of the satisfaction that mediæval schoolmen believed to
-be the portion of angels looking down upon the damned. Splügen abounds
-in such points of observation. On all sides one may climb from the
-alder-fringed shores of the Rhine, through larch-thickets tremulous
-with the leap of water, to grassy levels far above, whence the valley
-is seen lengthening southward to a great concourse of peaks. In the
-morning these upper meadows are hot and bright, and one is glad of the
-red-aisled pines and the onyx-coloured torrents cooling the dusk; but
-toward sunset, when the shadows make the slopes of turf look like an
-expanse of tumbled velvet, it is pleasant to pace the open ledges,
-watching the sun recede from the valley, where mowers are still
-sweeping the grass into long curved lines like ridges of the sea, while
-the pine-woods on the eastern slopes grow black and the upper snows
-fade to the colour of cold ashes.
-
-The landscape is simple, spacious and serene. The fields suggest the
-tranquil rumination of generations of cattle, the woods offer cool
-security to sylvan life, the mountains present blunt weather-beaten
-surfaces rather than the subtle contours, wrinkled as by meditation, of
-the Italian Alps. One feels that it is a scene in which _nothing has
-ever happened_; the haunting adjective is that which Whitman applies to
-the American landscape--“the large _unconscious_ scenery of my native
-land.”
-
-Switzerland is like a dinner served in the old-fashioned way, with
-all the dishes put on the table at once: every valley has its flowery
-mead, its “horrid” gorge, its chamois-haunted peaks, its wood and
-water-fall. In Italy, the effects are brought on in courses, and
-memory is thus able to differentiate the landscapes, even without the
-help of that touch of human individuality to which, after all, the
-best Italian scenery is but a setting. At Splügen, as in most Swiss
-landscapes, the human interest--the evidences of man’s presence--are
-an interruption rather than a climax. The village of Splügen, huddled
-on a ledge above the Rhine, sheepishly turns the backs of its houses
-on the view, as though conscious of making a poor show compared to
-the tremendous performance of nature. Between these houses, set at
-unconsidered angles, like boxes hastily piled on a shelf, cobble-stone
-streets ramble up the hill; but after a few yards they lapse into
-mountain paths, and the pastures stoop unabashed to the back doors of
-the village. Agriculture seems, in fact, the little town’s excuse for
-being. The whole of Splügen, in midsummer, is as one arm at the end of
-a scythe. All day long the lines of stooping figures--men, women and
-children, grandfathers and industrious babes--spread themselves over
-the hill-sides in an ever-widening radius, interminably cutting, raking
-and stacking the grass. The lower slopes are first laid bare; then, to
-the sheer upper zone of pines, the long grass, thick with larkspur,
-mountain pink and orchis, gradually recedes before the rising tide of
-mowers. Even in the graveyard of the high-perched church, the scythes
-swing between mounds overgrown with campanulas and martagon lilies;
-so that one may fancy the dust of generations of thrifty villagers
-enriching the harvests of posterity.
-
-This, indeed, is the only destiny one can imagine for them. The past
-of such a place must have been as bucolic as its present: the mediæval
-keep, crumbling on its wooded spur above the Rhine, was surely perched
-there that the lords of the valley might have an eye to the grazing
-cattle and command the manœuvres of the mowers. The noble Georgiis who
-lived in the escutcheoned houses of Splügen, and now lie under such
-a wealth of quarterings in the church and graveyard, must have been
-experts in fertilizers and stock-raising; nor can one figure, even for
-the seventeenth-century mercenary of the name, whose epitaph declares
-him to have been “captain of his Spanish Majesty’s cohorts,” emotions
-more poignant, when he came home from the wars, than that evoked by the
-tinkle of cow-bells in the pasture, and the vision of a table groaning
-with smoked beef and cyclopean cheeses.
-
-So completely are the peasants in the fields a part of the soil they
-cultivate, that during the day one may be said to have the whole
-of Splügen to one’s self, from the topmost peaks to the deserted
-high-road. In the evening the scene changes; and the transformation is
-not unintentionally described in theatrical terms, since the square
-which, after sunset, becomes the centre of life in Splügen, has an
-absurd resemblance to a stage-setting. One side of this square is
-bounded by the long weather-beaten front of the posting-inn--but the
-inn deserves a parenthesis. Built long ago, and then abandoned, so the
-village tradition runs, by a “great Italian family,” its exterior shows
-the thick walls, projecting eaves and oval attic openings of an old
-Tuscan house; while within, a monastic ramification of stone-vaulted
-corridors leads to rooms ceiled and panelled with sixteenth-century
-woodwork. The stone terrace before this impressive dwelling forms the
-proscenium where, after dinner, the spectators assemble. To the right
-of the square stands the pale pink “Post and Telegraph Bureau.” Beyond,
-closing in the right wing at a stage-angle, is a mysterious yellowish
-house with an arched entrance. Facing these, on the left, are the
-_dépendance_ of the inn and the custom-house; in the left background,
-the village street is seen winding down, between houses that look
-like “studies” in old-fashioned drawing-books (with the cracks in
-the plaster done in very black lead), to the bridge across the Rhine
-and the first loops of the post-road over the Splügen pass. Opposite
-the inn is the obligatory village fountain, the rallying-point of
-the chorus; beneath a stone parapet flows the torrent which acts as
-an invisible orchestra; and beyond the parapet, snow peaks fill the
-background of the stage.
-
-Dinner over, the eager spectators, hastening to the terrace (with
-a glimpse, as they pass the vaulted kitchen, of the Italian _chef_
-oiling his bicycle amid the débris of an admirable meal), find active
-preparations afoot for the event of the evening--the arrival of the
-diligences. Already the orchestra is tuning its instruments, and the
-chorus, recruited from the hay-fields, are gathering in the wings. A
-dozen of them straggle in and squat on the jutting stone basement of
-the post-office; others hang picturesquely about the fountain, or hover
-up the steep street, awaiting the prompter’s call. Presently some of
-the subordinate characters stroll across the stage: the owner of the
-saw-mill on the Rhine, a tall man in homespun, deferentially saluted by
-the chorus; two personages in black coats, with walking-sticks, who
-always appear together, and have the air of being joint syndics of the
-village; a gentleman of leisure, in a white cap with a visor, smoking
-a long Italian cigar and attended by an inquisitive Pomeranian dog; a
-citizen in white socks and carpet slippers, giving his arm to his wife,
-and preceded by a Bewickian little boy with a green butterfly-box over
-his shoulder; the gold-braided custom-house officer hurrying up rather
-late for his cue; two or three local ladies in sunburnt millinery and
-spectacles, who drop in to see the postmistress; and a showy young man,
-with the look of having seen life at Chur or Bellinzona, who emerges
-from the post-office conspicuously reading a letter, to the undisguised
-interest of the chorus, the ladies and the Pomeranian. As these figures
-pass and repass in a kind of social silence, they suggest the leisurely
-opening of some play composed before the unities were abolished, and
-peopled by types with generic names--the Innkeeper, the Postmistress,
-the Syndic--some comedy of Goldoni’s, perhaps, but void even of
-Goldoni’s simple malice.
-
-Meanwhile the porter has lit the oil-lanterns hanging by a chain over
-the door of the inn; a celestial hand has performed a similar office
-for the evening star above the peaks; and through the hush that has
-settled on the square comes a distant sound of bells.... Instantly
-the action begins; the innkeeper appears, supported by the porter
-and the waiter; a wave of acclamation runs through the chorus; the
-Pomeranian trots down the road; and presently the fagged leaders
-of the Thusis diligence turn their heads round the corner of the
-square. The preposterous yellow coach--a landau attached to a glass
-“clarence”--crosses the cobble-paved stage, swinging round with a grand
-curve to the inn door; vague figures, detaching themselves from the
-chorus, flit about the horses or help the guard to lift the luggage
-down; the two syndics, critically aloof, lean on their sticks to watch
-the scene; the Pomeranian bustles between the tired horses’ legs; and
-the diligence doors let out a menagerie of the strange folk whom one
-sees only on one’s travels. Here they come, familiar as the figures
-in a Noah’s ark: Germans first--the little triple-chinned man with a
-dachshund, out of “Fliegende Blätter,” the slippered Hercules with a
-face like that at the end of a meerschaum pipe, and their sentimental
-females; shrill and vivid Italians, a pleasant pig-faced priest.
-Americans going “right through,” with their city and state writ large
-upon their luggage; English girls like navvies, and Frenchmen like
-girls; the arched doorway absorbs them, and another jingle of bells,
-and a flash of lamps on the bridge, proclaim that the Chiavenna
-diligence is coming.
-
-The same ceremony repeats itself; and another detachment of the
-travelling menagerie descends. This time there is a family of rodents,
-who look as though they ought to be enclosed in wire netting and
-judiciously nourished on lettuce; there is a small fierce man in
-knickerbockers and a sash, conducting a large submissive wife and two
-hypocritical little boys who might have stepped out of “The Mirror of
-the Mind”; there is an unfortunate lady in spectacles, who looks like
-one of the Creator’s rejected experiments, and carries a grey linen bag
-embroidered with forget-me-nots; there is the inevitable youth with
-an alpenstock, who sends home a bunch of edelweiss to his awe-struck
-family.... These, too, disappear; the horses are led away; the chorus
-disperses, the lights go out, the performance is over. Only one
-spectator lingers, a thoughtful man in a snuff-coloured overcoat, who
-gives the measure of the social resources of Splügen by the deliberate
-way in which, evening after evening, he walks around the empty
-diligences, looks into their windows, examines the wheels and poles,
-and then mournfully vanishes into darkness.
-
-At last the two diligences have the silent square to themselves. There
-they stand, side by side in dusty slumber, till the morning cow-bells
-wake them to departure. One goes back to Thusis; to the region of
-good hotels, pure air and scenic platitudes. It may go empty for all
-we care. But the other ... the other wakes from its Alpine sleep to
-climb the cold pass at sunrise and descend by hot windings into the
-land where the church steeples turn into _campanili_, where the vine,
-breaking from perpendicular bondage, flings a liberated embrace about
-the mulberries, and far off, beyond the plain, the mirage of domes and
-spires, of painted walls and sculptured altars, beckons across the
-dustiest tracts of memory. In that diligence our seats are taken.
-
-
-
-
-A MIDSUMMER WEEK’S DREAM
-
-AUGUST IN ITALY
-
- _.... Un paysage choisi
- Que vont charmant masques et bergamasques._
-
-
-I
-
-For ten days we had not known what ailed us. We had fled from the
-August heat and crowd of the Vorderrheinthal to the posting-inn below
-the Splügen pass; and here fortune had given us all the midsummer
-tourist can hope for--solitude, cool air and fine scenery. A dozen
-times a day we counted our mercies, but still privately felt them to be
-insufficient. As we walked through the larch-groves beside the Rhine,
-or climbed the grassy heights above the valley, we were oppressed by
-the didactic quality of our surroundings--by the aggressive salubrity
-and repose of this _bergerie de Florian_. We seemed to be living in
-the landscape of a sanatorium prospectus. It was all pleasant enough,
-according to Schopenhauer’s definition of pleasure. We had none of the
-things we did not want; but then we did not particularly want any of
-the things we had. We had fancied we did till we got them; and as we
-had to own that they did their part in fulfilling our anticipations, we
-were driven to conclude that the fault was in ourselves. Then suddenly
-we found out what was wrong. Splügen was charming, but it was too near
-Italy.
-
-One can forgive a place three thousand miles from Italy for not being
-Italian; but that a village on the very border should remain stolidly,
-immovably Swiss was a constant source of exasperation. Even the
-landscape had neglected its opportunities. A few miles off it became
-the accomplice of man’s most exquisite imaginings; but here we could
-see in it only endless material for Swiss clocks and fodder.
-
-The trouble began with our watching the diligences. Every evening we
-saw one toiling up the pass from Chiavenna, with dusty horses and
-perspiring passengers. How we pitied those passengers! We walked among
-them puffed up with all the good air in our lungs. We felt fresh and
-cool and enviable, and moralized on the plaintive lot of those whose
-scant holidays compelled them to visit Italy in August. But already the
-poison was at work. We pictured what our less fortunate brothers had
-seen till we began to wonder if, after all, they were less fortunate.
-At least they had _been there_; and what drawbacks could qualify that
-fact? Was it better to be cool and look at a water-fall, or to be hot
-and look at Saint Mark’s? Was it better to walk on gentians or on
-mosaic, to smell fir-needles or incense? Was it, in short, ever well to
-be elsewhere when one might be in Italy?
-
-We tried to quell the rising madness by interrogating the travellers.
-Was it very hot on the lakes and in Milan? “Terribly!” they answered,
-and mopped their brows. “Unimaginative idiots!” we grumbled, and
-forbore to question the next batch. Of course it was hot there--but
-what of that? Think of the compensations! To take it on the lowest
-plane, think of the empty hotels and railway carriages, the absence
-of tourists and Baedekers! Even the Italians were away, among the
-Apennines and in the Engadine; we should have the best part of the
-country to ourselves. Gradually we began to picture our sensations
-should we take seats in the diligence on its return journey. From that
-moment we were lost. We did not say much to each other, but one morning
-at sunrise we found a travelling-carriage at the door. No one seemed
-to know who had ordered it, but we noticed that our luggage was being
-strapped on behind. We took our seats and the driver turned his horses
-toward the Splügen pass. It was not the way to Switzerland.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _By the Port of Lovere_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- LOVEIRE. 1901.
-
-]
-
-We mounted to ice and snow. The savage landscape led us to the top of
-the pass and dogged us down to the miserable Italian custom-house on
-the other side. Then began the long descent through snow-galleries and
-steep pine-forests, above the lonely gorge of the Madesimo: Switzerland
-still in every aspect, but with a promise of Italy in the names of
-the dreary villages. Visible Italy began with the valley of the Lira,
-where, in a wild Salvator Rosa landscape, the beautiful campanile
-of the Madonna of Gallevaggio rises above embowering walnuts. After
-that each successive village declared its allegiance more openly.
-The huddled stone houses disappeared in a wealth of pomegranates and
-oleanders. Vine-pergolas shaded the doorways, roses and dahlias
-overflowed the terraces of rough masonry, and between the
-walnut-groves there were melon-patches and fields of maize.
-
-As we approached Chiavenna a thick bloom of heat lay on the motionless
-foliage, and the mountains hung like thunder-clouds on the horizon.
-There was something oppressive, menacing almost, in the still weight
-of the atmosphere. It seemed to have absorbed all the ardour of the
-sun-baked Lombard plain, of the shadeless rice and maize fields
-stretching away to the south of us. But the eye had ample compensation.
-The familiar town of Chiavenna had grown as fantastically picturesque
-as the background of a fresco. The old houses, with their medallioned
-doorways of worn marble; the court-yards bright with flowers and
-shaded by trellised vines; the white turbulence of the Lira, rushing
-between gardens, balconies and terraces set at reckless angles above
-the water--were all these a part of the town we had so often seen at
-less romantic seasons? The general impression was of an exuberance of
-rococo--as though the sportive statue of Saint John Nepomuc on the
-bridge, the grotesque figures on the balustrade of the pale-green villa
-near the hotel, and the stucco shrines at the street corners, had
-burst into a plastic efflorescence rivalling the midsummer wealth of
-the gardens.
-
-We had left Switzerland with the general object of going to Italy and
-the specific one of exploring the Bergamasque Alps. It was the name
-which had attracted us, as much from its intrinsic picturesqueness as
-from its associations with the _commedia dell’ arte_ and the jolly
-figures of Harlequin and Brighella. I have often journeyed thus in
-pursuit of a name, and have seldom been unrewarded. In this case the
-very aspect of the map was promising. The region included in the
-scattered lettering--_Bergamasker Hochthäler_--had that furrowed,
-serried look so encouraging to the experienced traveller. It was rich,
-crowded, suggestive; and the names of the villages were enchanting.
-
-Early the next morning we set out for Colico, at the head of the
-Lake of Como, and thence took train for Sondrio, the chief town of
-the Valtelline. The lake, where we had to wait for our train, lay in
-unnatural loveliness beneath a breathless sky, the furrowed peaks
-bathed in subtle colour-gradations of which, at other seasons, the
-atmosphere gives no hint. At Sondrio we found all the dreariness of a
-modern Italian town with wide unshaded streets; but taking carriage in
-the afternoon for Madonna di Tirano we were soon in the land of romance
-again. The Valtelline, through which we drove, is one vast fruit and
-vegetable garden of extraordinary fertility. The _gran turco_ (as the
-maize is called) grows in jungles taller than a man, and the grapes and
-melons have the exaggerated size and bloom of their counterfeits in a
-Dutch fruit-piece. The rich dulness of this foreground was relieved by
-the noble lines of the hills, and the air cooled by the rush of the
-Adda, which followed the windings of our road, and by a glimpse of
-snow peaks at the head of the valley. The villages were uninteresting,
-but we passed a low-lying deserted church, a charming bit of
-seventeenth-century decay, with peeling stucco ornaments, and weeds
-growing from the florid vases of the pediment; and far off, on a lonely
-wooded height, there was a tantalizing glimpse of another church, a
-Renaissance building rich with encrusted marbles: one of the nameless
-uncatalogued treasures in which Italy still abounds.
-
-Toward sunset we reached Madonna di Tirano, the great pilgrimage
-church of the Valtelline. With its adjoining monastery it stands
-alone in poplar-shaded meadows a mile or more from the town of Tirano.
-The marble church, a late fifteenth-century building by Battagio
-(the architect of the Incoronata of Lodi), has the peculiar charm of
-that transitional period when individuality of detail was merged,
-but not yet lost, in the newly-recovered sense of unity. From the
-columns of the porch, with their Verona-like arabesques, to the
-bronze Saint Michael poised like a Mercury on the cupola, the whole
-building combines the charm and naïveté of the earlier tradition with
-the dignity of a studied whole. The interior, if less homogeneous,
-is, in the French sense, even more “amusing.” Owing, doubtless, to
-the remote situation of the church, it has escaped the unifying
-hand of the improver, and presents three centuries of conflicting
-decorative treatment, ranging from the marble chapel of the Madonna,
-so suggestive, in its clear-edged reliefs, of the work of Omodeo at
-Pavia, to the barocco carvings of the organ and the eighteenth-century
-_grisailles_ beneath the choir-gallery.
-
-The neighbouring monastery of Saint Michael has been turned into an inn
-without farther change than that of substituting tourists for monks
-in the white-washed cells around the cloisters. The old building is
-a dusty labyrinth of court-yards, loggias and pigeon-haunted upper
-galleries, which it needs but little imagination to people with cowled
-figures gliding to lauds or benediction; and the refectory where we
-supped is still hung with portraits of cardinals, monsignori, and lady
-abbesses holding little ferret-like dogs.
-
-The next day we drove across the rich meadows to Tirano, one of those
-unhistoried and unconsidered Italian towns which hold in reserve for
-the observant eye a treasure of quiet impressions. It is difficult to
-name any special “effect”: the hurried sight-seer may discover only
-dull streets and featureless house-fronts. But the place has a fine
-quality of age and aloofness. The featureless houses are “palaces,”
-long-fronted and escutcheoned, with glimpses of arcaded courts, and of
-gardens where maize and dahlias smother the broken statues and choked
-fountains, and where grapes ripen on the peeling stucco walls. Here
-and there one comes on a frivolous rococo church, subdued by time to
-delicious harmony with its surroundings; on a fountain in a quiet
-square, or a wrought-iron balcony projecting romantically from a
-shuttered façade; or on one or another of the hundred characteristic
-details which go to make up the _mise en scène_ of the average Italian
-town. It is precisely in places like Tirano, where there are no salient
-beauties to fix the eye, that one appreciates the value of these
-details, that one realizes what may be called the negative strength
-of the Italian artistic sense. Where the Italian builder could not be
-grand, he could always abstain from being mean and trivial; and this
-artistic abnegation gives to many a dull little town like Tirano an
-architectural dignity which our great cities lack.
-
-
-II
-
-The return to secular life was made two days later, when we left
-our monastery and set out to drive across the Aprica pass to Edolo.
-Retracing for a mile or two the way toward Sondrio, we took a turn to
-the left and began to mount the hills through forests of beech and
-chestnut. With each bend of the road the views down the Valtelline
-toward Sondrio and Como grew wider and more beautiful. No one who has
-not looked out on such a prospect in the early light of an August
-morning can appreciate the poetic truth of Claude’s interpretation
-of nature: we seemed to be moving through a gallery hung with his
-pictures. There was the same expanse of billowy forest, the same silver
-winding of a river through infinite gradations of distance, the same
-aërial line of hills melting into illimitable sky.
-
-As we neared the top of the pass the air freshened, and pines and open
-meadows replaced the forest. We lunched at a little hotel in a bare
-meadow, among a crowd of Italians enjoying the _villeggiatura_ in their
-shrill gregarious fashion; then we began the descent to Edolo in the
-Val Camonica.
-
-The scenery changed rapidly as we drove on. There was no longer
-any great extent of landscape, as on the other side of the pass,
-but a succession of small park-like views: rounded clumps of trees
-interspersed with mossy glades, water-falls surmounted by old mills,
-_campanili_ rising above villages hidden in foliage. On these smooth
-grassy terraces, under the walnut boughs, one expected at each turn
-to come upon some pastoral of Giorgione’s, or on one of Bonifazio’s
-sumptuous picnics. The scenery has a studied beauty in which velvet
-robes and caparisoned palfreys would not be out of place, and even the
-villages might have been “brushed in” by an artist skilled in effects
-and not afraid to improve upon reality.
-
-It was after sunset when we reached Edolo, a dull town splendidly
-placed at the head of the Val Camonica, beneath the ice-peaks of the
-Adamello. The Oglio, a loud stream voluble of the glaciers, rushes
-through the drowsy streets as though impatient to be gone; and we were
-not sorry, the next morning, to follow its lead and continue our way
-down the valley.
-
-
-III
-
-The Val Camonica, which extends from the Adamello group to the head of
-the lake of Iseo, is a smaller and more picturesque reproduction of the
-Valtelline. Vines and maize again fringed our way; but the mountains
-were closer, the villages more frequent and more picturesque.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The Municipio--Brescia_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- BRESCIA. 1901.
-]
-
-We had read in the invaluable guide-book of Gsell-Fels a vague allusion
-to an interesting church among these mountains, but we could learn
-nothing of it at Edolo, and only by persistent enquiries along the
-road did we finally hear that there _was_ a church with “sculptures”
-in the hill-village of Cerveno, high above the reach of carriages. We
-left the high-road at the point indicated, and drove in a light country
-carriole up the stony mule-path, between vines and orchards, till
-the track grew too rough for wheels; then we continued the ascent on
-foot. As we approached the cluster of miserable hovels which had been
-pointed out to us we felt sure we had been misled. Not even in Italy,
-the land of unsuspected treasures, could one hope to find a church with
-“sculptures” in a poverty-stricken village on this remote mountain!
-Cerveno does not even show any signs of past prosperity. It has plainly
-never been more than it now is--the humblest of _paesi_, huddled away
-in an unvisited fold of the Alps. The peasants whom we met still
-insisted that the church we sought was close at hand; but the higher we
-mounted the lower our anticipations fell.
-
-Then suddenly, at the end of a long stony lane, we came on an imposing
-doorway. The church to which it belonged stood on a higher ledge of
-the hill, and the door led into a vaulted ascent, with shallow flights
-of steps broken by platforms or landings--a small but yet impressive
-imitation of the Bernini staircase in the Vatican. As we mounted we
-found that each landing opened into a dimly-lit chapel with grated
-doors, through which we discerned terra-cotta groups representing the
-scenes of the Passion. The staircase was in fact a Sacred Way like
-the more famous one of Varallo; but there was distinct originality in
-placing the chapels on each side of the long flight of steps leading to
-the church, instead of scattering them on an open hill-side, according
-to the traditional plan common to all the other sacred mountains of
-northern Italy.
-
-The dilettante will always allow for the heightening of emotion that
-attends any unexpected artistic “find”; but, setting this subjective
-impression aside, the Via Crucis of Cerveno remains in my memory as
-among the best examples of its kind--excepting always the remarkable
-terra-cottas of San Vivaldo in Tuscany. At Cerveno, as at Varallo,
-the groups are marked by unusual vivacity and expressiveness. The
-main lines of the composition are conventional, and the chief
-personages--Christ and the Apostles, the Virgin and the other
-holy characters--are modelled on traditional types; but the minor
-figures, evidently taken from life, are rendered with frank realism
-and with extraordinary truth of expression and gesture. Just such
-types--the dwarf, the beggar, the hunchback, the brawny waggoner or
-ploughman--had met us in every village on the way to Cerveno. As in
-all the hill-regions where the goitre is prevalent, the most villanous
-characters in the drama are depicted with a hideous bag of flesh
-beneath the chin; and Signorelli could not have conceived more bestial
-leering cruelty than that in some of the faces which press about the
-dying Christ. The scenes follow the usual order of the sacred story,
-without marked departure from the conventional grouping; but there is
-unusual pathos in the Descent from the Cross, where the light from
-the roof of the chapel falls with tragic intensity on the face of a
-Magdalen full of suave Lombard beauty.
-
-Hardly less surprising than this remarkable stairway is the church to
-which it leads. The walls are hung with devotional pictures set in
-the faded gilding of rich old frames, the altar-fronts are remarkable
-examples of sixteenth-century wood-carving, and the high altar is
-surmounted by an elaborate tabernacle, also of carved wood, painted and
-gilt, that in itself repays the effort of the climb to Cerveno. This
-tabernacle is a complicated architectural composition--like one of the
-fantastic designs of Fontana or Bibbiena--thronged with tiny saints
-and doctors, angels and _putti_, akin to the little people of the
-Neapolitan _presepii:_ a celestial company fluttering
-
- _Si come schiera d’api che s’infiora_
-
-around the divine group which surmounts the shrine.
-
-This prodigality of wood-carving, surprising as it is in so remote and
-humble a church, is yet characteristic of the region about Brescia
-and Bergamo. Lamberti of Brescia, the sculptor of the famous frame
-of Romanino’s Madonna in the church of San Francesco, was one of the
-greatest wood-carvers of the Italian Renaissance; and every church
-and chapel in the country through which we were travelling bore
-witness to the continued practice of the art in some graceful frame or
-altar-front, some saint or angel rudely but expressively modelled.
-
-We lunched that day at Breno, a town guarded by a ruined castle on
-a hill, and sunset brought us to Lovere, at the head of the lake of
-Iseo. It was the stillest of still evenings, and the little town which
-Lady Mary Wortley Montagu has immortalized was reflected, with every
-seam and wrinkle of its mountain background, in the pearly surface
-of the lake. Literal-minded critics, seeking in vain along the shore
-for Lady Mary’s villa and garden, have grumbled at the inaccuracy of
-her descriptions; but every lover of Italy will understand the mental
-process by which she unconsciously created an imaginary Lovere. For
-though the town, at first sight, is dull and disappointing, yet, taken
-with its surroundings, it might well form the substructure of one of
-those Turneresque visions which, in Italy, are perpetually intruding
-between the most conscientious traveller and his actual surroundings.
-It is indeed almost impossible to see Italy steadily and see it whole.
-The onset of impressions and memories is at times so overwhelming that
-observation is lost in mere sensation.
-
-Certainly he who, on an August morning, sails from Lovere to Iseo, at
-the southern end of the lake, is likely to find himself succumbing to
-Lady Mary’s hallucinations. Warned by her example, and conscious of
-lacking her extenuating gift, I hesitate to record my impressions of
-the scene; or venture, at most, to do so in the past tense, asserting
-(and this even with a mental reservation) that on a certain morning
-a certain number of years ago the lake of Iseo wore such and such an
-aspect. But the difficulty of rendering the aspect remains. I can only
-say it was that very lake of the _carte du Tendre_ upon which, in the
-eighteenth-century romances, gay parties in velvet-hung barges used
-to set out for the island of Cythera. Every village on that enchanted
-shore might have been the stage of some comedy in the Bergamasque
-dialect, with Harlequin in striped cloak, and Brighella in conical hat
-and wide green and white trousers, strutting up and down before the
-shuttered house in which Dr. Graziano hides his pretty ward; every
-villa reflecting its awnings and bright flowers in the lake might
-have housed some Rosaura to whom Leandro, the Tuscan lover, warbled
-_rispetti_ beneath the padlocked water-gate; every pink or yellow
-monastery on the hill-side might have sent forth its plausible friar,
-descendant of Machiavelli’s Fra Timoteo, to preach in the market-place,
-beg at the villa-door, and help Rosaura and Leandro cozen the fat dupe
-of a Pantaloon in black cloak and scarlet socks. The eighteenth century
-of Longhi, of Tiepolo and Goldoni was reflected in the lake as in some
-magic crystal. Did the vision dissolve as we landed at Iseo, or will
-some later traveller find it still lying beneath the wave like the
-vanished city of Ys? There is no telling, in such cases, how much the
-eye receives and how much it contributes; and if ever the boundaries
-between fact and fancy waver, it may well be under the spell of the
-Italian midsummer madness.
-
-
-IV
-
-The sun lay heavy on Iseo; and the railway journey thence to Brescia
-left in our brains a golden dazzle of heat. It was refreshing, on
-reaching Brescia, to enter the streets of the old town, where the
-roofs almost meet and there is always a blessed strip of shade to
-walk in. The cities in Italy are much cooler than the country. It is
-in August that one understands the wisdom of the old builders, who
-made the streets so narrow, and built dim draughty arcades around the
-open squares. In Brescia the effects of light and shade thus produced
-were almost Oriental in their sharp-edged intensity; the rough stucco
-surfaces gilded with vivid sunlight bringing out the depths of
-contrasting shade, and the women with black veils over their heads
-slipping along under the mysterious balconies and porticoes like
-flitting fragments of the shadow.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Chiesa dei Miracoli--Brescia_
-]
-
-Brescia is at all times a delightful place to linger in. Its chief
-possessions--the bronze Victory, and that room in the Martinengo palace
-where Moretto, in his happiest mood, depicted the ladies of the line
-under arches of trellis-work backed by views of the family villas--make
-it noteworthy even among Italian cities; and it has, besides, its
-beautiful town-hall, its picture-gallery, and the curious court-yards
-painted in perspective that are so characteristic of the place. But in
-summer there is a strong temptation to sit and think of these things
-rather than to go and see them. In the court-yard of the hotel, where
-a fountain tinkles refreshingly, and the unbleached awnings flap in
-the breeze of the electric fans, it is pleasant to feel that the
-Victory and the pictures are close at hand, like old friends waiting
-on one’s inclination; but if one ventures forth, let it be rather
-to the churches than to the galleries. Only at this season can one
-appreciate the atmosphere of the churches: that chill which cuts the
-sunshine like a knife as one steps across the dusky threshold. When
-we entered the cathedral its vast aisles were empty, but far off,
-in the dimness of the pillared choir, we heard a drone of intoning
-canons that freshened the air like the sound of a water-fall in a
-forest. Thence we wandered on to San Francesco, empty too, where, in
-the sun-spangled dimness, the great Romanino throned behind the high
-altar. The sacristan drew back the curtain before the picture, and as
-it was revealed to us in all its sun-bathed glory he exclaimed with
-sudden wonder, as though he had never seen it before: “_È stupendo! È
-stupendo!_” Perhaps he vaguely felt, as we did, that Romanino, to be
-appreciated, must be seen in just that light, a projection of the suave
-and radiant atmosphere in which his own creations move. Certainly no
-Romanino of the great public galleries arrests the imagination like the
-Madonna of San Francesco; and in its presence one thinks with a pang of
-all the beautiful objects uprooted from their native soil to adorn the
-herbarium of the art-collector....
-
-
-V
-
-It was on the last day of our journey that the most imperturbable
-member of the party, looking up from a prolonged study of the
-guide-books, announced that we had not seen the Bergamasque Alps after
-all.
-
-In the excited argument that followed, proof seemed to preponderate
-first on one side and then on the other; but a closer scrutiny of the
-map confirmed the fear that we had not actually penetrated beyond
-the borders of the promised land. It must be owned that at first the
-discovery was somewhat humiliating; but on reflection it left us
-overjoyed to think that we had still the Bergamasque Alps to visit.
-Meanwhile our pleasure had certainly been enhanced by our delusion; and
-we remembered with fresh admiration Goethe’s profound saying--a saying
-which Italy inspired--
-
- _O, wie beseliget uns Menschen ein falscher Begriff!_
-
-
-
-
-THE SANCTUARIES OF THE PENNINE ALPS
-
-
-When June is hot on the long yellow streets of Turin, it is pleasant to
-take train for the Biellese, that romantic hill-country where the last
-slopes of the Pennine Alps melt into the Piedmontese plain.
-
-The line, crossing the lowland with its red-tiled farm-houses and
-mulberry orchards, rises gradually to a region of rustling verdure.
-Mountain streams flow down between alder-fringed banks, white oxen doze
-under the acacia-hedges, and in the almond and cherry orchards the
-vine hangs its Virgilian garlands from blossoming tree to tree. This
-pastoral land rolls westward to the Graiian Alps in an undulating sea
-of green, but to the north it breaks abruptly into the height against
-which rises the terraced outline of Biella.
-
-The cliffs of the Biellese are the haunt of ancient legend, and on
-almost every ledge a church or monastery perpetuates the story of
-some wonder-working relic. Biella, the chief town of this devout
-district, covers a small conical hill and spreads its suburbs over the
-surrounding level. Its hot sociable streets are full of the shrill
-activity of an Italian watering-place; but the transalpine traveller
-will probably be inclined to push on at once to the village of Andorno,
-an hour’s drive deeper in the hills.
-
-Biella overhangs the plain; but Andorno lies in a valley which soon
-contracts to a defile between the mountains. The drive thither from
-Biella skirts the Cervo, a fresh mountain stream, and passes through
-villages set on park-like slopes in the ample shade of chestnut-groves.
-The houses of these villages have little of the picturesqueness
-mistakenly associated with Italian rural architecture; but every window
-displays its pot of lavender or of carnations, and the arched doorways
-reveal gardens flecked with the blue shadows of the vine-pergola.
-
-Andorno itself is folded in hills, rounded, umbrageous, cooled with
-the song of birds. A sylvan hush envelops the place, and the air one
-breathes seems to have travelled over miles of forest freshened by
-unseen streams. It is all as still and drowsy as the dream of a tired
-brain. There is nothing to see but the country itself--acacia-fringed
-banks sloping to the stream below the village; the arch of a ruined
-bridge; an old hexagonal chapel with red-tiled roof and an arcade of
-stunted columns; and, beyond the bridge and the chapel, rich upland
-meadows where all day long the peasant women stoop to the swing of the
-scythe.
-
-In June in this high country (where patches of snow still lie in the
-shaded hollows), the wild flowers of spring and summer seem to meet:
-narcissus and forget-me-not lingering in the grass, while yellow
-broom--Leopardi’s _lover of sad solitudes_--sheets the dry banks with
-gold, and higher up, in the folds of the hills, patches of crimson
-azalea mix their shy scent with the heavy fragrance of the acacia. In
-the meadows the trees stand in well-spaced majestic groups, walnut,
-chestnut and beech, tenting the grass with shade. The ivy hangs its
-drapery over garden walls and terraces, and the streams rush down under
-a quivering canopy of laburnum. The scenery of these high Pennine
-valleys is everywhere marked by the same nobleness of colour and
-outline, the same atmosphere of spaciousness and poetry. It is the rich
-studied landscape of Bonifazio’s idyls: a scene of peace and plenitude,
-not the high-coloured southern opulence but the sober wealth poured
-from a glacial horn of plenty. There is none of the Swiss abruptness,
-of the Swiss accumulation of effects. The southern aspect softens and
-expands. There is no crowding of impressions, but a stealing sense of
-harmony and completeness.
-
-From Andorno the obvious excursion is to the famous shrine of San
-Giovanni; a “sight” taking up eight pages in the excellent “Guida del
-Biellese,” but remaining in the traveller’s memory chiefly as the
-objective point of a charming walk or drive. The road thither winds
-up the Val d’Andorno, between heights set with villages hung aloft
-among the beech-groves, or thrusting their garden-parapets above the
-spray and tumult of the Cervo. The densely-wooded cliffs are scarred
-with quarries of sienite, and the stream, as the valley narrows,
-forces its way over masses of rock and between shelving stony banks;
-but the little gardens dashed by its foam overflow with irises, roses
-and peonies, surrounded with box-hedges and shaded by the long mauve
-panicles of the wistaria.
-
-Presently the road leaves the valley, and ascends the beech-clothed
-flank of the mountain on which the church of San Giovanni is perched.
-The coolness and hush of this wooded hill-side are delicious after
-the noise and sunshine of the open road, and one is struck by the
-civic amenity which, in this remote solitude, has placed benches at
-intervals beneath the trees. At length the brow of the hill is reached.
-The beeches recede, leaving a grassy plateau flanked by a long façade
-of the monastery; and from the brink of this open space the eye drops
-unhindered down the long leafy reaches of the Val d’Andorno.
-
-The scene is characterized by the tenderest gradations of colour
-and line: beeches blending with walnuts, these with the tremulous
-laburnum-thickets along the stream, and the curves of the hills flowing
-into one another till they lose themselves in the aërial distances of
-the plain. The building which commands this outlook is hardly worthy
-of its station, unless, indeed, the traveller feels its sober lines
-to be an admission of art’s inferiority to nature in such aspects. To
-the confirmed apologist of Italy there is indeed a certain charm in
-finding so insignificant a piece of architecture in so rare a spot:
-as though in a land thus amply dowered no architectural emphasis
-were needed to call attention to any special point of view. Yet a
-tenderness for the view, one cannot but infer, must have guided the
-steps of those early cenobites who peopled the romantic landscape with
-wonder-working images. When did a miracle take place on a barren plain
-or in a circumscribed hollow? The manifestations of divine favour
-invariably sought the heights, and those who dedicated themselves to
-the commemoration of such holy incidents did so in surroundings poetic
-enough to justify their faith in the supernatural.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The Inner Quadrangle at Oropa_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- LOVEIRE. 1901.
-]
-
-The church, with its dignified front and sculptured portal, adjoins
-the hospice, and shows little of interest within but the stone grotto
-containing the venerated image of Saint John, discovered in the third
-century by Saint Eusebius, Bishop of Vercelli. This grotto is protected
-by an iron grating, and its dark recess twinkles with silver hearts
-and other votive offerings. The place is still a favourite pilgrimage,
-but there seems to be some doubt as to which Saint John has chosen it
-as the scene of his posthumous thaumaturgy; for, according to the
-local guide-book, it is equally frequented on the feasts of the Baptist
-and of the Evangelist. This uncertainty is not without its practical
-advantages; and one reads that the hospice is open the year round,
-and that an excellent meal may always be enjoyed in the _trattoria_
-above the arcade; while on the feasts of the respective saints it is
-necessary for the devotee to bespeak his board and lodging in advance.
-
-If San Giovanni appeals chiefly to the lover of landscape, the more
-famous sanctuary of Oropa is of special interest to the architect; for
-thither, in the eighteenth century, the piety of the house of Savoy
-sent Juvara, one of the greatest architects of his time, to add a grand
-façade and portico to the group of monastic buildings erected a hundred
-years earlier by Negro di Pralungo.
-
-The ascent to the great mountain-shrine of the Black Virgin leads the
-traveller back to Biella, and up the hills behind the town. The drive
-is long, but so diversified, so abounding in beauty, that in nearing
-its end one feels the need of an impressive monument to close so
-nobly ordered an approach. As the road rises above the vineyards of
-Biella, as the house-roofs, the church-steeples and the last suburban
-villas drop below the line of vision, there breaks upon the eye the
-vast undulating reach of the Piedmontese plain. From the near massing
-of cultivated verdure--the orchards, gardens, groves of the minutely
-pencilled foreground--to the far limit where earth and sky converge
-in silver, the landscape glides through every gradation of sun-lit
-cloud-swept loveliness. First the Val d’Andorno unbosoms its wooded
-depths; then the distances press nearer, blue-green and dappled with
-forest, with the towns of Biella, Novara and Vercelli like white fleets
-anchored on a misty sea. This view, with its fold on fold of woodland,
-dusky-shimmering in the foreground, then dark blue, with dashes of
-tawny sunlight and purple streaks of rain, till it fades into the
-indeterminate light of the horizon, suggests some heroic landscape of
-Poussin’s, or the boundless russet distances of Rubens’s “Château of
-Stein.”
-
-Meanwhile the foreground is perpetually changing. The air freshens, the
-villages with their flower-gardens and their guardian images of the
-Black Virgin are left behind, and between the thinly-leaved beeches
-rise bare gravelly slopes backed by treeless hills. The Loreto of
-Piedmont lies nearly four thousand feet above the sea, and even in
-June there is a touch of snow in the air. For a moment one fancies
-one’s self in Switzerland; but here, at the bend of the road, is a
-white chapel with a classic porch, within which a group of terra-cotta
-figures enact some episode of the Passion. Italy has reasserted herself
-and art has humanized the landscape. More chapels are scattered through
-the trees, but one forgets to note them as the carriage turns into a
-wide grassy forecourt, bordered by stone pyramids and dominated at its
-farther end by the great colonnade of the hospice. A _rampe douce_ with
-fine iron gates leads up to an outer court enclosed in the arcaded
-wings of the building. Under these arcades are to be found shops in
-which the pilgrim may satisfy his various wants, from groceries, wines
-and cotton umbrellas (much needed in these showery hills), to rosaries,
-images of the Black Virgin, and pious histories of her miracles. Above
-the arcades the pilgrims are lodged; and in the centre of the inner
-façade Juvara’s marble portico unfolds its double flight of steps.
-
-Passing through this gateway, one stands in a spacious inner
-quadrangle. This again is enclosed in low buildings resting on
-arcades, their alignment broken only by the modest façade of the
-church. Outside there is the profane bustle of life, the clatter of
-glasses at the doors of rival _trattorie_, the cracking of whips, the
-stir of buying and selling; but a warm silence holds the inner court.
-Only a few old peasant women are hobbling, rosary in hand, over the
-sun-baked flags to the cool shelter of the church. The church is indeed
-cavernously cold, with that subterranean chill peculiar to religious
-buildings. The interior is smaller and plainer than one had expected;
-but presently it is seen to be covered with a decoration beside which
-the rarest tapestry or fresco might sink into insignificance. This
-covering is composed of innumerable votive offerings, crowding each
-other from floor to vaulting over every inch of wall, lighting the
-chapels with a shimmer of silver and tinsel, with the yellow of old
-wax legs and arms, and the gleam of tarnished picture-frames: each
-overlapping scale of this strange sheath symbolizing some impulse of
-longing, grief or gratitude, so that, as it were, the whole church is
-lined with heart-beats. Most of these offerings are the gift of the
-poor mountain-folk, and the paintings record with artless realism the
-miraculous escapes of carters, quarrymen and stone-cutters. In the
-choir, however, hang a few portraits of noble donators in ruffs and
-Spanish jerkins; and one picture, rudely painted on the wall itself,
-renders with touching fidelity the interior of a peasant’s house in the
-sixteenth or seventeenth century, with the mother kneeling by a cradle
-over which the Black Virgin sheds her reassuring light.
-
-The ebony Virgin herself (another “find” of the indefatigable Saint
-Eusebius) is enthroned behind the high altar, in a tiny chapel built
-by her discoverer, where, in a blaze of altar-lights, the miraculous
-image, nimbused in jewels and gold, showers a dazzling brightness
-on the groups who succeed each other at her iron lattice. The
-incense-laden air and the sweating stone walls encrusted with votive
-offerings recall at once the chapel of Loreto; but here the smaller
-space, the deeper dusk, heighten the sense of holiness and solemnity;
-and if a few white-capped Sisters are grouped against the grating,
-while before the altar a sweet-voiced young priest intones the mystic
-
- _Mater purissima,
- Mater admirabile,
- Mater prudentissima,_
-
-punctuated by the wailing _Ora pro nobis!_ of the nuns, it would be
-hard to picture a scene richer in that mingling of suavity and awe with
-which the Church composes her incomparable effects.
-
-After so complex an impression the pleasures of the eye may seem a
-trifle thin; yet there is a great charm in the shaded walks winding
-through the colony of chapels above the monastery. Nothing in nature is
-lovelier than a beech-wood rustling with streams; and to come, in such
-a setting, on one graceful _tempietto_ after another, to discover, in
-their semi-pagan porches, groups of peasants praying before some dim
-presentment of the Passion, gives a renewed sense of the way in which,
-in Italy, nature, art and religion combine to enrich the humblest
-lives. These Sacred Mounts, or Stations of the Cross, are scattered
-everywhere on the Italian slopes of the Alps. The most famous is at
-Varallo, and to find any artistic merit one must go there, or to San
-Vivaldo in Tuscany, or the unknown hill-village of Cerveno in the Val
-Camonica. At Oropa the groups are relatively crude and uninteresting;
-but the mysterious half-light in which they are seen, and the
-surrounding murmur of leaves and water, give them a value quite
-independent of their plastic qualities.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Varallo itself is but a day’s journey from Andorno, and in June weather
-the drive thither is beautiful. The narrow country road mounts through
-chestnut-groves as fine as those which cast their velvet shade for
-miles about Promontogno in the Val Bregaglia. At first the way dips
-continuously from one green ravine to another, but at Mosso Santa
-Maria, the highest point of the ascent, the glorious plain again
-bursts into view, with white roads winding toward distant cities,
-and the near flanks of the hills clothed in unbroken forest. The Val
-Sesia is broader than the Val d’Andorno, and proportionately less
-picturesque; but its expanse of wheat and vine, checkered with shade
-and overhung by piled-up mossy rocks, offers a restful contrast to the
-landscape of the higher valleys. As Varallo is neared the hills close
-in again and the scenery regains its sub-Alpine character. The first
-unforgettable glimpse of the old town is caught suddenly at a bend of
-the road, with the Sanctuary lifted high above the river, and tiled
-roofs and church-towers clustered at its base. The near approach is a
-disenchantment; for few towns have suffered more than Varallo under the
-knife of “modern improvement,” and those who did not know it in earlier
-days would hardly guess that it was once the most picturesque town in
-North Italy. A dusty wide-avenued suburb, thinly scattered with cheap
-villas, now leads from the station to the edge of the old town; and
-the beautiful slope facing the Sacred Mountain has been cleared of its
-natural growth and planted with moribund palms and camellias, to form
-the “pleasure” grounds of a huge stucco hotel with failure written over
-every inch of its pretentious façade.
-
-One knows not whether to lament the impairment of such rare
-completeness, or to find consolation in the fact that Varallo is rich
-enough not to be ruined by its losses. Ten or fifteen years ago every
-aspect was enchanting; now one must choose one’s point of view, but
-one or two of the finest are still intact. Turning one’s back, for
-instance, on the offending hotel, one has still, on a summer morning,
-the rarest vision of wood and water and happily-blended architecture:
-the Sesia with its soft meadows and leafy banks, the old houses huddled
-above it, and the high cliff crowned by the chapels of the Sacred Way.
-At night all melts to a diviner loveliness. The clustered darkness of
-the town, twinkling with lights, lies folded in hills delicately traced
-against a sky mauve with moonlight. Here and there the moon burnishes a
-sombre mass of trees, or makes a campanile stand out pale and definite
-as ivory; while high above, the summit of the cliff projects against
-the sky, with an almost Greek purity of outline, the white domes and
-arches of the Sanctuary.
-
-The centre of the town is also undisturbed. Here one may wander through
-cool narrow streets with shops full of devotional emblems, and of
-the tall votive candles gaily spangled with gold, and painted with
-flower-wreaths and _mandorle_ of the Virgin. These streets, on Sundays,
-are thronged with the peasant women of the neighbouring valleys in
-their various costumes: some with cloth leggings and short dark-blue
-cloth petticoats embroidered in colours; others in skirts of plaited
-black silk, with embroidered jackets, silver necklaces and spreading
-head-dresses; for nearly every town has its distinctive dress, and
-some happy accident seems to have preserved this slope of the Alps
-from the depressing uniformity of modern fashions. In architectural
-effects the town is little richer than its neighbours; but it has that
-indescribable “tone” in which the soft texture of old stucco and the
-bloom of weather-beaten marble combine with a hundred happy accidents
-of sun and shade to produce what might be called the _patine_ of Italy.
-There is, indeed, one remarkable church, with a high double flight
-of steps leading to its door; but this (though it contains a fine
-Gaudenzio) passes as a mere incident in the general picturesqueness,
-and the only church with which the sight-seer seriously reckons is that
-of Santa Maria delle Grazie, frescoed with the artist’s scenes from the
-Passion.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The Main Court of the Sacro Monte at Varallo_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- VARALLO. 1901.
-]
-
-There is much beauty of detail in these crowded compositions; but, to
-the inexpert, Gaudenzio lives perhaps chiefly as the painter of the
-choiring angels of Saronno: so great there that elsewhere he seems
-relatively unimportant. At Varallo, at least, one associates him
-first with the Sacred Mountain. To this great monument of his native
-valley he contributed some of his most memorable work, and it seems
-fitting that on turning from his frescoes in Santa Maria one should
-find one’s self at the foot of the path leading to the Sanctuary. The
-wide approach, paved with tiny round pebbles polished by the feet
-of thousands of pilgrims, leads round the flank of the cliff to the
-park-like enclosure on its summit. Here, on the ledge overlooking the
-town, stands the church built by Saint Charles Borromeo (now disfigured
-by a modern façade), and grouped about it are the forty-two chapels
-of the “New Jerusalem.” These little buildings, to which one mounts
-or descends by mossy winding paths beneath the trees, present every
-variety of pseudo-classical design. Some, placed at different levels,
-are connected by open colonnades and long flights of steps; some have
-airy loggias, overlooking gardens tufted with blush-roses and the lilac
-iris; while others stand withdrawn in the deep shade of the beeches.
-Each chapel contains a terra-cotta group representing some scene in
-the divine history, and the site and architecture of each building
-have been determined by a subtle sense of dramatic fitness. Thus, the
-chapels enclosing the earlier episodes--the Annunciation, the Nativity
-and the scenes previous to the Last Supper--are placed in relatively
-open sites, with patches of flowers about their doorsteps; while as the
-drama darkens the pilgrim descends into deep shady hollows, or winds
-along chill stone corridors and up and down interminable stairs; a
-dark subterranean passage leading at last to the image of the buried
-Christ.
-
-Of the groups themselves it is difficult to speak dispassionately,
-for they are so much a part of their surroundings that one can hardly
-measure them by any conventional standard. To do so, indeed, would be
-to miss their meaning. They must be studied as a reflection of the
-Bible story in the hearts of simple and emotional peasants; for it was
-the piety of the mountain-folk that called them into being, and the
-modellers and painters who contributed to the work were mostly natives
-of Val Sesia or of the neighbouring valleys. The art of clay modelling
-is peculiarly adapted to the rendering of strong and direct emotions.
-So much vivacity of expression do its rapid evocations permit, that
-one might almost describe it as intermediate between pantomime and
-sculpture. The groups at Varallo have the defects inherent in such
-an improvisation: the crudeness, the violence, sometimes even the
-seeming absurdities of an instantaneous photograph. These faults are
-redeemed by a simplicity and realism which have not had time to harden
-into conventionality. The Virgin and Saint Elizabeth are low-browed
-full-statured peasant women; the round-cheeked romping children, the
-dwarfs and hunchbacks, the Roman soldiers and the Jewish priests,
-have all been transferred alive from the market-places of Borgo Sesia
-and Arona. These expressive figures, dressed in real clothes, with
-real hair flowing about their shoulders, seem like the actors in some
-miracle-play arrested at its crowning moment.
-
-Closer inspection brings to light a marked difference in quality
-between the different groups. Those by Tabacchetti and Fermo Stella
-are the best, excepting only the remarkable scene of the Crucifixion,
-attributed to Gaudenzio, and probably executed from his design.
-Tabacchetti is the artist of the Adam and Eve surrounded by the
-supra-terrestrial flora and fauna of Eden: a curious composition, with
-a golden-haired Eve of mincing elegance and refinement. To Stella are
-due some of the simplest and most moving scenes of the series: the
-Adoration of the Magi, the message of the angel to Joseph, and Christ
-and the woman of Samaria. Especially charming is the Annunciation,
-where a yellow-wigged angel, in a kind of celestial dressing-gown of
-flowered brocade, advances, lily in hand, toward a gracefully-startled
-Virgin, dressed (as one is told) in a costume presented by a pious lady
-of Varallo. In another scene the Mother of God, habited like a peasant
-of Val Sesia, looks up smilingly from the lace-cushion on which she is
-at work; while the Last Supper, probably a survival of the older wooden
-groups existing before Gaudenzio and his school took up the work, shows
-a lace-trimmed linen table-cloth, with bread and fruit set out on real
-Faenza dishes.
-
-After these homely details the scenes of the Passion, where Gaudenzio’s
-influence probably prevailed, seem a trifle academic; but even here
-there are local touches, such as the curly white dog at the foot of
-Herod’s throne, the rags of the beggars, the child in the Crucifixion
-holding a spotted hound in leash.
-
-The Crucifixion is fitly the culminating point of the series. Here
-Gaudenzio lined the background with one of his noblest frescoes, and
-the figures placed before it are worthy, in expression and attitude, to
-carry out the master’s conception. The gold-bucklered Roman knight on
-his white charger, the eager gaping throng, where beggars and cripples
-jostle turbaned fine ladies and their dwarfs, where oval-faced Lombard
-women with children at the breast press forward to catch a glimpse of
-the dying Christ, while the hideous soldiers at the foot of the cross
-draw lots for the seamless garment--all these crowding careless figures
-bring out with strange intensity the agony uplifted in their midst.
-Never, perhaps, has the popular, the unimpressed, unrepentant side of
-the scene been set forth with more tragic directness. One can fancy the
-gold-armoured knight echoing in after years the musing words of Anatole
-France’s _Procurateur de Judée_:--“Jésus? Jésus de Nazareth? Je ne me
-rappelle pas.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-From Varallo the fortunate traveller may carry his impressions
-unimpaired through the chestnut-woods and across the hills to the lake
-of Orta--a small sheet of water enclosed in richest verdure, with the
-wooded island of San Giuliano on its bosom. Orta has a secret charm of
-its own: a quality of solitude, of remoteness, that makes it seem the
-special property of each traveller who chances to discover it. Here
-too is a Sacred Way, surmounting the usual knoll above the town. The
-groups have little artistic merit, but there is a solemn charm in the
-tranquil glades, with their little white-pillared shrines, connected
-by grass walks under a continuous vaulting of branches. The chief
-“feature” of Orta, however, is the incredibly complete little island,
-with its ancient church embosomed in gardens; yet even this counts only
-as a detail in the general composition, a last touch to the prodigal
-picturesqueness of the place. The lake itself is begirt by vine-clad
-slopes, and in every direction roads and bridle-paths lead across the
-wooded hills, through glades sheeted in spring-time with primroses and
-lilies-of-the-valley, to the deeper forest-recesses at the foot of the
-high Alps.
-
-In any other country the departure from such perfect loveliness must
-lead to an anti-climax; but there is no limit to the prodigality of the
-Italian landscape, and the wanderer who turns eastward from Orta may
-pass through scenes of undiminished beauty till, toward sunset, the
-hills divide to show Lake Maggiore at his feet, with the Isola Bella
-moored like a fantastic pleasure-craft upon its waters.
-
-
-
-
-WHAT THE HERMITS SAW
-
-
-In almost every gallery of Italy there hangs, among the pictures of
-the earlier period, one which represents, with loving minuteness of
-topographical detail, a rocky mountain-side honeycombed with caves and
-inhabited by hermits.
-
-As a rule, the landscape is comprehensive enough to include the whole
-Thebaid, with the river at the base of the cliff, the _selva oscura_
-“fledging the wild-ridged mountain steep by steep,” and the various
-little edifices--huts, chapels and bridges--with which the colony
-of anchorites have humanized their wild domain. This presentment of
-the life of the solitaries always remained a favourite subject in
-Italian art, and even in the rococo period, when piety had become
-a drawing-room accomplishment, the traditional charm of the “life
-apart” was commemorated by the mock “hermitages” to be found in every
-nobleman’s park, or by such frescoes as adorn the entrance to the
-chapel of the Villa Chigi, near Rome: a tiny room painted to represent
-a rocky cleft in the mountains, with anchorites visiting each other in
-their caves, or engaged in the duties of their sylvan existence.
-
-A vast body of literature--and of a literature peculiarly accessible
-to the people--has kept alive in Catholic countries the image of the
-early solitary. The Golden Legend, the great Bollandist compilations,
-and many other collections of pious anecdote, preserve, in simple
-and almost childish form, the names and deeds of the desert saints.
-In the traditions of the Latin race there still lingers, no doubt, a
-sub-conscious memory of the dark days when all that was gentle and
-merciful and humane turned to the desert to escape the desolation of
-the country and the foulness of the town. From war and slavery and
-famine, from the strife of the circus factions and the incredible
-vices and treacheries of civilized life, the disenchanted Christian,
-aghast at the more than pagan corruption of a converted world, fled
-into the waste places to wear out his life in penance. The horrors he
-left behind surpassed anything the desert could show--surpassed even
-the terrors that walked by night, the airy tongues that syllabled
-men’s names, the lemurs, succubi and painted demons of the tombs.
-Nevertheless the lives of the early anchorites, who took refuge in
-the burning solitudes of Egypt and Asia Minor, were full of fears and
-anguish. Their history echoes with the groans and lamentations of souls
-in pain, and had their lives been recorded by contemporary artists, the
-presentment must have recalled those horribly circumstantial studies of
-everlasting torment which admonished the mediæval worshipper from the
-walls of every church.
-
-But when Italian art began to chronicle the history of the desert
-fathers, a change had passed over the spirit of Christianity. If
-the world was still a dark place, full of fears and evil, solitary
-communion with God had ceased to become a more dreadful alternative;
-and when men went forth into the desert they found Christ there rather
-than the devil. So at least one infers from the spirit in which the
-Italian painters rendered the life of the Thebaid--transposing its
-scenes from the parched African desert to their own fertile landscape,
-and infusing into the lives of the desert fathers that sense of human
-fellowship with which Saint Francis had penetrated the mediæval
-conception of Christianity. The first hermits shunned each other as
-they shunned the image of evil; every human relation was a snare,
-and they sought each other out only in moments of moral or physical
-extremity, when flesh or spirit quailed before the hallucinations of
-solitude. But in the Italian pictures the hermits move in an atmosphere
-of fraternal tenderness. Though they still lead the “life apart,” it is
-shorn of its grimness and mitigated by acts of friendly ministry and
-innocent childlike intercourse. The solitaries still dwell in remote
-inaccessible regions, and for the most part their lives are spent
-alone; but on the feasts of the Church they visit each other, and when
-they go on pilgrimage they pause at each other’s thresholds.
-
-Yet, though one feels that this new spirit has tamed the desert,
-and transplanted to it enough of the leaven of human intercourse to
-exorcise its evil spirits, the imagination remains chiefly struck by
-the strangeness of the conditions in which these voluntary exiles must
-have found themselves. The hermits brought little with them from the
-world of cities and men compared to what they found in the wilderness.
-Their relation to the earth--their ancient mysterious mother--must
-have been the most intimate as well as the most interesting part of
-their lives; as a “return to nature” the experience had a freshness
-and intensity which the modern seeker after primeval sensations can
-never hope to recover. For in those days, when distances were measured
-by the pilgrim’s sandal or the ass’s hoof, a few miles meant exile,
-and the mountain visible from the walls of his native town offered
-the solitary as complete an isolation as the slopes of Lebanon. News
-travelled at the same pace, when it did not drop by the way. There was
-little security outside the city walls, and small incentive for the
-traveller, except from devotional motives, to seek out the anchorite on
-his inaccessible height.
-
-The hermit, therefore, was thrown back on the companionship of the
-wild; and what he won from it we read in the gentler legends of the
-desert, and in the records of the early Italian artists. Much, for
-instance, is told of the delightful nature of the intercourse between
-the solitaries and wild animals. The lion having been the typical
-“denizen” of the Libyan sands, the Italian painter has transplanted
-him to the Umbrian hill-sides, where, jointly with the wolf and the
-stag, he lives in gentle community with the anchorites. For instead
-of fleeing from or fighting these lords of the wilderness, the wise
-hermits at once entered into negotiations with them--negotiations
-sometimes resulting in life-long friendships, and sealed by the
-self-sacrificing death of the adoring animal. It was of course the
-power of the cross which subjugated these savage beasts; and many
-instances are recorded of the control exercised over wild animals,
-and the contrition awakened in them, by the conquering sign. But the
-hermits, not content with asserting their spiritual predominance over
-these poor soulless creatures (_non sono Cristiani_), seemed to feel
-that such a victory was too easy, and were themselves won over by the
-devotion of their dumb friends, and drawn into a brotherly commerce
-which no law of the Church prescribed.
-
-The mystical natural history of the first Christian centuries
-facilitated the belief in this intercourse between man and beast. When
-even familiar domestic animals were credited with strange symbolic
-attributes, it was natural to people the wild with the dragon, the
-hydra and the cocatrix; to believe that the young of the elephant were
-engendered by their mothers’ eating of the mandragora which grows on
-a mount near Paradise; that those of the lion were born dead and
-resuscitated by their parents’ breath; and that the old eagle renewed
-his youth by plunging three times in a magic fountain. It is not
-strange that creatures so marvellously endowed should have entered into
-friendly relations with the human intruders upon their solitude, and
-subdued their savage natures to the teachings of their new masters.
-And as the lion and the wolf were gradually transformed into humble
-but wise companions, so the other influences of the wilderness came
-to acquire a power over the solitaries. Even after the early Thebaids
-had been gathered in under one or another of the great monastic rules,
-seekers after holiness continued to flee the communal life, and in
-Italy every lonely height came to have its recluse. It was impossible
-that these little restricted human lives, going forth singly into the
-desert, should not be gradually absorbed into it and saturated with
-its spirit. Think what a soul-shattering or soul-making experience it
-must have been to the dweller in the narrow walled town or the narrower
-monastery, to go forth alone, beyond the ploughed fields and the road
-to the next village, beyond the haunts of men and hail of friendly
-voices, forth into the unmapped region of hills and forests, where
-wild beasts and robbers, and other presences less definable but more
-baleful, lay in wait for the lonely traveller! From robbers there was
-not much to fear: the solitaries were poor, and it was a great sin to
-lay hands on them. The wild beasts, too, might be won over to Christian
-amity; but what of those other presences of which the returning
-traveller whispered over the evening fire?
-
-At first, no doubt, the feeling of awe was uppermost, and only the
-heart inflated with divine love could sustain the assaults of fear and
-loneliness; but gradually, as the noise of cities died out, as the ear
-became inured to the vast hush of nature, and the mind to the delicious
-recurrence of untroubled hours--then, wonderfully, imperceptibly, the
-spirit of the hermit must have put forth tendrils of sympathy and
-intelligence toward the mysterious world about him. Think of the joy of
-escaping from the ceaseless brawls, the dirt, disease and misery of the
-mediæval town, or from the bickering, the tale-bearing, the mechanical
-devotions of the crowded monastery! Think of the wonder of entering,
-alone and undisturbed, into communion with this vast still world of
-cliff and cataract, of bird and beast and flower!
-
-There were, of course, different kinds of hermits: the dull kind whose
-only object was to escape from the turmoil and rivalry of the city,
-or the toil and floggings of the farm, and to live drowsily in a warm
-cleft of the rocks (not too far from the other solitaries), high above
-the populous plain alternately harried by war and pestilence; and
-there was the ecstatic, so filled with the immanent light that he saw
-neither cliff nor cataract, that the various face of nature was no more
-to him than a window of clear glass opening on the brightness of the
-beatific vision. But there must have been a third kind also--the kind
-in whom the divine love, instead of burning like a cold inward flame,
-overflowed on the whole world about him; to whom, in this new immediate
-contact with nature, the swallow became a sister, the wolf a brother,
-the very clods “lovers and lamps”: mute Saint Francises, born out of
-their due time, to whom the life of nature revealed, inarticulately but
-profoundly, the bond of brotherhood between man and the soil.
-
-It was to these solitaries that the wilderness truly confessed itself,
-yielding up once more all the terror and the poetry of its ancient
-life. For the cliffs and forests shunned of men had not always been
-thus deserted, and always there had throbbed in them the pulse of
-that strange intermediate life, between the man and the clod, of which
-the tradition lingers in all lonely places. The hermits of course knew
-this: the life of ancient days was still close to them. They knew also
-that the power of the cross had banished from temple and market-place,
-from garden, house and vineyard, a throng of tutelary beings on whom
-the welfare of men had once been thought to depend, but who had now
-been declared false to their trust, and driven forth to join their
-brothers of the hills and woods. This knowledge rested on no vague
-rumours, but on authenticated fact. Were not many of the old temples
-still standing, some built into the walls of Christian churches, others
-falling into desecrated ruin on lonely cliff and promontory? And was
-it not known that in these latter the wraiths of the old gods still
-reassembled? Many pilgrims and travellers bore witness to the fact.
-Who had not heard of the Jewish wayfarer, overtaken by night in a
-lonely country, who sought shelter in a ruined temple of Apollo, and
-would have been blasted by the god and his attendant demons, had he
-not (converted by fear) dispelled the unholy rout with the sign of the
-cross?
-
-A tangle of classic and mediæval traditions, Greek, Etruscan and
-Germanic, in which the gods of the Thessalian glades and the werewolves
-of northern forests rode the midnight blast in the _chevauchée_ of a
-wild Walpurgisnacht, haunted the background of life in that confused
-age when “ignorant armies clashed by night” on the battleground of
-the awakening human intelligence. To the citizen hugging the city
-walls, this supernatural world was dark with images of sin and fear;
-but to the dweller in the forest, bold enough to affront the greater
-terrors of self-communion, it must have offered a mitigating sense
-of fellowship. That it did so is proved even by some of the earliest
-legends. It was not always in forms of peril and perdition that the
-banished gods manifested themselves to the votaries of the usurper.
-To the dweller in the city they may have come in vengeful shape, like
-the Venus, _tout entière à sa proie attachée_, who held fast to the
-Christian bridegroom’s ring (though surely here one catches a note
-of the old longing); but in their native solitude they seem to have
-appeared propitiatingly, with timid proffers of service, as when Saint
-Anthony, travelling in search of a fellow-hermit, was guided on his
-way, first by a centaur and then by “a little man with hoofs like a
-goat.”
-
-For generations indeed, for centuries even in that slow-moving time,
-the divinities of the old dispensation must have remained more familiar
-to the simple people than the strange new God of Israel. Often they
-must have stolen back in the twilight, to surprise and comfort the
-unlettered toilers who still believed in them, still secretly offered
-them the dripping honeycomb and bowl of ewe’s milk, or hung garlands
-in the cleft tree which they haunted. To some of these humble hearts,
-grieving for their old fireside gods, and a little bewildered by the
-demands of the great forbidding Christ who frowned from the golden
-heights of the Byzantine apse, the “return to nature” must have been
-like a coming home to the instinctive endearing ways of childhood. How
-could they be alarmed by the sight of these old exiled gods, familiars
-of the hearth and garden; they who had been born to the sense of such
-presences, to half-human intercourse with beings who linked man to the
-soil that nurtured him, and the roof beneath which he slept?
-
-Even the most holy and learned men of the first Christian centuries did
-not question the actual existence of the heathen gods, and the Fathers
-of the Church expended volumes of controversy in discussing their
-origin and their influence on a Christianized world. A strange conflict
-of opinion waged around this burning question. By the greater number of
-authorities the old gods were believed to be demons, emanations of the
-mysterious spirit of evil, himself the Ahriman of the ancient Eastern
-dualism, who had cleverly smuggled himself into the new Christian
-creed. Yet the oracles, though usually regarded as the voices of these
-demons, were always believed in and quoted by the Christian Church,
-and the history of the dark ages abounds in allusion to the authority
-of the Sibylline books. While Christian scholarship thus struggled
-under the spell of the old beliefs, how could the artisan and serf have
-freed themselves from it? Gradually, indeed, the Church, foreseeing the
-perils of a divided allegiance, and fearing the baleful loveliness of
-the old gods, was to transform their myths into Christian legend, and
-so supply a new throng of anthropomorphic conceptions for minds unable
-to keep their faith alive on the thin abstractions of the schoolmen.
-The iconography of the early Church bears witness to the skill with
-which these adaptations were effected, and the slender young Olympians
-and their symbols pressed into the service of the new faith; but it was
-long before the results of this process reached the popular mind, and
-meanwhile the old gods lived on in simple fellowship with the strange
-saints and angels.
-
-Through all the middle ages the marvellous did not fail from the earth:
-it simply receded farther from the centres of life, drawing after
-it the hearts of the adventurous. The Polo brothers were no doubt
-clear-sighted practical men while they drove their trade in Venice;
-but wonders pressed upon them when they set foot in the Great Khan’s
-domains. If an astute Italian prince, who lived till the middle of
-the fifteenth century with the light of the new humanism flooding his
-court, could yet, on his travels to the Holy Land and Greece, discover
-castles inhabited by enchanted snakes, as well as wonder-working
-shrines of his own creed, how could the simple hearts of the anchorite
-and solitary remain closed to the old wonders?
-
-Shapes which have once inhabited the imagination of man pass
-reluctantly out of existence. Centuries of poetic belief had peopled
-the old world with a race of superhuman beings, and as many centuries
-would be needed to lay their ghosts. It must be remembered, moreover,
-that no sudden cataclysm, political or intellectual, marked the
-introduction of the Christian faith. For three centuries after the
-sacrifice on Calvary, hardly an allusion to the new god is to be found
-in the pages of the pagan historians and philosophers. Even after he
-had led the legions of Constantine to victory, and so won official
-allegiance throughout the Roman world, no violent change marked the
-beginning of the new era. For centuries still, men ploughed the same
-fields with ploughs fashioned on the same lines, kept the same holidays
-with the same rites, and lived on the same store of accumulated
-beliefs. And in the hearts of the solitaries these beliefs must have
-lingered longest. For in fleeing the world they were returning to the
-native habitations of the old gods. They were nature-spirits every one,
-sprung from the wave, the cloud, the tree. To the cities they had been
-borne triumphant by the will of men, and from the cities they might
-be banished at its behest; but who should drive them from their old
-stronghold in the breast of nature? Their temples might be re-dedicated
-to the new god, but none could banish them from the temples not made
-with hands. Daylight might deny them, but twilight confessed them
-still. They made no effort to recover the supremacy which had been
-wrested from them: the gods know when their hour has come. But they
-lived on, shrinking back more and more into their primitive forms,
-into the vapour, the tree-trunk, the moon-track on the lonely sea; or
-revealing themselves, in wistful fugitive glimpses, to the mortals who
-had come to share their forest exile.
-
-In what gentle guise they showed themselves, one may see in many
-pictures of the Italian _quattro cento_, some of whose lesser painters
-seem to have been in actual communion with this pale woodland Olympus.
-The gods they depict are not the shining lords of the Greek heaven,
-but half-human, half-sylvan creatures, shy suppliants for mortal
-recognition, hovering gently on the verge of evanescence. Robetta, the
-Florentine engraver, transferred them to some of his plates, Luini
-caught their tender grace in his Sacrifice to Pan and Metamorphosis
-of Daphne, and Lorenzo Costa gives a glimpse of their sylvan revels
-in the Mythological Scene of the Louvre; but it was Piero di Cosimo
-who had the clearest intuition of them. The gentle furred creature of
-the Death of Procris might have been the very faun who showed Saint
-Anthony the way; and in all Cosimo’s mythological pictures one has the
-same impression of that intermediate world, the twilight world of the
-conquered, Christianized, yet still lingering gods, so different from
-the clear upper air of classic art.
-
-Was it, as the scholars would have us believe, mere lack of
-book-learning and technical skill that kept the painters of the
-_quattro_ cento spell-bound in this mediæval Olympus? Were these
-vanishing gods and half-gods merely a clumsy attempt to formulate
-the classic conception of divinity? But the Pisani had discovered
-Greek plastic art two centuries earlier; but the uncovered wonders of
-Rome were being daily drawn and measured by skilful hands; but the
-silhouettes of the antique temples were still outlined against the
-skies of Greater Greece! No--these lesser artists were not struggling
-to embody a half-understood ideal. Kept nearer the soil and closer to
-the past by the very limitations of their genius, they left to the
-great masters the task of reconstituting classical antiquity, content
-to go on painting the gods who still lived in their blood, the gods
-their own forbears had known in the familiar streets and fields, the
-fading gods whom the hermits were last to see in the lost recesses of
-the mountain.
-
-
-
-
-A TUSCAN SHRINE
-
-
-One of the rarest and most delicate pleasures of the continental
-tourist is to circumvent the compiler of his guide-book. The red
-volumes which accompany the traveller through Italy have so completely
-anticipated the most whimsical impulses of their readers that it is now
-almost impossible to plan a tour of exploration without finding, on
-reference to them, that their author has already been over the ground,
-has tested the inns, measured the kilometres, and distilled from the
-massive tomes of Kugler, Burckhardt and Morelli a portable estimate
-of the local art and architecture. Even the discovery of incidental
-lapses scarcely consoles the traveller for the habitual accuracy of
-his statements; and the only refuge left from his omniscience lies in
-approaching the places he describes by a route which he has not taken.
-
-Those to whom one of the greatest charms of travel in over-civilized
-countries consists in such momentary escapes from the expected, will
-still find here and there, even in Italy, a few miles unmeasured by
-the guide-book; and it was to enjoy the brief exhilaration of such a
-discovery that we stepped out of the train one morning at Certaldo,
-determined to find our way thence to San Vivaldo.
-
-For some months we had been vaguely aware that, somewhere among the
-hills between Volterra and the Arno, there lay an obscure monastery
-containing a series of terra-cotta groups which were said to represent
-the scenes of the Passion. No one in Florence seemed to know much about
-them; and many of the people whom we questioned had never even heard
-of San Vivaldo. Professor Enrico Ridolfi, at that time the director
-of the Royal Museums at Florence, knew by hearsay of the existence
-of the groups, and told me that there was every reason to accept the
-local tradition which has always attributed them to Giovanni Gonnelli,
-the blind modeller of Gambassi, an obscure artist of the seventeenth
-century, much praised by contemporary authors, but since fallen into
-merited oblivion. Professor Ridolfi, however, had never seen any
-photographs of the groups, and was not unnaturally disposed to believe
-that they were of small artistic merit, since Gonnelli worked much
-later, and in a more debased period of taste, than the modeller of the
-well-known groups at Varallo. Still, even when the more pretentious
-kind of Italian sculpture was at its lowest, a spark of its old life
-smouldered here and there in the improvisations of the _plasticatore_,
-or stucco modeller; and I hoped to find, in the despised groups of
-San Vivaldo, something of the coarse naïveté and brutal energy which
-animate their more famous rivals of Varallo. In this hope we started
-in search of San Vivaldo; and as the guide-books told us that it could
-be reached only by way of Castel Fiorentino, we promptly determined to
-attack it from San Gimignano.
-
-At Certaldo, the birthplace of Boccaccio, where the train left us one
-April morning, we found an archaic little carriage, with a coachman
-who entered sympathetically into our plan for eluding our cicerone. He
-told us that he knew a road which led in about four hours across the
-mountains from San Gimignano to San Vivaldo; and in his charge we were
-soon crossing the poplar-fringed Elsa and climbing the steep ascent to
-San Gimignano, where we were to spend the night.
-
-The next morning, before sunrise, the little carriage awaited us at
-the inn door; and as we dashed out under the gateway of San Gimignano
-we felt the thrill of explorers sighting a new continent. It seemed,
-in fact, an unknown world which lay beneath us in the early light.
-The hills, so definitely etched at midday, at sunset so softly
-modelled, had melted into a silver sea of which the farthest waves were
-indistinguishably merged in billows of luminous mist. Only the near
-foreground retained its precision of outline, and that too had assumed
-an air of unreality. Fields, hedges and cypresses were tipped with an
-aureate brightness which recalled the golden ripples running over the
-grass in the foreground of Botticelli’s “Birth of Venus.” The sunshine
-had the density of gold-leaf: we seemed to be driving through the
-landscape of a missal.
-
-At first we had this magical world to ourselves, but as the light
-broadened groups of labourers began to appear under the olives and
-between the vines; shepherdesses, distaff in hand, drove their flocks
-along the roadside, and yokes of white oxen with scarlet fringes above
-their meditative eyes moved past us with such solemn deliberateness
-of step that fancy transformed their brushwood-laden carts into the
-sacred _carroccio_ of the past. Ahead of us the road wound through
-a district of vineyards and orchards, but to the north and east the
-panorama of the Tuscan hills unrolled range after range of treeless
-undulations, outlined one upon the other, as the sun grew high, with
-the delicately-pencilled minuteness of a mountain background of Sebald
-Beham’s. Behind us the fantastic towers of San Gimignano dominated each
-bend of the road like some persistent mirage of the desert; to the
-north lay Castel Fiorentino, and far away other white villages gleamed
-like fossil shells embedded in the hill-sides.
-
-The elements composing the foreground of such Tuscan scenes are almost
-always extremely simple--slopes trellised with vine and mulberry, under
-which the young wheat runs like green flame; stretches of ash-coloured
-olive orchard; and here and there a farm-house with projecting eaves
-and open loggia, guarded by its inevitable group of cypresses. These
-cypresses, with their velvety-textured spires of rusty black, acquire
-an extraordinary value against the neutral-tinted breadth of the
-landscape; distributed with the sparing hand with which a practised
-writer uses his exclamation-points, they seem to emphasize the more
-intimate meaning of the scene; calling the eye here to a shrine, there
-to a homestead, or testifying by their mere presence to the lost
-tradition of some barren knoll. But this significance of detail is one
-of the chief charms of the mid-Italian landscape. It has none of the
-purposeless prodigality, the extravagant climaxes, of what is called
-“fine scenery”; nowhere is there any obvious largesse to the eye; but
-the very reticence of its delicately-moulded lines, its seeming disdain
-of facile effects, almost give it the quality of a work of art, make it
-appear the crowning production of centuries of plastic expression.
-
-For some distance the road from San Gimignano to San Vivaldo winds
-continuously upward, and our ascent at length brought us to a region
-where agriculture ceases and the way lies across heathery undulations,
-with a scant growth of oaks and ilexes in the more sheltered hollows.
-As we drove on, these copses gave way to stone-pines, and presently
-we dipped over the yoke of the highest ridge and saw below us another
-sea of hills, with a bare mountain-spur rising from it like a scaly
-monster floating on the waves, its savage spine bristling with the
-walls and towers of Volterra.
-
-For nearly an hour we skirted the edge of this basin of hills, in sight
-of the ancient city on its livid cliff; then we turned into a gentler
-country, through woods starred with primroses, with a flash of streams
-in the hollows; and presently a murmur of church-bells reached us
-through the woodland silence. At the same moment we caught sight of a
-brick campanile rising above the trees on a slope just ahead of us, and
-our carriage turned from the high-road up a lane with scattered chapels
-showing their white façades through the foliage. This lane, making a
-sudden twist, descended abruptly between mossy banks and brought us out
-on a grass-plot before a rectangular monastic building adjoining the
-church of which the bells had welcomed us. Here was San Vivaldo, and
-the chapels we had passed doubtless concealed beneath their cupolas
-“more neat than solemn” the terra-cottas of which we were in search.
-
-The monastery of San Vivaldo, at one time secularized by the Italian
-government, has now been restored to the Franciscan order, of which
-its patron saint was a member. San Vivaldo was born at San Gimignano
-in the latter half of the thirteenth century, and after joining in
-his youth the Tertiary Order of Saint Francis, retired to a hollow
-chestnut-tree in the forest of Camporeno (the site of the present
-monastery), in which cramped abode he passed the remainder of his life
-“in continual macerations and abstinence.” After his death the tree
-which had been sanctified in so unusual a manner became an object of
-devotion among the neighbouring peasantry, who, when it disappeared,
-raised on the spot an oratory to the Virgin. It is doubtful, however,
-if this memorial, which fell gradually into neglect, would have
-preserved San Vivaldo from oblivion, had not that Senancour of a saint
-found a Matthew Arnold in the shape of a Franciscan friar, a certain
-Fra Cherubino of Florence, who, early in the sixteenth century, was
-commissioned by his order to watch over and restore the abandoned
-sanctuary. Fra Cherubino, with his companions, took possession of the
-forest of Camporeno, and proceeded to lay the foundation-stone of a
-monastery which was to commemorate the hermit of the chestnut-tree.
-The forgotten merits of San Vivaldo were speedily restored to popular
-favour by the friar’s eloquence, and often, after one of his sermons,
-three thousand people were to be seen marching in procession to the
-river Evola to fetch building-materials for the monastery. Meanwhile
-Fra Tommaso, another of the monks, struck by the resemblance of the
-hills and valleys of Camporeno to the holy places of Palestine,
-began the erection of the “devout chapels” which were to contain the
-representations of the Passion; and thus arose the group of buildings
-now forming the monastery of San Vivaldo.
-
-As we drove up we saw several monks at work in the woods and in the
-vegetable-gardens below the monastery. These took no notice of us, but
-in answer to our coachman’s summons there appeared another, whose Roman
-profile might have emerged from one of those great portrait-groups
-of the sixteenth century, where grave-featured monks and chaplains
-are gathered about a seated pope. This monk, whose courteous welcome
-betrayed as little surprise as though the lonely glades of San Vivaldo
-were daily invaded by hordes of sight-seers, informed us that it was
-his duty to conduct visitors to the various shrines. The chapels of the
-Passion are about twenty in number, and as many more are said to have
-perished. They are scattered irregularly through the wood adjoining
-the monastery, and our guide, who showed a deep interest in the works
-of art committed to his charge, assured us that the terra-cotta groups
-were undoubtedly due to Giovanni Gonnelli, _Il Cieco di Gambassi_, for
-whose talent he seemed to entertain a profound admiration. Some of
-the master’s work, he added, had been destroyed, or replaced by that
-of “qualche muratore”; but he assured us that in the groups which had
-been preserved we should at once recognize the touch of an eminent
-hand. As he led the way he smilingly referred to Giovanni Gonnelli’s
-legendary blindness, which plays a most picturesque part in the
-artist’s biography. The monk explained to us that Gonnelli was blind
-of only one eye, thus demolishing Baldinucci’s charming tradition of
-portrait-busts executed in total darkness to the amazement of popes and
-princes. Still, we suspected our guide of adapting his hero’s exploits
-to the incredulity of the unorthodox, and perhaps secretly believing
-in the anecdotes over which he affected to smile. On the threshold of
-the first chapel he paused to explain that some of the groups had been
-irreparably injured during the period of neglect and abandonment which
-followed the suppression of the monastery. The government, he added,
-had seized the opportunity to carry off from the church the Presepio
-in high relief which was Gonnelli’s masterpiece, and to strip many of
-the chapels of the escutcheons in Robbia ware that formerly ornamented
-the ceilings. “Even then, however,” he concluded, “our good fathers
-were keeping secret watch over the shrines, and they saved some of the
-escutcheons by covering them with whitewash; but the government has
-never given us back our Presepio.”
-
-Having thus guarded us against possible disillusionment, he unlocked
-the door of the first chapel on what he declared to be an undoubted
-work of the master--the Descent of the Holy Ghost upon the Disciples.
-
-This group, like all the others at San Vivaldo, is set in a little
-apsidal recess at the farther end of the chapel. I had expected, at
-best, an inferior imitation of the seventeenth-century groups in the
-more famous Via Crucis of Varallo, but to my surprise I found myself
-in the presence of a much finer, and apparently a much earlier, work.
-The figures, which are of life-size, are set in a depressed arch, and
-fitted into their allotted space with something of the skill which the
-Greek sculptors showed in adapting their groups to the slope of the
-pediment. In the centre, the Virgin kneels on a low column or pedestal,
-which raises her partially above the surrounding figures of the
-disciples. Her attitude is solemnly prayerful, with a touch of nun-like
-severity in the folds of the wimple and in the gathered plaits of the
-gown beneath her cloak. Her face, furrowed with lines of grief and age,
-is yet irradiated by an inner light; and her hands, like those of all
-the figures hitherto attributed to Gonnelli, are singularly graceful
-and expressive. The same air of unction, of what the French call
-_recueillement_, distinguishes the face and attitude of the kneeling
-disciple on the extreme left; and the whole group breathes that air
-of devotional simplicity usually associated with an earlier and less
-worldly period of art.
-
-Next to this group, the finest is perhaps that of “Lo Spasimo,” the
-swoon of the Virgin at the sight of Christ bearing the cross. It is
-the smallest of the groups, being less than life-size, and comprising
-only the figure of the Virgin supported by the Marys and by two
-kneeling angels. There is a trace of primitive stiffness in the attempt
-to render the prostration of the Virgin, but her face expresses an
-extremity of speechless anguish which is subtly contrasted with the
-awed but temperate grief of the woman who bends above her; while the
-lovely countenances of the attendant angels convey another shade of
-tender participation: the compassion of those who are in the counsels
-of the Eternal, and know that
-
- _In la sua volontade è nostra pace_.
-
-In this group the artist has attained to the completest expression of
-his characteristic qualities: refined and careful modelling, reticence
-of emotion, and that “gift of tears” which is the last attribute one
-would seek in the resonant but superficial art of the seventeenth
-century.
-
-Among other groups undoubtedly due to the same hand are those of
-Christ Before Pilate, of the Ascension, and of the Magdalen bathing
-the feet of Christ. In the group of the Ascension the upper part has
-been grotesquely restored; but the figures of the Virgin and disciples,
-who kneel below, are apparently untouched, and on their faces is seen
-that look of wondering ecstasy, that reflection of the beatific vision,
-which the artist excelled in representing. In every group of the series
-his Saint John has this luminous look; and in that of the Ascension it
-brightens even the shrewd bearded countenances of the older disciples.
-In the scene of Christ before Pilate the figure of Pilate is especially
-noteworthy: his delicate incredulous lips seem just framing their
-immortal interrogation. Our guide pointed out that the Roman lictor in
-this group, who raises his arm to strike the accused Christ, has had
-his offending hand knocked off by the zeal of the faithful.
-
-The representation of the Magdalen bathing the feet of Christ is
-noticeable for the fine assemblage of heads about the supper-table.
-Those of Christ and of his host are peculiarly expressive; and Saint
-John’s look of tranquil tenderness contrasts almost girlishly with the
-majestic gravity of the neighbouring faces. The Magdalen herself is
-less happily executed; there is something actually unpleasant in her
-ramping four-footed attitude as she crawls toward the Christ, and the
-figure is probably by another hand. In the group of the Crucifixion,
-for the most part of inferior workmanship, the figures of the two
-thieves are finely modelled, and their expression of anguish has been
-achieved with the same sobriety of means which marks all the artist’s
-effects. The remaining groups in the chapels are without special
-interest, but under the portico of the church there are three fine
-figures, possibly by the artist of the Spasimo, representing Saint
-Roch, Saint Linus of Volterra, and one of the Fathers of the Church.
-
-There are, then, among the groups of San Vivaldo, five which appear
-to be by the same master, in addition to several scattered figures
-presumably by his hand; all of which have always been attributed to
-Giovanni Gonnelli, the blind pupil of Pietro Tacca. The figures in
-these groups are nearly, if not quite, as large as life; they have all
-been rudely repainted, and are entirely unglazed, though framed in
-glazed mouldings of the familiar Robbian style.
-
-Professor Ridolfi’s information was confirmed by the local tradition,
-and there seemed no doubt that the groups of San Vivaldo had always
-been regarded as the work of Gonnelli, an obscure artist living
-at a time when the greatest masters produced little to which
-posterity has conceded any artistic excellence. But one glance at the
-terra-cottas sufficed to show that they could not have been modelled
-in mid-seventeenth century: neither their merits nor their defects
-belonged to that period of art. What had the sculptor of San Vivaldo
-in common with the pupils of Giovanni Bologna and Il Fiammingo, that
-tribe of skilled craftsmen who peopled every church and palace in
-Italy with an impersonal flock of Junos and Virgin Marys, Venuses and
-Magdalens, distinguishable only by their official attributes? The more
-closely I studied the groups, the more the conviction grew that they
-were the work of an artist trained in an earlier tradition, and still
-preserving, under the stiffening influences of convention, a touch of
-that individuality and directness of expression which mark the prime of
-Tuscan art. The careful modelling of the hands, the quiet grouping, so
-free from effort and agitation, the simple draperies, the devotional
-expression of the faces, all seemed to point to the lingering
-influences of the fifteenth century; not indeed to the fresh charm of
-its noon, but to the refinement, the severity, of its close. The glazed
-mouldings enclosing the groups, and the coloured medallions with
-which the ceilings of the chapels are decorated, suggested a direct
-connection with the later school of the Robbias; and as I looked I was
-haunted by a confused recollection of a Presepio seen at the Bargello,
-and attributed to Giovanni della Robbia or his school. Could this be
-the high-relief which had been removed from San Vivaldo?
-
-On returning to Florence I went at once to the Bargello, and found,
-as I had expected, that the Presepio I had in mind was indeed the one
-from San Vivaldo. I was surprised by the extraordinary resemblance of
-the heads to some of those in the groups ascribed to Gonnelli. I had
-fancied that the modeller of San Vivaldo might have been inspired by
-the Presepio of the Bargello; but I was unprepared for the identity
-of treatment in certain details of hair and drapery, and for the
-recurrence of the same type of face. The Presepio undoubtedly shows
-greater delicacy of treatment; but this is accounted for by the fact
-that the figures are much smaller, and only in partial relief, whereas
-at San Vivaldo they are so much detached from the background that they
-may be regarded as groups of statuary. Again, the glaze which covers
-all but the faces of the Presepio has preserved its original beauty
-of colouring, while the groups of San Vivaldo have been crudely daubed
-with fresh coats of paint, and even of whitewash; and the effect of
-the Presepio is farther enhanced by an excessively ornate frame of
-fruit-garlanded pilasters, as well as by its charming predella with
-small scenes set between panels of arabesque. Altogether, it is a far
-more elaborate production than the terra-cottas of San Vivaldo, and
-some of its most graceful details, such as the dance of angels on the
-stable-roof, are evidently borrowed from the earlier _répertoire_ of
-the Robbias; but in spite of these incidental archaisms no one can
-fail to be struck by the likeness of the central figures to certain of
-the statues at San Vivaldo. The head of Saint Joseph in the Presepio,
-for instance, with its wrinkled penthouse forehead, and the curled
-and parted beard, suggests at once that of the disciple seated on the
-right of Saint John in the house of the Pharisee; the same face, though
-younger, occurs again in the Pentecostal group, and the kneeling female
-figure in the Presepio is treated in the same manner as the youngest
-Mary in the group of the Spasimo: even the long rolled-back tresses,
-with their shell-like convolutions, are the same.
-
-The discovery of this close resemblance deepened the interest of
-the problem. It seemed hardly credible that a work of such artistic
-significance as the Via Crucis of San Vivaldo should not long since
-have been studied and classified. In Tuscany especially, where every
-phase of fifteenth-century art, including its prolongation in the
-succeeding century, has been traced and analyzed with such scrupulous
-care, it was inconceivable that so interesting an example of an
-essentially Italian style should have escaped notice. There could
-be no doubt that the groups belonged to the period in question.
-Since it was impossible not to reject at once the hypothetical
-seventeenth-century artist content to imitate with servile accuracy
-a manner which had already fallen into disfavour, it was necessary
-to assume that a remarkable example of late _quattro-cento_ art had
-remained undiscovered, within a few hours’ journey from Florence, for
-nearly four hundred years. The only reasonable explanation of this
-oversight seemed to be that, owing to the seclusion of the monastery
-of San Vivaldo, the groups had never acquired more than local fame,
-and that, having possibly been restored in the seventeenth century by
-Giovanni Gonnelli or one of his pupils, they had been ascribed to him
-by a generation which, having ceased to value the work of the earlier
-artist, was profoundly impressed by the miraculous skill of the blind
-modeller, and eager to connect his name with the artistic treasures of
-the monastery.
-
-To the infrequent sight-seers of the seventeenth and eighteenth
-centuries, there would be nothing surprising in such an attribution.
-The perception of differences in style is a recently-developed faculty,
-and even if a student of art had penetrated to the wilds of San
-Vivaldo, he would probably have noticed nothing to arouse a doubt of
-the local tradition. The movement toward a discrimination of styles,
-which came in the first half of the nineteenth century, was marked, in
-the study of Italian art, by a contemptuous indifference toward all but
-a brief period of that art; and the mere fact that a piece of sculpture
-was said to have been executed in the seventeenth century would, until
-very lately, have sufficed to prevent its receiving expert attention.
-Thus the tradition which ascribed the groups of San Vivaldo to Giovanni
-Gonnelli resulted in concealing them from modern investigation as
-effectually as though they had been situated in the centre of an
-unexplored continent, and in procuring for me the rare sensation of
-an artistic discovery made in the heart of the most carefully-explored
-artistic hunting-ground of Europe.
-
-My first care was to seek expert confirmation of my theory; and as a
-step in this direction I made arrangements to have the groups of San
-Vivaldo photographed by Signor Alinari of Florence. I was obliged to
-leave Italy before the photographs could be taken; but on receiving
-them I sent them at once to Professor Ridolfi, who had listened with
-some natural incredulity to my description of the terra-cottas; and
-his reply shows that I had not overestimated the importance of the
-discovery.
-
-“No sooner,” he writes, “had I seen the photographs than I became
-convinced of the error of attributing them to Giovanni Gonnelli, called
-_Il Cieco di Gambassi_. I saw at once that they are not the work of an
-artist of the seventeenth century, but of one living at the close of
-the fifteenth or beginning of the sixteenth century; of an artist of
-the school of the Robbias, who follows their precepts and possesses
-their style.... The figures are most beautifully grouped, and modelled
-with profound sentiment and not a little _bravura_. They do not appear
-to me to be all by the same author, for the Christ in the house of the
-Pharisee seems earlier and purer in style, and more robust in manner;
-also the swoon of the Madonna, ... which is executed in a grander style
-than the other reliefs and seems to belong to the first years of the
-sixteenth century.
-
-“The fact that these terra-cottas are not glazed does not prove that
-they are not the work of the Robbia school; for Giovanni della Robbia,
-for example, sometimes left the flesh of his figures unglazed, painting
-them with the brush; and this is precisely the case in a Presepio of
-the National Museum” (this is the Presepio of San Vivaldo), “a work of
-the Robbias, in which the flesh is left unglazed.
-
-“I therefore declare with absolute certainty that it is a mistake to
-attribute these beautiful works to Giovanni Gonnelli, and that they are
-undoubtedly a century earlier in date.”
-
-
-
-
-SUB UMBRA LILIORUM
-
-AN IMPRESSION OF PARMA
-
-
-Parma, at first sight, lacks the engaging individuality of some of the
-smaller Italian towns. Of the romantic group of ducal cities extending
-from Milan to the Adriatic--Parma, Modena, Ferrara, Urbino--it is
-the least easy to hit off in a few strokes, to sum up in a sentence.
-Its component features, however interesting in themselves, fail to
-blend in one of those memorable wholes which take instant hold of the
-traveller’s imagination. The “sights” of Parma must be sought for; they
-remain separate isolated facts, and their quest is enlivened by few
-of those happy architectural incidents which give to a drive through
-Ferrara or Ravenna so fine a flavour of surprise.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _A Characteristic Street_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- PARMA. 1901.
-]
-
-The devotee of the fourteenth century, trained by Ruskin to pass
-without even saluting any expression of structural art more recent
-than the first unfolding of the pointed style, must restrict his
-investigations to the Baptistery and the outside of the Cathedral; and
-even the lax eclectic who nurses a secret weakness for the baroque and
-rejoices in the last frivolous flowering of the eighteenth century,
-finds little immediate satisfaction for his tastes. The general aspect
-of Parma is in fact distinctly inexpressive, and its more important
-buildings have only the relative merit of suggesting happier examples
-of the same style. This absence of the superlative is, in many Italian
-cities, atoned for by the episodical charm of the streets: by glimpses
-of sculptured windows, pillared court-yards, and cornices projecting
-a perfect curve against the blue; but the houses of Parma are plain
-almost to meanness, and though their monotonous succession is broken
-here and there by a palace-front embroidered with the Farnese lilies,
-it must be owned that, with rare exceptions, these façades have few
-palatial qualities but that of size. Perhaps not short of Ravenna could
-be found another Italian town as destitute of the more obvious graces;
-and nowhere surely but in Italy could so unpromising an exterior hide
-such varied treasures. To the lover of Italy--the perennial wooer whom
-every spring recalls across the Alps--there is a certain charm in
-this external dulness. After being steeped in the mediævalism of Siena,
-Perugia or Pistoja, after breathing at Vicenza, Modena and Bergamo the
-very air of Goldoni, Rosalba, and the _commedia dell’ arte_, it is
-refreshing to come on a town that holds back and says: “Find me out.”
-Such a challenge puts the psychologist on his mettle and gives to his
-quest the stimulus of discovery.
-
-It may seem paradoxical to connect the emotions of the explorer with
-one of the most familiar centres of artistic influence, but it is
-partly because Parma is still dominated by Correggio that it has
-dropped out of the emotional range of the modern traveller. For though
-it is scarce a hundred years since our grandparents posted thither to
-palpitate over the master, their æsthetic point of view is as remote
-from ours as their mode of locomotion. By a curious perversity of fate
-Correggio, so long regarded as the leading exponent of “sentiment,” now
-survives only by virtue of his technique, and has shrunk to the limited
-immortality of the painter’s painter. A new generation may rediscover
-his emotional charm, but to the untechnical picture-lover of the
-present day his prodigious manipulations of light and colour seldom
-atone for the Turveydrop attitudes of his saints and angels and for the
-sugary loveliness of his Madonnas. Lacking alike the frank naturalism
-of such masters as Palma Vecchio and Bonifazio, the sensuous mysticism
-of Sodoma and the fantastic gaiety of Tiepolo, Correggio seems to
-typify that phase of cold sentimentality which dwindled to its end
-in the “Keepsakes” of sixty years ago. Each generation makes certain
-demands on the art of its own period and seeks certain affinities in
-the art of the past; and a kind of personal sincerity is perhaps what
-modern taste has most consistently exacted: the term being understood
-not in its technical sense, as applied to execution, but in its
-imaginative significance, as qualifying the “message” of the artist. It
-is inevitable that the average spectator should look at pictures from
-a quite untechnical standpoint. He knows nothing of values, brushwork
-and the rest; yet it is to the immense majority formed by his kind that
-art addresses itself. There must therefore be two recognized ways of
-judging a picture--by its technique and by its expression: that is,
-not the mere story it has to tell, but its power of rendering in line
-and colour the equivalent of some idea or of some emotion. There is
-the less reason for disputing such a claim because, given the power of
-_seeing soul_, as this faculty may be defined, the power of embodying
-the impression, of making it visible and comprehensible to others, is
-necessarily one of technique; and it is doubtful if any artist not
-possessed of this insight has received, even from his fellow-craftsmen,
-a lasting award of supremacy.
-
-Now the sentiment that Correggio embodied is one which, from the
-present point of view, seems to lack the preserving essence of
-sincerity. It is true that recent taste has returned with a certain
-passion to the brilliant mannerisms of the eighteenth century; but
-it is because they are voluntary mannerisms, as frankly factitious
-as the masquerading of children, that they have retained their hold
-on the fancy. As there is a soul in the games of children, or in
-any diversion entered into with conviction, so there is a soul, if
-only an inconsequent spoiled child’s soul, in the laughing art of
-the eighteenth century. It is the defect of Correggio’s art that it
-expresses no conviction whatever. He offers us no clue to the _état
-d’âme_ of his celestial gymnasts. They do not seem to be honestly in
-love with this world or the next, or to take any personal part in the
-transactions in which the artist has engaged them. In fact, they are
-simply models, smirking and attitudinizing at so much an hour, and so
-well trained that even their individuality as models remains hidden
-behind the fixed professional smile. The conclusion is that if they
-are only models to the spectator, it is because they were only models
-to Correggio; that his art had no transmuting quality, and that he was
-always conscious of the wires which held on the wings.
-
-It may, indeed, be argued that devotional painting in Italy had
-assumed, in the sixteenth century, a stereotyped form from which a
-stronger genius than Correggio’s could hardly have freed it; and that
-the triumphs of that day should be sought rather in the domain of
-decorative art, where conventionality becomes a strength, and where
-the æsthetic imagination finds expression in combinations of mere line
-and colour. Many of the decorative paintings of the sixteenth century
-are indeed among the most delightful products of Italian art; and it
-might have been expected that Correggio’s extraordinary technical skill
-and love of rhythmically whirling lines would have found complete
-development in this direction. It is, of course, permissible to the
-artist to regard the heavenly hosts as mere factors in a decorative
-composition; and to consider Thrones, Dominations, Princedoms, Virtues,
-Powers only in their relation to the diameter of a dome or to the
-curve of a spandril; but to the untechnical spectator such a feat is
-almost impossible, and in judging a painter simply as a decorator, the
-public is more at its ease before such frankly ornamental works as
-the famous frescoes of the convent of Saint Paul. It might, in fact,
-have been expected that Correggio would be at his best in executing
-the commission of the light-hearted Abbess, who had charged him to
-amplify the symbolism of her device (the crescent moon) by adorning her
-apartments with the legend of Diana. There is something delightfully
-characteristic of the period in this choice of the Latmian goddess to
-typify the spirit of monastic chastity; and equally characteristic is
-Correggio’s acceptance of the commission as an opportunity to paint
-classic bas-reliefs and rosy flesh and blood, without much attempt to
-express the somewhat strained symbolism of the myth.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The “Little Palace of the Garden”_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- PARMA. 1901.
-]
-
-The vaulted ceiling of the room is treated as a trellised arbour,
-through which rosy loves peep down on the blonde Diana emerging from
-grey drifts of evening mist: a charming composition, with much grace of
-handling in the figure of the goddess and in the _grisailles_ of the
-lunettes below the cornice; yet lacking as a whole just that ethereal
-quality which is supposed to be the distinctive mark of Correggio’s
-art. Compared with the delicate trellis-work and flitting cupids of
-Zucchero’s frescoes at the Villa di Papa Giulio, Correggio’s design
-is heavy and dull. The masses of foliage are too uniform and the
-_putti_ too fat and stolid for their skyey task. This failure of the
-decorative sense is rendered more noticeable by the happy manner in
-which Araldi, a generation earlier, had solved a similar problem in the
-adjoining room. Here the light arabesques and miniature divinities of
-the ceiling, and the biblical and mythological scenes of the frieze,
-are presented with all that earnest striving after personal truth of
-expression that is the ruling principle of fifteenth-century art. It is
-this faculty of personal interpretation, always kept in strict abeyance
-to the laws of decorative fitness, which makes the mural painting
-of the fifteenth century so satisfying that, compared with the
-Mantegna room at Mantua, the Sala del Cambio at Perugia, the Sala degli
-Angeli at Urbino, and the frescoed room at the Schifanoia at Ferrara,
-all the later wall-decorations in Italy (save perhaps the Moretto room
-at Brescia) seem to fall a little short of perfection.
-
-Of a much earlier style of mural painting, Parma itself contains one
-notable example. The ancient octagon of the Baptistery, with its
-encircling arcade and strange frieze of leaping, ramping and running
-animals, is outwardly one of the most interesting buildings in Italy;
-while its interior has a character of its own hardly to be matched
-even in that land of fiercely competing individualism. Downward from
-the apex of the dome the walls are frescoed in successive tiers with
-figures of saints in rigid staring attitudes, interspersed with awkward
-presentments of biblical story. All these designs are marked by a
-peculiar naïveté of composition and great vehemence of gesture and
-expression. Those in the dome and between the windows are attributed
-to the thirteenth century, while the lower frescoes are of the
-fourteenth; but so crude in execution are the latter that they combine
-with the upper rows in producing an effect of exceptional decorative
-value, to which a note of strangeness is given by the introduction,
-here and there, of high-reliefs of saints and angels, so placed that
-the frescoes form a background to their projecting figures. The most
-successful of these sculptures is the relief of the flight into Egypt:
-a solemn procession led by a squat square-faced angel with unwieldy
-wings and closed by two inscrutable-looking figures in Oriental dress.
-
-Seen after the Baptistery, the Cathedral is perhaps something of a
-disappointment; yet to pass from its weather-beaten front, between the
-worn red lions of the ancient porch, into the dusky magnificence of the
-interior, is to enjoy one of those contrasts possible only in a land
-where the humblest wayside chapel may disclose the stratified art of
-centuries. In the great cupola, Correggio lords it with the maelstrom
-of his heavenly host; and the walls of the nave are covered with
-frescoes by Mazzola and Gambara, to which time has given a golden-brown
-tone, as of sumptuous hangings, that atones for the pretentious
-insignificance of their design. There is a venerable episcopal throne
-attributed to Benedetto Antelami, that strangely dramatic sculptor
-to whom the reliefs of the Baptistery are also ascribed, and one of
-the chapels contains a magnificent Descent from the Cross with his
-signature; but except for these works the details of the interior,
-though including several fine sepulchral monuments and a ciborium by
-Alberti, are not exceptional enough to make a lasting impression.
-
-On almost every Italian town, whatever succession of masters it may
-have known, some one family has left its dominant mark; and Parma is
-distinctively the city of the Farnesi. Late-comers though they were,
-their lilies are everywhere, over gateways, on palace-fronts and in the
-aisles of churches; and they have bequeathed to the town a number of
-its most characteristic buildings, from the immense unfinished Palazzo
-della Pilotta to the baroque fountain of parti-coloured marbles which
-enlivens with its graceful nymphs and river-gods the grassy solitude of
-the palace-square. It is to Rannuccio I, the greatest of these ducal
-builders, that Parma owes the gigantic project of the Pilotta, as well
-as the Farnese theatre and the University. To this group Duke Ottavio,
-at a later date, added the charming “Little Palace of the Garden,” of
-which the cheerful yellow façade still overlooks the pleached alleys
-of a formal pleasance adorned, under the Bourbon rulers who succeeded
-him, with groups of statuary by the court sculptor, a Frenchman named
-Jean Baptiste Boudard. Ottavio commissioned Agostino Carracci to
-decorate the interior of the ducal villa, and even now, after years
-of incredible neglect and ill-usage, the walls of several rooms show
-remains of the work executed, as the artist’s pious inscription runs,
-_sub umbra liliorum_. The villa has been turned into barracks, and
-it is difficult to gain admission; but the persistent sight-seer may
-succeed in seeing one room, where large-limbed ruddy immortals move,
-against a background of bluish summer landscape, through the slow
-episodes of some Olympian fable. This apartment shows the skill of the
-Carracci as decorators of high cool ceremonious rooms, designed to
-house the midsummer idleness of a court still under the yoke of Spanish
-etiquette, and living in a climate where the linear vivacities of
-Tiepolo might have been conducive to apoplexy.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The Worn Red Lions
- of the Ancient Porch_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- PARMA. 1901.
-]
-
-The most noteworthy building which arose in Parma under the shadow
-of the lilies is, however, the famous theatre built by Aleotti for
-Duke Rannuccio, and opened in 1620 to celebrate the marriage of
-Odoardo Farnese with Margaret of Tuscany. Externally it is a mere
-outgrowth of the palace; but to those who feel a tenderness for the
-vivacious figures of the _commedia dell’ arte_ and have followed
-their picturesque wanderings through the pages of Gozzi and Goldoni,
-the interior is an immediate evocation of the strolling theatrical
-life of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries--that strange period
-when players were passed on from duchy to principality to perform at
-wedding-feasts and to celebrate political victories; when kings and
-princes stood sponsors to their children, and the Church denied them
-Christian burial.
-
-The Farnese theatre is one of those brilliant improvisations in wood
-and plaster to which Italian artists were trained by centuries of
-hurriedly-organized _trionfi_, state processions, religious festivals,
-returns from war, all demanding the collaboration of sculptor,
-architect and painter in the rapid creation of triumphal arches,
-architectural perspectives, statuary, chariots, flights of angels, and
-galleons tossing on simulated seas: evanescent visions of some _pays
-bleu_ of Boiardo or of Ariosto, destined to crumble the next day like
-the palace of an evil enchanter. To those who admire the peculiarly
-Italian gift of spontaneous plastic invention, the art of the
-_plasticatore_, to borrow an untranslatable term, such buildings are of
-peculiar interest, since, owing to the nature of their construction,
-so few have survived; and of these probably none is as well preserved
-as Aleotti’s theatre. The ceiling of painted canvas is gone, and the
-splendid Farnese dukes bestriding their chargers in lofty niches on
-each side of the proscenium are beginning to show their wooden anatomy
-through the wounds in their plaster sides; but the fine composition of
-the auditorium, and the throng of stucco divinities attitudinizing in
-the niches and on the balustrades, and poised above the arch of the
-proscenium, still serve to recall the original splendour of the scene.
-The dusty gloom of the place suggests some impending transformation,
-and when fancy has restored to the roof the great glass chandeliers
-now hanging in the neighbouring museum, their light seems to fall once
-more on boxes draped with crimson velvet and filled with lords and
-ladies in the sumptuous Spanish habit, while on the stage, before a
-gay perspective of colonnades and terraces, Isabel and Harlequin and
-the Capitan Spavento, _plasticatori_ of another sort, build on the
-scaffolding of some familiar intrigue the airy superstructure of their
-wit.
-
-In the adjoining palace no such revival is possible. Most museums
-in Italy are dead palaces, and none is more inanimate than that of
-Parma. Many of the ducal treasures are still left--family portraits
-by Suttermans and Sir Antony Mor, Bernini-like busts of the Bourbon
-dukes of Parma, with voluminous wigs and fluttering steinkerks; old
-furniture, old majolica, and all those frail elaborate trifles that
-the irony of fate preserves when brick and marble crumble. All these
-accessories of a ruined splendour, catalogued, numbered and penned up
-in glass cases, can no more revive the life of which they formed a part
-than the contents of an herbarium can renew the scent and murmur of a
-summer meadow. The transient holders of all that pomp, from the great
-Alexander to the Duchess Marie Louise of Austria, his last unworthy
-successor, look down with unrecognizing eyes on this dry alignment of
-classified objects; and one feels, in passing from one room to another,
-as though some fanciful heroic poem, depicting the splendid vanities
-of life, and depending for its effect on a fortunate collocation of
-words, had been broken up and sorted out into the different parts of
-speech.
-
-This is the view of the sentimentalist; but from that of the student
-of art the museum of Parma is perhaps more interesting than the palace
-could ever have been. The Correggios are in themselves an unmatched
-possession; the general collection of pictures is large and varied, and
-the wealth of bronzes and marbles, of coins, medals and architectural
-fragments of different schools and periods, would be remarkable in any
-country but Italy, where the inexhaustible richness of the small towns
-is a surprise to the most experienced traveller.
-
-On the whole, the impression carried away from Parma is incomplete
-and confusing. The name calls forth as many scattered images as
-contradictory associations. It is doubtful if the wanderer reviewing
-from a distance his Italian memories will be able to put any distinct
-picture of the place beside the concrete vision of Siena, Mantua or
-Vicenza. It will not hang as a whole in the gallery of his mental
-vignettes; but in the mosaic of detached impressions some rich and
-iridescent fragments will represent his after-thoughts of Parma.
-
-
-
-
-MARCH IN ITALY
-
-
-I
-
-March is in some respects the most exquisite month of the Italian year.
-It is the month of transitions and surprises, of vehement circling
-showers with a golden heart of sunlight, of bare fields suffused
-overnight with fruit-blossoms, and hedgerows budding as suddenly as the
-staff of Tannhäuser. It is the month in which the northern traveller,
-grown distrustful of the promised clemency of Italian skies, and with
-the winter bitterness still in his bones, lighting on a patch of
-primroses under a leafless bank, or on the running flame of tulips
-along the trenches of an olive orchard, learns that Italy _is_ Italy,
-after all, and hugs himself at thought of the black ultramontane March.
-
-It must be owned, however, that it is not, even in Italy, the safest
-month for excursions. There are too many _voltes-face_ toward winter,
-too many moody hesitating dawns, when the skies will not declare
-themselves for or against rain, but hanging neutral till the hesitating
-traveller sets forth, seem then to take a cruel joy in proving that
-he should have stayed at home. Yet there are rare years when some
-benign influence tames the fitfulness of March, subduing her to a long
-sequence of golden days, and then he who has trusted to her promise
-receives the most exquisite reward. It takes faith in one’s luck to
-catch step with such a train of days, and fare with them northward
-across the wakening land; but now and then this fortune befalls the
-pilgrim, and then he sees a new Italy, an Italy which discovery seems
-to make his own. The ancient Latin landscape, so time-furrowed and
-passion-scarred, lies virgin to the eye, fresh-bathed in floods of
-limpid air. The scene seems recreated by the imagination, it wears the
-pristine sparkle of those
-
- _Towers of fables immortal fashioned from mortal dreams_
-
-which lie beyond the geographer’s boundaries, like the Oceanus of the
-early charts; it becomes, in short, the land in which anything may
-happen, save the dull, the obvious and the expected.
-
-
-II
-
-It was, for instance, on such a March day that we rowed across the
-harbour of Syracuse to the mouth of the Anapus.
-
-Our brown rowers, leaping overboard, pushed the flat-bottomed boat
-through the line of foam where bay and river meet, and we passed
-over to the smooth current which slips seaward between flat banks
-fringed with arundo donax and bamboo. The bamboo grows in vast
-feathery thickets along these Sicilian waters, and the slightly
-angular precision of its stem and foliage allies itself well with
-the classic clearness of the landscape--a landscape which, in spite
-of an occasional excess of semi-tropical vegetation, yet retains the
-Greek quality of producing intense effects with a minimum of material.
-There is nothing tropical about the shores of the Anapus; but as the
-river turns and narrows, the boat passes under an arch of Egyptian
-papyrus, that slender exotic reed, brought to Sicily, it is supposed,
-by her Arabian colonizers, and thriving, strangely enough, in no other
-European soil. This plumy tunnel so enclosed us as we advanced, that
-for long stretches of our indolent progress we saw only the face of
-the stream, the summer insects flickering on it, and the continuous
-golden line of irises along its edge. Now and then, however, a gap in
-the papyrus showed, as through an arch in a wall, a prospect of flat
-fields with grazing cattle, or a solitary farm-house, low, brown,
-_tassée_, with a date-palm spindling against its well-curb, or the
-white flank of Etna suddenly thrust across the sky-line.
-
-So, after a long dreamy lapse of time, we came to the source of
-the river, the azure bowl of the nymph Cyane, who pours her pure
-current into the broader Anapus. The haunt of the nymph is a circular
-reed-fringed pool, supposedly so crystalline that she may still be seen
-lurking on its pebbly bed; but the recent spring rains had clouded her
-lair, and though, in this legend-haunted land, one always feels the
-nearness of
-
- _The faun pursuing, the nymph pursued_,
-
-the pool of Cyane revealed no sign of her presence.
-
-Disappointed in our quest, we turned back and glided down the Anapus
-again to visit her sister-nymph, the more famed but less fortunate
-Arethusa, whose unhappy fate it is to mingle her wave with the
-brackish sea-tide in the very harbour of Syracuse, where, under the
-wall of the quay, the poor creature languishes in a prison of masonry,
-her papyrus wreath sending up an anæmic growth from the slimy bottom
-filled with green.
-
-We were glad to turn from this desecrated fount to the long
-russet-coloured town curving above its harbour. Syracuse, girt with
-slopes of flowering orchard-land, lies nobly against the fortified
-ridge of Epipolæ. But the city itself--richer in history than any
-other on that crowded soil, and characteristically symbolized by its
-Greek temple welded into the masonry of a mediæval church--even the
-thronging associations of the city could not, on a day so prodigal of
-sunlight, hold us long within its walls. These walls, the boundaries
-of the Greek Ortygia, have once more become the limits of the shrunken
-modern town, and crossing the moat beyond them, we found ourselves
-at once in full country. There was a peculiar charm in the sudden
-transition from the old brown streets saturated with history to this
-clear smiling land where only the spring seemed to have written its
-tale--its ever-recurring, ever-fresh record of blossom and blade
-miraculously renewed. The country about Syracuse is peculiarly fitted
-to be the exponent of this gospel of renewal. The land stretches away
-in mild slopes laden with acre on acre of blossoming fruit-trees, and
-of old olive orchards under which the lilac anemones have room to
-spread in never-ending sheets of colour. The open pastures are plumed
-with silvery asphodel, and every farm-house has its glossy orange-grove
-fenced from the road by a rampart of prickly pear.
-
-The highway itself, as we drove out toward Epipolæ, was thronged with
-country-folk who might have been the descendants of Theocritan nymphs
-and mortal shepherds, brown folk with sidelong agate eyes, trudging
-dustily after their goats and asses, or jogging townward in their
-little blue or red carts painted with legends of the saints and stories
-from Ariosto. After a mile or two the road curved slowly upward and we
-began to command a widening prospect. At our feet lay Syracuse, girt by
-the Plemmyrian marsh, and by the fields and orchards which were once
-the crowded Greek suburbs of Neapolis, Tyche and Achradina; and beyond
-the ridge of Epipolæ and the nearer hills, Etna rose white and dominant
-against the pale Calabrian coast-line.
-
-The fortress of Euryalus, on the crest of Epipolæ, might be called the
-Greek Carcassonne, since it is the best-preserved example of ancient
-military architecture in Europe. Archways, galleries, massive flights
-of stairs and long subterranean passages may still be traced by the
-archæologically minded in the mass of fallen stones marking the site
-of the ruin; and even the idler unversed in military construction will
-feel the sudden nearness of the past when he comes upon the rock-hewn
-sockets to which the cavalry attached their horses.
-
-Euryalus, however, more fortunate than Carcassonne, has escaped the
-renovating hand of a Viollet-le-Duc, and its broken ramparts lie in
-mellow ruin along the backbone of the ridge, feathered with those
-delicate growths which, in the Mediterranean countries, veil the
-fallen works of man without concealing them. That day, indeed, the
-prodigal blossoming of the Sicilian March had covered the ground with
-a suffusion of colour which made even the mighty ruins of the fortress
-seem a mere background for the triumphant pageant of the spring. From
-the tall silhouette of the asphodel, classic in outline as in name, to
-the tendrils of scarlet and yellow vetch capriciously fretting the
-ancient stones with threads of richest colour, every inch of ground and
-every cleft of masonry was overrun with some delicate wild tracery of
-leaf and blossom.
-
-But to those who first see Syracuse in the month of March--the heart of
-the Sicilian spring--it must appear pre-eminently as one vast unbounded
-garden. The appeal of architecture and history pales before this vast
-glory of the loosened soil. The walls and towers will remain--but
-this transient beauty must be caught upon the wing. And so from the
-flowered slopes of Euryalus we passed to the richer profusion of the
-gardens that adjoin the town. Fringing the road by which we descended,
-a hundred spring flowers--anemones, lupins, sweet alyssum, herb-Robert,
-snapdragon and the fragrant wild mignonette--linked the uncultivated
-country-side to the rich horticulture of the suburbs; and in the
-suburbs the vegetation reached so tropical an excess that the spring
-pilgrim’s memory of Syracuse must be a blur of golden-brown ruins
-immersed in a sea of flowers.
-
-There are gardens everywhere, gardens of all kinds and classes, from
-the peasant’s hut hedged with pink geraniums to the villa with its
-terraced sub-tropical growths; but most wonderful, most unexpected of
-all, are the famous gardens of the quarries. Time has perhaps never
-done a more poetic thing than in turning these bare unshaded pits of
-death, where the Greek captives of Salamis died under the lash of the
-Sicilian slave-driver and the arrows of the Sicilian sun, into deep
-cool wells of shade and verdure. Here, where the chivalry of Athens
-perished of heat and thirst, a damp mantle of foliage pours over the
-red cliff-sides, fills the depths with the green freshness of twilight,
-and effaces, like a pitiful hand on a burning brow, the record of
-that fiery martyrdom. And the quarries are as good to grow flowers in
-as to torture men. The equable warmth of these sheltered ravines is
-as propitious to vegetation as it was destructive to human life; and
-wherever soil has accumulated, on the ledges and in the hollows, the
-“blood of the martyrs” sends up an exuberant growth.
-
-On the edge of one of these hell-pits a monastery has been built; above
-another stands a villa; and monastic and secular hands have transformed
-the sides of the quarries into gardens of fantastic beauty. Paths and
-rocky stairways fringed with fern wind down steeply from the upper
-world, now tunnelled through dense growths of cypress and olive, now
-skirting cliff-walks dripping with cataracts of ivy, or tufted with
-the glaucous spikes and scarlet rockets of gigantic cactuses. In the
-depths, where time has amassed a soil incredibly rich, the vegetation
-becomes prodigious, febrile, like that of the delirious garden in “La
-Faute de l’Abbé Mouret.” Here the paths wind under groves of orange
-and lemon trees, over a dense carpeting of violets, stocks, narcissus
-and honey-scented hyacinths. Trellises of red roses lift their network
-against the light, and damp clefts of the rock are black with dripping
-maidenhair. Here are tall hedges of blue rosemary and red-gold
-abutilon, there shrubby masses of anthemisia, heliotrope and lavender.
-Overhead, black cypress-shafts spring from the bright sea of foliage,
-and at the pit’s brink, where the Syracusan citizens, under their white
-umbrellas, used to lean over and taunt the captives dying in the sun, a
-great hedge of prickly pear writhes mockingly against the sky.
-
-
-III
-
-At noon of such another day we set out from Rome for Caprarola.
-
-The still air had a pearly quality and a mauve haze hung upon the
-hills. Our way lay north-westward, toward the Ciminian mountains. Once
-free of the gates, our motor started on its steady rush along the white
-highway, first past the walls of vineyard and garden, and then across
-the grey waste spaces of the Campagna. The Roman champaign is the type
-of variety in monotony. Seen from the heights of the city, it reaches
-in silvery sameness toward all points of the compass; but to a near
-view it reveals a dozen different physiognomies. Toward Frascati and
-the Alban hills it wears the ordered garb of fertility: wheat-fields,
-vineyards and olive-groves. South-eastward, in the direction of the
-Sabine range, its white volcanic reaches are tufted with a dark _maqui_
-of sullen and reluctant growth, while in the west the Agro Romano rolls
-toward Monterosi and Soracte in sere reaches of pasture-land mottled
-with hillock and ravine.
-
-Gradually, as we left the outskirts of Rome, the grandeur of this
-stern landscape declared itself. To the right and left the land
-stretched out in endless grassy reaches, guarded here and there by
-a lonely tomb or by the tall gateway of some abandoned vineyard.
-Presently the road began to rise and dip, giving us, on the ascent,
-sweeping views over a wider range of downs which rolled away in
-the north-west to the Ciminian forest, and in the east to the hazy
-rampart of the Sabine hills. Ahead of us the same undulations swept on
-interminably, the road undulating with them, now engulfed in the trough
-of the land, now tossed into view on some farther slope, like a streak
-of light on a flying sea. There was something strangely inspiriting
-in the call of this fugitive road. From ever-lengthening distances it
-seemed to signal us on, luring us up slope after slope, and racing
-ahead of us down the long declivities where the motor panted after it
-like a pack on the trail.
-
-For some time the thrill of the chase distracted us from a nearer view
-of the foreground; but gradually there stole on us a sense of breadth
-and quietude, of sun-bathed rugged fields with black cattle grazing
-in their hollows, and here and there a fortified farm-house lifting
-its bulk against the sky. These fortress-farms of the Campagna,
-standing sullen and apart among the pacific ruins of pagan Rome--tombs,
-aqueducts and villas--give a glimpse of that black age which rose on
-the wreck of the Imperial civilization. All the violence and savagery
-of the mediæval city, with its great nobles forever in revolt, its
-popes plotting and trembling within the Lateran walls, or dragging
-their captive cardinals from point to point as the Emperor or the
-French King moved his forces--all the mysterious crimes of passion and
-cupidity, the intrigues, ambushes, massacres with which the pages of
-the old chronicles reek, seem symbolized in one of those lowering brown
-piles with its battlemented sky-line, crouched on a knoll of the waste
-land which its masters helped to devastate.
-
-At length a blue pool, the little lake of Monterosi, broke the expanse
-of the downs; then we flashed through a poor roadside village of the
-same name, and so upward into a hill-region where hedgerows and copses
-began to replace the brown tufting of the Campagna. On and on we fled,
-ever upward to the town of Ronciglione, perched, like many hill-cities
-of this region, on the sheer edge of a ravine, and stretching its line
-of baroque churches and stately crumbling palaces along one steep
-street to the edge of a lofty down.
-
-Across this plateau, golden with budding broom, we flew on to the next
-height, and here paused to embrace the spectacle--beneath us, on the
-left, the blue volcanic lake of Vico in its oak-fringed crater; on the
-right, far below, the plain of Etruria, scattered with ancient cities
-and ringed in a mountain-range still touched with snow; and rising from
-the middle of the plain, Soracte, proud, wrinkled, solitary, with the
-ruined monastery of Sant’ Oreste just seen on its crest.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _An Italian Sky in March_
-]
-
-From this mount of vision we dropped abruptly downward by a road cut
-in the red tufa-banks. Presently there began to run along the crest
-of the tufa on our left a lofty wall gripping the flanks of the rock,
-and overhung by dark splashes of ivy and clumps of leafless trees--one
-of those rugged Italian walls which are the custodians of such hidden
-treasures of scent and verdure. This wall continued to run parallel
-with us till our steep descent ended in a stone-paved square, with the
-roofs of a town sliding abruptly away below it on one side, and above,
-on the other, the great ramps and terraces of a pentagonal palace
-clenched to the highest ledge of the cliff. Such is the first sight of
-Caprarola.
-
-Never, surely, did feudal construction so insolently dominate its
-possessions. The palace of the great Farnese Cardinal seems to lord
-it not only over the golden-brown town which forms its footstool, but
-over the far-reaching Etrurian plain, the forests and mountains of the
-horizon: over Nepi, Sutri, Cività Castellana, and the lonely pride of
-Soracte. And the grandeur of the site is matched by the arrogance of
-the building: no villa, but a fortified and moated palace, or rather a
-fortress planned in accordance with the most advanced military science
-of the day, but built on the lines of a palace. Yet on such a March day
-as this, with the foreground of brown oak-woods all slashed and fringed
-with rosy almond-bloom; with the haze of spring just melting from the
-horizon, and revealing depth after depth of mountain-blue; with March
-clouds fleeing overhead, and flinging trails of shadow and showers of
-silver light across the undulations of the plain--on such a day, the
-insolent Farnese keep, for all its background of gardens, frescoes, and
-architectural splendour, seems no longer the lord of the landscape,
-but a mere point of vantage from which to view the outspread glory at
-our feet.
-
-
-IV
-
-The drive from Viterbo to Montefiascone lies across the high plateau
-between the Monte Cimino and the lake of Bolsena.
-
-For the best part of the way, the landscape is pastoral and
-agricultural, with patches of oak-wood to which in March the leaves
-still cling; and on this fitful March morning, with rain in the
-shifting clouds, the ploughmen move behind their white oxen under
-umbrellas as vividly green as the young wheat. Here are none of the
-great bursts of splendour which mark the way from Rome to Caprarola;
-and it seems fitting that this more prosaic road should be travelled
-at a sober pace, in a Viterban posting-chaise, behind two plodding
-horses. The horses are not so plodding, however, but that they swing us
-briskly enough down the short descents of the rolling country, which
-now becomes wilder and more diversified, with stretches of woodland
-interspersed with a heathy growth of low fragrant shrubs. Here the
-slopes are thick with primroses, and the blue vinca and violet peep
-through the ivy trails of the hedgerows; but the trees are still
-leafless, for it is a high wind-swept region, where March practises
-few of her milder arts. A lonely country too: no villages, and only
-a few solitary farm-houses, are to be seen as we jog up and down the
-monotonous undulations of the road to the foot of Montefiascone.
-
-The town overhangs us splendidly, on a spur above the lake of Bolsena;
-and a long ascent between fortified walls leads to the summit on which
-its buildings are huddled. Through the curtain of rain which the skies
-have now let down, the crooked streets with their archways and old
-blackened stone houses present no striking effects, though doubtless
-a bright day would draw from them some of that latent picturesqueness
-which is never far to seek when Italian masonry and Italian sunlight
-meet. Meanwhile, however, the rain persists, and the environment of
-Montefiascone remains so obstinately shrouded that, for all we know,
-the town may be situated “Nowhere,” like the famous scene in Festus.
-
-Through this rain-muffled air, led blindfold as it were, we presently
-descend again by the same windings to the city gates, and thence,
-following the road to Bagnorea, come on the desolate church of San
-Flaviano, lying by itself in a hollow beneath the walls of the town.
-In our hasty dash from the carriage to the door, there is just time
-to receive the impression of an immensely old brick façade, distorted
-and scarred with that kind of age which only the Latin sense of
-antiquity has kept a word to describe--then we are in a low-arched
-cavernous interior, with spectral frescoes emerging here and there
-from the universal background of whitewash, and above the choir a
-spreading gallery or upper church, which makes of the lower building
-a species of crypt above ground. And here--O irony of fate!--in this
-old, deserted and damp-dripping church, under a worn slab before
-the abandoned altar (for it is only in the upper church that mass
-continues to be said)--here, a castaway as it were from both worlds,
-lies that genial offshoot of a famous race, the wine-loving Bishop
-Fugger, whose lust of the palate brought him to this lonely end. It
-would have been impossible to pass through Montefiascone without
-dropping a commemorative tear on the classic Est-Est-Est upon which,
-till so lately, a good cask of Montefiascone has been yearly broached
-in memory of the prelate’s end; yet one feels a regret, almost, in
-carrying away such a chill recollection of the poor Bishop’s fate,
-in leaving him to the solitude of that icy limbo which seems so
-disproportionate a punishment for his amiable failing.
-
-Leaving San Flaviano, we press on toward Orvieto through an unbroken
-blur of rain. The weary miles leave no trace in memory, and we are
-still in an indeterminate region of wood and pasture and mist-muffled
-hills when gradually the downpour ceases, and streaks of sunset begin
-to part the clouds. Almost at the same moment a dip of the road brings
-us out above a long descent, with a wavy plain at its base, and reared
-up on a cliff above the plain a fierce brown city, walled, towered
-and pinnacled, which seems to have dropped from the sky like some
-huge beast of prey and locked its talons in the rock. All about the
-plain, in the watery evening light, rises a line of hills, with Monte
-Amiata thrusting its peak above the circle; the nearer slopes are
-clothed in olive and cypress, with castles and monasteries jutting from
-their ledges, and just below us the sight of an arched bridge across
-a ravine, with a clump of trees at its approach, touches a spring
-of memory and transports us from the actual scene to its pictured
-presentment--Turner’s “Road to Orvieto.”
-
-It was, in fact, from this point that the picture was painted; and
-looking forth on the landscape, with its stormy blending of sepia-hues
-washed in pallid sunlight, one sees in it the vindication of Turner’s
-art--that true impressionism which consists not in the unimaginative
-noting of actual “bits,” but in the reconstruction of a scene as it
-has flowed into the mould of memory, the merging of fragmentary facts
-into a homogeneous impression. This is what Turner has done to the view
-of Orvieto from the Bolsena road, so summing up and interpreting the
-spirit of the scene that the traveller pausing by the arched bridge
-above the valley loses sense of the boundaries between art and life,
-and lives for a moment in that mystical region where the two are one.
-
-
-V
-
-Our friends and counsellors had for many years warned us against
-visiting Vallombrosa in March--the month which oftenest finds us in
-Tuscany.
-
-“Wait till June,” they advised--and knowing the complexity of
-influences which go to make up an Italian “sensation,” and how, for
-lack of one ingredient, the whole mixture may lose its savour, we
-had obediently waited for June. But June in Florence never seemed to
-come--“the time and the place” were no more to meet in our horoscope
-than in the poet’s; and so, one year when March was playing at April,
-we decided to take advantage of her mood and risk the adventure.
-
-We set out early, in that burnished morning air which seems, as with a
-fine burin, to retrace overnight every line of the Tuscan landscape.
-The railway runs southward along the Arno valley to Sant’ Ellero; and
-we might have been travelling through some delicately-etched background
-of Mantegna’s or Robetta’s, in which the clear pale colours of early
-spring were but an effect of subtle blendings of line. This Tuscan hill
-scenery, which for purity of modelling has no match short of Greece, is
-seen to the best advantage in March, when the conformation of the land
-is still unveiled by foliage, and every line tells like the threads of
-silver in a _niello_.
-
-From Sant’ Ellero, where the train is exchanged for a little funicular
-car of primitive construction, we were pushed jerkily uphill by a
-gasping engine which had to be constantly refreshed by long draughts of
-water from wayside tanks. On such a day, however, it was impossible to
-grudge the slowness of the ascent. As we mounted higher, the country
-developed beneath us with that far-reaching precision of detail which
-gives to extended views in mid-Italy a curiously pre-Raphaelite
-look--as though they had been wrought out by a hand enamoured of
-definition and unskilled in the creation of general effects. The new
-wheat springing under the olives was the only high note of colour: all
-else was sepia-brown of new-turned earth, grey-brown of weather-mottled
-farm-houses and village belfries, golden-black of rusty cypresses
-climbing the hill-sides in straight interminable lines, and faint blush
-of peach-blossoms floating against grey olives.
-
-Then we gained a new height, and the details of the foreground were
-lost in a vast unfolding of distances--hill on hill, blurred with
-olive-groves, or bare and keen-cut, with a sprinkling of farm-houses
-on their slopes, and here and there a watch-tower on a jutting spur;
-and beyond these again, a tossing sunlit sea of peaks, its farthest
-waves still crested with snow. Half way up, the abrupt slopes of
-oak-forest which we had skirted gave way to a plateau clothed with
-vines and budding fruit orchards; then another sharp climb through
-oak-scrub, across the dry beds of mountain-streams and up slopes of
-broom and heather, brought us to the topmost ledge, where the railway
-ends. On this ledge stands the dreary village of Saltina--a cluster
-of raw-looking houses set like boxes on a shelf (with a Hôtel Milton
-among them), and a background of Swiss chalets dotted forlornly on a
-treeless slope. Saltina must be arid even in midsummer, and in March
-it was a place to fly from. Our flight, however, was regulated by the
-leisurely gait of a small white donkey who was the only _bête de somme_
-to be had at that early season, and behind whom we slowly turned the
-shoulder of the cliff, and entered the pillared twilight of a great
-fir-wood. The road ran through this wood for a mile or two, carrying
-us straight to the heart of the Etrurian shades. As we advanced,
-byways branched off to the right and left, climbing the hill-sides
-through deep-perspectives of verdure; and presently we came to a wide
-turfy hollow, where the great trees recede, leaving a space for the
-monastery and its adjacent buildings.
-
-The principal _corps-de-bâtiment_ faces on a walled entrance-court with
-box-bordered paths leading to the fine arcaded portico of the church.
-These buildings are backed by a hanging wood with a hermitage on its
-crest--the Paradiso--but before them lies an open expanse studded with
-ancient trees, with a stone-bordered fish-pond, and grass walks leading
-down to mossy glens with the sound of streams in their depths. Facing
-the monastery stands the low building where pilgrims were formerly
-lodged, and which now, without farther modification than the change of
-name, has become the Albergo della Foresta; while the monastery itself
-has been turned into a government school of forestry.
-
-Since change was inevitable, it is a fortunate accident which has
-housed a sylvan college in these venerable shades, and sent the
-green-accoutred foresters to carry on the husbandry of the monks.
-Never, surely, were the inevitable modifications of time more gently
-tempered to the survivor of earlier conditions. The monastery of
-Vallombrosa has neither the examinate air of a _monument historique_,
-nor that look of desecration and decadency that too often comes with
-altered uses. It has preserved its high atmosphere of meditative
-peace, and the bands of students flitting through the forest with
-surveying-implements and agricultural tools seem the lawful successors
-of the monks.
-
-We had been told in Florence that winter still held the mountains, that
-we should find snow in the shady hollows and a glacial wind from the
-peaks. But spring airs followed us to the heights. Through the aromatic
-fir-boughs the sunlight slanted as warmly as down the ilex-walks of
-the Boboli gardens, and over the open slopes about the monastery there
-ran a rosy-purple flush of crocuses--not here and there in scattered
-drifts, or starring the grass as in the foregrounds of Mantegna and
-Botticelli, but so close-set that they formed a continuous sheet of
-colour, a tide of lilac which submerged the turf and, flowing between
-the ancient tree-boles, invaded even the dark edges of the forest. It
-was probably the one moment of the year at which the forest flushes
-into colour; its hour of transfiguration--we might have tried every
-other season, and missed the miracle of March in Vallombrosa. At first
-the eye was dazzled by this vast field of the cloth-of-purple, and
-could take in none of the more delicate indications of spring; but
-presently we found our way to the lower glens, where the crocuses
-ceased, and pale-yellow primroses poured over ivy-banks to the brink
-of agate-coloured brooks. In the forest, too, ferns were uncurling and
-violets thrusting themselves through the close matting of fir-needles;
-while the terraces of the monks’ garden, which climbs the hill-side
-near the monastery, were fragrant with budding box and beds of tulip
-and narcissus.
-
-It was an air to idle in, breathing deep the stored warmth of
-immemorial springs; but the little donkey waited between the shafts of
-his _calessina_, and on the ledge of Saltina we knew that our engine
-was taking a last draught before the descent. Reluctantly we jogged
-back through the forest, and, regaining our seats in the train, plunged
-downward into a sea of translucent mountains, and valleys bathed in
-haze, a great reach of irradiated heights flowing by imperceptible
-gradations into amber depths of air, while below us the shadows fell,
-and the Arno gleamed white in the indistinctness of evening.
-
-
-
-
-PICTURESQUE MILAN
-
-
-I
-
-It is hard to say whether the stock phrase of the stock tourist--“there
-is so little to see in Milan”--redounds most to the derision of the
-speaker or to the glory of Italy. That such a judgment should be
-possible, even to the least instructed traveller, implies a surfeit
-of impressions procurable in no other land; since, to the hastiest
-observation, Milan could hardly seem lacking in interest when
-compared to any but Italian cities. From comparison with the latter,
-even, it suffers only on a superficial estimate, for it is rich in
-all that makes the indigenous beauty of Italy, as opposed to the
-pseudo-Gothicisms, the trans-Alpine points and pinnacles, which Ruskin
-taught a submissive generation of art critics to regard as the typical
-expression of the Italian spirit. The guide-books, long accustomed
-to draw their Liebig’s extract of art from the pages of this school
-of critics, have kept the tradition alive by dwelling only on the
-monuments which conform to perpendicular ideals, and by apologetic
-allusions to the “monotony” and “regularity” of Milan--as though
-endeavouring in advance to placate the traveller for its not looking
-like Florence or Siena!
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Court of the Palazzo Marino,
- now the Municipio_
-]
-
-Of late, indeed, a new school of writers, among whom Mr. J. W.
-Anderson, and the German authors, Messrs. Ebe and Gurlitt, deserve
-the first mention, have broken through this conspiracy of silence,
-and called attention to the intrinsically Italian art of the
-post-Renaissance period; the period which, from Michael Angelo to
-Juvara, has been marked in sculpture and architecture (though more
-rarely in painting) by a series of memorable names. Signor Franchetti’s
-admirable monograph on Bernini, and the recent volume on Tiepolo in the
-Knackfuss series of Künstler-Monographien have done their part in this
-redistribution of values; and it is now possible for the traveller to
-survey the course of Italian art with the impartiality needful for its
-due enjoyment, and to admire, for instance, the tower of the Mangia
-without scorning the palace of the Consulta.
-
-
-II
-
-But, it may be asked, though Milan will seem more interesting to the
-emancipated judgment, will it appear more picturesque? Picturesqueness
-is, after all, what the Italian pilgrim chiefly seeks; and the current
-notion of the picturesque is a purely Germanic one, connoting Gothic
-steeples, pepper-pot turrets, and the huddled steepness of the northern
-burgh.
-
-Italy offers little, and Milan least of all, to satisfy these
-requirements. The Latin ideal demanded space, order, and nobility of
-composition. But does it follow that picturesqueness is incompatible
-with these? Take up one of Piranesi’s etchings--those strange
-compositions in which he sought to seize the spirit of a city or a
-quarter by a mingling of its most characteristic features. Even the
-northern conception of the picturesque must be satisfied by the sombre
-wildness of these studies--here a ruined aqueduct, casting its shade
-across a lonely stretch of ground tufted with acanthus, there a palace
-colonnade through which the moonlight sweeps on a winter wind, or the
-recesses of some mighty Roman bath where cloaked figures are huddled
-in dark confabulation.
-
-Canaletto’s black-and-white studies give, in a lesser degree, the
-same impression of the grotesque and the fantastic--the under-side
-of that _barocchismo_ so long regarded as the smirk on the face of a
-conventional age.
-
-But there is another, a more typically Italian picturesqueness, gay
-rather than sinister in its suggestions, made up of lights rather
-than of shadows, of colour rather than of outline, and this is the
-picturesqueness of Milan. The city abounds in vivid effects, in
-suggestive juxtapositions of different centuries and styles--in
-all those incidental contrasts and surprises which linger in the
-mind after the catalogued “sights” have faded. Leaving behind the
-wide modern streets--which have the merit of having been modernized
-under Eugène Beauharnais rather than under King Humbert--one enters
-at once upon some narrow byway overhung by the grated windows of a
-seventeenth-century palace, or by the delicate terra-cotta apse of a
-_cinque-cento_ church. Everywhere the forms of expression are purely
-Italian, with the smallest possible admixture of that Gothic element
-which marks the old free cities of Central Italy. The rocca Sforzesca
-(the old Sforza castle) and the houses about the Piazza de’ Mercanti
-are the chief secular buildings recalling the pointed architecture of
-the north; and the older churches are so old that they antedate Gothic
-influences, and lead one back to the round-arched basilican type. But
-in the line of national descent what exquisite varieties the Milanese
-streets present! Here, for instance, is the Corinthian colonnade of San
-Lorenzo, the only considerable fragment of ancient Mediolanum, its last
-shaft abutting on a Gothic archway against which clings a flower-decked
-shrine. Close by, one comes on the ancient octagonal church of San
-Lorenzo, while a few minutes’ drive leads to where the Borromeo palace
-looks across a quiet grassy square at the rococo front of the old
-family church, flanked by a fine bronze statue of the great saint and
-cardinal.
-
-The Palazzo Borromeo is itself a notable factor in the picturesqueness
-of Milan. The entrance leads to a court-yard enclosed in an ogive
-arcade surmounted by pointed windows in terra-cotta mouldings. The
-walls of this court are still frescoed with the Borromean crown, and
-the _Humilitas_ of the haughty race; and a doorway leads into the
-muniment-room, where the archives of the house are still stored, and
-where, on the damp stone walls, Michelino da Milano has depicted the
-scenes of a fifteenth-century villeggiatura. Here the noble ladies of
-the house, in high fluted turbans and fantastic fur-trimmed gowns, may
-be seen treading the measures of a mediæval dance with young gallants
-in parti-coloured hose, or playing at various games--the _jeu de
-tarots_, and a kind of cricket played with a long wooden bat; while in
-the background rise the mountains about Lake Maggiore and the peaked
-outline of the Isola Bella, then a bare rock unadorned with gardens and
-architecture. These frescoes, the only existing works of a little-known
-Lombard artist, are suggestive in style of Pisanello’s dry and vigorous
-manner, and as records of the private life of the Italian nobility in
-the fifteenth century they are second only to the remarkable pictures
-of the Schifanoia at Ferrara.
-
-Not far from the Borromean palace, another doorway leads to a different
-scene: the great cloister of the Ospedale Maggiore, one of the most
-glorious monuments that man ever erected to his fellows. The old
-hospitals of Italy were famous not only for their architectural
-beauty and great extent, but for their cleanliness and order and the
-enlightened care which their inmates received. Northern travellers have
-recorded their wondering admiration of these lazarets, which seemed as
-stately as palaces in comparison with the miserable pest-houses north
-of the Alps. What must have been the astonishment of such a traveller,
-whether German or English, on setting foot in the principal court of
-the Milanese hospital, enclosed in its vast cloister enriched with
-traceries and medallions of terra-cotta, and surmounted by the arches
-of an open loggia whence the patients could look down on a peaceful
-expanse of grass and flowers! Even now, one wonders whether this
-poetizing of philanthropy, this clothing of charity in the garb of
-beauty, may not have had its healing uses: whether the ugliness of the
-modern hospital may not make it, in another sense, as unhygienic as the
-more picturesque buildings it has superseded? It is at least pleasant
-to think of the poor sick people sunning themselves in the beautiful
-loggia of the Ospedale Maggiore, or sitting under the magnolia-trees
-in the garden, while their blue-gowned and black-veiled nurses move
-quietly through the cloisters at the summons of the chapel-bell.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The Tower of S. Stefano_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- MILANO. 1901.
-]
-
-But one need not enter a court-yard or cross a threshold to appreciate
-the variety and colour of Milan. The streets themselves are full of
-charming detail--_quattro-cento_ marble portals set with medallions of
-bushy-headed Sforzas in round caps and plaited tunics; windows framed
-in terra-cotta wreaths of fruit and flowers; iron balconies etching
-their elaborate arabesques against the stucco house-fronts; mighty
-doorways flanked by Atlantides, like that of Pompeo Leoni’s house (the
-_Casa degli Omenoni_) and of the Jesuit seminary; or yellow-brown
-rococo churches with pyramids, broken pediments, flying angels, and
-vases filled with wrought-iron palm-branches. It is in summer that
-these streets are at their best. Then the old gardens overhanging
-the Naviglio--the canal which intersects Milan with a layer of
-Venice--repeat in its waters their marble loggias hung with the vine,
-and their untrained profusion of roses and camellias. Then, in the more
-aristocratic streets, the palace doorways yield vistas of double and
-triple court-yards, with creeper-clad arcades enclosing spaces of
-shady turf, and terminating perhaps in a fountain set in some splendid
-architectural composition against the inner wall of the building. In
-summer, too, the dark archways in the humbler quarters of the town are
-brightened by fruit-stalls embowered in foliage, and heaped with such
-melons, figs and peaches as would have driven to fresh extravagance
-the exuberant brush of a Flemish fruit-painter. Then again, at the
-turn of a street, one comes across some little church just celebrating
-the feast of its patron saint with a brave display of garlands and red
-hangings; while close by a cavernous _bottegha_ has been festooned with
-more garlands and with bright nosegays, amid which hang the painted
-candles and other votive offerings designed to attract the small coin
-of the faithful.
-
-
-III
-
-Yet Milan is not dependent on the seasons for this midsummer magic
-of light and colour. For dark days it keeps its store of warmth and
-brightness hidden behind palace walls and in the cold dusk of church
-and cloister. Summer in all its throbbing heat has been imprisoned
-by Tiepolo in the great ceiling of the Palazzo Clerici: that revel of
-gods and demi-gods, and mortals of all lands and races, who advance
-with linked hands out of the rosy vapours of dawn. Nor are loftier
-colour-harmonies wanting. On the walls of San Maurizio Maggiore,
-Luini’s virgin martyrs move as in the very afterglow of legend: that
-hesitating light in which the fantastic becomes probable, and the
-boundaries between reality and vision fade; while tints of another
-sort, but as tender, as harmonious, float through the dusk of the
-sacristy of Santa Maria delle Grazie, a dim room panelled with
-intarsia-work, with its grated windows veiled by vine-leaves.
-
-But nothing in Milan approaches in beauty the colour-scheme of the
-Portinari chapel behind the choir of Sant’ Eustorgio. In Italy,
-even, there is nothing else exactly comparable to this masterpiece
-of collaboration between architect and painter. At Ravenna, the tomb
-of Galla Placidia and the apse of San Vitale glow with richer hues,
-and the lower church of Assisi is unmatched in its shifting mystery
-of chiar’-oscuro; but for pure light, for a clear shadowless scale
-of iridescent tints, what can approach the Portinari chapel? Its
-most striking feature is the harmony of form and colour which makes
-the decorative design of Michelozzo flow into and seem a part of the
-exquisite frescoes of Vincenzo Foppa. This harmony is not the result
-of any voluntary feint, any such trickery of the brush as the later
-decorative painters delighted in. In the Portinari chapel, architecture
-and painting are kept distinct in treatment, and the fusion between
-them is effected by unity of line and colour, and still more, perhaps,
-by an identity of sentiment, which keeps the whole chapel in the same
-mood of blitheness,--a mood which makes it difficult to remember that
-the chapel is the mausoleum of a martyred saint. But Saint Peter
-Martyr’s marble sarcophagus, rich and splendid as it is, somehow fails
-to distract the attention from its setting. There are so many mediæval
-monuments like it in Italy--and there is but one Portinari chapel.
-From the cupola, with its scales of pale red and blue, overlapping
-each other like the breast-plumage of a pigeon, and terminating in a
-terra-cotta frieze of dancing angels, who swing between them great
-bells of fruit and flowers, the eye is led by insensible gradations
-of tint to Foppa’s frescoes in the spandrils--iridescent saints and
-angels in a setting of pale classical architecture--and thence to
-another frieze of terra-cotta seraphs with rosy-red wings against a
-background of turquoise-green; this lower frieze resting in turn on
-pilasters of pale-green adorned with white stucco _rilievi_ of little
-bell-ringing angels. It is only as a part of this colour-scheme that
-the central sarcophagus really affects one--the ivory tint of its old
-marble forming a central point for the play of light, and allying
-itself with the sumptuous hues of Portinari’s dress, in the fresco
-which represents the donator of the chapel kneeling before his patron
-saint.
-
-
-IV
-
-The picturesqueness of Milan has overflowed on its environs, and there
-are several directions in which one may prolong the enjoyment of its
-characteristic art. The great Certosa of Pavia can, alas, no longer be
-included in a category of the picturesque. Secularized, catalogued,
-railed off from the sight-seer, who is hurried through its endless
-corridors on the heels of a government custodian, it still ministers to
-the sense of beauty, but no longer excites those subtler sensations
-which dwell in the atmosphere of a work of art rather than in itself.
-Such sensations must be sought in the other deserted Certosa at
-Chiaravalle. The abbey church, with its noble colonnaded cupola, is
-still one of the most conspicuous objects in the flat landscape about
-Milan; but within all is falling to ruin, and one feels the melancholy
-charm of a beautiful building which has been allowed to decay as
-naturally as a tree. The disintegrating touch of nature is less cruel
-than the restoring touch of man, and the half-ruined frescoes and
-intarsia-work of Chiaravalle retain more of their original significance
-than the carefully-guarded treasures of Pavia.
-
-Less melancholy than Chiaravalle, and as yet unspoiled by the touch
-of official preservation, is the pilgrimage church of the Madonna of
-Saronno. A long avenue of plane-trees leads from the village to the
-sumptuous marble façade of the church, an early Renaissance building
-with ornamental additions of the seventeenth century. Within, it is
-famous for the frescoes of Luini in the choir, and of Gaudenzio Ferrari
-in the cupola. The Luini frescoes are full of a serene impersonal
-beauty. Painted in his latest phase, when he had fallen under the
-influence of Raphael and the “grand manner,” they lack the intimate
-charm of his early works; yet the Lombard note, the Leonardesque
-quality, lingers here and there in the side-long glance of the women,
-and in the yellow-haired beauty of the adolescent heads; while it finds
-completer expression in the exquisite single figures of Saint Catherine
-and Saint Apollonia.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The Church at Saronno_
-
- E. C. Peixotto
- 1901.
-]
-
-If these stately compositions are less typical of Luini than, for
-instance, the frescoes of San Maurizio Maggiore, or of the Casa Pelucca
-(now in the Brera), Gaudenzio’s cupola seems, on the contrary, to sum
-up in one glorious burst of expression all his fancy had ever evoked
-and his hand longed to embody. It seems to have been given to certain
-artists to attain, once at least, to this full moment of expression: to
-Titian, for instance, in the Bacchus and Ariadne, to Michael Angelo in
-the monuments of the Medici, to Giorgione in the Sylvan Concert of the
-Louvre. In other works they may reveal greater powers, more magnificent
-conceptions; but once only, perhaps, is it given to each to achieve
-the perfect equipoise of mind and hand; and in that moment even the
-lesser artists verge on greatness. Gaudenzio found his opportunity
-in the cupola of Saronno, and for once he rises above the charming
-anecdotic painter of Varallo to the brotherhood of the masters. It
-is as the expression of a mood that his power reveals itself--the
-mood of heavenly joyousness, so vividly embodied in his circle of
-choiring angels that form seems to pass into sound, and the dome to
-be filled with a burst of heavenly jubilation. With unfaltering hand
-he has sustained this note of joyousness. Nowhere does his invention
-fail or his brush lag behind it. The sunny crowding heads, the flying
-draperies, the fluttering scores of the music, are stirred as by a wind
-of inspiration--a breeze from the celestial pastures. The walls of the
-choir seem to resound with one of the angel-choruses of “Faust,” or
-with the last chiming lines of the “Paradiso.” Happy the artist whose
-full powers find voice in such a key!
-
-
-V
-
-The reader who has followed these desultory wanderings through Milan
-has but touched the hem of her garment. In the Brera, the Ambrosiana,
-the Poldi-Pezzoli gallery, and the magnificent new Archæological
-Museum, now fittingly housed in the old castle of the Sforzas, are
-treasures second only to those of Rome and Florence. But these are
-among the catalogued riches of the city. The guide-books point to
-them, they lie in the beaten track of sight-seeing, and it is rather
-in the intervals between such systematized study of the past, in
-the parentheses of travel, that one obtains those more intimate
-glimpses which help to compose the image of each city, to preserve its
-personality in the traveller’s mind.
-
-
-
-
-ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS
-
-
-I
-
-In the Italian devotional pictures of the early Renaissance there are
-usually two quite unrelated parts: the foreground and the background.
-
-The foreground is conventional. Its personages--saints, angels and Holy
-Family--are the direct descendants of a long line of similar figures.
-Every detail of dress and attitude has been settled beforehand by laws
-which the artist accepts as passively as the fact that his models
-have two eyes apiece, and noses in the middle of their faces. Though
-now and then some daring painter introduces a happy modification,
-such as the little violin-playing angels on the steps of the Virgin’s
-throne, in the pictures of the Venetian school, such changes are too
-rare and unimportant to affect the general truth of the statement.
-It is only in the background that the artist finds himself free to
-express his personality. Here he depicts not what some one else has
-long since designed for him, in another land and under different
-conceptions of life and faith, but what he actually sees about him, in
-the Lombard plains, in the delicately-modelled Tuscan hill-country,
-or in the fantastic serrated landscape of the Friulian Alps. One must
-look past and beyond the central figures, in their typical attitudes
-and symbolical dress, to catch a glimpse of the life amid which the
-painting originated. Relegated to the middle distance, and reduced to
-insignificant size, is the real picture, the picture which had its
-birth in the artist’s brain and reflects his impression of the life
-about him.
-
-Here, for instance, behind a Madonna of Bellini’s, white oxen graze
-the pasture, and a shepherd lolls on a bank beside his flock; there,
-in the train of the Eastern Kings, real soldiers, clerks, pedlars,
-beggars, and all the miscellaneous rabble of the Italian streets wind
-down a hill-side crowned by a mediæval keep, and cross a bridge with a
-water-mill--just such a bridge and water-mill as the artist may have
-sketched in his native village. And in the scenes of the life of the
-Virgin, what opportunities for _genre_-painting present themselves! In
-Ghirlandaio’s fresco of the Birth of the Virgin, in the apse of Santa
-Maria Novella, fine ladies in contemporary costume are congratulating
-the conventionally-draped Saint Anna, while Crivelli’s Annunciation, in
-the National Gallery, shows an ornate Renaissance palace, with peacocks
-spreading their tails on the upper loggia, a sumptuous Eastern rug
-hanging over a marble balustrade, and the celestial messenger tripping
-up a flight of marble stairs to a fashionable front door.
-
-No painter was more prodigal than Carpaccio of these intimate details,
-or more audacious in the abrupt juxtaposition of devotional figures
-with the bustling secular life of his day. His Legend of Saint Ursula,
-in the Accademia of Venice, is a storehouse of fifteenth-century
-anecdote, an encyclopædia of dress, architecture and manners; and
-behind his agonizing Saint Sebastian, tied to a column and riddled with
-arrows, the traffic of the Venetian canals goes on unregardingly, as in
-life the most trivial activities revolve unheeding about a great sorrow.
-
-Even painters far less independent of tradition than Carpaccio and
-Crivelli succeeded in imparting the personal note, the note of direct
-observation, to the background of their religious pictures. If the
-figures are placed in a landscape, the latter is not a conventional
-grouping of hill, valley and river: it has the unmistakable quality of
-the _chose vue_. No one who has studied the backgrounds of old Italian
-pictures can imagine that realistic landscape-painting is a modern
-art. The technique of the early landscape-painters was not that of the
-modern interpreter of nature, but their purpose was the same; they
-sought to render with fidelity and precision what they saw about them.
-It is this directness of vision which gives to their backgrounds such
-vividness and charm. In these distances one may discover the actual
-foreground of the artist’s life. Here one may learn what was veritably
-happening in fifteenth-century Venice, Florence and Perugia; here see
-what horizons the old masters looked out on, and note that the general
-aspect of the country is still almost as unchanged as the folds of the
-Umbrian mountains and the curves of the Tuscan streams.
-
-
-II
-
-As with the study of Italian pictures, so it is with Italy herself.
-The country is divided, not in _partes tres_, but in two: a foreground
-and a background. The foreground is the property of the guide-book
-and of its product, the mechanical sight-seer; the background, that
-of the dawdler, the dreamer and the serious student of Italy. This
-distinction does not imply any depreciation of the foreground. It must
-be known thoroughly before the middle distance can be enjoyed: there
-is no short cut to an intimacy with Italy. Nor must the analogy of the
-devotional picture be pushed too far. The famous paintings, statues
-and buildings of Italy are obviously the embodiment of its historic
-and artistic growth; but they have become slightly conventionalized by
-being too long used as the terms in which Italy is defined. They have
-stiffened into symbols, and the life of which they were once the most
-complete expression has evaporated in the desiccating museum-atmosphere
-to which their fame has condemned them. To enjoy them, one must let in
-on them the open air of an observation detached from tradition. Since
-they cannot be evaded they must be deconventionalized; and to effect
-this they must be considered in relation to the life of which they are
-merely the ornamental façade.
-
-Thus regarded, to what an enchanted region do they form the approach!
-Like courteous hosts they efface themselves, pointing the way, but
-giving their guests the freedom of their domain. It is not too
-fanciful to say that each of the great masterpieces of Italy holds the
-key to some secret garden of the imagination. One must know Titian
-and Giorgione to enjoy the intimacy of the Friulian Alps, Cima da
-Conegliano to taste the full savour of the strange Euganean landscape,
-Palladio and Sansovino to appreciate the frivolous villa-architecture
-of the Brenta, nay, the domes of Brunelleschi and Michael Angelo to
-feel the happy curve of some chapel cupola in a nameless village of the
-hills.
-
-“Une civilisation,” says Viollet-le-Duc, “ne peut prétendre posséder
-un art que si cet art pénètre partout, s’il fait sentir sa présence
-dans les œuvres les plus vulgaires.” It is because Italian art
-so interpenetrated Italian life, because the humblest stonemason
-followed in some sort the lines of the great architects, and the
-modeller of village Madonnas the composition of the great sculptors,
-that the monumental foreground and the unregarded distances behind
-it so continually interpret and expound each other. Italy, to her
-real lovers, is like a great illuminated book, with here and there
-a glorious full-page picture, and between these, page after page of
-delicately-pencilled margins, wherein every detail of her daily life
-may be traced. And the pictures and the margins are by the same hand.
-
-
-III
-
-As Italy is divided into foreground and background, so each city has
-its perspective; its _premier plan_ asterisked for the hasty traveller,
-its middle distance for the “happy few” who remain more than three
-days, and its boundless horizon for the idler who refuses to measure
-art by time. In some cases the background is the continuation, the
-amplification, of the central “subject”; in others, its direct
-antithesis. Thus in Umbria, and in some parts of Tuscany and the
-Marches, art, architecture, history and landscape all supplement and
-continue each other, and the least imaginative tourist must feel that
-in leaving the galleries of Siena or Florence for the streets and the
-surrounding country, he is still within the bounds of conventional
-sight-seeing.
-
-In Rome, on the contrary, in Milan, and to some extent in Venice, as
-well as in many of the smaller towns throughout Italy, there is a sharp
-line of demarcation between the guide-book city and its background.
-In some cases, the latter is composed mainly of objects at which the
-guide-book tourist has been taught to look askance, or rather which he
-has been counselled to pass by without a look. Goethe has long been
-held up to the derision of the enlightened student of art because he
-went to Assisi to see the Roman temple of Minerva, and omitted to visit
-the mediæval church of Saint Francis; but how many modern sight-seers
-visit the church and omit the temple? And wherein lies their superior
-catholicity of taste? The fact is that, in this particular instance,
-foreground and background have changed places, and the modern tourist
-who neglects Minerva for Saint Francis is as narrowly bound by
-tradition as his eighteenth-century predecessor, with this difference,
-that whereas the latter knew nothing of mediæval art and architecture,
-the modern tourist knows that the temple is there and deliberately
-turns his back on it.
-
-
-IV
-
-Perhaps Rome is, of all Italian cities, the one in which this
-one-sidedness of æsthetic interest is most oddly exemplified. In the
-Tuscan and Umbrian cities, as has been said, the art and architecture
-which form the sight-seer’s accepted “curriculum,” are still the
-distinctive features of the streets through which he walks to his
-gallery or his museum. In Florence, for instance, he may go forth from
-the Riccardi chapel, and see the castle of Vincigliata towering on its
-cypress-clad hill precisely as Gozzoli depicted it in his fresco; in
-Siena, the crenellated palaces with their iron torch-holders and barred
-windows form the unchanged setting of a mediæval pageant. But in Rome
-for centuries it has been the fashion to look only on a city which has
-almost disappeared, and to close the eyes to one which is still alive
-and actual.
-
-The student of ancient Rome moves among painfully-reconstructed
-débris; the mediævalist must traverse the city from end to end to
-piece together the meagre fragments of his “epoch.” Both studies are
-absorbing, and the very difficulty of the chase no doubt adds to its
-exhilaration; but is it not a curious mental attitude which compels
-the devotee of mediæval art to walk blindfold from the Palazzo Venezia
-to Santa Sabina on the Aventine, or from the Ara Cœli to Santa Maria
-Sopra Minerva, because the great monuments lying between these points
-of his pilgrimage belong to what some one has taught him to regard as a
-“debased period of art”?
-
-Rome is the most undisturbed baroque city of Italy. The great revival
-of its spiritual and temporal power coincided with the development
-of that phase of art of which Michael Angelo sowed the seed in Rome
-itself. The germs of Bernini and Tiepolo must be sought in the Sistine
-ceiling and in the Moses of San Pietro in Vincoli, however much the
-devotees of Michael Angelo may resent the tracing of such a lineage.
-But it is hard at this date to be patient with any form of artistic
-absolutism, with any critical criteria not based on that sense of
-the comparative which is the nineteenth century’s most important
-contribution to the function of criticism. It is hard to be tolerant of
-that peculiar form of intolerance which refuses to recognize in art
-the general law of growth and transformation, or, while recognizing
-it, considers it a subject for futile reproach and lamentation. The
-art critic must acknowledge a standard of excellence, and must be
-allowed his personal preferences within the range of established
-criteria: æsthetically, the world is divided into the Gothically and
-the classically minded, just as intellectually it is divided into those
-who rise to the general idea and those who pause at the particular
-instance. The lover of the particular instance will almost always have
-a taste for the Gothic, which is the personal and anecdotic in art
-carried to its utmost expression, at the cost of synthetic effect; but
-if he be at all accessible to general ideas, he must recognize the
-futility of battling against the inevitable tendencies of taste and
-invention. Granted that, from his standpoint, the art which evolved
-from Michael Angelo is an art of decadence: is that a reason for
-raging at it or ignoring it? The autumn is a season of decadence;
-but even by those who prefer the spring, it has not hitherto been an
-object of invective and reprobation. Only when the art critic begins
-to survey the modifications of art as objectively as he would study
-the alternations of the seasons, will he begin to understand and
-to sympathize with the different modes in which man has sought to
-formulate his gropings after beauty. If it be true in the world of
-sentiment that _il faut aimer pour comprendre_, the converse is true in
-the world of art. To enjoy any form of artistic expression one must not
-only understand what it tries to express, but know
-
- _The hills where its life rose,
- And the sea where it goes._
-
-Thus philosophically viewed, the baroque Rome--the Rome of Bernini,
-Borromini and Maderna, of Guercino, the Caracci and Claude
-Lorrain--becomes of great interest even to those who are not in
-sympathy with the exuberances of seventeenth-century art. In the
-first place, the great number of baroque buildings, churches, palaces
-and villas, the grandeur of their scale, and the happy incidents of
-their grouping, give a better idea than can elsewhere be obtained of
-the collective effects of which the style is capable. Thus viewed,
-it will be seen to be essentially a style _de parade_, the setting
-of the spectacular and external life which had developed from the
-more secluded civilization of the Renaissance as some blossom of
-immense size and dazzling colour may develop in the atmosphere of the
-forcing-house from a smaller and more delicate flower. The process was
-inevitable, and the result exemplifies the way in which new conditions
-will generate new forms of talent.
-
-It is in moments of social and artistic transformation that original
-genius shows itself, and Bernini was the genius of the baroque
-movement. To those who study his work in the light of the conditions
-which produced it, he will appear as the natural interpreter of that
-sumptuous _bravura_ period when the pomp of a revived ecclesiasticism
-and the elaborate etiquette of Spain were blent with a growing taste
-for country life, for the solemnities and amplitudes of nature.
-The mingling of these antagonistic interests has produced an art
-distinctive enough to take rank among the recognized “styles”: an art
-in which excessive formality and ostentation are tempered by a free
-play of line, as though the winds of heaven swept unhindered through
-the heavy draperies of a palace. It need not be denied that delicacy
-of detail, sobriety of means and the effect of repose were often
-sacrificed to these new requirements; but it is more fruitful to
-observe how skilfully Bernini and his best pupils managed to preserve
-the balance and rhythm of their bold compositions, and how seldom
-profusion led to incoherence. How successfully the Italian sense of
-form ruled over this semi-Spanish chaos of material, and drew forth
-from it the classic line, may be judged from the way in which the
-seventeenth-century churches about the Forum harmonize with the ruins
-of ancient Rome. Surely none but the most bigoted archæologist would
-wish away from that magic scene the façades of San Lorenzo in Miranda
-and of Santa Francesca Romana!
-
-In this connection it might be well for the purist to consider what
-would be lost if the seventeenth-century Rome which he affects to
-ignore were actually blotted out. The Spanish Steps would of course
-disappear, with the palace of the Propaganda; so would the glorious
-Barberini palace, and Bernini’s neighbouring fountain of the Triton;
-the via delle Quattro Fontane, with its dripping river-gods emerging
-from their grottoes, and Borromini’s fantastic church of San Carlo at
-the head of the street, a kaleidoscope of whirling line and ornament,
-offset by the delicately classical circular cortile of the adjoining
-monastery. On the Quirinal hill, the palace of the Consulta would go,
-and the central portal of the Quirinal (a work of Bernini’s), as well
-as the splendid gateway of the Colonna gardens. The Colonna palace
-itself, dull and monotonous without, but within the very model of a
-magnificent pleasure-house, would likewise be effaced; so would many
-of the most characteristic buildings of the Corso--San Marcello, the
-Gesù, the Sciarra and Doria palaces, and the great Roman College. Gone,
-too, would be the Fountain of Trevi, and Lunghi’s gay little church
-of San Vincenzo ed Anastasio, which faces it so charmingly across the
-square; gone the pillared court-yard and great painted galleries of
-the Borghese palace, and the Fontana dei Termini with its beautiful
-group of adjoining churches; the great fountain of the piazza Navona,
-Lunghi’s stately façade of the Chiesa Nuova, and Borromini’s Oratory
-of San Filippo Neri; the monumental Fountain of the Acqua Paola on the
-Janiculan, the familiar “Angels of the Passion” on the bridge of Sant’
-Angelo, and, in the heart of the Leonine City itself, the mighty sweep
-of Bernini’s marble colonnades and the flying spray of his Vatican
-fountains.
-
-This enumeration includes but a small number of the baroque buildings
-of Rome, and the villas encircling the city have not been named,
-though nearly all, with their unmatched gardens, are due to the art
-of this “debased” period. But let the candid sight-seer--even he
-who has no tolerance of the seventeenth century, and to whom each
-of the above-named buildings may be, individually, an object of
-reprobation--let even this sectary of art ask himself how much of
-“mighty splendent Rome” would be left, were it possible to obliterate
-the buildings erected during the fever of architectural renovation
-which raged from the accession of Sixtus V to the last years of the
-seventeenth century. Whether or no he would deplore the loss of any one
-of these buildings, he would be constrained to own that collectively
-they go far toward composing the physiognomy of the Rome he loves.
-So far-spreading was the architectural renascence of the seventeenth
-century, and so vast were the opportunities afforded to its chief
-exponents, that every quarter of the ancient city is saturated with
-the _bravura_ spirit of Bernini and Borromini. Some may think that
-Rome itself is the best defence of the baroque: that an art which
-could so envelop without eclipsing the mighty monuments amid which
-it was called to work, which could give expression to a brilliant
-present without jarring on a warlike or ascetic past, which could, in
-short, fuse Imperial and early Christian Rome with the city of Spanish
-ceremonial and post-Tridentine piety, needs no better justification
-than the _Circumspice_ of Wren. But even those who remain unconverted,
-who cannot effect the transference of artistic and historic sympathy
-necessary to a real understanding of seventeenth-century architecture,
-should at least realize that the Rome which excites a passion of
-devotion such as no other city can inspire, the Rome for which
-travellers pine in absence, and to which they return again and again
-with the fresh ardour of discovery, is, externally at least, in great
-part the creation of the seventeenth century.
-
-
-V
-
-In Venice the foreground is Byzantine-Gothic, with an admixture
-of early Renaissance. It extends from the church of Torcello to
-the canvases of Tintoretto. This foreground has been celebrated in
-literature with a vehemence and profusion which have projected it still
-farther into the public consciousness, and more completely obscured the
-fact that there is another Venice, a background Venice, the Venice of
-the eighteenth century.
-
-Eighteenth-century Venice was not always thus relegated to the
-background. It had its day, when tourists pronounced Saint Mark’s an
-example of “the barbarous Gothick,” and were better acquainted with
-the ridotto of San Moisè than with the monuments of the Frari. It
-is instructive to note that the Venice of that day had no galleries
-and no museums. Travellers did not go there to be edified, but to be
-amused; and one may fancy with what relief the young nobleman on the
-grand tour, sated with the marbles of Rome and the canvases of Parma
-and Bologna, turned aside for a moment to a city where enjoyment was
-the only art and life the only object of study. But while travellers
-were flocking to Venice to see its carnival and gaming-rooms, its
-public festivals and private _casini_, a generation of artists were
-at work brushing in the gay background of the scene, and quiet hands
-were recording, in a series of memorable little pictures, every phase
-of that last brilliant ebullition of the _joie de vivre_ before “the
-kissing had to stop.”
-
-Longhena and his pupils were the architects of this bright _mise en
-scène_, Tiepolo was its great scene-painter, and Canaletto, Guardi
-and Longhi were the historians who captured every phrase and gesture
-with such delicacy and precision that under their hands the glittering
-Venice of the “Toccata of Galuppi” lies outspread like a butterfly with
-the bloom on its wings.
-
-Externally, Venice did not undergo the same renovation as Rome. As she
-was at the close of the Renaissance, with the impress of Palladio and
-Sansovino on her religious and secular architecture, so she remains
-to this day. One original architect, Baldassare Longhena, struck the
-note of a brilliant _barocchismo_ in the churches of Santa Maria della
-Salute and the Scalzi, and in the Pesaro and Rezzonico palaces on the
-Grand Canal; and his pupils, developing his manner with infinitely
-less talent, gave to Venice the long squat Dogana with its flying
-Fortune fronting the Lagoon, the churches of Santa Maria Zobenigo,
-San Moisè and the Gesuiti, the Monte di Pietà, and a score of imposing
-palaces. The main effect of the city was, however, little modified by
-this brief flowering of the baroque. Venice has always stamped every
-new fashion with her own personality, and Longhena’s architecture
-seems merely the hot-house efflorescence of the style of Sansovino and
-Scamozzi. Being, moreover, less under the sway of the Church than any
-other Italian state, she was able to resist the architectural livery
-with which the great Jesuit subjugation clad the rest of Italy. The
-spirit of the eighteenth century therefore expressed itself rather in
-her expanding social life, and in the decorative arts which attend
-on such drawing-room revivals. Skilful _stuccatori_ adorned the old
-saloons and galleries with fresh gilding and mirrors, slender furniture
-replaced the monumental cabinets which Venice had borrowed from Spain,
-and little _genre_-pictures by Longhi and landscapes by Canaletto and
-Battaglia were hung on the large-patterned damask of the boudoir walls.
-Religion followed the same lines, adapting itself to the elegancies
-of the drawing-room, and six noble families recognized their social
-obligations to heaven by erecting the sumptuous church of Santa Maria
-degli Scalzi, with its palatial interior, in which one may well imagine
-the heavenly hostess saying to her noble donators: “Couvrez-vous, mes
-cousins.”
-
-Though begun by Longhena about 1650, the church of the Scalzi is so
-identified with the genius of Tiepolo that it may be regarded as an
-epitome of eighteenth-century Venetian art. Herr Cornelius Gurlitt,
-the most penetrating critic of the Venetian baroque, has indeed justly
-pointed out that Longhena was the forerunner and _Geistesgenossen_ of
-the great master of eighteenth-century decorative painting, and that
-the architect’s bold and sumptuous structural effects might have been
-designed as a setting for those unsurpassed audacities of the brush
-which, a hundred years later, were to continue and complete them.
-
-On the soaring vault of the Scalzi, above an interior of almost
-Palladian elegance and severity, the great painter of atmosphere, the
-first of the _pleinairistes_, was required to depict the transportation
-of the Holy House from Palestine to Loreto. That Tiepolo, with his
-love of ethereal distances, and of cloud-like hues melting into thin
-air, should have accepted the task of representing a stone house
-borne through the sky by angels, shows a rare sense of mastery; that
-he achieved the feat without disaster justifies the audacity of the
-attempt.
-
-Tiepolo was above all a lover of open spaces. He liked to suspend
-his fluttering groups in great pellucid reaches of sky, and the vast
-ceiling of the Scalzi gave him an exceptional opportunity for the
-development of this effect. The result is that the angels, whirling
-along the Virgin’s house with a vehemence which makes it seem a
-mere feather in the rush of their flight, appear to be sweeping
-through measureless heights of air above an unroofed building. The
-architectural propriety of such a _trompe l’œil_ is not only open to
-criticism but perhaps quite indefensible; yet, given the demand for
-this particular illusion, who but Tiepolo could have produced it?
-
-The same ethereal effect, but raised to a higher heaven of
-translucency, is to be found in the ceiling of the Gesuati (not to be
-confounded with the Gesuiti), on the quay of the Zattere. This charming
-structure, built in the early eighteenth century by Massari, one of
-the pupils of Longhena, but obviously inspired by the great churches
-of Palladio, is dedicated to Saint Mary of the Rosary; and Tiepolo, in
-three incomparable frescoes, has represented on its ceiling the legend
-of Saint Dominick receiving the chaplet from the Virgin in glory.
-
-The guide-books, always on the alert to warn the traveller against an
-undue admiration of Tiepolo, are careful to point out that the Mother
-of God, bending from her starry throne above the ecstatic saint, looks
-like a noble Venetian lady of the painter’s day. No doubt she does.
-It is impossible to form an intelligent estimate of Tiepolo’s genius
-without remembering that the Catholicism of his time was a religion
-of _bon ton_, which aimed to make its noble devotees as much at home
-in church as in the drawing-room. He took his models from real life
-and composed his celestial scenes without much thought of their inner
-significance; yet by sheer force of technique he contrived to impart
-to his great religious pictures a glow of supernatural splendour which
-makes it not inapt to apply to them the lines of the “Paradiso”:
-
- _Che la luce divina è penetrante
- Per l’universo, secondo ch’è degno,
- Sichè nulla le puote essere ostante._
-
-
-VI
-
-It is quite true, however, that Tiepolo was not primarily a devotional
-painter. He was first of all a great decorative artist, a master of
-emotion in motion, and it probably mattered little to him whether he
-was called on to express the passion of Saint Theresa or of Cleopatra.
-This does not imply that he executed his task indifferently. Whatever
-it was, he threw into it the whole force of his vehement imagination
-and incomparable _maestria_; but what he saw in it, whether it was
-religious or worldly, was chiefly, no doubt, the opportunity to obtain
-new effects of light and line.
-
-If he had a special bent, it was perhaps toward the depicting of
-worldly pageants. In the Labia palace on the Canareggio, a building
-in which Cominelli, the ablest Venetian architect of the eighteenth
-century, nobly continued the “grand manner” of Sansovino and Scamozzi,
-Tiepolo found an unequalled opportunity for the exercise of this
-side of his talent. Here, in the lofty saloon of the _piano nobile_,
-he painted the loves of Antony and Cleopatra transposed to the
-key of modern patrician life. He first covered the walls with an
-architectural improvisation of porticoes, loggias and colonnades, which
-might have been erected to celebrate the “triumph” of some magnificent
-Este or Gonzaga. In this splendid setting he placed two great scenes:
-Cleopatra melting the pearl, and Antony and Cleopatra landing from
-their barge; while every gallery, balcony and flight of steps is filled
-with courtiers, pages and soldiers, with dwarfs and blackamoors holding
-hounds in leash, and waiting-maids and lacqueys leaning down to see the
-pageant.
-
-From this throng of figures the principal characters detach themselves
-with a kind of delicate splendour. Royal Egypt,
-
- _On her neck the small face buoyant, like a bell-flower on its bed_,
-
-in her brocaded gown of white and gold, with a pearl collar about
-her throat, and a little toy spaniel playing at her feet, is an
-eighteenth-century Dogaressa; Antony is a young Procurator travestied
-as a Roman hero; while the turbaned black boy, the maid-servants,
-the courtiers, the pages, are all taken _sur le vif_ from some
-brilliant rout in a Pisano or Mocenigo palace. And yet--here comes
-the wonder--into these “water-flies” and triflers of his day, the
-ladies engrossed in cards and scandal, the abatini preoccupied with
-their acrostics, the young nobles intriguing with the _prima amorosa_
-of San Moisè or engaged in a sentimental correspondence with a nun of
-Santa Chiara--into this throng of shallow pleasure-seekers Tiepolo has
-managed to infuse something of the old Roman state. As one may think of
-Dante beneath the vault of the Gesuati, one may recall Shakespeare in
-the presence of these rouged and powdered Venetians. The scene of the
-landing suggests with curious vividness the opening scene of “Antony
-and Cleopatra”--
-
- _Look where they come!
- The triple pillar of the world transformed
- Into a strumpet’s fool--_
-
-and one can almost hear the golden Antony, as he brushes aside the
-importunate Roman messengers, whispering to his Queen: “What sport
-to-night?”
-
-Still more Shakespearian is the scene of the pearl. Cleopatra,
-enthroned in state at the banqueting-table, lifts one hand to drop the
-jewel into her goblet, and in her gesture and her smile are summed up
-all the cruel grace of the “false soul of Egypt.” It is Tiepolo’s
-best praise that such phrases and associations as these are evoked by
-his art, and that, judged from the painter’s standpoint, it recalls
-the glory of another great tradition. Studied in the light of Venetian
-painting, Tiepolo is seen to be the direct descendant of Titian and
-Veronese. If the intervening century has taken something from the
-warmth of his colour, leaving it too often chalky where that of the
-Renaissance was golden, he has recovered the lines, the types and the
-radiant majesty of the Venetian _cinque cento_, and Veronese’s Venice
-Enthroned, in the Ducal Palace, is the direct forbear of his Virgins
-and Cleopatras.
-
-
-VII
-
-It is perhaps no longer accurate to describe Tiepolo as forming a part
-of the Venetian background. Recent criticism has advanced him to the
-middle distance, and if there are still comparatively few who know his
-work, his name is familiar to the cultivated minority of travellers.
-
-Far behind him, however, still on the vanishing-point of the tourist’s
-horizon, are the other figures of the Venetian background: Longhi,
-Guardi, Canaletto, and their humbler understudies. Of these, Canaletto
-alone emerges into relative prominence. His views of Venice are to
-be found in so many European galleries, and his name so facilitates
-the association of ideas, that, if few appreciate his work, many are
-superficially acquainted with it; whereas Guardi, a painter of greater
-though more unequal talent, is still known only to the dilettante.
-
-The work of both is invaluable as a “document” for the study of
-eighteenth-century Venice; but while Canaletto in his charming canvases
-represented only the superficial and obvious aspect of the city, as it
-might appear to any appreciative stranger, Guardi, one of the earliest
-impressionists, gives the real life of the streets, the _grouillement_
-of the crowd in Saint Mark’s square, the many-coloured splash of a
-church procession surging up the steps of the Redentore, the flutter of
-awnings over market-stalls on a fair-day, or the wide black trail of a
-boat-race across the ruffled green waters of the Canalazzo.
-
-Far beneath these two men in talent, but invaluable as a chronicler of
-Venetian life, is Canaletto’s son-in-law, Bellotti, who, in a stiff
-topographical manner, has faithfully and minutely recorded every
-detail of eighteenth-century life on the canals. Being of interest
-only to the student of manners, he is seldom represented in the public
-galleries; but many private collections in the north of Italy contain
-a series of his pictures, giving all the Venetian festivals, from the
-Marriage of the Adriatic to the great feat of the _Vola_, which took
-place in the Piazzetta on the last Thursday before Lent.
-
-As unknown to the general public as Bellotti, but more sought after by
-connoisseurs than any other Italian artist of the eighteenth century
-save Tiepolo, is Pietro Longhi, the _genre_-painter, whose exquisite
-little transcripts of Venetian domestic life now fetch their weight in
-gold at Christie’s or the Hôtel Drouot. Longhi’s talent is a peculiar
-one. To “taste” him, as the French say, one must understand the
-fundamental naïveté of that brilliant and corrupt Venetian society,
-as it is revealed in the comedies of Goldoni and in the memoirs of
-contemporary writers. The Venetians were, in fact, amoral rather
-than immoral. There was nothing complex or morbid in their vice; it
-was hardly vice at all, in the sense which implies the deliberate
-saying of “Evil, be thou my good.” Venetian immorality was a mere
-yielding to natural instincts, to the _joie de vivre_ of a gay and
-sensuous temperament. There was no intellectual depravity in Venice
-because there was hardly any intellect: there was no thought of evil
-because there was no thought. The fashionable sinners whom posterity
-has pictured as revelling in the complexities of vice sat enchanted
-before the simple scenes of Goldoni’s drama, and the equally simple
-pictures of their favourite _genre_-painter. Nor must it be thought
-that this taste for simplicity and innocence was evidence of a subtler
-perversion. The French profligate sought in imagination the contrast of
-an ideal world, the milk and rose-water world of Gessner’s Idylls and
-the _bergerie de Florian_. But Goldoni and Longhi are not idealists,
-or even sentimentalists. They draw with a frank hand the life of their
-day, from the fisherman’s hut to the patrician’s palace. Nothing can
-be more unmistakable than the realism of Goldoni’s dialect plays, and
-a people who could enjoy such simple pictures of the life about them
-must, in a sense, have led simple lives themselves.
-
-Longhi’s easel-pictures record every phase of Venetian middle-class
-and aristocratic existence. To some, indeed, it is difficult to find
-a clue, and it has been conjectured that these represent scenes from
-the popular comedies of the day. The others depict such well-known
-incidents as the visit to the convent parlour, where the nuns are
-entertaining their gallants with a marionette-show; the masked _nobil
-donna_ consulting the fortune-teller, or walking with her _cicisbeo_
-in Saint Mark’s square; the same lady’s _lever_, where she is seen at
-her toilet-table surrounded by admirers; the family party at breakfast,
-with the nurse bringing in a swaddled baby; the little son and heir
-riding out attended by his governor; the actress rehearsing her aria
-with the _maestro di cappella_; the visit to the famous hippopotamus
-in his tent in the Piazzetta; the dancing-lesson, the music-lesson,
-the portrait-painting, and a hundred other episodes of social and
-domestic life. The personages who take part in these scenes are always
-of one type: the young women with small oval faces, powdered but
-unrouged, with red lips and sloping foreheads; the men in cloaks and
-masks, or gay embroidered coats, with square brows and rather snub
-features, gallant, flourishing, _empressés_, but never in the least
-idealized or sentimentalized. The scenes of “high life” take place
-for the most part in tall bare rooms, with stone window-frames, a
-family portrait of a doge or an admiral above the chimney-piece, and a
-few stiff arm-chairs of the heavy Venetian baroque. There is nothing
-sumptuous in the furnishing of the apartments or in the dress of their
-inmates. The ladies, if they are going abroad or paying a visit, wear
-a three-cornered hat above the black lace _zendaletto_ which hides
-their hair and the lower part of the face, while their dresses are
-covered by the black silk _bauto_ or domino. Indoors, they are attired
-in simple short gowns of silk or brocade, with a kerchief on the
-shoulders, and a rose or a clove-pink in the unpowdered hair. That
-pleasure in the painting of gorgeous stuffs, and in all the material
-splendours of life, derived by Tiepolo from his great predecessors of
-the Renaissance, was not shared by Longhi. His charm lies in a less
-definable quality, a quality of unstudied simplicity and naturalness,
-which gives to his easel-pictures the value of actual transcripts from
-life. One feels that he did not “arrange” his scenes, any more than
-Goldoni constructed his comedies. Both were content to reflect, in the
-mirror of a quietly humorous observation, the every-day incidents of
-the piazza, the convent and the palace.
-
-The fact that Longhi, in his _genre_-pictures, sought so little
-variety of grouping, and was content to limit his figures to so small
-a range of gestures, has given rise to the idea that he was incapable
-of versatility and breadth of composition. To be undeceived on this
-point, however, one has only to see his frescoes in the Palazzo Grassi
-(now Sina) on the Grand Canal. This fine palace, built about 1740
-by Massari, the architect of the Gesuati, has a magnificent double
-stairway leading from the colonnaded court to the state apartments
-above; and on the walls of this stairway Longhi, for once laying aside
-his small canvases and simple methods, has depicted, in a series of
-charmingly-animated groups, the members of the Grassi family leaning
-over a marble balustrade to see their guests ascending the stairs.
-The variety of these groups, the expressiveness of the faces, and the
-general breadth of treatment, prove that Longhi had far more technical
-and imaginative power than he chose to put into his little pictures,
-and that his naïveté was a matter of choice. Probably no one who knows
-his work regrets this self-imposed limitation. Additional movement and
-complexity of grouping would destroy the sense of leisure, of spacious
-rooms and ample time, of that absence of hurry and confusion so typical
-of a society untroubled by moral responsibilities or social rivalries,
-and pursuing pleasure with the well-bred calmness which was one of the
-most charming traits obliterated by the French Revolution.
-
-
-VIII
-
-On a quiet canal not far from the church of the Frari there stands an
-old palace where, in a series of undisturbed rooms, may be seen the
-very setting in which the personages of Goldoni and Longhi played out
-their social comedy.
-
-The Palazzo Querini-Stampaglia was bequeathed to the city of Venice
-some fifty years since by the last Count Querini, and with its gallery,
-its library and its private apartments has since then stood open to
-a public which never visits it. Yet here the student of Venetian
-backgrounds may find the unchanged atmosphere of the eighteenth
-century. The gallery, besides some good paintings of earlier schools,
-contains a large collection of Bellotti’s pictures, representing all
-the great religious and popular festivals of Venice, as well as a
-half-dozen Longhis and a charming series of _genre_-pictures by unknown
-artists of his school.
-
-Of far greater interest, however, are the private apartments, with
-their seventeenth and eighteenth century decorations still intact,
-and the walls lined with the heavy baroque consoles and arm-chairs
-so familiar to students of Longhi’s interiors, and of the charming
-prints in the first edition of Goldoni. Here is the typical _chambre
-de parade_, with its pale-green damask curtains and bed-hangings, and
-its furniture painted with flowers on a ground of pale-green _laque_;
-here the tapestried saloon with its Murano chandeliers, the boudoir
-with looking-glass panels set in delicately carved and painted wreaths
-of flowers and foliage, and the portrait-room hung with pictures of the
-three great Querini: the Doge, the Cardinal and the Admiral. Here, too,
-is the long gallery, with a bust of the Cardinal (a seventeenth-century
-prince of the Church) surrounded by marble effigies of his seven
-_bravi_: a series of Berniniesque heads of remarkable vigour and
-individuality, from that of the hoary hang-dog scoundrel with
-elf-locks drooping over an evil scowl, to the smooth young villain with
-bare throat and insolent stare, who seems to glory in his own sinister
-beauty.
-
-These busts give an insight into a different phase of Italian life:
-the life of the violent and tragical seventeenth century, when every
-great personage, in the Church no less than in the world, had his
-bodyguard of hardened criminals, outlaws and galley-slaves, who
-received sanctuary in their patron’s palace, and performed in return
-such acts of villany and violence as the Illustrissimo required. It
-seems a far cry from the peaceable world of Goldoni and Longhi to this
-prelate surrounded by the effigies of his hired assassins; yet _bravi_,
-though no longer openly acknowledged or immortalized in marble, lurked
-in the background of Italian life as late as the end of the eighteenth
-century, and Stendhal, who knew Italy as few foreigners have known
-it, declares that in his day the great Lombard nobles still had their
-retinue of _bauli_, as the knights of the stiletto were called in the
-Milanese.
-
-It is not in art only that the _bravi_ have been commemorated. Lovers
-of “I Promessi Sposi,” the one great Italian novel, will not soon
-forget the followers of Don Rodrigo; and an idea of the part they
-played at the end of the eighteenth century may be obtained from the
-pages of Ippolito Nievo’s “Confessioni di un Ottuagenario,” that
-delightful book, half romance, half autobiography, which, after many
-years of incredible neglect, has just been republished in Italy.
-Ippolito Nievo, one of Garibaldi’s young soldiers, was among those
-who perished in the wreck of the _Ercole_, on the return from Palermo
-in 1860. He was but twenty-nine at the time of his death, and it is
-said that his impatience to see a lady to whom he was attached caused
-him, despite the entreaties of his friends, to take passage in the
-notoriously unseaworthy _Ercole_. Four years earlier he had written the
-“Confessioni,” a volume which, for desultory charm and simple rendering
-of domestic incidents, is not unworthy to take rank with “Dichtung
-und Wahrheit,” while its capricious heroine, La Pisana, is as vivid a
-creation as Goethe’s Philina or (one had almost said) as the Beatrix of
-Thackeray.
-
-Ippolito Nievo was himself a native of the Veneto, and intimately
-acquainted, through family tradition, with the life of the small
-towns and villa-castles of the Venetian mainland at the close of the
-eighteenth century. The “Confessioni” picture the life of a young
-lad in a nobleman’s castle near the town of Portogruaro, and later
-in Venice; and not the least remarkable thing about the book is the
-fact that, at a period when other Italian novelists were depicting the
-high-flown adventures of mediæval knights and ladies, its young author,
-discarding the old stage-properties of romanticism, should have set
-himself to recording, with the wealth of detail and quiet humour of a
-Dutch _genre_-painter, the manners and customs of his own little corner
-of Italy, as his parents had described it to him. Nievo’s account of
-the provincial nobles in the Veneto shows that to the very end of the
-eighteenth century, mediæval customs, with all their violence and
-treachery, prevailed within a day’s journey of polished and peaceful
-Venice. His nobles in their fortified castles, of which the drawbridges
-are still raised at night, have their little trains of men-at-arms,
-composed in general of the tattered peasantry on their estates, but
-sometimes of professional fighters, smugglers or outlaws, who have been
-taken into the service of some truculent lord of the manor; and Nievo
-describes with much humour the conflicts between these little armies,
-and the ruses, plots and negotiations of their quarrelsome masters.
-
-In another novel, published at about the same time, Pietro Scudo,
-a Venetian who wrote in French, has drawn, with far less talent, a
-picture of another side of Venetian life: the life of the musical
-schools and the Opera, which George Sand had attempted to represent in
-“Consuelo.” Scudo’s book, “Le Chevalier Sarti,” has fallen into not
-unmerited oblivion. It is written in the insipid style of the romantic
-period--that style which Flaubert, in a moment of exasperation,
-described as “les embêtements bleuâtres du lyrisme poitrinaire”; and
-its heroine, like Châteaubriand’s unhappy Madame de Beaumont, dies of
-the fashionable ailment of the day, _une maladie de langueur_. The
-book, moreover, is badly constructed to the verge of incoherence, and
-the characters are the stock mannikins of romantic fiction; yet in
-spite of these defects, Scudo has succeeded (where George Sand failed)
-in reproducing the atmosphere of eighteenth-century Venice. He has
-done this not by force of talent but by the patient accumulation of
-detail. Though not the most important feature in the construction
-of a good historical novel, this is an essential part of the
-process. George Sand, however, was above such humble methods. Totally
-lacking in artistic sensibility and in its accompanying faculty,
-the historic imagination, she was obliged to confine herself to the
-vaguest generalities in describing scenes and manners so alien to the
-“romantic” conception of life. Nature and passion were the only things
-which interested her, and in the Venice of the eighteenth century
-there was no nature and little passion. Hence the Venetian scenes of
-“Consuelo” give the impression of having been done _de chic_, while
-Scudo’s bear the impress of an unimaginative accuracy. In “Le Chevalier
-Sarti” the lover of “decadent” Venice will find innumerable curious
-details, descriptions of life in the villas of the Brenta, of concerts
-in the famous Scuole, carnival scenes at the ridotto, and _parties
-fines_ at the Orto di San Stefano, the favourite resort of the world
-of gallantry; while the minor characters of the book, who have escaped
-the obligatory romanticism of the hero and heroine, help to make up the
-crowded picture of a world as bright and brittle as a sun-shot Murano
-glass.
-
-
-IX
-
-But it is, after all, not in Nievo or Scudo, nor even in Longhi
-and Goldoni, that one comes closest to the vanished Venice of the
-eighteenth century.
-
-In the Museo Correr, on the Grand Canal, there has recently been opened
-a room containing an assemblage of life-sized mannikins dressed in the
-various costumes of the _sette cento_.
-
-Here are the red-robed Senator, the proud Procuratessa in brocade and
-Murano lace, the Abatino in his plum coloured taffeta coat and black
-small-clothes, the fashionable reveller in _bauto_ and mask, the
-lacquey in livery of pale-blue silk, the lawyer, the gondolier, the
-groom, and the noble Marquess in his hunting-dress of white buckskin.
-Surely nowhere else does one come into such actual contact with that
-little world which was so essentially a world of _appearances_--of fine
-clothes, gay colours and graceful courtly attitudes. The mannikins
-indeed are not graceful. The Cavaliere Leandro can no longer execute a
-sweeping bow at the approach of the Procuratessa, or slip a love-letter
-into the muff of the charming Angelica; the Senator may stare as
-haughtily as he pleases at the Abate and the lawyer, without compelling
-those humble clients to stir an inch from his path; and the noble
-Marquess, in his spotless buckskin leggings and gauntlets, will never
-again be off to shoot thrushes from a “bird-tower” in the Euganeans.
-But the very rigidity of their once supple joints seems an allegory of
-their latter state. There they stand, poor dolls of destiny, discarded
-playthings of the gods, in attitudes of puzzled wonder, as if arrested
-in their revels by the stroke of the dread Corsican magician--for it
-was not Death but Napoleon who “stepped tacitly and took them” from the
-plots and pleasures, the sunshine and music of the canals, to that pale
-world of oblivion where only now and then some dreamer curious of the
-day of little things revisits their melancholy ghosts.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not
-changed.
-
-The spelling of non-English words was not checked.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.
-
-Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.
-
-Redundant chapter titles removed by Transcriber.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Italian Backgrounds, by Edith Wharton
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 54932-0.txt or 54932-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/4/9/3/54932/
-
-Produced by Mary Glenn Krause, MFR, Charlie Howard, and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/54932-0.zip b/old/54932-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 39c1253..0000000
--- a/old/54932-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h.zip b/old/54932-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 38fb4f0..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/54932-h.htm b/old/54932-h/54932-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index e5d7811..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/54932-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,5855 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- The Project Gutenberg eBook of Italian Backgrounds, by Edith Wharton.
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {max-width: 40em; margin: auto;}
-
-h1, h2, h3 {
- text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- margin-top: 2.5em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
-}
-
-h1 {line-height: 1;}
-
-h2+p {margin-top: 1.5em;}
-h2 .subhead {display: block; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
-
-.transnote h2 {
- margin-top: .5em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
-}
-
-.subhead {
- text-indent: 0;
- text-align: center;
- font-size: smaller;
-}
-
-p {
- text-indent: 1.75em;
- margin-top: .51em;
- margin-bottom: .24em;
- text-align: justify;
-}
-.caption p {text-align: center; text-indent: 0;}
-p.center {text-indent: 0;}
-
-.p1 {margin-top: 1em;}
-.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
-.p4 {margin-top: 4em;}
-.vspace {line-height: 1.5;}
-
-.in0 {text-indent: 0;}
-.in2 {padding-left: 2em;}
-
-.xsmall {font-size: 60%;}
-.small {font-size: 70%;}
-.smaller {font-size: 85%;}
-.larger {font-size: 125%;}
-.xxlarge {font-size: 200%;}
-
-p.drop-cap {text-indent: 0; margin-bottom: 1.1em;}
-p.drop-cap:first-letter {
- float: left;
- margin: .11em .2em 0 0;
- font-size: 350%;
- line-height:0.7em;
- text-indent: 0;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
-}
-p.drop-cap .smcap1 {margin-left: -.7em;}
-p.drop-cap.b .smcap1 {margin-left: -.9em;}
-p .smcap1 {font-size: 150%;}
-.smcap1 {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-.smcap.smaller {font-size: 75%;}
-
-hr {
- width: 80%;
- margin-top: 4em;
- margin-bottom: 4em;
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: auto;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-.tb {
- text-align: center;
- padding-top: .76em;
- padding-bottom: .24em;
-}
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
- width: 100%;
- border-collapse: collapse;
-}
-
-.tdl {
- text-align: left;
- vertical-align: top;
- padding-right: 1em;
- padding-left: 1.5em;
- text-indent: -1.5em;
-}
-
-.tdr {
- text-align: right;
- vertical-align: bottom;
- padding-left: .3em;
- white-space: nowrap;
-}
-.tdl, .tdr {padding-bottom: .5em;}
-.tdl.nopad, .tdr.nopad {padding-bottom: 0;}
-
-.pagenum {
- position: absolute;
- right: 4px;
- text-indent: 0em;
- text-align: right;
- font-size: 70%;
- font-weight: normal;
- font-variant: normal;
- font-style: normal;
- letter-spacing: normal;
- line-height: normal;
- color: #acacac;
- border: 1px solid #acacac;
- background: #ffffff;
- padding: 1px 2px;
-}
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: 2em auto 5em auto;
- text-align: center;
- page-break-inside: avoid;
- max-width: 100%;
-}
-.figcenter+p {clear: both; margin-top: 2em;}
-img {
- padding: 0;
- max-width: 100%;
- height: auto;
-}
-
-.cap-container {float: right; clear: both; padding-right: 1em; line-height: 1;}
-.caption {text-align: left; margin-top: 0;}
-.in4i {padding-left: 6em;}
-
-.poem-container {
- text-align: center;
- font-size: 98%;
-}
-
-.poem {
- display: inline-block;
- text-align: left;
- margin-left: 0;
-}
-
-.poem br {display: none;}
-
-.poem .stanza{padding: 0.5em 0;}
-
-.poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
-.poem span.i10 {display: block; margin-left: 5em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
-
-.transnote {
- background-color: #EEE;
- border: thin dotted;
- font-family: sans-serif, serif;
- color: #000;
- margin-top: 4em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- padding: 1em;
-}
-
-.gesperrt {
- letter-spacing: 0.2em;
- margin-right: -0.2em;
-}
-.wspace {word-spacing: .3em;}
-
-span.locked {white-space:nowrap;}
-
-.sans {font-family: sans-serif, serif;}
-
-@media print, handheld
-{
- h1, .chapter, .newpage {page-break-before: always;}
- h1.nobreak, h2.nobreak, .nobreak {page-break-before: avoid; padding-top: 0;}
-
- p {
- margin-top: .5em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .25em;
- }
-
- table {width: 100%; max-width: 100%;}
-
- .tdl {
- padding-left: 1em;
- text-indent: -1em;
- padding-right: 0;
- }
-
- p.drop-cap {text-indent: 1.75em; margin-bottom: .24em;}
- p.drop-cap:first-letter {
- float: none;
- font-size: 100%;
- margin-left: 0;
- margin-right: 0;
- text-indent: 1.75em;
- }
-
- p.drop-cap.i .smcap1, p.drop-cap.a .smcap1, p.drop-cap .smcap1,
- p.drop-cap.b .smcap1, p.drop-cap.al .smcap1 {margin-left: 0;}
- p .smcap1 {font-size: 100%;}
- .smcap1 {font-variant: normal;}
-
-}
-
-@media handheld
-{
- body {margin: 0;}
-
- hr {
- margin-top: .1em;
- margin-bottom: .1em;
- visibility: hidden;
- color: white;
- width: .01em;
- display: none;
- }
-
- .poem-container {text-align: left; margin-left: 5%;}
- .poem {display: block;}
- .poem .stanza {page-break-inside: avoid;}
-
- .transnote {
- page-break-inside: avoid;
- margin-left: 2%;
- margin-right: 2%;
- margin-top: 1em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- padding: .5em;
- }
-
- .cap-container {float: none; padding-left: 50%;}
-
-
-}
- </style>
- </head>
-
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Italian Backgrounds, by Edith Wharton
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Italian Backgrounds
-
-Author: Edith Wharton
-
-Illustrator: Ernest Clifford Peixotto
-
-Release Date: June 19, 2017 [EBook #54932]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mary Glenn Krause, MFR, Charlie Howard, and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<h1>ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS</h1>
-
-<div id="i_1" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 27.6875em;">
- <img src="images/i_004.jpg" width="443" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
-<i>Group from the Crucifixion<br />
-San Vivaldo</i></div></div></div>
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center wspace xxlarge">
-ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">BY<br />
-<span class="larger wspace">EDITH WHARTON</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">ILLUSTRATED BY E. C. PEIXOTTO</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 15.0625em;">
- <img src="images/i_005.jpg" width="241" height="340" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="p2 center larger vspace wspace">NEW YORK<br />
-CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS<br />
-<span class="gesperrt">MCMV</span>
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center smaller">
-Copyright, 1905, by<br />
-<span class="smcap">Charles Scribner’s Sons</span><br />
-<br />
-<i>Published April, 1905</i></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center smaller sans">THE DE VINNE PRESS
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="TABLE_OF_CONTENTS"></a>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Table of Contents">
- <tr class="small">
- <td class="nopad"> </td>
- <td class="tdr nopad">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">AN ALPINE POSTING-INN</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_1">1</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">A MIDSUMMER WEEK’S DREAM</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_2">15</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE SANCTUARIES OF THE PENNINE ALPS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_3">39</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">WHAT THE HERMITS SAW</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_4">63</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">A TUSCAN SHRINE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_5">83</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">SUB UMBRA LILIORUM</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_6">107</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">MARCH IN ITALY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_7">125</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">PICTURESQUE MILAN</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_8">153</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_9">171</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="List of Illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl nopad">GROUP FROM THE CRUCIFIXION—SAN VIVALDO</td>
- <td class="tdr nopad"><a href="#i_1"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
- <tr class="xsmall">
- <td class="nopad"> </td>
- <td class="tdr nopad">FACING PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">BY THE PORT OF LOVERE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_2">20</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE MUNICIPIO—BRESCIA</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_3">28</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHIESA DEI MIRACOLI—BRESCIA</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_4">36</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE INNER QUADRANGLE AT OROPA</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_5">46</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE MAIN COURT OF THE SACRO MONTE AT VARALLO</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_6">56</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">A CHARACTERISTIC STREET</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_7">110</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE “LITTLE PALACE OF THE GARDEN”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_8">116</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE WORN RED LIONS OF THE ANCIENT PORCH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_9">120</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">AN ITALIAN SKY IN MARCH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_10">140</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">COURT OF THE PALAZZO MARINO, NOW THE MUNICIPIO</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_11">156</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE TOWER OF S. STEFANO</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_12">162</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE CHURCH AT SARONNO</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_13">168</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_1"><a id="AN_ALPINE_POSTING-INN"></a>AN ALPINE POSTING-INN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">To</span> the mind curious in contrasts—surely one of
-the chief pleasures of travel—there can be
-no better preparation for a descent into
-Italy than a sojourn among the upper Swiss valleys.
-To pass from the region of the obviously picturesque—the
-country contrived, it would seem, for the delectation
-of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">cœur à poésie facile</i>—to that sophisticated
-landscape where the face of nature seems
-moulded by the passions and imaginings of man, is
-one of the most suggestive transitions in the rapidly
-diminishing range of such experiences.</p>
-
-<p>Nowhere is this contrast more acutely felt than in
-one of the upper Grisons villages. The anecdotic
-Switzerland of the lakes is too remote from Italy,
-geographically and morally, to evoke a comparison.
-The toy chalet, with its air of self-conscious neatness,
-making one feel that if one lifted the roof it would
-disclose a row of tapes and scissors, or the shining<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4">4</a></span>
-cylinders of a musical box, suggests cabinet-work
-rather than architecture; the swept and garnished
-streets, the precise gardens, the subjugated vines,
-present the image of an old maid’s paradise that
-would be thrown into hopeless disarray by the introduction
-of anything so irregular as a work of art. In
-the Grisons, however, where only a bald grey pass
-divides one from Italy, its influence is felt, in a negative
-sense, in the very untidiness of the streets, the
-rank growth of weeds along the base of rough glaring
-walls, the drone of flies about candidly-exposed
-manure-heaps. More agreeably, the same influence
-shows itself in the rude old centaur-like houses, with
-their wrought-iron window-grilles and stone escutcheons
-surmounting the odorous darkness of a stable.
-These are the houses of people conscious of Italy,
-who have transplanted to their bleak heights, either
-from poverty of invention, or an impulse as sentimental
-as our modern habit of “collecting,” the thick
-walls, the small windows, the jutting eaves of dwellings
-designed under a sultry sky. So vivid is the
-reminiscence that one almost expects to see a cypress
-leaning against the bruised-peach-coloured walls of
-the village <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">douane</i>; but it is just here that the contrast<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-accentuates itself. The cypress, with all it stands
-for, is missing.</p>
-
-<p>It is not easy, in the height of the Swiss season,
-to light on a nook neglected by the tourist; but at
-Splügen he still sweeps by in a cloud of diligence
-dust, or pauses only to gulp a flask of Paradiso and a
-rosy trout from the Suretta lakes. One’s enjoyment
-of the place is thus enhanced by the pleasing spectacle
-of the misguided hundreds who pass it by, and
-from the vantage of the solitary meadows above the
-village one may watch the throngs descending on
-Thusis or Chiavenna with something of the satisfaction
-that mediæval schoolmen believed to be the portion
-of angels looking down upon the damned.
-Splügen abounds in such points of observation. On
-all sides one may climb from the alder-fringed shores
-of the Rhine, through larch-thickets tremulous with
-the leap of water, to grassy levels far above, whence
-the valley is seen lengthening southward to a great
-concourse of peaks. In the morning these upper
-meadows are hot and bright, and one is glad of the
-red-aisled pines and the onyx-coloured torrents cooling
-the dusk; but toward sunset, when the shadows
-make the slopes of turf look like an expanse of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6">6</a></span>
-tumbled velvet, it is pleasant to pace the open ledges,
-watching the sun recede from the valley, where mowers
-are still sweeping the grass into long curved lines
-like ridges of the sea, while the pine-woods on the
-eastern slopes grow black and the upper snows
-fade to the colour of cold ashes.</p>
-
-<p>The landscape is simple, spacious and serene.
-The fields suggest the tranquil rumination of generations
-of cattle, the woods offer cool security to
-sylvan life, the mountains present blunt weather-beaten
-surfaces rather than the subtle contours,
-wrinkled as by meditation, of the Italian Alps. One
-feels that it is a scene in which <em>nothing has ever
-happened</em>; the haunting adjective is that which
-Whitman applies to the American landscape—“the
-large <em>unconscious</em> scenery of my native land.”</p>
-
-<p>Switzerland is like a dinner served in the old-fashioned
-way, with all the dishes put on the table
-at once: every valley has its flowery mead, its “horrid”
-gorge, its chamois-haunted peaks, its wood and
-water-fall. In Italy, the effects are brought on in
-courses, and memory is thus able to differentiate the
-landscapes, even without the help of that touch of
-human individuality to which, after all, the best<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-Italian scenery is but a setting. At Splügen, as in
-most Swiss landscapes, the human interest—the evidences
-of man’s presence—are an interruption rather
-than a climax. The village of Splügen, huddled on
-a ledge above the Rhine, sheepishly turns the backs
-of its houses on the view, as though conscious of making
-a poor show compared to the tremendous performance
-of nature. Between these houses, set at
-unconsidered angles, like boxes hastily piled on a
-shelf, cobble-stone streets ramble up the hill; but
-after a few yards they lapse into mountain paths, and
-the pastures stoop unabashed to the back doors of
-the village. Agriculture seems, in fact, the little
-town’s excuse for being. The whole of Splügen, in
-midsummer, is as one arm at the end of a scythe. All
-day long the lines of stooping figures—men, women
-and children, grandfathers and industrious babes—spread
-themselves over the hill-sides in an ever-widening
-radius, interminably cutting, raking and
-stacking the grass. The lower slopes are first laid
-bare; then, to the sheer upper zone of pines, the
-long grass, thick with larkspur, mountain pink and
-orchis, gradually recedes before the rising tide of
-mowers. Even in the graveyard of the high-perched<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-church, the scythes swing between mounds overgrown
-with campanulas and martagon lilies; so that
-one may fancy the dust of generations of thrifty
-villagers enriching the harvests of posterity.</p>
-
-<p>This, indeed, is the only destiny one can imagine
-for them. The past of such a place must have been
-as bucolic as its present: the mediæval keep, crumbling
-on its wooded spur above the Rhine, was surely
-perched there that the lords of the valley might have
-an eye to the grazing cattle and command the manœuvres
-of the mowers. The noble Georgiis who
-lived in the escutcheoned houses of Splügen, and
-now lie under such a wealth of quarterings in the
-church and graveyard, must have been experts in
-fertilizers and stock-raising; nor can one figure, even
-for the seventeenth-century mercenary of the name,
-whose epitaph declares him to have been “captain
-of his Spanish Majesty’s cohorts,” emotions more
-poignant, when he came home from the wars, than
-that evoked by the tinkle of cow-bells in the pasture,
-and the vision of a table groaning with smoked beef
-and cyclopean cheeses.</p>
-
-<p>So completely are the peasants in the fields a part
-of the soil they cultivate, that during the day one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9">9</a></span>
-may be said to have the whole of Splügen to one’s
-self, from the topmost peaks to the deserted high-road.
-In the evening the scene changes; and the
-transformation is not unintentionally described in
-theatrical terms, since the square which, after sunset,
-becomes the centre of life in Splügen, has an absurd
-resemblance to a stage-setting. One side of this
-square is bounded by the long weather-beaten front
-of the posting-inn—but the inn deserves a parenthesis.
-Built long ago, and then abandoned, so the village
-tradition runs, by a “great Italian family,” its
-exterior shows the thick walls, projecting eaves and
-oval attic openings of an old Tuscan house; while
-within, a monastic ramification of stone-vaulted corridors
-leads to rooms ceiled and panelled with sixteenth-century
-woodwork. The stone terrace before
-this impressive dwelling forms the proscenium where,
-after dinner, the spectators assemble. To the right
-of the square stands the pale pink “Post and Telegraph
-Bureau.” Beyond, closing in the right wing
-at a stage-angle, is a mysterious yellowish house with
-an arched entrance. Facing these, on the left, are the
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">dépendance</i> of the inn and the custom-house; in the
-left background, the village street is seen winding<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-down, between houses that look like “studies” in old-fashioned
-drawing-books (with the cracks in the plaster
-done in very black lead), to the bridge across the
-Rhine and the first loops of the post-road over the
-Splügen pass. Opposite the inn is the obligatory
-village fountain, the rallying-point of the chorus;
-beneath a stone parapet flows the torrent which acts
-as an invisible orchestra; and beyond the parapet,
-snow peaks fill the background of the stage.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner over, the eager spectators, hastening to the
-terrace (with a glimpse, as they pass the vaulted
-kitchen, of the Italian <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">chef</i> oiling his bicycle amid
-the débris of an admirable meal), find active preparations
-afoot for the event of the evening—the arrival
-of the diligences. Already the orchestra is
-tuning its instruments, and the chorus, recruited
-from the hay-fields, are gathering in the wings. A
-dozen of them straggle in and squat on the jutting
-stone basement of the post-office; others hang picturesquely
-about the fountain, or hover up the steep
-street, awaiting the prompter’s call. Presently some
-of the subordinate characters stroll across the stage:
-the owner of the saw-mill on the Rhine, a tall man in
-homespun, deferentially saluted by the chorus; two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-personages in black coats, with walking-sticks, who
-always appear together, and have the air of being
-joint syndics of the village; a gentleman of leisure, in
-a white cap with a visor, smoking a long Italian cigar
-and attended by an inquisitive Pomeranian dog; a
-citizen in white socks and carpet slippers, giving his
-arm to his wife, and preceded by a Bewickian little
-boy with a green butterfly-box over his shoulder; the
-gold-braided custom-house officer hurrying up rather
-late for his cue; two or three local ladies in sunburnt
-millinery and spectacles, who drop in to see the postmistress;
-and a showy young man, with the look of
-having seen life at Chur or Bellinzona, who emerges
-from the post-office conspicuously reading a letter, to
-the undisguised interest of the chorus, the ladies and
-the Pomeranian. As these figures pass and repass in
-a kind of social silence, they suggest the leisurely
-opening of some play composed before the unities
-were abolished, and peopled by types with generic
-names—the Innkeeper, the Postmistress, the Syndic—some
-comedy of Goldoni’s, perhaps, but void even
-of Goldoni’s simple malice.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the porter has lit the oil-lanterns hanging
-by a chain over the door of the inn; a celestial<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-hand has performed a similar office for the evening
-star above the peaks; and through the hush that has
-settled on the square comes a distant sound of bells....
-Instantly the action begins; the innkeeper appears,
-supported by the porter and the waiter; a wave
-of acclamation runs through the chorus; the Pomeranian
-trots down the road; and presently the fagged
-leaders of the Thusis diligence turn their heads round
-the corner of the square. The preposterous yellow
-coach—a landau attached to a glass “clarence”—crosses
-the cobble-paved stage, swinging round with
-a grand curve to the inn door; vague figures, detaching
-themselves from the chorus, flit about the horses
-or help the guard to lift the luggage down; the two
-syndics, critically aloof, lean on their sticks to watch
-the scene; the Pomeranian bustles between the tired
-horses’ legs; and the diligence doors let out a menagerie
-of the strange folk whom one sees only on one’s
-travels. Here they come, familiar as the figures in
-a Noah’s ark: Germans first—the little triple-chinned
-man with a dachshund, out of “Fliegende Blätter,”
-the slippered Hercules with a face like that at the end
-of a meerschaum pipe, and their sentimental females;
-shrill and vivid Italians, a pleasant pig-faced priest.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-Americans going “right through,” with their city
-and state writ large upon their luggage; English
-girls like navvies, and Frenchmen like girls; the
-arched doorway absorbs them, and another jingle of
-bells, and a flash of lamps on the bridge, proclaim
-that the Chiavenna diligence is coming.</p>
-
-<p>The same ceremony repeats itself; and another detachment
-of the travelling menagerie descends. This
-time there is a family of rodents, who look as though
-they ought to be enclosed in wire netting and judiciously
-nourished on lettuce; there is a small fierce
-man in knickerbockers and a sash, conducting a large
-submissive wife and two hypocritical little boys who
-might have stepped out of “The Mirror of the
-Mind”; there is an unfortunate lady in spectacles,
-who looks like one of the Creator’s rejected experiments,
-and carries a grey linen bag embroidered with
-forget-me-nots; there is the inevitable youth with an
-alpenstock, who sends home a bunch of edelweiss to
-his awe-struck family.... These, too, disappear;
-the horses are led away; the chorus disperses, the
-lights go out, the performance is over. Only one
-spectator lingers, a thoughtful man in a snuff-coloured
-overcoat, who gives the measure of the social<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-resources of Splügen by the deliberate way in which,
-evening after evening, he walks around the empty
-diligences, looks into their windows, examines the
-wheels and poles, and then mournfully vanishes into
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>At last the two diligences have the silent square to
-themselves. There they stand, side by side in dusty
-slumber, till the morning cow-bells wake them to departure.
-One goes back to Thusis; to the region of
-good hotels, pure air and scenic platitudes. It may
-go empty for all we care. But the other ... the
-other wakes from its Alpine sleep to climb the cold
-pass at sunrise and descend by hot windings into the
-land where the church steeples turn into <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">campanili</i>,
-where the vine, breaking from perpendicular bondage,
-flings a liberated embrace about the mulberries,
-and far off, beyond the plain, the mirage of domes
-and spires, of painted walls and sculptured altars,
-beckons across the dustiest tracts of memory. In
-that diligence our seats are taken.</p>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15">15</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_2"><a id="A_MIDSUMMER_WEEKS_DREAM"></a>A MIDSUMMER WEEK’S DREAM<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">AUGUST IN ITALY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"><i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">
-<span class="i0">.... Un paysage choisi<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Que vont charmant masques et bergamasques.</span></i>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">For</span> ten days we had not known what ailed us.
-We had fled from the August heat and
-crowd of the Vorderrheinthal to the posting-inn
-below the Splügen pass; and here fortune had
-given us all the midsummer tourist can hope for—solitude,
-cool air and fine scenery. A dozen times a
-day we counted our mercies, but still privately felt
-them to be insufficient. As we walked through the
-larch-groves beside the Rhine, or climbed the grassy
-heights above the valley, we were oppressed by the
-didactic quality of our surroundings—by the aggressive
-salubrity and repose of this <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">bergerie de Florian</i>.
-We seemed to be living in the landscape of a sanatorium
-prospectus. It was all pleasant enough, according<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-to Schopenhauer’s definition of pleasure.
-We had none of the things we did not want; but then
-we did not particularly want any of the things we
-had. We had fancied we did till we got them; and
-as we had to own that they did their part in fulfilling
-our anticipations, we were driven to conclude that the
-fault was in ourselves. Then suddenly we found out
-what was wrong. Splügen was charming, but it was
-too near Italy.</p>
-
-<p>One can forgive a place three thousand miles from
-Italy for not being Italian; but that a village on the
-very border should remain stolidly, immovably Swiss
-was a constant source of exasperation. Even the
-landscape had neglected its opportunities. A few
-miles off it became the accomplice of man’s most exquisite
-imaginings; but here we could see in it only
-endless material for Swiss clocks and fodder.</p>
-
-<p>The trouble began with our watching the diligences.
-Every evening we saw one toiling up the
-pass from Chiavenna, with dusty horses and perspiring
-passengers. How we pitied those passengers!
-We walked among them puffed up with all the good
-air in our lungs. We felt fresh and cool and enviable,
-and moralized on the plaintive lot of those whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-scant holidays compelled them to visit Italy in
-August. But already the poison was at work. We
-pictured what our less fortunate brothers had seen
-till we began to wonder if, after all, they were less
-fortunate. At least they had <em>been there</em>; and what
-drawbacks could qualify that fact? Was it better to
-be cool and look at a water-fall, or to be hot and look
-at Saint Mark’s? Was it better to walk on gentians
-or on mosaic, to smell fir-needles or incense? Was it,
-in short, ever well to be elsewhere when one might be
-in Italy?</p>
-
-<p>We tried to quell the rising madness by interrogating
-the travellers. Was it very hot on the lakes
-and in Milan? “Terribly!” they answered, and
-mopped their brows. “Unimaginative idiots!” we
-grumbled, and forbore to question the next batch.
-Of course it was hot there—but what of that? Think
-of the compensations! To take it on the lowest
-plane, think of the empty hotels and railway carriages,
-the absence of tourists and Baedekers! Even
-the Italians were away, among the Apennines and
-in the Engadine; we should have the best part of the
-country to ourselves. Gradually we began to picture
-our sensations should we take seats in the diligence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-on its return journey. From that moment we
-were lost. We did not say much to each other, but
-one morning at sunrise we found a travelling-carriage
-at the door. No one seemed to know who had
-ordered it, but we noticed that our luggage was being
-strapped on behind. We took our seats and the
-driver turned his horses toward the Splügen pass. It
-was not the way to Switzerland.</p>
-
-<div id="i_2" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_035.jpg" width="600" height="416" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>By the Port of Lovere</i><br />
-
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">LOVEIRE. 1901.<br /></span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>We mounted to ice and snow. The savage landscape
-led us to the top of the pass and dogged us
-down to the miserable Italian custom-house on the
-other side. Then began the long descent through
-snow-galleries and steep pine-forests, above the lonely
-gorge of the Madesimo: Switzerland still in every
-aspect, but with a promise of Italy in the names
-of the dreary villages. Visible Italy began with the
-valley of the Lira, where, in a wild Salvator Rosa
-landscape, the beautiful campanile of the Madonna
-of Gallevaggio rises above embowering walnuts.
-After that each successive village declared its allegiance
-more openly. The huddled stone houses disappeared
-in a wealth of pomegranates and oleanders.
-Vine-pergolas shaded the doorways, roses and dahlias
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21">21</a></span>overflowed the terraces of rough masonry, and between
-the walnut-groves there were melon-patches
-and fields of maize.</p>
-
-<p>As we approached Chiavenna a thick bloom of heat
-lay on the motionless foliage, and the mountains hung
-like thunder-clouds on the horizon. There was something
-oppressive, menacing almost, in the still weight
-of the atmosphere. It seemed to have absorbed all
-the ardour of the sun-baked Lombard plain, of the
-shadeless rice and maize fields stretching away to the
-south of us. But the eye had ample compensation.
-The familiar town of Chiavenna had grown as fantastically
-picturesque as the background of a fresco.
-The old houses, with their medallioned doorways of
-worn marble; the court-yards bright with flowers and
-shaded by trellised vines; the white turbulence of the
-Lira, rushing between gardens, balconies and terraces
-set at reckless angles above the water—were all
-these a part of the town we had so often seen at less
-romantic seasons? The general impression was of an
-exuberance of rococo—as though the sportive statue
-of Saint John Nepomuc on the bridge, the grotesque
-figures on the balustrade of the pale-green villa near<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-the hotel, and the stucco shrines at the street corners,
-had burst into a plastic efflorescence rivalling the
-midsummer wealth of the gardens.</p>
-
-<p>We had left Switzerland with the general object
-of going to Italy and the specific one of exploring
-the Bergamasque Alps. It was the name which had
-attracted us, as much from its intrinsic picturesqueness
-as from its associations with the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">commedia dell’ arte</i>
-and the jolly figures of Harlequin and Brighella.
-I have often journeyed thus in pursuit of a name,
-and have seldom been unrewarded. In this case the
-very aspect of the map was promising. The region
-included in the scattered lettering—<i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Bergamasker
-Hochthäler</i>—had that furrowed, serried look so encouraging
-to the experienced traveller. It was rich,
-crowded, suggestive; and the names of the villages
-were enchanting.</p>
-
-<p>Early the next morning we set out for Colico, at
-the head of the Lake of Como, and thence took train
-for Sondrio, the chief town of the Valtelline. The
-lake, where we had to wait for our train, lay in unnatural
-loveliness beneath a breathless sky, the furrowed
-peaks bathed in subtle colour-gradations of
-which, at other seasons, the atmosphere gives no hint.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-At Sondrio we found all the dreariness of a modern
-Italian town with wide unshaded streets; but taking
-carriage in the afternoon for Madonna di Tirano we
-were soon in the land of romance again. The Valtelline,
-through which we drove, is one vast fruit and
-vegetable garden of extraordinary fertility. The
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">gran turco</i> (as the maize is called) grows in jungles
-taller than a man, and the grapes and melons have
-the exaggerated size and bloom of their counterfeits
-in a Dutch fruit-piece. The rich dulness of this foreground
-was relieved by the noble lines of the hills, and
-the air cooled by the rush of the Adda, which followed
-the windings of our road, and by a glimpse of snow peaks
-at the head of the valley. The villages were
-uninteresting, but we passed a low-lying deserted
-church, a charming bit of seventeenth-century decay,
-with peeling stucco ornaments, and weeds growing
-from the florid vases of the pediment; and far off, on
-a lonely wooded height, there was a tantalizing
-glimpse of another church, a Renaissance building
-rich with encrusted marbles: one of the nameless uncatalogued
-treasures in which Italy still abounds.</p>
-
-<p>Toward sunset we reached Madonna di Tirano,
-the great pilgrimage church of the Valtelline.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-With its adjoining monastery it stands alone in poplar-shaded
-meadows a mile or more from the town of
-Tirano. The marble church, a late fifteenth-century
-building by Battagio (the architect of the Incoronata
-of Lodi), has the peculiar charm of that transitional
-period when individuality of detail was merged, but
-not yet lost, in the newly-recovered sense of unity.
-From the columns of the porch, with their Verona-like
-arabesques, to the bronze Saint Michael poised
-like a Mercury on the cupola, the whole building combines
-the charm and naïveté of the earlier tradition
-with the dignity of a studied whole. The interior, if
-less homogeneous, is, in the French sense, even more
-“amusing.” Owing, doubtless, to the remote situation
-of the church, it has escaped the unifying hand
-of the improver, and presents three centuries of conflicting
-decorative treatment, ranging from the marble
-chapel of the Madonna, so suggestive, in its
-clear-edged reliefs, of the work of Omodeo at Pavia,
-to the barocco carvings of the organ and the eighteenth-century
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">grisailles</i> beneath the choir-gallery.</p>
-
-<p>The neighbouring monastery of Saint Michael has
-been turned into an inn without farther change than
-that of substituting tourists for monks in the white-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25">25</a></span>washed
-cells around the cloisters. The old building
-is a dusty labyrinth of court-yards, loggias and
-pigeon-haunted upper galleries, which it needs but
-little imagination to people with cowled figures gliding
-to lauds or benediction; and the refectory where
-we supped is still hung with portraits of cardinals,
-monsignori, and lady abbesses holding little ferret-like
-dogs.</p>
-
-<p>The next day we drove across the rich meadows to
-Tirano, one of those unhistoried and unconsidered
-Italian towns which hold in reserve for the observant
-eye a treasure of quiet impressions. It is difficult to
-name any special “effect”: the hurried sight-seer
-may discover only dull streets and featureless house-fronts.
-But the place has a fine quality of age and
-aloofness. The featureless houses are “palaces,”
-long-fronted and escutcheoned, with glimpses of
-arcaded courts, and of gardens where maize and
-dahlias smother the broken statues and choked fountains,
-and where grapes ripen on the peeling stucco
-walls. Here and there one comes on a frivolous rococo
-church, subdued by time to delicious harmony
-with its surroundings; on a fountain in a quiet
-square, or a wrought-iron balcony projecting romantically<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-from a shuttered façade; or on one or another
-of the hundred characteristic details which go to
-make up the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mise en scène</i> of the average Italian
-town. It is precisely in places like Tirano, where
-there are no salient beauties to fix the eye, that one
-appreciates the value of these details, that one
-realizes what may be called the negative strength of
-the Italian artistic sense. Where the Italian builder
-could not be grand, he could always abstain from
-being mean and trivial; and this artistic abnegation
-gives to many a dull little town like Tirano an architectural
-dignity which our great cities lack.</p>
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>The return to secular life was made two days later,
-when we left our monastery and set out to drive
-across the Aprica pass to Edolo. Retracing for a
-mile or two the way toward Sondrio, we took a turn
-to the left and began to mount the hills through forests
-of beech and chestnut. With each bend of the
-road the views down the Valtelline toward Sondrio
-and Como grew wider and more beautiful. No one
-who has not looked out on such a prospect in the early<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-light of an August morning can appreciate the poetic
-truth of Claude’s interpretation of nature: we
-seemed to be moving through a gallery hung with his
-pictures. There was the same expanse of billowy
-forest, the same silver winding of a river through infinite
-gradations of distance, the same aërial line of
-hills melting into illimitable sky.</p>
-
-<p>As we neared the top of the pass the air freshened,
-and pines and open meadows replaced the forest.
-We lunched at a little hotel in a bare meadow, among
-a crowd of Italians enjoying the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">villeggiatura</i> in
-their shrill gregarious fashion; then we began the
-descent to Edolo in the Val Camonica.</p>
-
-<p>The scenery changed rapidly as we drove on.
-There was no longer any great extent of landscape,
-as on the other side of the pass, but a succession of
-small park-like views: rounded clumps of trees interspersed
-with mossy glades, water-falls surmounted
-by old mills, <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">campanili</i> rising above villages hidden
-in foliage. On these smooth grassy terraces, under
-the walnut boughs, one expected at each turn to come
-upon some pastoral of Giorgione’s, or on one of Bonifazio’s
-sumptuous picnics. The scenery has a
-studied beauty in which velvet robes and caparisoned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-palfreys would not be out of place, and even the villages
-might have been “brushed in” by an artist
-skilled in effects and not afraid to improve upon
-reality.</p>
-
-<p>It was after sunset when we reached Edolo, a dull
-town splendidly placed at the head of the Val Camonica,
-beneath the ice-peaks of the Adamello. The
-Oglio, a loud stream voluble of the glaciers, rushes
-through the drowsy streets as though impatient to
-be gone; and we were not sorry, the next morning,
-to follow its lead and continue our way down the
-valley.</p>
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>The Val Camonica, which extends from the Adamello
-group to the head of the lake of Iseo, is a
-smaller and more picturesque reproduction of the
-Valtelline. Vines and maize again fringed our way;
-but the mountains were closer, the villages more frequent
-and more picturesque.</p>
-
-<div id="i_3" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34.6875em;">
- <img src="images/i_047.jpg" width="555" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>The Municipio—Brescia</i><br />
-
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">BRESCIA. 1901.</span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>We had read in the invaluable guide-book of Gsell-Fels
-a vague allusion to an interesting church among
-these mountains, but we could learn nothing of it at
-Edolo, and only by persistent enquiries along the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29">29</a></span>road did we finally hear that there <em>was</em> a church with
-“sculptures” in the hill-village of Cerveno, high
-above the reach of carriages. We left the high-road
-at the point indicated, and drove in a light country
-carriole up the stony mule-path, between vines and
-orchards, till the track grew too rough for wheels;
-then we continued the ascent on foot. As we approached
-the cluster of miserable hovels which had
-been pointed out to us we felt sure we had been misled.
-Not even in Italy, the land of unsuspected
-treasures, could one hope to find a church with
-“sculptures” in a poverty-stricken village on this
-remote mountain! Cerveno does not even show any
-signs of past prosperity. It has plainly never been
-more than it now is—the humblest of <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">paesi</i>, huddled
-away in an unvisited fold of the Alps. The peasants
-whom we met still insisted that the church we sought
-was close at hand; but the higher we mounted the
-lower our anticipations fell.</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly, at the end of a long stony lane,
-we came on an imposing doorway. The church to
-which it belonged stood on a higher ledge of the hill,
-and the door led into a vaulted ascent, with shallow
-flights of steps broken by platforms or landings—a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-small but yet impressive imitation of the Bernini
-staircase in the Vatican. As we mounted we found
-that each landing opened into a dimly-lit chapel with
-grated doors, through which we discerned terra-cotta
-groups representing the scenes of the Passion. The
-staircase was in fact a Sacred Way like the more famous
-one of Varallo; but there was distinct originality
-in placing the chapels on each side of the long
-flight of steps leading to the church, instead of
-scattering them on an open hill-side, according to
-the traditional plan common to all the other sacred
-mountains of northern Italy.</p>
-
-<p>The dilettante will always allow for the heightening
-of emotion that attends any unexpected artistic
-“find”; but, setting this subjective impression aside,
-the Via Crucis of Cerveno remains in my memory as
-among the best examples of its kind—excepting always
-the remarkable terra-cottas of San Vivaldo in
-Tuscany. At Cerveno, as at Varallo, the groups are
-marked by unusual vivacity and expressiveness. The
-main lines of the composition are conventional, and
-the chief personages—Christ and the Apostles, the
-Virgin and the other holy characters—are modelled
-on traditional types; but the minor figures, evidently<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-taken from life, are rendered with frank realism and
-with extraordinary truth of expression and gesture.
-Just such types—the dwarf, the beggar, the hunchback,
-the brawny waggoner or ploughman—had met
-us in every village on the way to Cerveno. As in all
-the hill-regions where the goitre is prevalent, the
-most villanous characters in the drama are depicted
-with a hideous bag of flesh beneath the chin; and
-Signorelli could not have conceived more bestial leering
-cruelty than that in some of the faces which press
-about the dying Christ. The scenes follow the usual
-order of the sacred story, without marked departure
-from the conventional grouping; but there is unusual
-pathos in the Descent from the Cross, where the light
-from the roof of the chapel falls with tragic intensity
-on the face of a Magdalen full of suave Lombard
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly less surprising than this remarkable stairway
-is the church to which it leads. The walls are
-hung with devotional pictures set in the faded gilding
-of rich old frames, the altar-fronts are remarkable
-examples of sixteenth-century wood-carving,
-and the high altar is surmounted by an elaborate
-tabernacle, also of carved wood, painted and gilt,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-that in itself repays the effort of the climb to Cerveno.
-This tabernacle is a complicated architectural
-composition—like one of the fantastic designs of
-Fontana or Bibbiena—thronged with tiny saints and
-doctors, angels and <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">putti</i>, akin to the little people of
-the Neapolitan <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">presepii:</i> a celestial company fluttering</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i xml:lang="it" lang="it">Si come schiera d’api che s’infiora</i><br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">around the divine group which surmounts the shrine.</p>
-
-<p>This prodigality of wood-carving, surprising as it
-is in so remote and humble a church, is yet characteristic
-of the region about Brescia and Bergamo.
-Lamberti of Brescia, the sculptor of the famous
-frame of Romanino’s Madonna in the church of San
-Francesco, was one of the greatest wood-carvers of
-the Italian Renaissance; and every church and chapel
-in the country through which we were travelling bore
-witness to the continued practice of the art in some
-graceful frame or altar-front, some saint or angel
-rudely but expressively modelled.</p>
-
-<p>We lunched that day at Breno, a town guarded by
-a ruined castle on a hill, and sunset brought us to
-Lovere, at the head of the lake of Iseo. It was the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-stillest of still evenings, and the little town which
-Lady Mary Wortley Montagu has immortalized was
-reflected, with every seam and wrinkle of its mountain
-background, in the pearly surface of the lake.
-Literal-minded critics, seeking in vain along the
-shore for Lady Mary’s villa and garden, have grumbled
-at the inaccuracy of her descriptions; but every
-lover of Italy will understand the mental process by
-which she unconsciously created an imaginary Lovere.
-For though the town, at first sight, is dull and
-disappointing, yet, taken with its surroundings, it
-might well form the substructure of one of those
-Turneresque visions which, in Italy, are perpetually
-intruding between the most conscientious traveller
-and his actual surroundings. It is indeed almost impossible
-to see Italy steadily and see it whole. The
-onset of impressions and memories is at times so overwhelming
-that observation is lost in mere sensation.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly he who, on an August morning, sails
-from Lovere to Iseo, at the southern end of the lake,
-is likely to find himself succumbing to Lady Mary’s
-hallucinations. Warned by her example, and conscious
-of lacking her extenuating gift, I hesitate to
-record my impressions of the scene; or venture, at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-most, to do so in the past tense, asserting (and this
-even with a mental reservation) that on a certain
-morning a certain number of years ago the lake of
-Iseo wore such and such an aspect. But the difficulty
-of rendering the aspect remains. I can only say it
-was that very lake of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">carte du Tendre</i> upon which,
-in the eighteenth-century romances, gay parties in
-velvet-hung barges used to set out for the island of
-Cythera. Every village on that enchanted shore
-might have been the stage of some comedy in the
-Bergamasque dialect, with Harlequin in striped
-cloak, and Brighella in conical hat and wide green
-and white trousers, strutting up and down before the
-shuttered house in which Dr. Graziano hides his
-pretty ward; every villa reflecting its awnings and
-bright flowers in the lake might have housed some
-Rosaura to whom Leandro, the Tuscan lover, warbled
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">rispetti</i> beneath the padlocked water-gate; every
-pink or yellow monastery on the hill-side might have
-sent forth its plausible friar, descendant of Machiavelli’s
-Fra Timoteo, to preach in the market-place,
-beg at the villa-door, and help Rosaura and
-Leandro cozen the fat dupe of a Pantaloon in black
-cloak and scarlet socks. The eighteenth century of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-Longhi, of Tiepolo and Goldoni was reflected in the
-lake as in some magic crystal. Did the vision dissolve
-as we landed at Iseo, or will some later traveller find
-it still lying beneath the wave like the vanished city
-of Ys? There is no telling, in such cases, how much
-the eye receives and how much it contributes; and if
-ever the boundaries between fact and fancy waver, it
-may well be under the spell of the Italian midsummer
-madness.</p>
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>The sun lay heavy on Iseo; and the railway journey
-thence to Brescia left in our brains a golden dazzle
-of heat. It was refreshing, on reaching Brescia, to
-enter the streets of the old town, where the roofs almost
-meet and there is always a blessed strip of shade
-to walk in. The cities in Italy are much cooler than
-the country. It is in August that one understands
-the wisdom of the old builders, who made the streets
-so narrow, and built dim draughty arcades around
-the open squares. In Brescia the effects of light and
-shade thus produced were almost Oriental in their
-sharp-edged intensity; the rough stucco surfaces
-gilded with vivid sunlight bringing out the depths of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-contrasting shade, and the women with black veils
-over their heads slipping along under the mysterious
-balconies and porticoes like flitting fragments of the
-shadow.</p>
-
-<div id="i_4" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 19em;">
- <img src="images/i_059.jpg" width="304" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>Chiesa dei Miracoli—Brescia</i>
- </div></div></div>
-
-<p>Brescia is at all times a delightful place to linger
-in. Its chief possessions—the bronze Victory, and
-that room in the Martinengo palace where Moretto,
-in his happiest mood, depicted the ladies of the line
-under arches of trellis-work backed by views of the
-family villas—make it noteworthy even among Italian
-cities; and it has, besides, its beautiful town-hall,
-its picture-gallery, and the curious court-yards
-painted in perspective that are so characteristic of
-the place. But in summer there is a strong temptation
-to sit and think of these things rather than to
-go and see them. In the court-yard of the hotel,
-where a fountain tinkles refreshingly, and the unbleached
-awnings flap in the breeze of the electric
-fans, it is pleasant to feel that the Victory and the
-pictures are close at hand, like old friends waiting on
-one’s inclination; but if one ventures forth, let it be
-rather to the churches than to the galleries. Only at
-this season can one appreciate the atmosphere of the
-churches: that chill which cuts the sunshine like a
-knife as one steps across the dusky threshold. When
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37">37</a></span>we entered the cathedral its vast aisles were empty,
-but far off, in the dimness of the pillared choir, we
-heard a drone of intoning canons that freshened the
-air like the sound of a water-fall in a forest. Thence
-we wandered on to San Francesco, empty too, where,
-in the sun-spangled dimness, the great Romanino
-throned behind the high altar. The sacristan drew
-back the curtain before the picture, and as it was revealed
-to us in all its sun-bathed glory he exclaimed
-with sudden wonder, as though he had never seen it
-before: “<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">È stupendo! È stupendo!</i>” Perhaps he
-vaguely felt, as we did, that Romanino, to be appreciated,
-must be seen in just that light, a projection
-of the suave and radiant atmosphere in which his own
-creations move. Certainly no Romanino of the great
-public galleries arrests the imagination like the Madonna
-of San Francesco; and in its presence one
-thinks with a pang of all the beautiful objects uprooted
-from their native soil to adorn the herbarium
-of the art-collector....</p>
-
-<h3>V</h3>
-
-<p>It was on the last day of our journey that the most
-imperturbable member of the party, looking up from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-a prolonged study of the guide-books, announced
-that we had not seen the Bergamasque Alps after all.</p>
-
-<p>In the excited argument that followed, proof
-seemed to preponderate first on one side and then on
-the other; but a closer scrutiny of the map confirmed
-the fear that we had not actually penetrated beyond
-the borders of the promised land. It must be owned
-that at first the discovery was somewhat humiliating;
-but on reflection it left us overjoyed to think that we
-had still the Bergamasque Alps to visit. Meanwhile
-our pleasure had certainly been enhanced by our delusion;
-and we remembered with fresh admiration
-Goethe’s profound saying—a saying which Italy <span class="locked">inspired—</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i xml:lang="de" lang="de">O, wie beseliget uns Menschen ein falscher Begriff!</i><br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39">39</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_3"><a id="THE_SANCTUARIES_OF_THE"></a>THE SANCTUARIES OF THE
-PENNINE ALPS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> June is hot on the long yellow
-streets of Turin, it is pleasant to take
-train for the Biellese, that romantic hill-country
-where the last slopes of the Pennine Alps
-melt into the Piedmontese plain.</p>
-
-<p>The line, crossing the lowland with its red-tiled
-farm-houses and mulberry orchards, rises gradually
-to a region of rustling verdure. Mountain streams
-flow down between alder-fringed banks, white oxen
-doze under the acacia-hedges, and in the almond and
-cherry orchards the vine hangs its Virgilian garlands
-from blossoming tree to tree. This pastoral land
-rolls westward to the Graiian Alps in an undulating
-sea of green, but to the north it breaks abruptly into
-the height against which rises the terraced outline of
-Biella.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-The cliffs of the Biellese are the haunt of ancient
-legend, and on almost every ledge a church or monastery
-perpetuates the story of some wonder-working
-relic. Biella, the chief town of this devout district,
-covers a small conical hill and spreads its suburbs over
-the surrounding level. Its hot sociable streets are
-full of the shrill activity of an Italian watering-place;
-but the transalpine traveller will probably be
-inclined to push on at once to the village of Andorno,
-an hour’s drive deeper in the hills.</p>
-
-<p>Biella overhangs the plain; but Andorno lies in a
-valley which soon contracts to a defile between the
-mountains. The drive thither from Biella skirts the
-Cervo, a fresh mountain stream, and passes through
-villages set on park-like slopes in the ample shade of
-chestnut-groves. The houses of these villages have
-little of the picturesqueness mistakenly associated
-with Italian rural architecture; but every window
-displays its pot of lavender or of carnations, and the
-arched doorways reveal gardens flecked with the blue
-shadows of the vine-pergola.</p>
-
-<p>Andorno itself is folded in hills, rounded, umbrageous,
-cooled with the song of birds. A sylvan
-hush envelops the place, and the air one breathes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-seems to have travelled over miles of forest freshened
-by unseen streams. It is all as still and drowsy as
-the dream of a tired brain. There is nothing to see
-but the country itself—acacia-fringed banks sloping
-to the stream below the village; the arch of a ruined
-bridge; an old hexagonal chapel with red-tiled roof
-and an arcade of stunted columns; and, beyond the
-bridge and the chapel, rich upland meadows where all
-day long the peasant women stoop to the swing of the
-scythe.</p>
-
-<p>In June in this high country (where patches of
-snow still lie in the shaded hollows), the wild flowers
-of spring and summer seem to meet: narcissus and
-forget-me-not lingering in the grass, while yellow
-broom—Leopardi’s <em>lover of sad solitudes</em>—sheets the
-dry banks with gold, and higher up, in the folds of
-the hills, patches of crimson azalea mix their shy scent
-with the heavy fragrance of the acacia. In the meadows
-the trees stand in well-spaced majestic groups,
-walnut, chestnut and beech, tenting the grass with
-shade. The ivy hangs its drapery over garden walls
-and terraces, and the streams rush down under a
-quivering canopy of laburnum. The scenery of these
-high Pennine valleys is everywhere marked by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-same nobleness of colour and outline, the same atmosphere
-of spaciousness and poetry. It is the rich
-studied landscape of Bonifazio’s idyls: a scene of
-peace and plenitude, not the high-coloured southern
-opulence but the sober wealth poured from a glacial
-horn of plenty. There is none of the Swiss abruptness,
-of the Swiss accumulation of effects. The
-southern aspect softens and expands. There is no
-crowding of impressions, but a stealing sense of harmony
-and completeness.</p>
-
-<p>From Andorno the obvious excursion is to the
-famous shrine of San Giovanni; a “sight” taking
-up eight pages in the excellent “Guida del Biellese,”
-but remaining in the traveller’s memory chiefly as the
-objective point of a charming walk or drive. The
-road thither winds up the Val d’Andorno, between
-heights set with villages hung aloft among the beech-groves,
-or thrusting their garden-parapets above the
-spray and tumult of the Cervo. The densely-wooded
-cliffs are scarred with quarries of sienite, and the
-stream, as the valley narrows, forces its way over
-masses of rock and between shelving stony banks;
-but the little gardens dashed by its foam overflow
-with irises, roses and peonies, surrounded with box-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45">45</a></span>hedges
-and shaded by the long mauve panicles of the
-wistaria.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the road leaves the valley, and ascends
-the beech-clothed flank of the mountain on which the
-church of San Giovanni is perched. The coolness
-and hush of this wooded hill-side are delicious after
-the noise and sunshine of the open road, and one is
-struck by the civic amenity which, in this remote solitude,
-has placed benches at intervals beneath the
-trees. At length the brow of the hill is reached. The
-beeches recede, leaving a grassy plateau flanked by a
-long façade of the monastery; and from the brink of
-this open space the eye drops unhindered down the
-long leafy reaches of the Val d’Andorno.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is characterized by the tenderest gradations
-of colour and line: beeches blending with walnuts,
-these with the tremulous laburnum-thickets
-along the stream, and the curves of the hills flowing
-into one another till they lose themselves in the aërial
-distances of the plain. The building which commands
-this outlook is hardly worthy of its station,
-unless, indeed, the traveller feels its sober lines to be
-an admission of art’s inferiority to nature in such aspects.
-To the confirmed apologist of Italy there is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-indeed a certain charm in finding so insignificant a
-piece of architecture in so rare a spot: as though in a
-land thus amply dowered no architectural emphasis
-were needed to call attention to any special point of
-view. Yet a tenderness for the view, one cannot but
-infer, must have guided the steps of those early cenobites
-who peopled the romantic landscape with wonder-working
-images. When did a miracle take place
-on a barren plain or in a circumscribed hollow? The
-manifestations of divine favour invariably sought
-the heights, and those who dedicated themselves to
-the commemoration of such holy incidents did so in
-surroundings poetic enough to justify their faith in
-the supernatural.</p>
-
-<div id="i_5" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_073.jpg" width="600" height="383" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>The Inner Quadrangle at Oropa</i><br />
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">LOVEIRE. 1901.</span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The church, with its dignified front and sculptured
-portal, adjoins the hospice, and shows little of interest
-within but the stone grotto containing the venerated
-image of Saint John, discovered in the third century
-by Saint Eusebius, Bishop of Vercelli. This grotto is
-protected by an iron grating, and its dark recess twinkles
-with silver hearts and other votive offerings. The
-place is still a favourite pilgrimage, but there seems
-to be some doubt as to which Saint John has chosen it
-as the scene of his posthumous thaumaturgy; for, according<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-to the local guide-book, it is equally frequented
-on the feasts of the Baptist and of the Evangelist.
-This uncertainty is not without its practical
-advantages; and one reads that the hospice is open
-the year round, and that an excellent meal may always
-be enjoyed in the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">trattoria</i> above the arcade;
-while on the feasts of the respective saints it is necessary
-for the devotee to bespeak his board and lodging
-in advance.</p>
-
-<p>If San Giovanni appeals chiefly to the lover of
-landscape, the more famous sanctuary of Oropa is
-of special interest to the architect; for thither, in the
-eighteenth century, the piety of the house of Savoy
-sent Juvara, one of the greatest architects of his time,
-to add a grand façade and portico to the group of
-monastic buildings erected a hundred years earlier by
-Negro di Pralungo.</p>
-
-<p>The ascent to the great mountain-shrine of the
-Black Virgin leads the traveller back to Biella, and
-up the hills behind the town. The drive is long, but
-so diversified, so abounding in beauty, that in nearing
-its end one feels the need of an impressive monument
-to close so nobly ordered an approach. As the
-road rises above the vineyards of Biella, as the house-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48">48</a></span>roofs,
-the church-steeples and the last suburban villas
-drop below the line of vision, there breaks upon the
-eye the vast undulating reach of the Piedmontese
-plain. From the near massing of cultivated verdure—the
-orchards, gardens, groves of the minutely pencilled
-foreground—to the far limit where earth and
-sky converge in silver, the landscape glides through
-every gradation of sun-lit cloud-swept loveliness.
-First the Val d’Andorno unbosoms its wooded
-depths; then the distances press nearer, blue-green
-and dappled with forest, with the towns of Biella,
-Novara and Vercelli like white fleets anchored on a
-misty sea. This view, with its fold on fold of woodland,
-dusky-shimmering in the foreground, then dark
-blue, with dashes of tawny sunlight and purple
-streaks of rain, till it fades into the indeterminate
-light of the horizon, suggests some heroic landscape
-of Poussin’s, or the boundless russet distances of
-Rubens’s “Château of Stein.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the foreground is perpetually changing.
-The air freshens, the villages with their flower-gardens
-and their guardian images of the Black
-Virgin are left behind, and between the thinly-leaved
-beeches rise bare gravelly slopes backed by treeless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-hills. The Loreto of Piedmont lies nearly four thousand
-feet above the sea, and even in June there is a
-touch of snow in the air. For a moment one fancies
-one’s self in Switzerland; but here, at the bend of the
-road, is a white chapel with a classic porch, within
-which a group of terra-cotta figures enact some episode
-of the Passion. Italy has reasserted herself and
-art has humanized the landscape. More chapels are
-scattered through the trees, but one forgets to note
-them as the carriage turns into a wide grassy forecourt,
-bordered by stone pyramids and dominated at
-its farther end by the great colonnade of the hospice.
-A <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">rampe douce</i> with fine iron gates leads up to an
-outer court enclosed in the arcaded wings of the
-building. Under these arcades are to be found shops
-in which the pilgrim may satisfy his various wants,
-from groceries, wines and cotton umbrellas (much
-needed in these showery hills), to rosaries, images of
-the Black Virgin, and pious histories of her miracles.
-Above the arcades the pilgrims are lodged; and in
-the centre of the inner façade Juvara’s marble portico
-unfolds its double flight of steps.</p>
-
-<p>Passing through this gateway, one stands in a spacious
-inner quadrangle. This again is enclosed in low<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-buildings resting on arcades, their alignment broken
-only by the modest façade of the church. Outside
-there is the profane bustle of life, the clatter of
-glasses at the doors of rival <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">trattorie</i>, the cracking of
-whips, the stir of buying and selling; but a warm
-silence holds the inner court. Only a few old peasant
-women are hobbling, rosary in hand, over the sun-baked
-flags to the cool shelter of the church. The
-church is indeed cavernously cold, with that subterranean
-chill peculiar to religious buildings. The interior
-is smaller and plainer than one had expected;
-but presently it is seen to be covered with a decoration
-beside which the rarest tapestry or fresco might sink
-into insignificance. This covering is composed of innumerable
-votive offerings, crowding each other
-from floor to vaulting over every inch of wall, lighting
-the chapels with a shimmer of silver and tinsel,
-with the yellow of old wax legs and arms, and the
-gleam of tarnished picture-frames: each overlapping
-scale of this strange sheath symbolizing some impulse
-of longing, grief or gratitude, so that, as it were, the
-whole church is lined with heart-beats. Most of these
-offerings are the gift of the poor mountain-folk, and
-the paintings record with artless realism the miraculous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-escapes of carters, quarrymen and stone-cutters.
-In the choir, however, hang a few portraits of noble
-donators in ruffs and Spanish jerkins; and one picture,
-rudely painted on the wall itself, renders with
-touching fidelity the interior of a peasant’s house in
-the sixteenth or seventeenth century, with the mother
-kneeling by a cradle over which the Black Virgin
-sheds her reassuring light.</p>
-
-<p>The ebony Virgin herself (another “find” of the
-indefatigable Saint Eusebius) is enthroned behind
-the high altar, in a tiny chapel built by her discoverer,
-where, in a blaze of altar-lights, the miraculous image,
-nimbused in jewels and gold, showers a dazzling
-brightness on the groups who succeed each other at
-her iron lattice. The incense-laden air and the sweating
-stone walls encrusted with votive offerings recall
-at once the chapel of Loreto; but here the smaller
-space, the deeper dusk, heighten the sense of holiness
-and solemnity; and if a few white-capped Sisters
-are grouped against the grating, while before the
-altar a sweet-voiced young priest intones the mystic</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"><i xml:lang="it" lang="it">
-<span class="i0">Mater purissima,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Mater admirabile,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Mater prudentissima,</span></i>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52">52</a></span></p>
-<p class="in0">punctuated by the wailing <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">Ora pro nobis!</i> of the
-nuns, it would be hard to picture a scene richer in that
-mingling of suavity and awe with which the Church
-composes her incomparable effects.</p>
-
-<p>After so complex an impression the pleasures of
-the eye may seem a trifle thin; yet there is a great
-charm in the shaded walks winding through the colony
-of chapels above the monastery. Nothing in
-nature is lovelier than a beech-wood rustling with
-streams; and to come, in such a setting, on one graceful
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">tempietto</i> after another, to discover, in their semi-pagan
-porches, groups of peasants praying before
-some dim presentment of the Passion, gives a renewed
-sense of the way in which, in Italy, nature, art
-and religion combine to enrich the humblest lives.
-These Sacred Mounts, or Stations of the Cross, are
-scattered everywhere on the Italian slopes of the
-Alps. The most famous is at Varallo, and to find
-any artistic merit one must go there, or to San Vivaldo
-in Tuscany, or the unknown hill-village of Cerveno
-in the Val Camonica. At Oropa the groups
-are relatively crude and uninteresting; but the
-mysterious half-light in which they are seen, and
-the surrounding murmur of leaves and water,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-give them a value quite independent of their plastic
-qualities.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* <span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">*</span></div>
-
-<p>Varallo itself is but a day’s journey from Andorno,
-and in June weather the drive thither is beautiful.
-The narrow country road mounts through chestnut-groves
-as fine as those which cast their velvet shade
-for miles about Promontogno in the Val Bregaglia.
-At first the way dips continuously from one green
-ravine to another, but at Mosso Santa Maria, the
-highest point of the ascent, the glorious plain again
-bursts into view, with white roads winding toward
-distant cities, and the near flanks of the hills clothed
-in unbroken forest. The Val Sesia is broader than
-the Val d’Andorno, and proportionately less picturesque;
-but its expanse of wheat and vine, checkered
-with shade and overhung by piled-up mossy rocks,
-offers a restful contrast to the landscape of the
-higher valleys. As Varallo is neared the hills close
-in again and the scenery regains its sub-Alpine character.
-The first unforgettable glimpse of the old
-town is caught suddenly at a bend of the road, with
-the Sanctuary lifted high above the river, and tiled
-roofs and church-towers clustered at its base. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-near approach is a disenchantment; for few towns
-have suffered more than Varallo under the knife of
-“modern improvement,” and those who did not know
-it in earlier days would hardly guess that it was once
-the most picturesque town in North Italy. A dusty
-wide-avenued suburb, thinly scattered with cheap
-villas, now leads from the station to the edge of the
-old town; and the beautiful slope facing the Sacred
-Mountain has been cleared of its natural growth
-and planted with moribund palms and camellias, to
-form the “pleasure” grounds of a huge stucco hotel
-with failure written over every inch of its pretentious
-façade.</p>
-
-<p>One knows not whether to lament the impairment
-of such rare completeness, or to find consolation in
-the fact that Varallo is rich enough not to be ruined
-by its losses. Ten or fifteen years ago every aspect
-was enchanting; now one must choose one’s point of
-view, but one or two of the finest are still intact.
-Turning one’s back, for instance, on the offending
-hotel, one has still, on a summer morning, the rarest
-vision of wood and water and happily-blended architecture:
-the Sesia with its soft meadows and leafy
-banks, the old houses huddled above it, and the high<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-cliff crowned by the chapels of the Sacred Way. At
-night all melts to a diviner loveliness. The clustered
-darkness of the town, twinkling with lights, lies
-folded in hills delicately traced against a sky mauve
-with moonlight. Here and there the moon burnishes
-a sombre mass of trees, or makes a campanile stand
-out pale and definite as ivory; while high above, the
-summit of the cliff projects against the sky, with an
-almost Greek purity of outline, the white domes and
-arches of the Sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p>The centre of the town is also undisturbed. Here
-one may wander through cool narrow streets with
-shops full of devotional emblems, and of the tall votive
-candles gaily spangled with gold, and painted
-with flower-wreaths and <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">mandorle</i> of the Virgin.
-These streets, on Sundays, are thronged with the
-peasant women of the neighbouring valleys in their
-various costumes: some with cloth leggings and short
-dark-blue cloth petticoats embroidered in colours;
-others in skirts of plaited black silk, with embroidered
-jackets, silver necklaces and spreading head-dresses;
-for nearly every town has its distinctive dress, and
-some happy accident seems to have preserved this
-slope of the Alps from the depressing uniformity of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-modern fashions. In architectural effects the town
-is little richer than its neighbours; but it has that indescribable
-“tone” in which the soft texture of old
-stucco and the bloom of weather-beaten marble combine
-with a hundred happy accidents of sun and
-shade to produce what might be called the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">patine</i> of
-Italy. There is, indeed, one remarkable church, with
-a high double flight of steps leading to its door; but
-this (though it contains a fine Gaudenzio) passes as
-a mere incident in the general picturesqueness, and
-the only church with which the sight-seer seriously
-reckons is that of Santa Maria delle Grazie, frescoed
-with the artist’s scenes from the Passion.</p>
-
-<div id="i_6" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 29.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_087.jpg" width="476" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>The Main Court of the Sacro Monte at Varallo</i><br />
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">VARALLO. 1901.</span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>There is much beauty of detail in these crowded
-compositions; but, to the inexpert, Gaudenzio lives
-perhaps chiefly as the painter of the choiring angels
-of Saronno: so great there that elsewhere he seems
-relatively unimportant. At Varallo, at least, one associates
-him first with the Sacred Mountain. To this
-great monument of his native valley he contributed
-some of his most memorable work, and it seems fitting
-that on turning from his frescoes in Santa Maria
-one should find one’s self at the foot of the path leading
-to the Sanctuary. The wide approach, paved<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-with tiny round pebbles polished by the feet of thousands
-of pilgrims, leads round the flank of the cliff
-to the park-like enclosure on its summit. Here, on
-the ledge overlooking the town, stands the church built
-by Saint Charles Borromeo (now disfigured by a
-modern façade), and grouped about it are the forty-two
-chapels of the “New Jerusalem.” These little
-buildings, to which one mounts or descends by mossy
-winding paths beneath the trees, present every variety
-of pseudo-classical design. Some, placed at
-different levels, are connected by open colonnades
-and long flights of steps; some have airy loggias,
-overlooking gardens tufted with blush-roses and the
-lilac iris; while others stand withdrawn in the deep
-shade of the beeches. Each chapel contains a terra-cotta
-group representing some scene in the divine history,
-and the site and architecture of each building
-have been determined by a subtle sense of dramatic
-fitness. Thus, the chapels enclosing the earlier episodes—the
-Annunciation, the Nativity and the scenes
-previous to the Last Supper—are placed in relatively
-open sites, with patches of flowers about their doorsteps;
-while as the drama darkens the pilgrim descends
-into deep shady hollows, or winds along chill<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-stone corridors and up and down interminable stairs;
-a dark subterranean passage leading at last to the
-image of the buried Christ.</p>
-
-<p>Of the groups themselves it is difficult to speak
-dispassionately, for they are so much a part of their
-surroundings that one can hardly measure them by
-any conventional standard. To do so, indeed, would
-be to miss their meaning. They must be studied as
-a reflection of the Bible story in the hearts of simple
-and emotional peasants; for it was the piety of the
-mountain-folk that called them into being, and the
-modellers and painters who contributed to the work
-were mostly natives of Val Sesia or of the neighbouring
-valleys. The art of clay modelling is peculiarly
-adapted to the rendering of strong and direct emotions.
-So much vivacity of expression do its rapid
-evocations permit, that one might almost describe it
-as intermediate between pantomime and sculpture.
-The groups at Varallo have the defects inherent in
-such an improvisation: the crudeness, the violence,
-sometimes even the seeming absurdities of an instantaneous
-photograph. These faults are redeemed by
-a simplicity and realism which have not had time to
-harden into conventionality. The Virgin and Saint<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-Elizabeth are low-browed full-statured peasant
-women; the round-cheeked romping children, the
-dwarfs and hunchbacks, the Roman soldiers and the
-Jewish priests, have all been transferred alive from
-the market-places of Borgo Sesia and Arona. These
-expressive figures, dressed in real clothes, with real
-hair flowing about their shoulders, seem like the
-actors in some miracle-play arrested at its crowning
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>Closer inspection brings to light a marked difference
-in quality between the different groups. Those
-by Tabacchetti and Fermo Stella are the best, excepting
-only the remarkable scene of the Crucifixion,
-attributed to Gaudenzio, and probably executed from
-his design. Tabacchetti is the artist of the Adam and
-Eve surrounded by the supra-terrestrial flora and
-fauna of Eden: a curious composition, with a golden-haired
-Eve of mincing elegance and refinement. To
-Stella are due some of the simplest and most moving
-scenes of the series: the Adoration of the Magi, the
-message of the angel to Joseph, and Christ and the
-woman of Samaria. Especially charming is the Annunciation,
-where a yellow-wigged angel, in a kind
-of celestial dressing-gown of flowered brocade, advances,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-lily in hand, toward a gracefully-startled Virgin,
-dressed (as one is told) in a costume presented
-by a pious lady of Varallo. In another scene the
-Mother of God, habited like a peasant of Val Sesia,
-looks up smilingly from the lace-cushion on which
-she is at work; while the Last Supper, probably a
-survival of the older wooden groups existing before
-Gaudenzio and his school took up the work, shows a
-lace-trimmed linen table-cloth, with bread and fruit
-set out on real Faenza dishes.</p>
-
-<p>After these homely details the scenes of the Passion,
-where Gaudenzio’s influence probably prevailed,
-seem a trifle academic; but even here there are local
-touches, such as the curly white dog at the foot of
-Herod’s throne, the rags of the beggars, the child in
-the Crucifixion holding a spotted hound in leash.</p>
-
-<p>The Crucifixion is fitly the culminating point of
-the series. Here Gaudenzio lined the background
-with one of his noblest frescoes, and the figures
-placed before it are worthy, in expression and attitude,
-to carry out the master’s conception. The gold-bucklered
-Roman knight on his white charger, the
-eager gaping throng, where beggars and cripples
-jostle turbaned fine ladies and their dwarfs, where<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-oval-faced Lombard women with children at the
-breast press forward to catch a glimpse of the dying
-Christ, while the hideous soldiers at the foot of the
-cross draw lots for the seamless garment—all these
-crowding careless figures bring out with strange intensity
-the agony uplifted in their midst. Never,
-perhaps, has the popular, the unimpressed, unrepentant
-side of the scene been set forth with more tragic
-directness. One can fancy the gold-armoured knight
-echoing in after years the musing words of Anatole
-France’s <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Procurateur de Judée</i>:—“Jésus? Jésus de
-Nazareth? Je ne me rappelle pas.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* <span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">*</span></div>
-
-<p>From Varallo the fortunate traveller may carry his
-impressions unimpaired through the chestnut-woods
-and across the hills to the lake of Orta—a small sheet
-of water enclosed in richest verdure, with the wooded
-island of San Giuliano on its bosom. Orta has a secret
-charm of its own: a quality of solitude, of remoteness,
-that makes it seem the special property of
-each traveller who chances to discover it. Here too
-is a Sacred Way, surmounting the usual knoll above
-the town. The groups have little artistic merit, but
-there is a solemn charm in the tranquil glades, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-their little white-pillared shrines, connected by grass walks
-under a continuous vaulting of branches. The
-chief “feature” of Orta, however, is the incredibly
-complete little island, with its ancient church embosomed
-in gardens; yet even this counts only as a
-detail in the general composition, a last touch to the
-prodigal picturesqueness of the place. The lake
-itself is begirt by vine-clad slopes, and in every direction
-roads and bridle-paths lead across the wooded
-hills, through glades sheeted in spring-time with
-primroses and lilies-of-the-valley, to the deeper
-forest-recesses at the foot of the high Alps.</p>
-
-<p>In any other country the departure from such perfect
-loveliness must lead to an anti-climax; but there
-is no limit to the prodigality of the Italian landscape,
-and the wanderer who turns eastward from Orta may
-pass through scenes of undiminished beauty till, toward
-sunset, the hills divide to show Lake Maggiore
-at his feet, with the Isola Bella moored like a fantastic
-pleasure-craft upon its waters.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63">63</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_4"><a id="WHAT_THE_HERMITS_SAW"></a>WHAT THE HERMITS SAW</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> almost every gallery of Italy there hangs,
-among the pictures of the earlier period, one
-which represents, with loving minuteness of topographical
-detail, a rocky mountain-side honeycombed
-with caves and inhabited by hermits.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, the landscape is comprehensive enough
-to include the whole Thebaid, with the river at the
-base of the cliff, the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">selva oscura</i> “fledging the wild-ridged
-mountain steep by steep,” and the various little
-edifices—huts, chapels and bridges—with which
-the colony of anchorites have humanized their wild
-domain. This presentment of the life of the solitaries
-always remained a favourite subject in Italian art,
-and even in the rococo period, when piety had become
-a drawing-room accomplishment, the traditional
-charm of the “life apart” was commemorated
-by the mock “hermitages” to be found in every nobleman’s
-park, or by such frescoes as adorn the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-entrance to the chapel of the Villa Chigi, near Rome:
-a tiny room painted to represent a rocky cleft in the
-mountains, with anchorites visiting each other in
-their caves, or engaged in the duties of their sylvan
-existence.</p>
-
-<p>A vast body of literature—and of a literature peculiarly
-accessible to the people—has kept alive in
-Catholic countries the image of the early solitary.
-The Golden Legend, the great Bollandist compilations,
-and many other collections of pious anecdote,
-preserve, in simple and almost childish form, the
-names and deeds of the desert saints. In the traditions
-of the Latin race there still lingers, no doubt, a
-sub-conscious memory of the dark days when all
-that was gentle and merciful and humane turned to
-the desert to escape the desolation of the country
-and the foulness of the town. From war and slavery
-and famine, from the strife of the circus factions and
-the incredible vices and treacheries of civilized life,
-the disenchanted Christian, aghast at the more than
-pagan corruption of a converted world, fled into the
-waste places to wear out his life in penance. The
-horrors he left behind surpassed anything the desert
-could show—surpassed even the terrors that walked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-by night, the airy tongues that syllabled men’s names,
-the lemurs, succubi and painted demons of the tombs.
-Nevertheless the lives of the early anchorites, who
-took refuge in the burning solitudes of Egypt and
-Asia Minor, were full of fears and anguish. Their
-history echoes with the groans and lamentations of
-souls in pain, and had their lives been recorded by
-contemporary artists, the presentment must have
-recalled those horribly circumstantial studies of
-everlasting torment which admonished the mediæval
-worshipper from the walls of every church.</p>
-
-<p>But when Italian art began to chronicle the history
-of the desert fathers, a change had passed over the
-spirit of Christianity. If the world was still a dark
-place, full of fears and evil, solitary communion with
-God had ceased to become a more dreadful alternative;
-and when men went forth into the desert they
-found Christ there rather than the devil. So at least
-one infers from the spirit in which the Italian painters
-rendered the life of the Thebaid—transposing its
-scenes from the parched African desert to their own
-fertile landscape, and infusing into the lives of the
-desert fathers that sense of human fellowship with
-which Saint Francis had penetrated the mediæval<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-conception of Christianity. The first hermits
-shunned each other as they shunned the image of
-evil; every human relation was a snare, and they
-sought each other out only in moments of moral or
-physical extremity, when flesh or spirit quailed before
-the hallucinations of solitude. But in the Italian
-pictures the hermits move in an atmosphere of fraternal
-tenderness. Though they still lead the “life
-apart,” it is shorn of its grimness and mitigated by
-acts of friendly ministry and innocent childlike intercourse.
-The solitaries still dwell in remote inaccessible
-regions, and for the most part their lives are
-spent alone; but on the feasts of the Church they visit
-each other, and when they go on pilgrimage they
-pause at each other’s thresholds.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, though one feels that this new spirit has tamed
-the desert, and transplanted to it enough of the
-leaven of human intercourse to exorcise its evil spirits,
-the imagination remains chiefly struck by the
-strangeness of the conditions in which these voluntary
-exiles must have found themselves. The hermits
-brought little with them from the world of cities
-and men compared to what they found in the wilderness.
-Their relation to the earth—their ancient mysterious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-mother—must have been the most intimate
-as well as the most interesting part of their lives; as
-a “return to nature” the experience had a freshness
-and intensity which the modern seeker after primeval
-sensations can never hope to recover. For in those
-days, when distances were measured by the pilgrim’s
-sandal or the ass’s hoof, a few miles meant exile, and
-the mountain visible from the walls of his native town
-offered the solitary as complete an isolation as the
-slopes of Lebanon. News travelled at the same pace,
-when it did not drop by the way. There was little
-security outside the city walls, and small incentive
-for the traveller, except from devotional motives, to
-seek out the anchorite on his inaccessible height.</p>
-
-<p>The hermit, therefore, was thrown back on the
-companionship of the wild; and what he won from it
-we read in the gentler legends of the desert, and in
-the records of the early Italian artists. Much, for
-instance, is told of the delightful nature of the intercourse
-between the solitaries and wild animals. The
-lion having been the typical “denizen” of the Libyan
-sands, the Italian painter has transplanted him to the
-Umbrian hill-sides, where, jointly with the wolf and
-the stag, he lives in gentle community with the anchorites.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-For instead of fleeing from or fighting
-these lords of the wilderness, the wise hermits at once
-entered into negotiations with them—negotiations
-sometimes resulting in life-long friendships, and
-sealed by the self-sacrificing death of the adoring
-animal. It was of course the power of the cross
-which subjugated these savage beasts; and many instances
-are recorded of the control exercised over wild
-animals, and the contrition awakened in them, by the
-conquering sign. But the hermits, not content with
-asserting their spiritual predominance over these
-poor soulless creatures (<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">non sono Cristiani</i>), seemed
-to feel that such a victory was too easy, and were
-themselves won over by the devotion of their dumb
-friends, and drawn into a brotherly commerce which
-no law of the Church prescribed.</p>
-
-<p>The mystical natural history of the first Christian
-centuries facilitated the belief in this intercourse between
-man and beast. When even familiar domestic
-animals were credited with strange symbolic attributes,
-it was natural to people the wild with the
-dragon, the hydra and the cocatrix; to believe that
-the young of the elephant were engendered by their
-mothers’ eating of the mandragora which grows on a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-mount near Paradise; that those of the lion were born
-dead and resuscitated by their parents’ breath; and
-that the old eagle renewed his youth by plunging
-three times in a magic fountain. It is not strange
-that creatures so marvellously endowed should have
-entered into friendly relations with the human intruders
-upon their solitude, and subdued their savage
-natures to the teachings of their new masters. And
-as the lion and the wolf were gradually transformed
-into humble but wise companions, so the other influences
-of the wilderness came to acquire a power over
-the solitaries. Even after the early Thebaids had
-been gathered in under one or another of the great
-monastic rules, seekers after holiness continued to
-flee the communal life, and in Italy every lonely
-height came to have its recluse. It was impossible
-that these little restricted human lives, going forth
-singly into the desert, should not be gradually absorbed
-into it and saturated with its spirit. Think
-what a soul-shattering or soul-making experience it
-must have been to the dweller in the narrow walled
-town or the narrower monastery, to go forth alone,
-beyond the ploughed fields and the road to the next
-village, beyond the haunts of men and hail of friendly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-voices, forth into the unmapped region of hills and
-forests, where wild beasts and robbers, and other
-presences less definable but more baleful, lay in wait
-for the lonely traveller! From robbers there was not
-much to fear: the solitaries were poor, and it was a
-great sin to lay hands on them. The wild beasts, too,
-might be won over to Christian amity; but what of
-those other presences of which the returning traveller
-whispered over the evening fire?</p>
-
-<p>At first, no doubt, the feeling of awe was uppermost,
-and only the heart inflated with divine love
-could sustain the assaults of fear and loneliness; but
-gradually, as the noise of cities died out, as the ear
-became inured to the vast hush of nature, and the
-mind to the delicious recurrence of untroubled hours—then,
-wonderfully, imperceptibly, the spirit of the
-hermit must have put forth tendrils of sympathy and
-intelligence toward the mysterious world about him.
-Think of the joy of escaping from the ceaseless
-brawls, the dirt, disease and misery of the mediæval
-town, or from the bickering, the tale-bearing, the mechanical
-devotions of the crowded monastery! Think
-of the wonder of entering, alone and undisturbed,
-into communion with this vast still world of cliff and
-cataract, of bird and beast and flower!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-There were, of course, different kinds of hermits:
-the dull kind whose only object was to escape from
-the turmoil and rivalry of the city, or the toil and
-floggings of the farm, and to live drowsily in a warm
-cleft of the rocks (not too far from the other solitaries),
-high above the populous plain alternately harried
-by war and pestilence; and there was the ecstatic,
-so filled with the immanent light that he saw neither
-cliff nor cataract, that the various face of nature was
-no more to him than a window of clear glass opening
-on the brightness of the beatific vision. But there
-must have been a third kind also—the kind in whom
-the divine love, instead of burning like a cold inward
-flame, overflowed on the whole world about him; to
-whom, in this new immediate contact with nature, the
-swallow became a sister, the wolf a brother, the very
-clods “lovers and lamps”: mute Saint Francises,
-born out of their due time, to whom the life of nature
-revealed, inarticulately but profoundly, the bond of
-brotherhood between man and the soil.</p>
-
-<p>It was to these solitaries that the wilderness truly
-confessed itself, yielding up once more all the terror
-and the poetry of its ancient life. For the cliffs and
-forests shunned of men had not always been thus deserted,
-and always there had throbbed in them the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-pulse of that strange intermediate life, between the
-man and the clod, of which the tradition lingers in all
-lonely places. The hermits of course knew this: the
-life of ancient days was still close to them. They
-knew also that the power of the cross had banished
-from temple and market-place, from garden, house
-and vineyard, a throng of tutelary beings on whom
-the welfare of men had once been thought to depend,
-but who had now been declared false to their trust,
-and driven forth to join their brothers of the hills and
-woods. This knowledge rested on no vague rumours,
-but on authenticated fact. Were not many of the
-old temples still standing, some built into the walls
-of Christian churches, others falling into desecrated
-ruin on lonely cliff and promontory? And was it not
-known that in these latter the wraiths of the old
-gods still reassembled? Many pilgrims and travellers
-bore witness to the fact. Who had not heard
-of the Jewish wayfarer, overtaken by night in a
-lonely country, who sought shelter in a ruined temple
-of Apollo, and would have been blasted by the god
-and his attendant demons, had he not (converted
-by fear) dispelled the unholy rout with the sign of
-the cross?</p>
-
-<p>A tangle of classic and mediæval traditions, Greek,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-Etruscan and Germanic, in which the gods of the
-Thessalian glades and the werewolves of northern
-forests rode the midnight blast in the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">chevauchée</i> of
-a wild Walpurgisnacht, haunted the background of
-life in that confused age when “ignorant armies
-clashed by night” on the battleground of the awakening
-human intelligence. To the citizen hugging the
-city walls, this supernatural world was dark with images
-of sin and fear; but to the dweller in the forest,
-bold enough to affront the greater terrors of self-communion,
-it must have offered a mitigating sense
-of fellowship. That it did so is proved even by some
-of the earliest legends. It was not always in forms
-of peril and perdition that the banished gods manifested
-themselves to the votaries of the usurper. To
-the dweller in the city they may have come in vengeful
-shape, like the Venus, <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">tout entière à sa proie attachée</i>,
-who held fast to the Christian bridegroom’s
-ring (though surely here one catches a note of the old
-longing); but in their native solitude they seem to
-have appeared propitiatingly, with timid proffers of
-service, as when Saint Anthony, travelling in search
-of a fellow-hermit, was guided on his way, first by a
-centaur and then by “a little man with hoofs like a
-goat.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-For generations indeed, for centuries even in that
-slow-moving time, the divinities of the old dispensation
-must have remained more familiar to the simple
-people than the strange new God of Israel. Often
-they must have stolen back in the twilight, to surprise
-and comfort the unlettered toilers who still believed
-in them, still secretly offered them the dripping
-honeycomb and bowl of ewe’s milk, or hung garlands
-in the cleft tree which they haunted. To some of
-these humble hearts, grieving for their old fireside
-gods, and a little bewildered by the demands of the
-great forbidding Christ who frowned from the
-golden heights of the Byzantine apse, the “return
-to nature” must have been like a coming home to the
-instinctive endearing ways of childhood. How could
-they be alarmed by the sight of these old exiled gods,
-familiars of the hearth and garden; they who had
-been born to the sense of such presences, to half-human
-intercourse with beings who linked man to the
-soil that nurtured him, and the roof beneath which he
-slept?</p>
-
-<p>Even the most holy and learned men of the first
-Christian centuries did not question the actual existence
-of the heathen gods, and the Fathers of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-Church expended volumes of controversy in discussing
-their origin and their influence on a Christianized
-world. A strange conflict of opinion waged around
-this burning question. By the greater number of
-authorities the old gods were believed to be demons,
-emanations of the mysterious spirit of evil, himself
-the Ahriman of the ancient Eastern dualism, who
-had cleverly smuggled himself into the new Christian
-creed. Yet the oracles, though usually regarded as
-the voices of these demons, were always believed in
-and quoted by the Christian Church, and the history
-of the dark ages abounds in allusion to the authority
-of the Sibylline books. While Christian scholarship
-thus struggled under the spell of the old beliefs, how
-could the artisan and serf have freed themselves from
-it? Gradually, indeed, the Church, foreseeing the
-perils of a divided allegiance, and fearing the baleful
-loveliness of the old gods, was to transform their
-myths into Christian legend, and so supply a new
-throng of anthropomorphic conceptions for minds
-unable to keep their faith alive on the thin abstractions
-of the schoolmen. The iconography of the
-early Church bears witness to the skill with which
-these adaptations were effected, and the slender<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-young Olympians and their symbols pressed into the
-service of the new faith; but it was long before the
-results of this process reached the popular mind, and
-meanwhile the old gods lived on in simple fellowship
-with the strange saints and angels.</p>
-
-<p>Through all the middle ages the marvellous did
-not fail from the earth: it simply receded farther
-from the centres of life, drawing after it the hearts
-of the adventurous. The Polo brothers were no
-doubt clear-sighted practical men while they drove
-their trade in Venice; but wonders pressed upon them
-when they set foot in the Great Khan’s domains. If
-an astute Italian prince, who lived till the middle of
-the fifteenth century with the light of the new humanism
-flooding his court, could yet, on his travels to
-the Holy Land and Greece, discover castles inhabited
-by enchanted snakes, as well as wonder-working
-shrines of his own creed, how could the simple hearts
-of the anchorite and solitary remain closed to the old
-wonders?</p>
-
-<p>Shapes which have once inhabited the imagination
-of man pass reluctantly out of existence. Centuries
-of poetic belief had peopled the old world with a race
-of superhuman beings, and as many centuries would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-be needed to lay their ghosts. It must be remembered,
-moreover, that no sudden cataclysm, political
-or intellectual, marked the introduction of the Christian
-faith. For three centuries after the sacrifice on
-Calvary, hardly an allusion to the new god is to be
-found in the pages of the pagan historians and philosophers.
-Even after he had led the legions of
-Constantine to victory, and so won official allegiance
-throughout the Roman world, no violent change
-marked the beginning of the new era. For centuries
-still, men ploughed the same fields with ploughs fashioned
-on the same lines, kept the same holidays with
-the same rites, and lived on the same store of accumulated
-beliefs. And in the hearts of the solitaries these
-beliefs must have lingered longest. For in fleeing
-the world they were returning to the native habitations
-of the old gods. They were nature-spirits every
-one, sprung from the wave, the cloud, the tree. To
-the cities they had been borne triumphant by the will
-of men, and from the cities they might be banished
-at its behest; but who should drive them from their
-old stronghold in the breast of nature? Their temples
-might be re-dedicated to the new god, but none
-could banish them from the temples not made with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-hands. Daylight might deny them, but twilight confessed
-them still. They made no effort to recover the
-supremacy which had been wrested from them: the
-gods know when their hour has come. But they lived
-on, shrinking back more and more into their primitive
-forms, into the vapour, the tree-trunk, the moon-track
-on the lonely sea; or revealing themselves, in
-wistful fugitive glimpses, to the mortals who had
-come to share their forest exile.</p>
-
-<p>In what gentle guise they showed themselves, one
-may see in many pictures of the Italian <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">quattro
-cento</i>, some of whose lesser painters seem to have been
-in actual communion with this pale woodland Olympus.
-The gods they depict are not the shining lords
-of the Greek heaven, but half-human, half-sylvan
-creatures, shy suppliants for mortal recognition, hovering
-gently on the verge of evanescence. Robetta,
-the Florentine engraver, transferred them to some of
-his plates, Luini caught their tender grace in his Sacrifice
-to Pan and Metamorphosis of Daphne, and
-Lorenzo Costa gives a glimpse of their sylvan revels
-in the Mythological Scene of the Louvre; but it was
-Piero di Cosimo who had the clearest intuition of
-them. The gentle furred creature of the Death of
-Procris might have been the very faun who showed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-Saint Anthony the way; and in all Cosimo’s mythological
-pictures one has the same impression of that
-intermediate world, the twilight world of the conquered,
-Christianized, yet still lingering gods, so different
-from the clear upper air of classic art.</p>
-
-<p>Was it, as the scholars would have us believe, mere
-lack of book-learning and technical skill that kept
-the painters of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">quattro</i> cento spell-bound in this
-mediæval Olympus? Were these vanishing gods and
-half-gods merely a clumsy attempt to formulate the
-classic conception of divinity? But the Pisani had
-discovered Greek plastic art two centuries earlier; but
-the uncovered wonders of Rome were being daily
-drawn and measured by skilful hands; but the silhouettes
-of the antique temples were still outlined
-against the skies of Greater Greece! No—these
-lesser artists were not struggling to embody a half-understood
-ideal. Kept nearer the soil and closer to
-the past by the very limitations of their genius, they
-left to the great masters the task of reconstituting
-classical antiquity, content to go on painting the gods
-who still lived in their blood, the gods their own forbears
-had known in the familiar streets and fields, the
-fading gods whom the hermits were last to see in the
-lost recesses of the mountain.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83">83</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_5"><a id="A_TUSCAN_SHRINE"></a>A TUSCAN SHRINE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">One</span> of the rarest and most delicate pleasures
-of the continental tourist is to circumvent
-the compiler of his guide-book. The red
-volumes which accompany the traveller through Italy
-have so completely anticipated the most whimsical
-impulses of their readers that it is now almost impossible
-to plan a tour of exploration without finding,
-on reference to them, that their author has already
-been over the ground, has tested the inns,
-measured the kilometres, and distilled from the massive
-tomes of Kugler, Burckhardt and Morelli a
-portable estimate of the local art and architecture.
-Even the discovery of incidental lapses scarcely consoles
-the traveller for the habitual accuracy of his
-statements; and the only refuge left from his omniscience
-lies in approaching the places he describes by
-a route which he has not taken.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-Those to whom one of the greatest charms of travel
-in over-civilized countries consists in such momentary
-escapes from the expected, will still find here and
-there, even in Italy, a few miles unmeasured by the
-guide-book; and it was to enjoy the brief exhilaration
-of such a discovery that we stepped out of the
-train one morning at Certaldo, determined to find
-our way thence to San Vivaldo.</p>
-
-<p>For some months we had been vaguely aware that,
-somewhere among the hills between Volterra and the
-Arno, there lay an obscure monastery containing a
-series of terra-cotta groups which were said to represent
-the scenes of the Passion. No one in Florence
-seemed to know much about them; and many of the
-people whom we questioned had never even heard of
-San Vivaldo. Professor Enrico Ridolfi, at that time
-the director of the Royal Museums at Florence, knew
-by hearsay of the existence of the groups, and told
-me that there was every reason to accept the local tradition
-which has always attributed them to Giovanni
-Gonnelli, the blind modeller of Gambassi, an obscure
-artist of the seventeenth century, much praised by
-contemporary authors, but since fallen into merited
-oblivion. Professor Ridolfi, however, had never seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-any photographs of the groups, and was not unnaturally
-disposed to believe that they were of small artistic
-merit, since Gonnelli worked much later, and in
-a more debased period of taste, than the modeller of
-the well-known groups at Varallo. Still, even when
-the more pretentious kind of Italian sculpture was
-at its lowest, a spark of its old life smouldered here
-and there in the improvisations of the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">plasticatore</i>, or
-stucco modeller; and I hoped to find, in the despised
-groups of San Vivaldo, something of the coarse
-naïveté and brutal energy which animate their more
-famous rivals of Varallo. In this hope we started in
-search of San Vivaldo; and as the guide-books told
-us that it could be reached only by way of Castel
-Fiorentino, we promptly determined to attack it
-from San Gimignano.</p>
-
-<p>At Certaldo, the birthplace of Boccaccio, where
-the train left us one April morning, we found an
-archaic little carriage, with a coachman who entered
-sympathetically into our plan for eluding our cicerone.
-He told us that he knew a road which led in
-about four hours across the mountains from San
-Gimignano to San Vivaldo; and in his charge we
-were soon crossing the poplar-fringed Elsa and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-climbing the steep ascent to San Gimignano, where
-we were to spend the night.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning, before sunrise, the little carriage
-awaited us at the inn door; and as we dashed
-out under the gateway of San Gimignano we felt the
-thrill of explorers sighting a new continent. It
-seemed, in fact, an unknown world which lay beneath
-us in the early light. The hills, so definitely etched
-at midday, at sunset so softly modelled, had melted
-into a silver sea of which the farthest waves were indistinguishably
-merged in billows of luminous mist.
-Only the near foreground retained its precision of
-outline, and that too had assumed an air of unreality.
-Fields, hedges and cypresses were tipped with an
-aureate brightness which recalled the golden ripples
-running over the grass in the foreground of Botticelli’s
-“Birth of Venus.” The sunshine had the
-density of gold-leaf: we seemed to be driving through
-the landscape of a missal.</p>
-
-<p>At first we had this magical world to ourselves, but
-as the light broadened groups of labourers began to
-appear under the olives and between the vines; shepherdesses,
-distaff in hand, drove their flocks along the
-roadside, and yokes of white oxen with scarlet fringes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-above their meditative eyes moved past us with such
-solemn deliberateness of step that fancy transformed
-their brushwood-laden carts into the sacred <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">carroccio</i>
-of the past. Ahead of us the road wound through a
-district of vineyards and orchards, but to the north
-and east the panorama of the Tuscan hills unrolled
-range after range of treeless undulations, outlined
-one upon the other, as the sun grew high, with the
-delicately-pencilled minuteness of a mountain background
-of Sebald Beham’s. Behind us the fantastic
-towers of San Gimignano dominated each bend of
-the road like some persistent mirage of the desert; to
-the north lay Castel Fiorentino, and far away other
-white villages gleamed like fossil shells embedded in
-the hill-sides.</p>
-
-<p>The elements composing the foreground of such
-Tuscan scenes are almost always extremely simple—slopes
-trellised with vine and mulberry, under which
-the young wheat runs like green flame; stretches of
-ash-coloured olive orchard; and here and there a
-farm-house with projecting eaves and open loggia,
-guarded by its inevitable group of cypresses. These
-cypresses, with their velvety-textured spires of rusty
-black, acquire an extraordinary value against the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-neutral-tinted breadth of the landscape; distributed
-with the sparing hand with which a practised writer
-uses his exclamation-points, they seem to emphasize
-the more intimate meaning of the scene; calling the
-eye here to a shrine, there to a homestead, or testifying
-by their mere presence to the lost tradition of
-some barren knoll. But this significance of detail is
-one of the chief charms of the mid-Italian landscape.
-It has none of the purposeless prodigality, the extravagant
-climaxes, of what is called “fine scenery”;
-nowhere is there any obvious largesse to the eye; but
-the very reticence of its delicately-moulded lines, its
-seeming disdain of facile effects, almost give it the
-quality of a work of art, make it appear the crowning
-production of centuries of plastic expression.</p>
-
-<p>For some distance the road from San Gimignano
-to San Vivaldo winds continuously upward, and our
-ascent at length brought us to a region where agriculture
-ceases and the way lies across heathery undulations,
-with a scant growth of oaks and ilexes in
-the more sheltered hollows. As we drove on, these
-copses gave way to stone-pines, and presently we
-dipped over the yoke of the highest ridge and saw
-below us another sea of hills, with a bare mountain-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91">91</a></span>spur
-rising from it like a scaly monster floating on
-the waves, its savage spine bristling with the walls
-and towers of Volterra.</p>
-
-<p>For nearly an hour we skirted the edge of this
-basin of hills, in sight of the ancient city on its livid
-cliff; then we turned into a gentler country, through
-woods starred with primroses, with a flash of streams
-in the hollows; and presently a murmur of church-bells
-reached us through the woodland silence. At
-the same moment we caught sight of a brick campanile
-rising above the trees on a slope just ahead of
-us, and our carriage turned from the high-road up
-a lane with scattered chapels showing their white
-façades through the foliage. This lane, making a
-sudden twist, descended abruptly between mossy
-banks and brought us out on a grass-plot before a
-rectangular monastic building adjoining the church
-of which the bells had welcomed us. Here was San
-Vivaldo, and the chapels we had passed doubtless
-concealed beneath their cupolas “more neat than
-solemn” the terra-cottas of which we were in search.</p>
-
-<p>The monastery of San Vivaldo, at one time secularized
-by the Italian government, has now been restored
-to the Franciscan order, of which its patron<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-saint was a member. San Vivaldo was born at San
-Gimignano in the latter half of the thirteenth century,
-and after joining in his youth the Tertiary
-Order of Saint Francis, retired to a hollow chestnut-tree
-in the forest of Camporeno (the site of the
-present monastery), in which cramped abode he
-passed the remainder of his life “in continual macerations
-and abstinence.” After his death the tree
-which had been sanctified in so unusual a manner
-became an object of devotion among the neighbouring
-peasantry, who, when it disappeared, raised on
-the spot an oratory to the Virgin. It is doubtful,
-however, if this memorial, which fell gradually into
-neglect, would have preserved San Vivaldo from
-oblivion, had not that Senancour of a saint found a
-Matthew Arnold in the shape of a Franciscan friar,
-a certain Fra Cherubino of Florence, who, early in
-the sixteenth century, was commissioned by his order
-to watch over and restore the abandoned sanctuary.
-Fra Cherubino, with his companions, took possession
-of the forest of Camporeno, and proceeded to
-lay the foundation-stone of a monastery which was
-to commemorate the hermit of the chestnut-tree.
-The forgotten merits of San Vivaldo were speedily<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-restored to popular favour by the friar’s eloquence,
-and often, after one of his sermons, three thousand
-people were to be seen marching in procession to the
-river Evola to fetch building-materials for the monastery.
-Meanwhile Fra Tommaso, another of the
-monks, struck by the resemblance of the hills and
-valleys of Camporeno to the holy places of Palestine,
-began the erection of the “devout chapels” which
-were to contain the representations of the Passion;
-and thus arose the group of buildings now forming
-the monastery of San Vivaldo.</p>
-
-<p>As we drove up we saw several monks at work in
-the woods and in the vegetable-gardens below the
-monastery. These took no notice of us, but in answer
-to our coachman’s summons there appeared
-another, whose Roman profile might have emerged
-from one of those great portrait-groups of the sixteenth
-century, where grave-featured monks and
-chaplains are gathered about a seated pope. This
-monk, whose courteous welcome betrayed as little
-surprise as though the lonely glades of San Vivaldo
-were daily invaded by hordes of sight-seers, informed
-us that it was his duty to conduct visitors
-to the various shrines. The chapels of the Passion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-are about twenty in number, and as many more are
-said to have perished. They are scattered irregularly
-through the wood adjoining the monastery, and our
-guide, who showed a deep interest in the works of art
-committed to his charge, assured us that the terra-cotta
-groups were undoubtedly due to Giovanni Gonnelli,
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">Il Cieco di Gambassi</i>, for whose talent he
-seemed to entertain a profound admiration. Some
-of the master’s work, he added, had been destroyed,
-or replaced by that of “qualche muratore”; but he
-assured us that in the groups which had been preserved
-we should at once recognize the touch of an
-eminent hand. As he led the way he smilingly referred
-to Giovanni Gonnelli’s legendary blindness,
-which plays a most picturesque part in the artist’s
-biography. The monk explained to us that Gonnelli
-was blind of only one eye, thus demolishing Baldinucci’s
-charming tradition of portrait-busts executed
-in total darkness to the amazement of popes and
-princes. Still, we suspected our guide of adapting
-his hero’s exploits to the incredulity of the unorthodox,
-and perhaps secretly believing in the anecdotes
-over which he affected to smile. On the
-threshold of the first chapel he paused to explain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-that some of the groups had been irreparably injured
-during the period of neglect and abandonment which
-followed the suppression of the monastery. The
-government, he added, had seized the opportunity to
-carry off from the church the Presepio in high relief
-which was Gonnelli’s masterpiece, and to strip many
-of the chapels of the escutcheons in Robbia ware that
-formerly ornamented the ceilings. “Even then,
-however,” he concluded, “our good fathers were
-keeping secret watch over the shrines, and they saved
-some of the escutcheons by covering them with whitewash;
-but the government has never given us back
-our Presepio.”</p>
-
-<p>Having thus guarded us against possible disillusionment,
-he unlocked the door of the first chapel on
-what he declared to be an undoubted work of the
-master—the Descent of the Holy Ghost upon the
-Disciples.</p>
-
-<p>This group, like all the others at San Vivaldo, is
-set in a little apsidal recess at the farther end of the
-chapel. I had expected, at best, an inferior imitation
-of the seventeenth-century groups in the more famous
-Via Crucis of Varallo, but to my surprise I
-found myself in the presence of a much finer, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-apparently a much earlier, work. The figures, which
-are of life-size, are set in a depressed arch, and fitted
-into their allotted space with something of the skill
-which the Greek sculptors showed in adapting their
-groups to the slope of the pediment. In the centre,
-the Virgin kneels on a low column or pedestal, which
-raises her partially above the surrounding figures of
-the disciples. Her attitude is solemnly prayerful,
-with a touch of nun-like severity in the folds of the
-wimple and in the gathered plaits of the gown beneath
-her cloak. Her face, furrowed with lines of
-grief and age, is yet irradiated by an inner light;
-and her hands, like those of all the figures hitherto
-attributed to Gonnelli, are singularly graceful and
-expressive. The same air of unction, of what the
-French call <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">recueillement</i>, distinguishes the face
-and attitude of the kneeling disciple on the extreme
-left; and the whole group breathes that air of devotional
-simplicity usually associated with an earlier
-and less worldly period of art.</p>
-
-<p>Next to this group, the finest is perhaps that of
-“Lo Spasimo,” the swoon of the Virgin at the sight
-of Christ bearing the cross. It is the smallest of the
-groups, being less than life-size, and comprising only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-the figure of the Virgin supported by the Marys and
-by two kneeling angels. There is a trace of primitive
-stiffness in the attempt to render the prostration of
-the Virgin, but her face expresses an extremity of
-speechless anguish which is subtly contrasted with the
-awed but temperate grief of the woman who bends
-above her; while the lovely countenances of the attendant
-angels convey another shade of tender participation:
-the compassion of those who are in the
-counsels of the Eternal, and know that</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i xml:lang="it" lang="it">In la sua volontade è nostra pace</i>.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In this group the artist has attained to the completest
-expression of his characteristic qualities: refined
-and careful modelling, reticence of emotion,
-and that “gift of tears” which is the last attribute
-one would seek in the resonant but superficial art of
-the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p>Among other groups undoubtedly due to the same
-hand are those of Christ Before Pilate, of the Ascension,
-and of the Magdalen bathing the feet of
-Christ. In the group of the Ascension the upper
-part has been grotesquely restored; but the figures
-of the Virgin and disciples, who kneel below, are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-apparently untouched, and on their faces is seen that
-look of wondering ecstasy, that reflection of the beatific
-vision, which the artist excelled in representing.
-In every group of the series his Saint John has this
-luminous look; and in that of the Ascension it
-brightens even the shrewd bearded countenances of
-the older disciples. In the scene of Christ before
-Pilate the figure of Pilate is especially noteworthy:
-his delicate incredulous lips seem just framing their
-immortal interrogation. Our guide pointed out that
-the Roman lictor in this group, who raises his arm to
-strike the accused Christ, has had his offending hand
-knocked off by the zeal of the faithful.</p>
-
-<p>The representation of the Magdalen bathing the
-feet of Christ is noticeable for the fine assemblage
-of heads about the supper-table. Those of
-Christ and of his host are peculiarly expressive; and
-Saint John’s look of tranquil tenderness contrasts
-almost girlishly with the majestic gravity of the
-neighbouring faces. The Magdalen herself is less
-happily executed; there is something actually unpleasant
-in her ramping four-footed attitude as she
-crawls toward the Christ, and the figure is probably
-by another hand. In the group of the Crucifixion,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-for the most part of inferior workmanship,
-the figures of the two thieves are finely modelled, and
-their expression of anguish has been achieved with
-the same sobriety of means which marks all the artist’s
-effects. The remaining groups in the chapels
-are without special interest, but under the portico of
-the church there are three fine figures, possibly by
-the artist of the Spasimo, representing Saint Roch,
-Saint Linus of Volterra, and one of the Fathers of
-the Church.</p>
-
-<p>There are, then, among the groups of San Vivaldo,
-five which appear to be by the same master, in addition
-to several scattered figures presumably by his
-hand; all of which have always been attributed to
-Giovanni Gonnelli, the blind pupil of Pietro Tacca.
-The figures in these groups are nearly, if not quite,
-as large as life; they have all been rudely repainted,
-and are entirely unglazed, though framed in glazed
-mouldings of the familiar Robbian style.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Ridolfi’s information was confirmed by
-the local tradition, and there seemed no doubt that
-the groups of San Vivaldo had always been regarded
-as the work of Gonnelli, an obscure artist living at a
-time when the greatest masters produced little to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-which posterity has conceded any artistic excellence.
-But one glance at the terra-cottas sufficed to show
-that they could not have been modelled in mid-seventeenth
-century: neither their merits nor their defects
-belonged to that period of art. What had the sculptor
-of San Vivaldo in common with the pupils of
-Giovanni Bologna and Il Fiammingo, that tribe of
-skilled craftsmen who peopled every church and palace
-in Italy with an impersonal flock of Junos and
-Virgin Marys, Venuses and Magdalens, distinguishable
-only by their official attributes? The more
-closely I studied the groups, the more the conviction
-grew that they were the work of an artist trained in
-an earlier tradition, and still preserving, under the
-stiffening influences of convention, a touch of that
-individuality and directness of expression which
-mark the prime of Tuscan art. The careful modelling
-of the hands, the quiet grouping, so free from
-effort and agitation, the simple draperies, the devotional
-expression of the faces, all seemed to point to
-the lingering influences of the fifteenth century; not
-indeed to the fresh charm of its noon, but to the
-refinement, the severity, of its close. The glazed
-mouldings enclosing the groups, and the coloured<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-medallions with which the ceilings of the chapels are
-decorated, suggested a direct connection with the
-later school of the Robbias; and as I looked I was
-haunted by a confused recollection of a Presepio seen
-at the Bargello, and attributed to Giovanni della
-Robbia or his school. Could this be the high-relief
-which had been removed from San Vivaldo?</p>
-
-<p>On returning to Florence I went at once to the
-Bargello, and found, as I had expected, that the
-Presepio I had in mind was indeed the one from San
-Vivaldo. I was surprised by the extraordinary resemblance
-of the heads to some of those in the groups
-ascribed to Gonnelli. I had fancied that the modeller
-of San Vivaldo might have been inspired by the Presepio
-of the Bargello; but I was unprepared for the
-identity of treatment in certain details of hair and
-drapery, and for the recurrence of the same type of
-face. The Presepio undoubtedly shows greater delicacy
-of treatment; but this is accounted for by the
-fact that the figures are much smaller, and only in
-partial relief, whereas at San Vivaldo they are so
-much detached from the background that they may
-be regarded as groups of statuary. Again, the glaze
-which covers all but the faces of the Presepio has preserved<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-its original beauty of colouring, while the
-groups of San Vivaldo have been crudely daubed
-with fresh coats of paint, and even of whitewash; and
-the effect of the Presepio is farther enhanced by an
-excessively ornate frame of fruit-garlanded pilasters,
-as well as by its charming predella with small scenes
-set between panels of arabesque. Altogether, it is a
-far more elaborate production than the terra-cottas
-of San Vivaldo, and some of its most graceful details,
-such as the dance of angels on the stable-roof, are
-evidently borrowed from the earlier <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">répertoire</i> of the
-Robbias; but in spite of these incidental archaisms
-no one can fail to be struck by the likeness of the
-central figures to certain of the statues at San Vivaldo.
-The head of Saint Joseph in the Presepio,
-for instance, with its wrinkled penthouse forehead,
-and the curled and parted beard, suggests at once
-that of the disciple seated on the right of Saint John
-in the house of the Pharisee; the same face, though
-younger, occurs again in the Pentecostal group, and
-the kneeling female figure in the Presepio is treated
-in the same manner as the youngest Mary in the
-group of the Spasimo: even the long rolled-back
-tresses, with their shell-like convolutions, are the
-same.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-The discovery of this close resemblance deepened
-the interest of the problem. It seemed hardly credible
-that a work of such artistic significance as the Via
-Crucis of San Vivaldo should not long since have
-been studied and classified. In Tuscany especially,
-where every phase of fifteenth-century art, including
-its prolongation in the succeeding century, has been
-traced and analyzed with such scrupulous care, it was
-inconceivable that so interesting an example of an
-essentially Italian style should have escaped notice.
-There could be no doubt that the groups belonged to
-the period in question. Since it was impossible not
-to reject at once the hypothetical seventeenth-century
-artist content to imitate with servile accuracy a manner
-which had already fallen into disfavour, it was
-necessary to assume that a remarkable example of
-late <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">quattro-cento</i> art had remained undiscovered,
-within a few hours’ journey from Florence, for
-nearly four hundred years. The only reasonable explanation
-of this oversight seemed to be that, owing
-to the seclusion of the monastery of San Vivaldo, the
-groups had never acquired more than local fame, and
-that, having possibly been restored in the seventeenth
-century by Giovanni Gonnelli or one of his pupils,
-they had been ascribed to him by a generation which,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-having ceased to value the work of the earlier artist,
-was profoundly impressed by the miraculous skill of
-the blind modeller, and eager to connect his name
-with the artistic treasures of the monastery.</p>
-
-<p>To the infrequent sight-seers of the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries, there would be nothing surprising
-in such an attribution. The perception of
-differences in style is a recently-developed faculty,
-and even if a student of art had penetrated to the
-wilds of San Vivaldo, he would probably have noticed
-nothing to arouse a doubt of the local tradition.
-The movement toward a discrimination of styles,
-which came in the first half of the nineteenth century,
-was marked, in the study of Italian art, by a contemptuous
-indifference toward all but a brief period
-of that art; and the mere fact that a piece of sculpture
-was said to have been executed in the seventeenth
-century would, until very lately, have sufficed to prevent
-its receiving expert attention. Thus the tradition
-which ascribed the groups of San Vivaldo to
-Giovanni Gonnelli resulted in concealing them from
-modern investigation as effectually as though they
-had been situated in the centre of an unexplored continent,
-and in procuring for me the rare sensation of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-an artistic discovery made in the heart of the most
-carefully-explored artistic hunting-ground of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>My first care was to seek expert confirmation of
-my theory; and as a step in this direction I made
-arrangements to have the groups of San Vivaldo
-photographed by Signor Alinari of Florence. I was
-obliged to leave Italy before the photographs could
-be taken; but on receiving them I sent them at once
-to Professor Ridolfi, who had listened with some
-natural incredulity to my description of the terra-cottas;
-and his reply shows that I had not overestimated
-the importance of the discovery.</p>
-
-<p>“No sooner,” he writes, “had I seen the photographs
-than I became convinced of the error of
-attributing them to Giovanni Gonnelli, called <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">Il
-Cieco di Gambassi</i>. I saw at once that they are not
-the work of an artist of the seventeenth century, but
-of one living at the close of the fifteenth or beginning
-of the sixteenth century; of an artist of the school of
-the Robbias, who follows their precepts and possesses
-their style.... The figures are most beautifully
-grouped, and modelled with profound sentiment and
-not a little <em>bravura</em>. They do not appear to me to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-all by the same author, for the Christ in the house of
-the Pharisee seems earlier and purer in style, and
-more robust in manner; also the swoon of the Madonna, ... which
-is executed in a grander style
-than the other reliefs and seems to belong to the first
-years of the sixteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>“The fact that these terra-cottas are not glazed
-does not prove that they are not the work of the Robbia
-school; for Giovanni della Robbia, for example,
-sometimes left the flesh of his figures unglazed,
-painting them with the brush; and this is precisely
-the case in a Presepio of the National Museum” (this
-is the Presepio of San Vivaldo), “a work of the Robbias,
-in which the flesh is left unglazed.</p>
-
-<p>“I therefore declare with absolute certainty that
-it is a mistake to attribute these beautiful works to
-Giovanni Gonnelli, and that they are undoubtedly a
-century earlier in date.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107">107</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_6"><a id="SUB_UMBRA_LILIORUM"></a>SUB UMBRA LILIORUM<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">AN IMPRESSION OF PARMA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Parma, at</span> first sight, lacks the engaging individuality
-of some of the smaller Italian
-towns. Of the romantic group of ducal
-cities extending from Milan to the Adriatic—Parma,
-Modena, Ferrara, Urbino—it is the least easy to hit
-off in a few strokes, to sum up in a sentence. Its
-component features, however interesting in themselves,
-fail to blend in one of those memorable wholes
-which take instant hold of the traveller’s imagination.
-The “sights” of Parma must be sought for;
-they remain separate isolated facts, and their quest
-is enlivened by few of those happy architectural incidents
-which give to a drive through Ferrara or Ravenna
-so fine a flavour of surprise.</p>
-
-<div id="i_7" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.1875em;">
- <img src="images/i_145.jpg" width="355" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>A Characteristic Street</i><br />
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">PARMA. 1901.</span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The devotee of the fourteenth century, trained by
-Ruskin to pass without even saluting any expression
-of structural art more recent than the first unfolding<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-of the pointed style, must restrict his investigations to
-the Baptistery and the outside of the Cathedral; and
-even the lax eclectic who nurses a secret weakness for
-the baroque and rejoices in the last frivolous flowering
-of the eighteenth century, finds little immediate satisfaction
-for his tastes. The general aspect of Parma
-is in fact distinctly inexpressive, and its more important
-buildings have only the relative merit of suggesting
-happier examples of the same style. This
-absence of the superlative is, in many Italian cities,
-atoned for by the episodical charm of the streets: by
-glimpses of sculptured windows, pillared court-yards,
-and cornices projecting a perfect curve
-against the blue; but the houses of Parma are plain
-almost to meanness, and though their monotonous
-succession is broken here and there by a palace-front
-embroidered with the Farnese lilies, it must be
-owned that, with rare exceptions, these façades have
-few palatial qualities but that of size. Perhaps not
-short of Ravenna could be found another Italian
-town as destitute of the more obvious graces; and
-nowhere surely but in Italy could so unpromising
-an exterior hide such varied treasures. To the lover
-of Italy—the perennial wooer whom every spring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-recalls across the Alps—there is a certain charm in
-this external dulness. After being steeped in the
-mediævalism of Siena, Perugia or Pistoja, after
-breathing at Vicenza, Modena and Bergamo the very
-air of Goldoni, Rosalba, and the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">commedia dell’ arte</i>,
-it is refreshing to come on a town that holds back and
-says: “Find me out.” Such a challenge puts the
-psychologist on his mettle and gives to his quest the
-stimulus of discovery.</p>
-
-<p>It may seem paradoxical to connect the emotions
-of the explorer with one of the most familiar centres
-of artistic influence, but it is partly because Parma is
-still dominated by Correggio that it has dropped out
-of the emotional range of the modern traveller. For
-though it is scarce a hundred years since our grandparents
-posted thither to palpitate over the master,
-their æsthetic point of view is as remote from ours
-as their mode of locomotion. By a curious perversity
-of fate Correggio, so long regarded as the leading
-exponent of “sentiment,” now survives only by virtue
-of his technique, and has shrunk to the limited
-immortality of the painter’s painter. A new generation
-may rediscover his emotional charm, but to the
-untechnical picture-lover of the present day his prodigious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112">112</a></span>
-manipulations of light and colour seldom
-atone for the Turveydrop attitudes of his saints and
-angels and for the sugary loveliness of his Madonnas.
-Lacking alike the frank naturalism of such masters
-as Palma Vecchio and Bonifazio, the sensuous mysticism
-of Sodoma and the fantastic gaiety of Tiepolo,
-Correggio seems to typify that phase of cold sentimentality
-which dwindled to its end in the “Keepsakes”
-of sixty years ago. Each generation makes
-certain demands on the art of its own period and
-seeks certain affinities in the art of the past; and a
-kind of personal sincerity is perhaps what modern
-taste has most consistently exacted: the term being
-understood not in its technical sense, as applied to
-execution, but in its imaginative significance, as
-qualifying the “message” of the artist. It is inevitable
-that the average spectator should look at
-pictures from a quite untechnical standpoint. He
-knows nothing of values, brushwork and the rest; yet
-it is to the immense majority formed by his kind
-that art addresses itself. There must therefore be
-two recognized ways of judging a picture—by its
-technique and by its expression: that is, not the mere
-story it has to tell, but its power of rendering in line<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-and colour the equivalent of some idea or of some
-emotion. There is the less reason for disputing such
-a claim because, given the power of <em>seeing soul</em>, as
-this faculty may be defined, the power of embodying
-the impression, of making it visible and comprehensible
-to others, is necessarily one of technique; and it
-is doubtful if any artist not possessed of this insight
-has received, even from his fellow-craftsmen, a lasting
-award of supremacy.</p>
-
-<p>Now the sentiment that Correggio embodied is
-one which, from the present point of view, seems
-to lack the preserving essence of sincerity. It is
-true that recent taste has returned with a certain passion
-to the brilliant mannerisms of the eighteenth
-century; but it is because they are voluntary mannerisms,
-as frankly factitious as the masquerading
-of children, that they have retained their hold on the
-fancy. As there is a soul in the games of children,
-or in any diversion entered into with conviction, so
-there is a soul, if only an inconsequent spoiled child’s
-soul, in the laughing art of the eighteenth century.
-It is the defect of Correggio’s art that it expresses
-no conviction whatever. He offers us no clue to the
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">état d’âme</i> of his celestial gymnasts. They do not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-seem to be honestly in love with this world or the
-next, or to take any personal part in the transactions
-in which the artist has engaged them. In fact, they
-are simply models, smirking and attitudinizing at
-so much an hour, and so well trained that even their
-individuality as models remains hidden behind the
-fixed professional smile. The conclusion is that if
-they are only models to the spectator, it is because
-they were only models to Correggio; that his art
-had no transmuting quality, and that he was always
-conscious of the wires which held on the wings.</p>
-
-<p>It may, indeed, be argued that devotional painting
-in Italy had assumed, in the sixteenth century, a
-stereotyped form from which a stronger genius than
-Correggio’s could hardly have freed it; and that
-the triumphs of that day should be sought rather in
-the domain of decorative art, where conventionality
-becomes a strength, and where the æsthetic imagination
-finds expression in combinations of mere line
-and colour. Many of the decorative paintings of
-the sixteenth century are indeed among the most delightful
-products of Italian art; and it might have
-been expected that Correggio’s extraordinary technical
-skill and love of rhythmically whirling lines<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-would have found complete development in this direction.
-It is, of course, permissible to the artist to
-regard the heavenly hosts as mere factors in a decorative
-composition; and to consider Thrones, Dominations,
-Princedoms, Virtues, Powers only in their
-relation to the diameter of a dome or to the curve of
-a spandril; but to the untechnical spectator such a
-feat is almost impossible, and in judging a painter
-simply as a decorator, the public is more at its ease
-before such frankly ornamental works as the famous
-frescoes of the convent of Saint Paul. It might, in
-fact, have been expected that Correggio would be at
-his best in executing the commission of the light-hearted
-Abbess, who had charged him to amplify the
-symbolism of her device (the crescent moon) by
-adorning her apartments with the legend of Diana.
-There is something delightfully characteristic of the
-period in this choice of the Latmian goddess to typify
-the spirit of monastic chastity; and equally characteristic
-is Correggio’s acceptance of the commission
-as an opportunity to paint classic bas-reliefs and
-rosy flesh and blood, without much attempt to express
-the somewhat strained symbolism of the myth.</p>
-
-<div id="i_8" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_155.jpg" width="600" height="363" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>The “Little Palace of the Garden”</i><br />
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">PARMA. 1901.</span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The vaulted ceiling of the room is treated as a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116">116</a></span>
-trellised arbour, through which rosy loves peep down
-on the blonde Diana emerging from grey drifts of
-evening mist: a charming composition, with much
-grace of handling in the figure of the goddess and in
-the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">grisailles</i> of the lunettes below the cornice; yet
-lacking as a whole just that ethereal quality which is
-supposed to be the distinctive mark of Correggio’s
-art. Compared with the delicate trellis-work and
-flitting cupids of Zucchero’s frescoes at the Villa di
-Papa Giulio, Correggio’s design is heavy and dull.
-The masses of foliage are too uniform and the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">putti</i>
-too fat and stolid for their skyey task. This failure
-of the decorative sense is rendered more noticeable
-by the happy manner in which Araldi, a generation
-earlier, had solved a similar problem in the adjoining
-room. Here the light arabesques and miniature
-divinities of the ceiling, and the biblical and mythological
-scenes of the frieze, are presented with all
-that earnest striving after personal truth of expression
-that is the ruling principle of fifteenth-century
-art. It is this faculty of personal interpretation,
-always kept in strict abeyance to the laws of decorative
-fitness, which makes the mural painting of the
-fifteenth century so satisfying that, compared with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-the Mantegna room at Mantua, the Sala del Cambio
-at Perugia, the Sala degli Angeli at Urbino, and the
-frescoed room at the Schifanoia at Ferrara, all the
-later wall-decorations in Italy (save perhaps the
-Moretto room at Brescia) seem to fall a little short
-of perfection.</p>
-
-<p>Of a much earlier style of mural painting, Parma
-itself contains one notable example. The ancient
-octagon of the Baptistery, with its encircling arcade
-and strange frieze of leaping, ramping and running
-animals, is outwardly one of the most interesting
-buildings in Italy; while its interior has a character
-of its own hardly to be matched even in that land of
-fiercely competing individualism. Downward from
-the apex of the dome the walls are frescoed in successive
-tiers with figures of saints in rigid staring attitudes,
-interspersed with awkward presentments of
-biblical story. All these designs are marked by a
-peculiar naïveté of composition and great vehemence
-of gesture and expression. Those in the dome and
-between the windows are attributed to the thirteenth
-century, while the lower frescoes are of the fourteenth;
-but so crude in execution are the latter that
-they combine with the upper rows in producing an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-effect of exceptional decorative value, to which a note
-of strangeness is given by the introduction, here and
-there, of high-reliefs of saints and angels, so placed
-that the frescoes form a background to their projecting
-figures. The most successful of these sculptures
-is the relief of the flight into Egypt: a solemn procession
-led by a squat square-faced angel with unwieldy
-wings and closed by two inscrutable-looking
-figures in Oriental dress.</p>
-
-<p>Seen after the Baptistery, the Cathedral is perhaps
-something of a disappointment; yet to pass
-from its weather-beaten front, between the worn red
-lions of the ancient porch, into the dusky magnificence
-of the interior, is to enjoy one of those contrasts
-possible only in a land where the humblest
-wayside chapel may disclose the stratified art of centuries.
-In the great cupola, Correggio lords it with
-the maelstrom of his heavenly host; and the walls of
-the nave are covered with frescoes by Mazzola and
-Gambara, to which time has given a golden-brown
-tone, as of sumptuous hangings, that atones for the
-pretentious insignificance of their design. There is a
-venerable episcopal throne attributed to Benedetto
-Antelami, that strangely dramatic sculptor to whom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-the reliefs of the Baptistery are also ascribed, and
-one of the chapels contains a magnificent Descent
-from the Cross with his signature; but except for
-these works the details of the interior, though including
-several fine sepulchral monuments and a
-ciborium by Alberti, are not exceptional enough to
-make a lasting impression.</p>
-
-<p>On almost every Italian town, whatever succession
-of masters it may have known, some one family has
-left its dominant mark; and Parma is distinctively
-the city of the Farnesi. Late-comers though they
-were, their lilies are everywhere, over gateways, on
-palace-fronts and in the aisles of churches; and they
-have bequeathed to the town a number of its most
-characteristic buildings, from the immense unfinished
-Palazzo della Pilotta to the baroque fountain
-of parti-coloured marbles which enlivens with its
-graceful nymphs and river-gods the grassy solitude
-of the palace-square. It is to Rannuccio I, the greatest
-of these ducal builders, that Parma owes the gigantic
-project of the Pilotta, as well as the Farnese
-theatre and the University. To this group Duke
-Ottavio, at a later date, added the charming “Little
-Palace of the Garden,” of which the cheerful yellow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-façade still overlooks the pleached alleys of a formal
-pleasance adorned, under the Bourbon rulers who
-succeeded him, with groups of statuary by the court
-sculptor, a Frenchman named Jean Baptiste Boudard.
-Ottavio commissioned Agostino Carracci to
-decorate the interior of the ducal villa, and even now,
-after years of incredible neglect and ill-usage, the
-walls of several rooms show remains of the work executed,
-as the artist’s pious inscription runs, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">sub
-umbra liliorum</i>. The villa has been turned into barracks,
-and it is difficult to gain admission; but the
-persistent sight-seer may succeed in seeing one room,
-where large-limbed ruddy immortals move, against
-a background of bluish summer landscape, through
-the slow episodes of some Olympian fable. This
-apartment shows the skill of the Carracci as decorators
-of high cool ceremonious rooms, designed to
-house the midsummer idleness of a court still under
-the yoke of Spanish etiquette, and living in a climate
-where the linear vivacities of Tiepolo might have
-been conducive to apoplexy.</p>
-
-<div id="i_9" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_163.jpg" width="392" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>The Worn Red Lions<br />
- of the Ancient Porch</i><br />
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">PARMA. 1901.</span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The most noteworthy building which arose in
-Parma under the shadow of the lilies is, however, the
-famous theatre built by Aleotti for Duke Rannuccio,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121">121</a></span>
-and opened in 1620 to celebrate the marriage of Odoardo
-Farnese with Margaret of Tuscany. Externally
-it is a mere outgrowth of the palace; but to
-those who feel a tenderness for the vivacious figures
-of the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">commedia dell’ arte</i> and have followed their
-picturesque wanderings through the pages of Gozzi
-and Goldoni, the interior is an immediate evocation
-of the strolling theatrical life of the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries—that strange period when
-players were passed on from duchy to principality
-to perform at wedding-feasts and to celebrate political
-victories; when kings and princes stood sponsors
-to their children, and the Church denied them
-Christian burial.</p>
-
-<p>The Farnese theatre is one of those brilliant improvisations
-in wood and plaster to which Italian
-artists were trained by centuries of hurriedly-organized
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">trionfi</i>, state processions, religious festivals, returns
-from war, all demanding the collaboration of
-sculptor, architect and painter in the rapid creation
-of triumphal arches, architectural perspectives, statuary,
-chariots, flights of angels, and galleons tossing
-on simulated seas: evanescent visions of some <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">pays
-bleu</i> of Boiardo or of Ariosto, destined to crumble<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-the next day like the palace of an evil enchanter. To
-those who admire the peculiarly Italian gift of spontaneous
-plastic invention, the art of the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">plasticatore</i>,
-to borrow an untranslatable term, such buildings are
-of peculiar interest, since, owing to the nature of
-their construction, so few have survived; and of
-these probably none is as well preserved as Aleotti’s
-theatre. The ceiling of painted canvas is gone, and
-the splendid Farnese dukes bestriding their chargers
-in lofty niches on each side of the proscenium are
-beginning to show their wooden anatomy through
-the wounds in their plaster sides; but the fine composition
-of the auditorium, and the throng of stucco
-divinities attitudinizing in the niches and on the balustrades,
-and poised above the arch of the proscenium,
-still serve to recall the original splendour of the
-scene. The dusty gloom of the place suggests some
-impending transformation, and when fancy has restored
-to the roof the great glass chandeliers now
-hanging in the neighbouring museum, their light
-seems to fall once more on boxes draped with crimson
-velvet and filled with lords and ladies in the sumptuous
-Spanish habit, while on the stage, before a gay
-perspective of colonnades and terraces, Isabel and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123">123</a></span>
-Harlequin and the Capitan Spavento, <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">plasticatori</i>
-of another sort, build on the scaffolding of some familiar
-intrigue the airy superstructure of their wit.</p>
-
-<p>In the adjoining palace no such revival is possible.
-Most museums in Italy are dead palaces, and none
-is more inanimate than that of Parma. Many of
-the ducal treasures are still left—family portraits
-by Suttermans and Sir Antony Mor, Bernini-like
-busts of the Bourbon dukes of Parma, with voluminous
-wigs and fluttering steinkerks; old furniture,
-old majolica, and all those frail elaborate trifles that
-the irony of fate preserves when brick and marble
-crumble. All these accessories of a ruined splendour,
-catalogued, numbered and penned up in glass cases,
-can no more revive the life of which they formed a
-part than the contents of an herbarium can renew the
-scent and murmur of a summer meadow. The transient
-holders of all that pomp, from the great Alexander
-to the Duchess Marie Louise of Austria, his
-last unworthy successor, look down with unrecognizing
-eyes on this dry alignment of classified objects;
-and one feels, in passing from one room to
-another, as though some fanciful heroic poem, depicting
-the splendid vanities of life, and depending<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-for its effect on a fortunate collocation of words, had
-been broken up and sorted out into the different
-parts of speech.</p>
-
-<p>This is the view of the sentimentalist; but from
-that of the student of art the museum of Parma is
-perhaps more interesting than the palace could ever
-have been. The Correggios are in themselves an unmatched
-possession; the general collection of pictures
-is large and varied, and the wealth of bronzes and
-marbles, of coins, medals and architectural fragments
-of different schools and periods, would be remarkable
-in any country but Italy, where the inexhaustible
-richness of the small towns is a surprise to the most
-experienced traveller.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole, the impression carried away from
-Parma is incomplete and confusing. The name calls
-forth as many scattered images as contradictory associations.
-It is doubtful if the wanderer reviewing
-from a distance his Italian memories will be able to
-put any distinct picture of the place beside the concrete
-vision of Siena, Mantua or Vicenza. It will
-not hang as a whole in the gallery of his mental vignettes;
-but in the mosaic of detached impressions
-some rich and iridescent fragments will represent his
-after-thoughts of Parma.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125">125</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_7"><a id="MARCH_IN_ITALY"></a>MARCH IN ITALY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">March</span> is in some respects the most exquisite
-month of the Italian year. It is the
-month of transitions and surprises, of vehement
-circling showers with a golden heart of sunlight,
-of bare fields suffused overnight with fruit-blossoms,
-and hedgerows budding as suddenly as the
-staff of Tannhäuser. It is the month in which the
-northern traveller, grown distrustful of the promised
-clemency of Italian skies, and with the winter bitterness
-still in his bones, lighting on a patch of primroses
-under a leafless bank, or on the running flame of
-tulips along the trenches of an olive orchard, learns
-that Italy <em>is</em> Italy, after all, and hugs himself at
-thought of the black ultramontane March.</p>
-
-<p>It must be owned, however, that it is not, even in
-Italy, the safest month for excursions. There are
-too many <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">voltes-face</i> toward winter, too many moody<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-hesitating dawns, when the skies will not declare
-themselves for or against rain, but hanging neutral
-till the hesitating traveller sets forth, seem then to
-take a cruel joy in proving that he should have stayed
-at home. Yet there are rare years when some benign
-influence tames the fitfulness of March, subduing her
-to a long sequence of golden days, and then he who
-has trusted to her promise receives the most exquisite
-reward. It takes faith in one’s luck to catch step
-with such a train of days, and fare with them northward
-across the wakening land; but now and then
-this fortune befalls the pilgrim, and then he sees a
-new Italy, an Italy which discovery seems to make
-his own. The ancient Latin landscape, so time-furrowed
-and passion-scarred, lies virgin to the eye,
-fresh-bathed in floods of limpid air. The scene seems
-recreated by the imagination, it wears the pristine
-sparkle of those</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>Towers of fables immortal fashioned from mortal dreams</i><br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">which lie beyond the geographer’s boundaries, like
-the Oceanus of the early charts; it becomes, in short,
-the land in which anything may happen, save the dull,
-the obvious and the expected.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129">129</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>It was, for instance, on such a March day that we
-rowed across the harbour of Syracuse to the mouth
-of the Anapus.</p>
-
-<p>Our brown rowers, leaping overboard, pushed the
-flat-bottomed boat through the line of foam where
-bay and river meet, and we passed over to the smooth
-current which slips seaward between flat banks
-fringed with arundo donax and bamboo. The bamboo
-grows in vast feathery thickets along these Sicilian
-waters, and the slightly angular precision of
-its stem and foliage allies itself well with the classic
-clearness of the landscape—a landscape which, in
-spite of an occasional excess of semi-tropical vegetation,
-yet retains the Greek quality of producing
-intense effects with a minimum of material. There
-is nothing tropical about the shores of the Anapus;
-but as the river turns and narrows, the boat passes
-under an arch of Egyptian papyrus, that slender
-exotic reed, brought to Sicily, it is supposed, by her
-Arabian colonizers, and thriving, strangely enough,
-in no other European soil. This plumy tunnel so
-enclosed us as we advanced, that for long stretches<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130">130</a></span>
-of our indolent progress we saw only the face of the
-stream, the summer insects flickering on it, and the
-continuous golden line of irises along its edge. Now
-and then, however, a gap in the papyrus showed, as
-through an arch in a wall, a prospect of flat fields
-with grazing cattle, or a solitary farm-house, low,
-brown, <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">tassée</i>, with a date-palm spindling against its
-well-curb, or the white flank of Etna suddenly thrust
-across the sky-line.</p>
-
-<p>So, after a long dreamy lapse of time, we came to
-the source of the river, the azure bowl of the nymph
-Cyane, who pours her pure current into the broader
-Anapus. The haunt of the nymph is a circular reed-fringed
-pool, supposedly so crystalline that she may
-still be seen lurking on its pebbly bed; but the recent
-spring rains had clouded her lair, and though, in this
-legend-haunted land, one always feels the nearness of</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>The faun pursuing, the nymph pursued</i>,<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">the pool of Cyane revealed no sign of her presence.</p>
-
-<p>Disappointed in our quest, we turned back and
-glided down the Anapus again to visit her sister-nymph,
-the more famed but less fortunate Arethusa,
-whose unhappy fate it is to mingle her wave with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-the brackish sea-tide in the very harbour of Syracuse,
-where, under the wall of the quay, the poor creature
-languishes in a prison of masonry, her papyrus
-wreath sending up an anæmic growth from the slimy
-bottom filled with green.</p>
-
-<p>We were glad to turn from this desecrated fount
-to the long russet-coloured town curving above its
-harbour. Syracuse, girt with slopes of flowering
-orchard-land, lies nobly against the fortified ridge of
-Epipolæ. But the city itself—richer in history than
-any other on that crowded soil, and characteristically
-symbolized by its Greek temple welded into the masonry
-of a mediæval church—even the thronging associations
-of the city could not, on a day so prodigal
-of sunlight, hold us long within its walls. These
-walls, the boundaries of the Greek Ortygia, have once
-more become the limits of the shrunken modern town,
-and crossing the moat beyond them, we found ourselves
-at once in full country. There was a peculiar
-charm in the sudden transition from the old brown
-streets saturated with history to this clear smiling
-land where only the spring seemed to have written its
-tale—its ever-recurring, ever-fresh record of blossom
-and blade miraculously renewed. The country about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-Syracuse is peculiarly fitted to be the exponent of
-this gospel of renewal. The land stretches away in
-mild slopes laden with acre on acre of blossoming
-fruit-trees, and of old olive orchards under which the
-lilac anemones have room to spread in never-ending
-sheets of colour. The open pastures are plumed with
-silvery asphodel, and every farm-house has its glossy
-orange-grove fenced from the road by a rampart of
-prickly pear.</p>
-
-<p>The highway itself, as we drove out toward Epipolæ,
-was thronged with country-folk who might
-have been the descendants of Theocritan nymphs and
-mortal shepherds, brown folk with sidelong agate
-eyes, trudging dustily after their goats and asses, or
-jogging townward in their little blue or red carts
-painted with legends of the saints and stories from
-Ariosto. After a mile or two the road curved slowly
-upward and we began to command a widening prospect.
-At our feet lay Syracuse, girt by the Plemmyrian
-marsh, and by the fields and orchards which
-were once the crowded Greek suburbs of Neapolis,
-Tyche and Achradina; and beyond the ridge of
-Epipolæ and the nearer hills, Etna rose white and
-dominant against the pale Calabrian coast-line.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133">133</a></span>
-The fortress of Euryalus, on the crest of Epipolæ,
-might be called the Greek Carcassonne, since it is the
-best-preserved example of ancient military architecture
-in Europe. Archways, galleries, massive flights
-of stairs and long subterranean passages may still
-be traced by the archæologically minded in the mass
-of fallen stones marking the site of the ruin; and
-even the idler unversed in military construction will
-feel the sudden nearness of the past when he comes
-upon the rock-hewn sockets to which the cavalry attached
-their horses.</p>
-
-<p>Euryalus, however, more fortunate than Carcassonne,
-has escaped the renovating hand of a Viollet-le-Duc,
-and its broken ramparts lie in mellow ruin
-along the backbone of the ridge, feathered with those
-delicate growths which, in the Mediterranean countries,
-veil the fallen works of man without concealing
-them. That day, indeed, the prodigal blossoming of
-the Sicilian March had covered the ground with a
-suffusion of colour which made even the mighty ruins
-of the fortress seem a mere background for the triumphant
-pageant of the spring. From the tall silhouette
-of the asphodel, classic in outline as in name,
-to the tendrils of scarlet and yellow vetch capriciously<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-fretting the ancient stones with threads of richest
-colour, every inch of ground and every cleft of masonry
-was overrun with some delicate wild tracery of
-leaf and blossom.</p>
-
-<p>But to those who first see Syracuse in the month
-of March—the heart of the Sicilian spring—it must
-appear pre-eminently as one vast unbounded garden.
-The appeal of architecture and history pales before
-this vast glory of the loosened soil. The walls and
-towers will remain—but this transient beauty must
-be caught upon the wing. And so from the flowered
-slopes of Euryalus we passed to the richer profusion
-of the gardens that adjoin the town. Fringing the
-road by which we descended, a hundred spring flowers—anemones,
-lupins, sweet alyssum, herb-Robert,
-snapdragon and the fragrant wild mignonette—linked
-the uncultivated country-side to the rich horticulture
-of the suburbs; and in the suburbs the vegetation
-reached so tropical an excess that the spring
-pilgrim’s memory of Syracuse must be a blur of
-golden-brown ruins immersed in a sea of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>There are gardens everywhere, gardens of all
-kinds and classes, from the peasant’s hut hedged with
-pink geraniums to the villa with its terraced sub-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135">135</a></span>tropical
-growths; but most wonderful, most unexpected
-of all, are the famous gardens of the quarries.
-Time has perhaps never done a more poetic thing
-than in turning these bare unshaded pits of death,
-where the Greek captives of Salamis died under the
-lash of the Sicilian slave-driver and the arrows of
-the Sicilian sun, into deep cool wells of shade and
-verdure. Here, where the chivalry of Athens perished
-of heat and thirst, a damp mantle of foliage
-pours over the red cliff-sides, fills the depths with the
-green freshness of twilight, and effaces, like a pitiful
-hand on a burning brow, the record of that fiery martyrdom.
-And the quarries are as good to grow flowers
-in as to torture men. The equable warmth of
-these sheltered ravines is as propitious to vegetation
-as it was destructive to human life; and wherever soil
-has accumulated, on the ledges and in the hollows, the
-“blood of the martyrs” sends up an exuberant
-growth.</p>
-
-<p>On the edge of one of these hell-pits a monastery
-has been built; above another stands a villa; and monastic
-and secular hands have transformed the sides
-of the quarries into gardens of fantastic beauty.
-Paths and rocky stairways fringed with fern wind<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-down steeply from the upper world, now tunnelled
-through dense growths of cypress and olive, now
-skirting cliff-walks dripping with cataracts of ivy,
-or tufted with the glaucous spikes and scarlet rockets
-of gigantic cactuses. In the depths, where time has
-amassed a soil incredibly rich, the vegetation becomes
-prodigious, febrile, like that of the delirious garden
-in “La Faute de l’Abbé Mouret.” Here the paths
-wind under groves of orange and lemon trees, over
-a dense carpeting of violets, stocks, narcissus and
-honey-scented hyacinths. Trellises of red roses lift
-their network against the light, and damp clefts of
-the rock are black with dripping maidenhair. Here
-are tall hedges of blue rosemary and red-gold abutilon,
-there shrubby masses of anthemisia, heliotrope
-and lavender. Overhead, black cypress-shafts spring
-from the bright sea of foliage, and at the pit’s brink,
-where the Syracusan citizens, under their white umbrellas,
-used to lean over and taunt the captives dying
-in the sun, a great hedge of prickly pear writhes
-mockingly against the sky.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137">137</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>At noon of such another day we set out from Rome
-for Caprarola.</p>
-
-<p>The still air had a pearly quality and a mauve haze
-hung upon the hills. Our way lay north-westward,
-toward the Ciminian mountains. Once free of the
-gates, our motor started on its steady rush along the
-white highway, first past the walls of vineyard and
-garden, and then across the grey waste spaces of the
-Campagna. The Roman champaign is the type of
-variety in monotony. Seen from the heights of the
-city, it reaches in silvery sameness toward all points
-of the compass; but to a near view it reveals a dozen
-different physiognomies. Toward Frascati and the
-Alban hills it wears the ordered garb of fertility:
-wheat-fields, vineyards and olive-groves. South-eastward,
-in the direction of the Sabine range, its
-white volcanic reaches are tufted with a dark <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">maqui</i>
-of sullen and reluctant growth, while in the west the
-Agro Romano rolls toward Monterosi and Soracte
-in sere reaches of pasture-land mottled with hillock
-and ravine.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually, as we left the outskirts of Rome, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-grandeur of this stern landscape declared itself. To
-the right and left the land stretched out in endless
-grassy reaches, guarded here and there by a lonely
-tomb or by the tall gateway of some abandoned vineyard.
-Presently the road began to rise and dip, giving
-us, on the ascent, sweeping views over a wider
-range of downs which rolled away in the north-west
-to the Ciminian forest, and in the east to the hazy
-rampart of the Sabine hills. Ahead of us the same
-undulations swept on interminably, the road undulating
-with them, now engulfed in the trough of the
-land, now tossed into view on some farther slope, like
-a streak of light on a flying sea. There was something
-strangely inspiriting in the call of this fugitive
-road. From ever-lengthening distances it seemed to
-signal us on, luring us up slope after slope, and
-racing ahead of us down the long declivities where
-the motor panted after it like a pack on the trail.</p>
-
-<p>For some time the thrill of the chase distracted us
-from a nearer view of the foreground; but gradually
-there stole on us a sense of breadth and quietude, of
-sun-bathed rugged fields with black cattle grazing in
-their hollows, and here and there a fortified farm-house
-lifting its bulk against the sky. These fortress-farms<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-of the Campagna, standing sullen and
-apart among the pacific ruins of pagan Rome—tombs,
-aqueducts and villas—give a glimpse of that
-black age which rose on the wreck of the Imperial
-civilization. All the violence and savagery of the
-mediæval city, with its great nobles forever in revolt,
-its popes plotting and trembling within the Lateran
-walls, or dragging their captive cardinals from point
-to point as the Emperor or the French King moved
-his forces—all the mysterious crimes of passion and
-cupidity, the intrigues, ambushes, massacres with
-which the pages of the old chronicles reek, seem symbolized
-in one of those lowering brown piles with its
-battlemented sky-line, crouched on a knoll of the
-waste land which its masters helped to devastate.</p>
-
-<p>At length a blue pool, the little lake of Monterosi,
-broke the expanse of the downs; then we flashed
-through a poor roadside village of the same name,
-and so upward into a hill-region where hedgerows
-and copses began to replace the brown tufting of the
-Campagna. On and on we fled, ever upward to the
-town of Ronciglione, perched, like many hill-cities of
-this region, on the sheer edge of a ravine, and stretching
-its line of baroque churches and stately crumbling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-palaces along one steep street to the edge of a lofty
-down.</p>
-
-<p>Across this plateau, golden with budding broom,
-we flew on to the next height, and here paused to
-embrace the spectacle—beneath us, on the left, the
-blue volcanic lake of Vico in its oak-fringed crater;
-on the right, far below, the plain of Etruria, scattered
-with ancient cities and ringed in a mountain-range
-still touched with snow; and rising from the
-middle of the plain, Soracte, proud, wrinkled, solitary,
-with the ruined monastery of Sant’ Oreste just
-seen on its crest.</p>
-
-<div id="i_10" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_187.jpg" width="600" height="448" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>An Italian Sky in March</i>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>From this mount of vision we dropped abruptly
-downward by a road cut in the red tufa-banks. Presently
-there began to run along the crest of the tufa
-on our left a lofty wall gripping the flanks of the
-rock, and overhung by dark splashes of ivy and
-clumps of leafless trees—one of those rugged Italian
-walls which are the custodians of such hidden treasures
-of scent and verdure. This wall continued
-to run parallel with us till our steep descent ended
-in a stone-paved square, with the roofs of a town
-sliding abruptly away below it on one side, and
-above, on the other, the great ramps and terraces<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-of a pentagonal palace clenched to the highest
-ledge of the cliff. Such is the first sight of
-Caprarola.</p>
-
-<p>Never, surely, did feudal construction so insolently
-dominate its possessions. The palace of the
-great Farnese Cardinal seems to lord it not only over
-the golden-brown town which forms its footstool, but
-over the far-reaching Etrurian plain, the forests and
-mountains of the horizon: over Nepi, Sutri, Cività
-Castellana, and the lonely pride of Soracte. And the
-grandeur of the site is matched by the arrogance of
-the building: no villa, but a fortified and moated palace,
-or rather a fortress planned in accordance with
-the most advanced military science of the day, but
-built on the lines of a palace. Yet on such a March
-day as this, with the foreground of brown oak-woods
-all slashed and fringed with rosy almond-bloom; with
-the haze of spring just melting from the horizon, and
-revealing depth after depth of mountain-blue; with
-March clouds fleeing overhead, and flinging trails of
-shadow and showers of silver light across the undulations
-of the plain—on such a day, the insolent Farnese
-keep, for all its background of gardens, frescoes,
-and architectural splendour, seems no longer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-the lord of the landscape, but a mere point of vantage
-from which to view the outspread glory at our feet.</p>
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>The drive from Viterbo to Montefiascone lies across
-the high plateau between the Monte Cimino and the
-lake of Bolsena.</p>
-
-<p>For the best part of the way, the landscape is pastoral
-and agricultural, with patches of oak-wood to
-which in March the leaves still cling; and on this fitful
-March morning, with rain in the shifting clouds,
-the ploughmen move behind their white oxen under
-umbrellas as vividly green as the young wheat. Here
-are none of the great bursts of splendour which mark
-the way from Rome to Caprarola; and it seems fitting
-that this more prosaic road should be travelled
-at a sober pace, in a Viterban posting-chaise, behind
-two plodding horses. The horses are not so plodding,
-however, but that they swing us briskly enough
-down the short descents of the rolling country, which
-now becomes wilder and more diversified, with
-stretches of woodland interspersed with a heathy
-growth of low fragrant shrubs. Here the slopes are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-thick with primroses, and the blue vinca and violet
-peep through the ivy trails of the hedgerows; but the
-trees are still leafless, for it is a high wind-swept region,
-where March practises few of her milder arts.
-A lonely country too: no villages, and only a few solitary
-farm-houses, are to be seen as we jog up and
-down the monotonous undulations of the road to the
-foot of Montefiascone.</p>
-
-<p>The town overhangs us splendidly, on a spur above
-the lake of Bolsena; and a long ascent between fortified
-walls leads to the summit on which its buildings
-are huddled. Through the curtain of rain which the
-skies have now let down, the crooked streets with their
-archways and old blackened stone houses present no
-striking effects, though doubtless a bright day would
-draw from them some of that latent picturesqueness
-which is never far to seek when Italian masonry and
-Italian sunlight meet. Meanwhile, however, the rain
-persists, and the environment of Montefiascone remains
-so obstinately shrouded that, for all we know,
-the town may be situated “Nowhere,” like the famous
-scene in Festus.</p>
-
-<p>Through this rain-muffled air, led blindfold as it
-were, we presently descend again by the same windings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144">144</a></span>
-to the city gates, and thence, following the road
-to Bagnorea, come on the desolate church of San
-Flaviano, lying by itself in a hollow beneath the walls
-of the town. In our hasty dash from the carriage to
-the door, there is just time to receive the impression
-of an immensely old brick façade, distorted and
-scarred with that kind of age which only the Latin
-sense of antiquity has kept a word to describe—then
-we are in a low-arched cavernous interior, with spectral
-frescoes emerging here and there from the universal
-background of whitewash, and above the choir
-a spreading gallery or upper church, which makes of
-the lower building a species of crypt above ground.
-And here—O irony of fate!—in this old, deserted
-and damp-dripping church, under a worn slab before
-the abandoned altar (for it is only in the upper
-church that mass continues to be said)—here, a castaway
-as it were from both worlds, lies that genial offshoot
-of a famous race, the wine-loving Bishop Fugger,
-whose lust of the palate brought him to this
-lonely end. It would have been impossible to pass
-through Montefiascone without dropping a commemorative
-tear on the classic Est-Est-Est upon
-which, till so lately, a good cask of Montefiascone has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-been yearly broached in memory of the prelate’s end;
-yet one feels a regret, almost, in carrying away such
-a chill recollection of the poor Bishop’s fate, in leaving
-him to the solitude of that icy limbo which seems
-so disproportionate a punishment for his amiable
-failing.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving San Flaviano, we press on toward Orvieto
-through an unbroken blur of rain. The weary
-miles leave no trace in memory, and we are still in an
-indeterminate region of wood and pasture and mist-muffled
-hills when gradually the downpour ceases,
-and streaks of sunset begin to part the clouds. Almost
-at the same moment a dip of the road brings us
-out above a long descent, with a wavy plain at its
-base, and reared up on a cliff above the plain a fierce
-brown city, walled, towered and pinnacled, which
-seems to have dropped from the sky like some huge
-beast of prey and locked its talons in the rock. All
-about the plain, in the watery evening light, rises a
-line of hills, with Monte Amiata thrusting its peak
-above the circle; the nearer slopes are clothed in olive
-and cypress, with castles and monasteries jutting
-from their ledges, and just below us the sight of an
-arched bridge across a ravine, with a clump of trees<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-at its approach, touches a spring of memory and
-transports us from the actual scene to its pictured
-presentment—Turner’s “Road to Orvieto.”</p>
-
-<p>It was, in fact, from this point that the picture was
-painted; and looking forth on the landscape, with
-its stormy blending of sepia-hues washed in pallid
-sunlight, one sees in it the vindication of Turner’s art—that
-true impressionism which consists not in the
-unimaginative noting of actual “bits,” but in the reconstruction
-of a scene as it has flowed into the mould
-of memory, the merging of fragmentary facts into
-a homogeneous impression. This is what Turner has
-done to the view of Orvieto from the Bolsena road,
-so summing up and interpreting the spirit of the
-scene that the traveller pausing by the arched bridge
-above the valley loses sense of the boundaries between
-art and life, and lives for a moment in that mystical
-region where the two are one.</p>
-
-<h3>V</h3>
-
-<p>Our friends and counsellors had for many years
-warned us against visiting Vallombrosa in March—the
-month which oftenest finds us in Tuscany.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-“Wait till June,” they advised—and knowing the
-complexity of influences which go to make up an
-Italian “sensation,” and how, for lack of one ingredient,
-the whole mixture may lose its savour, we had
-obediently waited for June. But June in Florence
-never seemed to come—“the time and the place”
-were no more to meet in our horoscope than in the
-poet’s; and so, one year when March was playing at
-April, we decided to take advantage of her mood
-and risk the adventure.</p>
-
-<p>We set out early, in that burnished morning air
-which seems, as with a fine burin, to retrace overnight
-every line of the Tuscan landscape. The railway
-runs southward along the Arno valley to Sant’ Ellero;
-and we might have been travelling through
-some delicately-etched background of Mantegna’s or
-Robetta’s, in which the clear pale colours of early
-spring were but an effect of subtle blendings of line.
-This Tuscan hill scenery, which for purity of modelling
-has no match short of Greece, is seen to the best
-advantage in March, when the conformation of the
-land is still unveiled by foliage, and every line tells
-like the threads of silver in a <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">niello</i>.</p>
-
-<p>From Sant’ Ellero, where the train is exchanged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-for a little funicular car of primitive construction,
-we were pushed jerkily uphill by a gasping engine
-which had to be constantly refreshed by long
-draughts of water from wayside tanks. On such a
-day, however, it was impossible to grudge the slowness
-of the ascent. As we mounted higher, the country
-developed beneath us with that far-reaching precision
-of detail which gives to extended views in
-mid-Italy a curiously pre-Raphaelite look—as though
-they had been wrought out by a hand enamoured of
-definition and unskilled in the creation of general
-effects. The new wheat springing under the olives
-was the only high note of colour: all else was sepia-brown
-of new-turned earth, grey-brown of weather-mottled
-farm-houses and village belfries, golden-black
-of rusty cypresses climbing the hill-sides in
-straight interminable lines, and faint blush of peach-blossoms
-floating against grey olives.</p>
-
-<p>Then we gained a new height, and the details of
-the foreground were lost in a vast unfolding of distances—hill
-on hill, blurred with olive-groves, or bare
-and keen-cut, with a sprinkling of farm-houses on
-their slopes, and here and there a watch-tower on a
-jutting spur; and beyond these again, a tossing sunlit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-sea of peaks, its farthest waves still crested with
-snow. Half way up, the abrupt slopes of oak-forest
-which we had skirted gave way to a plateau clothed
-with vines and budding fruit orchards; then another
-sharp climb through oak-scrub, across the dry beds
-of mountain-streams and up slopes of broom and
-heather, brought us to the topmost ledge, where the
-railway ends. On this ledge stands the dreary village
-of Saltina—a cluster of raw-looking houses set
-like boxes on a shelf (with a Hôtel Milton among
-them), and a background of Swiss chalets dotted forlornly
-on a treeless slope. Saltina must be arid even
-in midsummer, and in March it was a place to fly
-from. Our flight, however, was regulated by the
-leisurely gait of a small white donkey who was the
-only <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">bête de somme</i> to be had at that early season, and
-behind whom we slowly turned the shoulder of the
-cliff, and entered the pillared twilight of a great fir-wood.
-The road ran through this wood for a mile or
-two, carrying us straight to the heart of the Etrurian
-shades. As we advanced, byways branched off to the
-right and left, climbing the hill-sides through deep-perspectives
-of verdure; and presently we came to a
-wide turfy hollow, where the great trees recede, leaving<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-a space for the monastery and its adjacent buildings.</p>
-
-<p>The principal <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">corps-de-bâtiment</i> faces on a walled
-entrance-court with box-bordered paths leading to
-the fine arcaded portico of the church. These buildings
-are backed by a hanging wood with a hermitage
-on its crest—the Paradiso—but before them lies an
-open expanse studded with ancient trees, with a
-stone-bordered fish-pond, and grass walks leading
-down to mossy glens with the sound of streams in
-their depths. Facing the monastery stands the low
-building where pilgrims were formerly lodged, and
-which now, without farther modification than the
-change of name, has become the Albergo della Foresta;
-while the monastery itself has been turned into
-a government school of forestry.</p>
-
-<p>Since change was inevitable, it is a fortunate accident
-which has housed a sylvan college in these venerable
-shades, and sent the green-accoutred foresters
-to carry on the husbandry of the monks. Never,
-surely, were the inevitable modifications of time more
-gently tempered to the survivor of earlier conditions.
-The monastery of Vallombrosa has neither the examinate
-air of a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">monument historique</i>, nor that look<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-of desecration and decadency that too often comes
-with altered uses. It has preserved its high atmosphere
-of meditative peace, and the bands of students
-flitting through the forest with surveying-implements
-and agricultural tools seem the lawful successors
-of the monks.</p>
-
-<p>We had been told in Florence that winter still held
-the mountains, that we should find snow in the shady
-hollows and a glacial wind from the peaks. But
-spring airs followed us to the heights. Through the
-aromatic fir-boughs the sunlight slanted as warmly
-as down the ilex-walks of the Boboli gardens, and
-over the open slopes about the monastery there ran a
-rosy-purple flush of crocuses—not here and there in
-scattered drifts, or starring the grass as in the foregrounds
-of Mantegna and Botticelli, but so close-set
-that they formed a continuous sheet of colour, a tide
-of lilac which submerged the turf and, flowing between
-the ancient tree-boles, invaded even the dark
-edges of the forest. It was probably the one moment
-of the year at which the forest flushes into colour; its
-hour of transfiguration—we might have tried every
-other season, and missed the miracle of March in Vallombrosa.
-At first the eye was dazzled by this vast<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-field of the cloth-of-purple, and could take in none of
-the more delicate indications of spring; but presently
-we found our way to the lower glens, where the crocuses
-ceased, and pale-yellow primroses poured over
-ivy-banks to the brink of agate-coloured brooks. In
-the forest, too, ferns were uncurling and violets
-thrusting themselves through the close matting of fir-needles;
-while the terraces of the monks’ garden,
-which climbs the hill-side near the monastery, were
-fragrant with budding box and beds of tulip and
-narcissus.</p>
-
-<p>It was an air to idle in, breathing deep the stored
-warmth of immemorial springs; but the little donkey
-waited between the shafts of his <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">calessina</i>, and on the
-ledge of Saltina we knew that our engine was taking
-a last draught before the descent. Reluctantly we
-jogged back through the forest, and, regaining our
-seats in the train, plunged downward into a sea of
-translucent mountains, and valleys bathed in haze, a
-great reach of irradiated heights flowing by imperceptible
-gradations into amber depths of air, while
-below us the shadows fell, and the Arno gleamed
-white in the indistinctness of evening.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153">153</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_8"><a id="PICTURESQUE_MILAN"></a>PICTURESQUE MILAN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">It</span> is hard to say whether the stock phrase of the
-stock tourist—“there is so little to see in Milan”—redounds
-most to the derision of the speaker or
-to the glory of Italy. That such a judgment should
-be possible, even to the least instructed traveller, implies
-a surfeit of impressions procurable in no other
-land; since, to the hastiest observation, Milan could
-hardly seem lacking in interest when compared to any
-but Italian cities. From comparison with the latter,
-even, it suffers only on a superficial estimate, for
-it is rich in all that makes the indigenous beauty of
-Italy, as opposed to the pseudo-Gothicisms, the trans-Alpine
-points and pinnacles, which Ruskin taught a
-submissive generation of art critics to regard as the
-typical expression of the Italian spirit. The guide-books,
-long accustomed to draw their Liebig’s extract<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156">156</a></span>
-of art from the pages of this school of critics, have
-kept the tradition alive by dwelling only on the monuments
-which conform to perpendicular ideals, and by
-apologetic allusions to the “monotony” and “regularity”
-of Milan—as though endeavouring in advance
-to placate the traveller for its not looking like
-Florence or Siena!</p>
-
-<div id="i_11" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.25em;">
- <img src="images/i_207.jpg" width="388" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>Court of the Palazzo Marino,<br />
- now the Municipio</i>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Of late, indeed, a new school of writers, among
-whom Mr. J.&nbsp;W. Anderson, and the German authors,
-Messrs. Ebe and Gurlitt, deserve the first mention,
-have broken through this conspiracy of silence, and
-called attention to the intrinsically Italian art of the
-post-Renaissance period; the period which, from Michael
-Angelo to Juvara, has been marked in sculpture
-and architecture (though more rarely in painting)
-by a series of memorable names. Signor
-Franchetti’s admirable monograph on Bernini, and
-the recent volume on Tiepolo in the Knackfuss series
-of Künstler-Monographien have done their part in
-this redistribution of values; and it is now possible
-for the traveller to survey the course of Italian art
-with the impartiality needful for its due enjoyment,
-and to admire, for instance, the tower of the Mangia
-without scorning the palace of the Consulta.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157">157</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>But, it may be asked, though Milan will seem more
-interesting to the emancipated judgment, will it appear
-more picturesque? Picturesqueness is, after
-all, what the Italian pilgrim chiefly seeks; and the
-current notion of the picturesque is a purely Germanic
-one, connoting Gothic steeples, pepper-pot
-turrets, and the huddled steepness of the northern
-burgh.</p>
-
-<p>Italy offers little, and Milan least of all, to satisfy
-these requirements. The Latin ideal demanded
-space, order, and nobility of composition. But does
-it follow that picturesqueness is incompatible with
-these? Take up one of Piranesi’s etchings—those
-strange compositions in which he sought to seize the
-spirit of a city or a quarter by a mingling of its most
-characteristic features. Even the northern conception
-of the picturesque must be satisfied by the sombre
-wildness of these studies—here a ruined aqueduct,
-casting its shade across a lonely stretch of ground
-tufted with acanthus, there a palace colonnade
-through which the moonlight sweeps on a winter
-wind, or the recesses of some mighty Roman bath<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-where cloaked figures are huddled in dark confabulation.</p>
-
-<p>Canaletto’s black-and-white studies give, in a
-lesser degree, the same impression of the grotesque
-and the fantastic—the under-side of that <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">barocchismo</i>
-so long regarded as the smirk on the face of a conventional
-age.</p>
-
-<p>But there is another, a more typically Italian picturesqueness,
-gay rather than sinister in its suggestions,
-made up of lights rather than of shadows, of
-colour rather than of outline, and this is the picturesqueness
-of Milan. The city abounds in vivid effects,
-in suggestive juxtapositions of different centuries
-and styles—in all those incidental contrasts
-and surprises which linger in the mind after the catalogued
-“sights” have faded. Leaving behind the
-wide modern streets—which have the merit of having
-been modernized under Eugène Beauharnais rather
-than under King Humbert—one enters at once upon
-some narrow byway overhung by the grated windows
-of a seventeenth-century palace, or by the
-delicate terra-cotta apse of a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">cinque-cento</i> church.
-Everywhere the forms of expression are purely Italian,
-with the smallest possible admixture of that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-Gothic element which marks the old free cities of
-Central Italy. The rocca Sforzesca (the old Sforza
-castle) and the houses about the Piazza de’ Mercanti
-are the chief secular buildings recalling the pointed
-architecture of the north; and the older churches are
-so old that they antedate Gothic influences, and lead
-one back to the round-arched basilican type. But in
-the line of national descent what exquisite varieties
-the Milanese streets present! Here, for instance, is
-the Corinthian colonnade of San Lorenzo, the only
-considerable fragment of ancient Mediolanum, its
-last shaft abutting on a Gothic archway against
-which clings a flower-decked shrine. Close by, one
-comes on the ancient octagonal church of San Lorenzo,
-while a few minutes’ drive leads to where the
-Borromeo palace looks across a quiet grassy square
-at the rococo front of the old family church, flanked
-by a fine bronze statue of the great saint and cardinal.</p>
-
-<p>The Palazzo Borromeo is itself a notable factor in
-the picturesqueness of Milan. The entrance leads to
-a court-yard enclosed in an ogive arcade surmounted
-by pointed windows in terra-cotta mouldings. The
-walls of this court are still frescoed with the Borromean
-crown, and the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">Humilitas</i> of the haughty race;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-and a doorway leads into the muniment-room, where
-the archives of the house are still stored, and where,
-on the damp stone walls, Michelino da Milano has
-depicted the scenes of a fifteenth-century villeggiatura.
-Here the noble ladies of the house, in high
-fluted turbans and fantastic fur-trimmed gowns,
-may be seen treading the measures of a mediæval
-dance with young gallants in parti-coloured hose, or
-playing at various games—the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">jeu de tarots</i>, and a
-kind of cricket played with a long wooden bat; while
-in the background rise the mountains about Lake
-Maggiore and the peaked outline of the Isola Bella,
-then a bare rock unadorned with gardens and architecture.
-These frescoes, the only existing works
-of a little-known Lombard artist, are suggestive
-in style of Pisanello’s dry and vigorous manner,
-and as records of the private life of the Italian nobility
-in the fifteenth century they are second only
-to the remarkable pictures of the Schifanoia at
-Ferrara.</p>
-
-<p>Not far from the Borromean palace, another doorway
-leads to a different scene: the great cloister of
-the Ospedale Maggiore, one of the most glorious
-monuments that man ever erected to his fellows.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161">161</a></span>
-The old hospitals of Italy were famous not only for
-their architectural beauty and great extent, but for
-their cleanliness and order and the enlightened care
-which their inmates received. Northern travellers
-have recorded their wondering admiration of these
-lazarets, which seemed as stately as palaces in comparison
-with the miserable pest-houses north of the
-Alps. What must have been the astonishment of
-such a traveller, whether German or English, on setting
-foot in the principal court of the Milanese hospital,
-enclosed in its vast cloister enriched with
-traceries and medallions of terra-cotta, and surmounted
-by the arches of an open loggia whence the
-patients could look down on a peaceful expanse of
-grass and flowers! Even now, one wonders whether
-this poetizing of philanthropy, this clothing of charity
-in the garb of beauty, may not have had its healing
-uses: whether the ugliness of the modern hospital
-may not make it, in another sense, as unhygienic as
-the more picturesque buildings it has superseded? It
-is at least pleasant to think of the poor sick people
-sunning themselves in the beautiful loggia of the
-Ospedale Maggiore, or sitting under the magnolia-trees
-in the garden, while their blue-gowned and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162">162</a></span>
-black-veiled nurses move quietly through the cloisters
-at the summons of the chapel-bell.</p>
-
-<div id="i_12" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 20.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_217.jpg" width="325" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>The Tower of S. Stefano</i><br />
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">MILANO. 1901.</span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>But one need not enter a court-yard or cross a
-threshold to appreciate the variety and colour of
-Milan. The streets themselves are full of charming
-detail—<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">quattro-cento</i> marble portals set with medallions
-of bushy-headed Sforzas in round caps and
-plaited tunics; windows framed in terra-cotta
-wreaths of fruit and flowers; iron balconies etching
-their elaborate arabesques against the stucco house-fronts;
-mighty doorways flanked by Atlantides, like
-that of Pompeo Leoni’s house (the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">Casa degli
-Omenoni</i>) and of the Jesuit seminary; or yellow-brown
-rococo churches with pyramids, broken pediments,
-flying angels, and vases filled with wrought-iron
-palm-branches. It is in summer that these
-streets are at their best. Then the old gardens
-overhanging the Naviglio—the canal which intersects
-Milan with a layer of Venice—repeat in its
-waters their marble loggias hung with the vine, and
-their untrained profusion of roses and camellias.
-Then, in the more aristocratic streets, the palace
-doorways yield vistas of double and triple court-yards,
-with creeper-clad arcades enclosing spaces of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-shady turf, and terminating perhaps in a fountain
-set in some splendid architectural composition
-against the inner wall of the building. In summer,
-too, the dark archways in the humbler quarters of the
-town are brightened by fruit-stalls embowered in
-foliage, and heaped with such melons, figs and
-peaches as would have driven to fresh extravagance
-the exuberant brush of a Flemish fruit-painter.
-Then again, at the turn of a street, one comes across
-some little church just celebrating the feast of its
-patron saint with a brave display of garlands and
-red hangings; while close by a cavernous <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">bottegha</i>
-has been festooned with more garlands and with
-bright nosegays, amid which hang the painted candles
-and other votive offerings designed to attract
-the small coin of the faithful.</p>
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>Yet Milan is not dependent on the seasons for this
-midsummer magic of light and colour. For dark
-days it keeps its store of warmth and brightness hidden
-behind palace walls and in the cold dusk of
-church and cloister. Summer in all its throbbing heat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164">164</a></span>
-has been imprisoned by Tiepolo in the great ceiling
-of the Palazzo Clerici: that revel of gods and demi-gods,
-and mortals of all lands and races, who advance
-with linked hands out of the rosy vapours of dawn.
-Nor are loftier colour-harmonies wanting. On the
-walls of San Maurizio Maggiore, Luini’s virgin martyrs
-move as in the very afterglow of legend: that
-hesitating light in which the fantastic becomes probable,
-and the boundaries between reality and vision
-fade; while tints of another sort, but as tender, as
-harmonious, float through the dusk of the sacristy of
-Santa Maria delle Grazie, a dim room panelled with
-intarsia-work, with its grated windows veiled by vine-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>But nothing in Milan approaches in beauty the
-colour-scheme of the Portinari chapel behind the
-choir of Sant’ Eustorgio. In Italy, even, there is
-nothing else exactly comparable to this masterpiece
-of collaboration between architect and painter. At
-Ravenna, the tomb of Galla Placidia and the apse of
-San Vitale glow with richer hues, and the lower
-church of Assisi is unmatched in its shifting mystery
-of chiar’-oscuro; but for pure light, for a clear shadowless
-scale of iridescent tints, what can approach the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-Portinari chapel? Its most striking feature is the
-harmony of form and colour which makes the decorative
-design of Michelozzo flow into and seem a part
-of the exquisite frescoes of Vincenzo Foppa. This
-harmony is not the result of any voluntary feint, any
-such trickery of the brush as the later decorative
-painters delighted in. In the Portinari chapel,
-architecture and painting are kept distinct in treatment,
-and the fusion between them is effected by
-unity of line and colour, and still more, perhaps, by
-an identity of sentiment, which keeps the whole
-chapel in the same mood of blitheness,—a mood which
-makes it difficult to remember that the chapel is the
-mausoleum of a martyred saint. But Saint Peter
-Martyr’s marble sarcophagus, rich and splendid as it
-is, somehow fails to distract the attention from its
-setting. There are so many mediæval monuments
-like it in Italy—and there is but one Portinari chapel.
-From the cupola, with its scales of pale red and blue,
-overlapping each other like the breast-plumage of a
-pigeon, and terminating in a terra-cotta frieze of
-dancing angels, who swing between them great bells
-of fruit and flowers, the eye is led by insensible gradations
-of tint to Foppa’s frescoes in the spandrils—<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166">166</a></span>iridescent
-saints and angels in a setting of pale classical
-architecture—and thence to another frieze of
-terra-cotta seraphs with rosy-red wings against a
-background of turquoise-green; this lower frieze
-resting in turn on pilasters of pale-green adorned
-with white stucco <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">rilievi</i> of little bell-ringing angels.
-It is only as a part of this colour-scheme that the central
-sarcophagus really affects one—the ivory tint of
-its old marble forming a central point for the play of
-light, and allying itself with the sumptuous hues of
-Portinari’s dress, in the fresco which represents the
-donator of the chapel kneeling before his patron
-saint.</p>
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>The picturesqueness of Milan has overflowed on its
-environs, and there are several directions in which one
-may prolong the enjoyment of its characteristic art.
-The great Certosa of Pavia can, alas, no longer be
-included in a category of the picturesque. Secularized,
-catalogued, railed off from the sight-seer, who
-is hurried through its endless corridors on the heels
-of a government custodian, it still ministers to the
-sense of beauty, but no longer excites those subtler<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-sensations which dwell in the atmosphere of a work
-of art rather than in itself. Such sensations must be
-sought in the other deserted Certosa at Chiaravalle.
-The abbey church, with its noble colonnaded cupola,
-is still one of the most conspicuous objects in the flat
-landscape about Milan; but within all is falling to
-ruin, and one feels the melancholy charm of a beautiful
-building which has been allowed to decay as
-naturally as a tree. The disintegrating touch of nature
-is less cruel than the restoring touch of man, and
-the half-ruined frescoes and intarsia-work of Chiaravalle
-retain more of their original significance than
-the carefully-guarded treasures of Pavia.</p>
-
-<p>Less melancholy than Chiaravalle, and as yet unspoiled
-by the touch of official preservation, is the pilgrimage
-church of the Madonna of Saronno. A long
-avenue of plane-trees leads from the village to the
-sumptuous marble façade of the church, an early
-Renaissance building with ornamental additions of
-the seventeenth century. Within, it is famous for
-the frescoes of Luini in the choir, and of Gaudenzio
-Ferrari in the cupola. The Luini frescoes are full
-of a serene impersonal beauty. Painted in his latest
-phase, when he had fallen under the influence of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168">168</a></span>
-Raphael and the “grand manner,” they lack the intimate
-charm of his early works; yet the Lombard
-note, the Leonardesque quality, lingers here and
-there in the side-long glance of the women, and in
-the yellow-haired beauty of the adolescent heads;
-while it finds completer expression in the exquisite
-single figures of Saint Catherine and Saint Apollonia.</p>
-
-<div id="i_13" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30.875em;">
- <img src="images/i_227.jpg" width="494" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="cap-container"><div class="caption">
- <i>The Church at Saronno</i><br />
- <span class="small in4i">E. C. Peixotto<br />
- <span class="in4i">1901.</span></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>If these stately compositions are less typical of
-Luini than, for instance, the frescoes of San Maurizio
-Maggiore, or of the Casa Pelucca (now in the
-Brera), Gaudenzio’s cupola seems, on the contrary,
-to sum up in one glorious burst of expression all his
-fancy had ever evoked and his hand longed to embody.
-It seems to have been given to certain artists
-to attain, once at least, to this full moment of expression:
-to Titian, for instance, in the Bacchus and
-Ariadne, to Michael Angelo in the monuments of the
-Medici, to Giorgione in the Sylvan Concert of the
-Louvre. In other works they may reveal greater
-powers, more magnificent conceptions; but once only,
-perhaps, is it given to each to achieve the perfect
-equipoise of mind and hand; and in that moment
-even the lesser artists verge on greatness. Gaudenzio<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169">169</a></span>
-found his opportunity in the cupola of Saronno, and
-for once he rises above the charming anecdotic
-painter of Varallo to the brotherhood of the masters.
-It is as the expression of a mood that his power reveals
-itself—the mood of heavenly joyousness, so vividly
-embodied in his circle of choiring angels that
-form seems to pass into sound, and the dome to be
-filled with a burst of heavenly jubilation. With unfaltering
-hand he has sustained this note of joyousness.
-Nowhere does his invention fail or his brush
-lag behind it. The sunny crowding heads, the flying
-draperies, the fluttering scores of the music, are
-stirred as by a wind of inspiration—a breeze from the
-celestial pastures. The walls of the choir seem to
-resound with one of the angel-choruses of “Faust,”
-or with the last chiming lines of the “Paradiso.”
-Happy the artist whose full powers find voice in
-such a key!</p>
-
-<h3>V</h3>
-
-<p>The reader who has followed these desultory wanderings
-through Milan has but touched the hem of
-her garment. In the Brera, the Ambrosiana, the
-Poldi-Pezzoli gallery, and the magnificent new Archæological<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-Museum, now fittingly housed in the old
-castle of the Sforzas, are treasures second only to
-those of Rome and Florence. But these are among
-the catalogued riches of the city. The guide-books
-point to them, they lie in the beaten track of sight-seeing,
-and it is rather in the intervals between such
-systematized study of the past, in the parentheses of
-travel, that one obtains those more intimate glimpses
-which help to compose the image of each city, to preserve
-its personality in the traveller’s mind.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171">171</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_9"><a id="ITALIAN_BACKGROUNDS"></a>ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> the Italian devotional pictures of the early
-Renaissance there are usually two quite unrelated
-parts: the foreground and the background.</p>
-
-<p>The foreground is conventional. Its personages—saints,
-angels and Holy Family—are the direct
-descendants of a long line of similar figures. Every
-detail of dress and attitude has been settled beforehand
-by laws which the artist accepts as passively as
-the fact that his models have two eyes apiece, and
-noses in the middle of their faces. Though now and
-then some daring painter introduces a happy modification,
-such as the little violin-playing angels on
-the steps of the Virgin’s throne, in the pictures of the
-Venetian school, such changes are too rare and unimportant
-to affect the general truth of the statement.
-It is only in the background that the artist finds himself<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174">174</a></span>
-free to express his personality. Here he depicts
-not what some one else has long since designed
-for him, in another land and under different conceptions
-of life and faith, but what he actually sees
-about him, in the Lombard plains, in the delicately-modelled
-Tuscan hill-country, or in the fantastic
-serrated landscape of the Friulian Alps. One must
-look past and beyond the central figures, in their
-typical attitudes and symbolical dress, to catch a
-glimpse of the life amid which the painting originated.
-Relegated to the middle distance, and reduced
-to insignificant size, is the real picture, the
-picture which had its birth in the artist’s brain and
-reflects his impression of the life about him.</p>
-
-<p>Here, for instance, behind a Madonna of Bellini’s,
-white oxen graze the pasture, and a shepherd lolls on
-a bank beside his flock; there, in the train of the
-Eastern Kings, real soldiers, clerks, pedlars, beggars,
-and all the miscellaneous rabble of the Italian
-streets wind down a hill-side crowned by a mediæval
-keep, and cross a bridge with a water-mill—just
-such a bridge and water-mill as the artist may have
-sketched in his native village. And in the scenes of
-the life of the Virgin, what opportunities for <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">genre</i>-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175">175</a></span>painting
-present themselves! In Ghirlandaio’s
-fresco of the Birth of the Virgin, in the apse of Santa
-Maria Novella, fine ladies in contemporary costume
-are congratulating the conventionally-draped Saint
-Anna, while Crivelli’s Annunciation, in the National
-Gallery, shows an ornate Renaissance palace, with
-peacocks spreading their tails on the upper loggia, a
-sumptuous Eastern rug hanging over a marble balustrade,
-and the celestial messenger tripping up a
-flight of marble stairs to a fashionable front door.</p>
-
-<p>No painter was more prodigal than Carpaccio of
-these intimate details, or more audacious in the abrupt
-juxtaposition of devotional figures with the
-bustling secular life of his day. His Legend of
-Saint Ursula, in the Accademia of Venice, is a
-storehouse of fifteenth-century anecdote, an encyclopædia
-of dress, architecture and manners; and behind
-his agonizing Saint Sebastian, tied to a column
-and riddled with arrows, the traffic of the Venetian
-canals goes on unregardingly, as in life the most
-trivial activities revolve unheeding about a great
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>Even painters far less independent of tradition
-than Carpaccio and Crivelli succeeded in imparting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-the personal note, the note of direct observation, to
-the background of their religious pictures. If the
-figures are placed in a landscape, the latter is not a
-conventional grouping of hill, valley and river: it
-has the unmistakable quality of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">chose vue</i>. No
-one who has studied the backgrounds of old Italian
-pictures can imagine that realistic landscape-painting
-is a modern art. The technique of the early
-landscape-painters was not that of the modern interpreter
-of nature, but their purpose was the same;
-they sought to render with fidelity and precision
-what they saw about them. It is this directness of
-vision which gives to their backgrounds such vividness
-and charm. In these distances one may discover
-the actual foreground of the artist’s life. Here
-one may learn what was veritably happening in fifteenth-century
-Venice, Florence and Perugia; here
-see what horizons the old masters looked out on, and
-note that the general aspect of the country is still
-almost as unchanged as the folds of the Umbrian
-mountains and the curves of the Tuscan streams.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177">177</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>As with the study of Italian pictures, so it is with
-Italy herself. The country is divided, not in <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">partes
-tres</i>, but in two: a foreground and a background.
-The foreground is the property of the guide-book
-and of its product, the mechanical sight-seer; the
-background, that of the dawdler, the dreamer and
-the serious student of Italy. This distinction does
-not imply any depreciation of the foreground. It
-must be known thoroughly before the middle distance
-can be enjoyed: there is no short cut to an intimacy
-with Italy. Nor must the analogy of the devotional
-picture be pushed too far. The famous
-paintings, statues and buildings of Italy are obviously
-the embodiment of its historic and artistic
-growth; but they have become slightly conventionalized
-by being too long used as the terms in which
-Italy is defined. They have stiffened into symbols,
-and the life of which they were once the most complete
-expression has evaporated in the desiccating
-museum-atmosphere to which their fame has condemned
-them. To enjoy them, one must let in on
-them the open air of an observation detached from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-tradition. Since they cannot be evaded they must
-be deconventionalized; and to effect this they must
-be considered in relation to the life of which they are
-merely the ornamental façade.</p>
-
-<p>Thus regarded, to what an enchanted region do
-they form the approach! Like courteous hosts they
-efface themselves, pointing the way, but giving their
-guests the freedom of their domain. It is not too
-fanciful to say that each of the great masterpieces
-of Italy holds the key to some secret garden of the
-imagination. One must know Titian and Giorgione
-to enjoy the intimacy of the Friulian Alps, Cima da
-Conegliano to taste the full savour of the strange
-Euganean landscape, Palladio and Sansovino to
-appreciate the frivolous villa-architecture of the
-Brenta, nay, the domes of Brunelleschi and Michael
-Angelo to feel the happy curve of some chapel
-cupola in a nameless village of the hills.</p>
-
-<p>“Une civilisation,” says Viollet-le-Duc, “ne peut
-prétendre posséder un art que si cet art pénètre partout,
-s’il fait sentir sa présence dans les œuvres les
-plus vulgaires.” It is because Italian art so interpenetrated
-Italian life, because the humblest stonemason
-followed in some sort the lines of the great<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-architects, and the modeller of village Madonnas the
-composition of the great sculptors, that the monumental
-foreground and the unregarded distances
-behind it so continually interpret and expound each
-other. Italy, to her real lovers, is like a great illuminated
-book, with here and there a glorious full-page
-picture, and between these, page after page of delicately-pencilled
-margins, wherein every detail of her
-daily life may be traced. And the pictures and the
-margins are by the same hand.</p>
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>As Italy is divided into foreground and background,
-so each city has its perspective; its <em>premier plan</em> asterisked
-for the hasty traveller, its middle distance for
-the “happy few” who remain more than three days,
-and its boundless horizon for the idler who refuses
-to measure art by time. In some cases the background
-is the continuation, the amplification, of the
-central “subject”; in others, its direct antithesis.
-Thus in Umbria, and in some parts of Tuscany and
-the Marches, art, architecture, history and landscape
-all supplement and continue each other, and the least<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-imaginative tourist must feel that in leaving the galleries
-of Siena or Florence for the streets and the
-surrounding country, he is still within the bounds of
-conventional sight-seeing.</p>
-
-<p>In Rome, on the contrary, in Milan, and to some
-extent in Venice, as well as in many of the smaller
-towns throughout Italy, there is a sharp line of
-demarcation between the guide-book city and its
-background. In some cases, the latter is composed
-mainly of objects at which the guide-book tourist has
-been taught to look askance, or rather which he has
-been counselled to pass by without a look. Goethe
-has long been held up to the derision of the enlightened
-student of art because he went to Assisi to see
-the Roman temple of Minerva, and omitted to visit
-the mediæval church of Saint Francis; but how
-many modern sight-seers visit the church and omit
-the temple? And wherein lies their superior catholicity
-of taste? The fact is that, in this particular
-instance, foreground and background have changed
-places, and the modern tourist who neglects Minerva
-for Saint Francis is as narrowly bound by tradition
-as his eighteenth-century predecessor, with this difference,
-that whereas the latter knew nothing of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181">181</a></span>
-mediæval art and architecture, the modern tourist
-knows that the temple is there and deliberately turns
-his back on it.</p>
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>Perhaps Rome is, of all Italian cities, the one in
-which this one-sidedness of æsthetic interest is most
-oddly exemplified. In the Tuscan and Umbrian
-cities, as has been said, the art and architecture which
-form the sight-seer’s accepted “curriculum,” are still
-the distinctive features of the streets through which
-he walks to his gallery or his museum. In Florence,
-for instance, he may go forth from the Riccardi
-chapel, and see the castle of Vincigliata towering on
-its cypress-clad hill precisely as Gozzoli depicted it in
-his fresco; in Siena, the crenellated palaces with
-their iron torch-holders and barred windows form the
-unchanged setting of a mediæval pageant. But in
-Rome for centuries it has been the fashion to look
-only on a city which has almost disappeared, and to
-close the eyes to one which is still alive and actual.</p>
-
-<p>The student of ancient Rome moves among painfully-reconstructed
-débris; the mediævalist must
-traverse the city from end to end to piece together<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182">182</a></span>
-the meagre fragments of his “epoch.” Both studies
-are absorbing, and the very difficulty of the chase no
-doubt adds to its exhilaration; but is it not a curious
-mental attitude which compels the devotee of mediæval
-art to walk blindfold from the Palazzo Venezia
-to Santa Sabina on the Aventine, or from the
-Ara Cœli to Santa Maria Sopra Minerva, because
-the great monuments lying between these points of
-his pilgrimage belong to what some one has taught
-him to regard as a “debased period of art”?</p>
-
-<p>Rome is the most undisturbed baroque city of Italy.
-The great revival of its spiritual and temporal power
-coincided with the development of that phase of art
-of which Michael Angelo sowed the seed in Rome
-itself. The germs of Bernini and Tiepolo must be
-sought in the Sistine ceiling and in the Moses of San
-Pietro in Vincoli, however much the devotees of
-Michael Angelo may resent the tracing of such a
-lineage. But it is hard at this date to be patient
-with any form of artistic absolutism, with any critical
-criteria not based on that sense of the comparative
-which is the nineteenth century’s most important
-contribution to the function of criticism. It is hard
-to be tolerant of that peculiar form of intolerance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183">183</a></span>
-which refuses to recognize in art the general law of
-growth and transformation, or, while recognizing it,
-considers it a subject for futile reproach and lamentation.
-The art critic must acknowledge a standard
-of excellence, and must be allowed his personal
-preferences within the range of established criteria:
-æsthetically, the world is divided into the Gothically
-and the classically minded, just as intellectually it is
-divided into those who rise to the general idea and
-those who pause at the particular instance. The
-lover of the particular instance will almost always
-have a taste for the Gothic, which is the personal and
-anecdotic in art carried to its utmost expression, at
-the cost of synthetic effect; but if he be at all accessible
-to general ideas, he must recognize the futility
-of battling against the inevitable tendencies of taste
-and invention. Granted that, from his standpoint,
-the art which evolved from Michael Angelo is an art
-of decadence: is that a reason for raging at it or
-ignoring it? The autumn is a season of decadence;
-but even by those who prefer the spring, it has not
-hitherto been an object of invective and reprobation.
-Only when the art critic begins to survey the modifications
-of art as objectively as he would study the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-alternations of the seasons, will he begin to understand
-and to sympathize with the different modes in
-which man has sought to formulate his gropings
-after beauty. If it be true in the world of sentiment
-that <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">il faut aimer pour comprendre</i>, the converse is
-true in the world of art. To enjoy any form of
-artistic expression one must not only understand
-what it tries to express, but know</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"><i>
-<span class="i0">The hills where its life rose,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And the sea where it goes.</span></i>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus philosophically viewed, the baroque Rome—the
-Rome of Bernini, Borromini and Maderna, of
-Guercino, the Caracci and Claude Lorrain—becomes
-of great interest even to those who are not in sympathy
-with the exuberances of seventeenth-century
-art. In the first place, the great number of baroque
-buildings, churches, palaces and villas, the grandeur
-of their scale, and the happy incidents of their grouping,
-give a better idea than can elsewhere be obtained
-of the collective effects of which the style is capable.
-Thus viewed, it will be seen to be essentially a style
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">de parade</i>, the setting of the spectacular and external
-life which had developed from the more secluded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185">185</a></span>
-civilization of the Renaissance as some blossom of
-immense size and dazzling colour may develop in the
-atmosphere of the forcing-house from a smaller and
-more delicate flower. The process was inevitable,
-and the result exemplifies the way in which new conditions
-will generate new forms of talent.</p>
-
-<p>It is in moments of social and artistic transformation
-that original genius shows itself, and Bernini
-was the genius of the baroque movement. To
-those who study his work in the light of the conditions
-which produced it, he will appear as the natural
-interpreter of that sumptuous <em>bravura</em> period when
-the pomp of a revived ecclesiasticism and the elaborate
-etiquette of Spain were blent with a growing
-taste for country life, for the solemnities and amplitudes
-of nature. The mingling of these antagonistic
-interests has produced an art distinctive enough
-to take rank among the recognized “styles”: an art
-in which excessive formality and ostentation are
-tempered by a free play of line, as though the winds
-of heaven swept unhindered through the heavy
-draperies of a palace. It need not be denied that
-delicacy of detail, sobriety of means and the effect of
-repose were often sacrificed to these new requirements;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-but it is more fruitful to observe how skilfully
-Bernini and his best pupils managed to preserve
-the balance and rhythm of their bold compositions,
-and how seldom profusion led to incoherence.
-How successfully the Italian sense of form ruled
-over this semi-Spanish chaos of material, and drew
-forth from it the classic line, may be judged from the
-way in which the seventeenth-century churches about
-the Forum harmonize with the ruins of ancient
-Rome. Surely none but the most bigoted archæologist
-would wish away from that magic scene the
-façades of San Lorenzo in Miranda and of Santa
-Francesca Romana!</p>
-
-<p>In this connection it might be well for the purist
-to consider what would be lost if the seventeenth-century
-Rome which he affects to ignore were actually
-blotted out. The Spanish Steps would of
-course disappear, with the palace of the Propaganda;
-so would the glorious Barberini palace, and
-Bernini’s neighbouring fountain of the Triton; the
-via delle Quattro Fontane, with its dripping river-gods
-emerging from their grottoes, and Borromini’s
-fantastic church of San Carlo at the head of the
-street, a kaleidoscope of whirling line and ornament,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-offset by the delicately classical circular cortile of the
-adjoining monastery. On the Quirinal hill, the
-palace of the Consulta would go, and the central
-portal of the Quirinal (a work of Bernini’s), as well
-as the splendid gateway of the Colonna gardens.
-The Colonna palace itself, dull and monotonous
-without, but within the very model of a magnificent
-pleasure-house, would likewise be effaced; so would
-many of the most characteristic buildings of the
-Corso—San Marcello, the Gesù, the Sciarra and
-Doria palaces, and the great Roman College. Gone,
-too, would be the Fountain of Trevi, and Lunghi’s
-gay little church of San Vincenzo ed Anastasio,
-which faces it so charmingly across the square; gone
-the pillared court-yard and great painted galleries of
-the Borghese palace, and the Fontana dei Termini
-with its beautiful group of adjoining churches; the
-great fountain of the piazza Navona, Lunghi’s
-stately façade of the Chiesa Nuova, and Borromini’s
-Oratory of San Filippo Neri; the monumental
-Fountain of the Acqua Paola on the Janiculan,
-the familiar “Angels of the Passion” on the bridge
-of Sant’ Angelo, and, in the heart of the Leonine
-City itself, the mighty sweep of Bernini’s marble<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-colonnades and the flying spray of his Vatican
-fountains.</p>
-
-<p>This enumeration includes but a small number of
-the baroque buildings of Rome, and the villas encircling
-the city have not been named, though nearly
-all, with their unmatched gardens, are due to the art
-of this “debased” period. But let the candid sight-seer—even
-he who has no tolerance of the seventeenth
-century, and to whom each of the above-named buildings
-may be, individually, an object of reprobation—let
-even this sectary of art ask himself how much of
-“mighty splendent Rome” would be left, were it
-possible to obliterate the buildings erected during the
-fever of architectural renovation which raged from
-the accession of Sixtus V to the last years of the
-seventeenth century. Whether or no he would deplore
-the loss of any one of these buildings, he would
-be constrained to own that collectively they go far
-toward composing the physiognomy of the Rome he
-loves. So far-spreading was the architectural renascence
-of the seventeenth century, and so vast were
-the opportunities afforded to its chief exponents,
-that every quarter of the ancient city is saturated
-with the <em>bravura</em> spirit of Bernini and Borromini.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-Some may think that Rome itself is the best defence
-of the baroque: that an art which could so envelop
-without eclipsing the mighty monuments amid which
-it was called to work, which could give expression to
-a brilliant present without jarring on a warlike or
-ascetic past, which could, in short, fuse Imperial and
-early Christian Rome with the city of Spanish ceremonial
-and post-Tridentine piety, needs no better
-justification than the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">Circumspice</i> of Wren. But
-even those who remain unconverted, who cannot
-effect the transference of artistic and historic sympathy
-necessary to a real understanding of seventeenth-century
-architecture, should at least realize
-that the Rome which excites a passion of devotion
-such as no other city can inspire, the Rome for which
-travellers pine in absence, and to which they return
-again and again with the fresh ardour of discovery,
-is, externally at least, in great part the creation of
-the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<h3>V</h3>
-
-<p>In Venice the foreground is Byzantine-Gothic, with
-an admixture of early Renaissance. It extends from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190">190</a></span>
-the church of Torcello to the canvases of Tintoretto.
-This foreground has been celebrated in literature
-with a vehemence and profusion which have
-projected it still farther into the public consciousness,
-and more completely obscured the fact that
-there is another Venice, a background Venice, the
-Venice of the eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>Eighteenth-century Venice was not always thus
-relegated to the background. It had its day, when
-tourists pronounced Saint Mark’s an example of
-“the barbarous Gothick,” and were better acquainted
-with the ridotto of San Moisè than with the monuments
-of the Frari. It is instructive to note that the
-Venice of that day had no galleries and no museums.
-Travellers did not go there to be edified, but to be
-amused; and one may fancy with what relief the
-young nobleman on the grand tour, sated with the
-marbles of Rome and the canvases of Parma and
-Bologna, turned aside for a moment to a city where
-enjoyment was the only art and life the only object
-of study. But while travellers were flocking to Venice
-to see its carnival and gaming-rooms, its public
-festivals and private <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">casini</i>, a generation of artists
-were at work brushing in the gay background of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-scene, and quiet hands were recording, in a series of
-memorable little pictures, every phase of that last
-brilliant ebullition of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">joie de vivre</i> before “the
-kissing had to stop.”</p>
-
-<p>Longhena and his pupils were the architects of
-this bright <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mise en scène</i>, Tiepolo was its great scene-painter,
-and Canaletto, Guardi and Longhi were the
-historians who captured every phrase and gesture
-with such delicacy and precision that under their
-hands the glittering Venice of the “Toccata of
-Galuppi” lies outspread like a butterfly with the
-bloom on its wings.</p>
-
-<p>Externally, Venice did not undergo the same renovation
-as Rome. As she was at the close of the
-Renaissance, with the impress of Palladio and Sansovino
-on her religious and secular architecture, so
-she remains to this day. One original architect,
-Baldassare Longhena, struck the note of a brilliant
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">barocchismo</i> in the churches of Santa Maria della
-Salute and the Scalzi, and in the Pesaro and Rezzonico
-palaces on the Grand Canal; and his pupils, developing
-his manner with infinitely less talent, gave
-to Venice the long squat Dogana with its flying Fortune
-fronting the Lagoon, the churches of Santa<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-Maria Zobenigo, San Moisè and the Gesuiti, the
-Monte di Pietà, and a score of imposing palaces.
-The main effect of the city was, however, little modified
-by this brief flowering of the baroque. Venice
-has always stamped every new fashion with her own
-personality, and Longhena’s architecture seems
-merely the hot-house efflorescence of the style of Sansovino
-and Scamozzi. Being, moreover, less under
-the sway of the Church than any other Italian state,
-she was able to resist the architectural livery with
-which the great Jesuit subjugation clad the rest of
-Italy. The spirit of the eighteenth century therefore
-expressed itself rather in her expanding social life,
-and in the decorative arts which attend on such drawing-room
-revivals. Skilful <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">stuccatori</i> adorned the
-old saloons and galleries with fresh gilding and mirrors,
-slender furniture replaced the monumental cabinets
-which Venice had borrowed from Spain, and
-little <em>genre</em>-pictures by Longhi and landscapes by
-Canaletto and Battaglia were hung on the large-patterned
-damask of the boudoir walls. Religion
-followed the same lines, adapting itself to the elegancies
-of the drawing-room, and six noble families
-recognized their social obligations to heaven by erecting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193">193</a></span>
-the sumptuous church of Santa Maria degli
-Scalzi, with its palatial interior, in which one may
-well imagine the heavenly hostess saying to her noble
-donators: “Couvrez-vous, mes cousins.”</p>
-
-<p>Though begun by Longhena about 1650, the
-church of the Scalzi is so identified with the genius
-of Tiepolo that it may be regarded as an epitome of
-eighteenth-century Venetian art. Herr Cornelius
-Gurlitt, the most penetrating critic of the Venetian
-baroque, has indeed justly pointed out that Longhena
-was the forerunner and <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">Geistesgenossen</i> of the
-great master of eighteenth-century decorative painting,
-and that the architect’s bold and sumptuous
-structural effects might have been designed as a setting
-for those unsurpassed audacities of the brush
-which, a hundred years later, were to continue and
-complete them.</p>
-
-<p>On the soaring vault of the Scalzi, above an interior
-of almost Palladian elegance and severity, the
-great painter of atmosphere, the first of the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">pleinairistes</i>,
-was required to depict the transportation of
-the Holy House from Palestine to Loreto. That
-Tiepolo, with his love of ethereal distances, and of
-cloud-like hues melting into thin air, should have accepted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194">194</a></span>
-the task of representing a stone house borne
-through the sky by angels, shows a rare sense of mastery;
-that he achieved the feat without disaster justifies
-the audacity of the attempt.</p>
-
-<p>Tiepolo was above all a lover of open spaces. He
-liked to suspend his fluttering groups in great pellucid
-reaches of sky, and the vast ceiling of the Scalzi
-gave him an exceptional opportunity for the development
-of this effect. The result is that the angels,
-whirling along the Virgin’s house with a vehemence
-which makes it seem a mere feather in the rush
-of their flight, appear to be sweeping through measureless
-heights of air above an unroofed building.
-The architectural propriety of such a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">trompe
-l’œil</i> is not only open to criticism but perhaps quite
-indefensible; yet, given the demand for this particular
-illusion, who but Tiepolo could have produced
-it?</p>
-
-<p>The same ethereal effect, but raised to a higher
-heaven of translucency, is to be found in the ceiling
-of the Gesuati (not to be confounded with the Gesuiti),
-on the quay of the Zattere. This charming
-structure, built in the early eighteenth century by
-Massari, one of the pupils of Longhena, but obviously<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195">195</a></span>
-inspired by the great churches of Palladio, is
-dedicated to Saint Mary of the Rosary; and Tiepolo,
-in three incomparable frescoes, has represented on its
-ceiling the legend of Saint Dominick receiving the
-chaplet from the Virgin in glory.</p>
-
-<p>The guide-books, always on the alert to warn the
-traveller against an undue admiration of Tiepolo, are
-careful to point out that the Mother of God, bending
-from her starry throne above the ecstatic saint, looks
-like a noble Venetian lady of the painter’s day. No
-doubt she does. It is impossible to form an intelligent
-estimate of Tiepolo’s genius without remembering
-that the Catholicism of his time was a religion of
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">bon ton</i>, which aimed to make its noble devotees as
-much at home in church as in the drawing-room. He
-took his models from real life and composed his celestial
-scenes without much thought of their inner significance;
-yet by sheer force of technique he contrived
-to impart to his great religious pictures a glow of
-supernatural splendour which makes it not inapt to
-apply to them the lines of the “Paradiso”:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"><i>
-<span class="i0">Che la luce divina è penetrante<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Per l’universo, secondo ch’è degno,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Sichè nulla le puote essere ostante.</span></i>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196">196</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>VI</h3>
-
-<p>It is quite true, however, that Tiepolo was not primarily
-a devotional painter. He was first of all a
-great decorative artist, a master of emotion in motion,
-and it probably mattered little to him whether
-he was called on to express the passion of Saint Theresa
-or of Cleopatra. This does not imply that he
-executed his task indifferently. Whatever it was,
-he threw into it the whole force of his vehement imagination
-and incomparable <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">maestria</i>; but what he
-saw in it, whether it was religious or worldly, was
-chiefly, no doubt, the opportunity to obtain new
-effects of light and line.</p>
-
-<p>If he had a special bent, it was perhaps toward the
-depicting of worldly pageants. In the Labia palace
-on the Canareggio, a building in which Cominelli, the
-ablest Venetian architect of the eighteenth century,
-nobly continued the “grand manner” of Sansovino
-and Scamozzi, Tiepolo found an unequalled opportunity
-for the exercise of this side of his talent.
-Here, in the lofty saloon of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">piano nobile</i>, he
-painted the loves of Antony and Cleopatra transposed
-to the key of modern patrician life. He first<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-covered the walls with an architectural improvisation
-of porticoes, loggias and colonnades, which might
-have been erected to celebrate the “triumph” of some
-magnificent Este or Gonzaga. In this splendid setting
-he placed two great scenes: Cleopatra melting
-the pearl, and Antony and Cleopatra landing from
-their barge; while every gallery, balcony and flight
-of steps is filled with courtiers, pages and soldiers,
-with dwarfs and blackamoors holding hounds in
-leash, and waiting-maids and lacqueys leaning down
-to see the pageant.</p>
-
-<p>From this throng of figures the principal characters
-detach themselves with a kind of delicate splendour.
-Royal Egypt,</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>On her neck the small face buoyant, like a bell-flower on its bed</i>,<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">in her brocaded gown of white and gold, with a pearl
-collar about her throat, and a little toy spaniel playing
-at her feet, is an eighteenth-century Dogaressa;
-Antony is a young Procurator travestied as a Roman
-hero; while the turbaned black boy, the maid-servants,
-the courtiers, the pages, are all taken <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">sur le vif</i>
-from some brilliant rout in a Pisano or Mocenigo<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198">198</a></span>
-palace. And yet—here comes the wonder—into
-these “water-flies” and triflers of his day, the ladies
-engrossed in cards and scandal, the abatini preoccupied
-with their acrostics, the young nobles intriguing
-with the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">prima amorosa</i> of San Moisè or engaged in
-a sentimental correspondence with a nun of Santa
-Chiara—into this throng of shallow pleasure-seekers
-Tiepolo has managed to infuse something of the old
-Roman state. As one may think of Dante beneath
-the vault of the Gesuati, one may recall Shakespeare
-in the presence of these rouged and powdered Venetians.
-The scene of the landing suggests with curious
-vividness the opening scene of “Antony and
-<span class="locked">Cleopatra”—</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"><i>
-<span class="i10">Look where they come!<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The triple pillar of the world transformed<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Into a strumpet’s fool—</span></i>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">and one can almost hear the golden Antony, as he
-brushes aside the importunate Roman messengers,
-whispering to his Queen: “What sport to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>Still more Shakespearian is the scene of the pearl.
-Cleopatra, enthroned in state at the banqueting-table,
-lifts one hand to drop the jewel into her goblet, and
-in her gesture and her smile are summed up all the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199">199</a></span>
-cruel grace of the “false soul of Egypt.” It is Tiepolo’s
-best praise that such phrases and associations
-as these are evoked by his art, and that, judged from
-the painter’s standpoint, it recalls the glory of another
-great tradition. Studied in the light of Venetian
-painting, Tiepolo is seen to be the direct descendant
-of Titian and Veronese. If the intervening
-century has taken something from the warmth of his
-colour, leaving it too often chalky where that of the
-Renaissance was golden, he has recovered the lines,
-the types and the radiant majesty of the Venetian
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">cinque cento</i>, and Veronese’s Venice Enthroned, in
-the Ducal Palace, is the direct forbear of his Virgins
-and Cleopatras.</p>
-
-<h3>VII</h3>
-
-<p>It is perhaps no longer accurate to describe Tiepolo
-as forming a part of the Venetian background. Recent
-criticism has advanced him to the middle distance,
-and if there are still comparatively few who
-know his work, his name is familiar to the cultivated
-minority of travellers.</p>
-
-<p>Far behind him, however, still on the vanishing-point
-of the tourist’s horizon, are the other figures of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200">200</a></span>
-the Venetian background: Longhi, Guardi, Canaletto,
-and their humbler understudies. Of these,
-Canaletto alone emerges into relative prominence.
-His views of Venice are to be found in so many European
-galleries, and his name so facilitates the association
-of ideas, that, if few appreciate his work,
-many are superficially acquainted with it; whereas
-Guardi, a painter of greater though more unequal
-talent, is still known only to the dilettante.</p>
-
-<p>The work of both is invaluable as a “document”
-for the study of eighteenth-century Venice; but while
-Canaletto in his charming canvases represented only
-the superficial and obvious aspect of the city, as it
-might appear to any appreciative stranger, Guardi,
-one of the earliest impressionists, gives the real life of
-the streets, the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">grouillement</i> of the crowd in Saint
-Mark’s square, the many-coloured splash of a church
-procession surging up the steps of the Redentore, the
-flutter of awnings over market-stalls on a fair-day,
-or the wide black trail of a boat-race across the ruffled
-green waters of the Canalazzo.</p>
-
-<p>Far beneath these two men in talent, but invaluable
-as a chronicler of Venetian life, is Canaletto’s son-in-law,
-Bellotti, who, in a stiff topographical manner,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201">201</a></span>
-has faithfully and minutely recorded every detail of
-eighteenth-century life on the canals. Being of interest
-only to the student of manners, he is seldom
-represented in the public galleries; but many private
-collections in the north of Italy contain a series of his
-pictures, giving all the Venetian festivals, from the
-Marriage of the Adriatic to the great feat of the
-<em>Vola</em>, which took place in the Piazzetta on the last
-Thursday before Lent.</p>
-
-<p>As unknown to the general public as Bellotti, but
-more sought after by connoisseurs than any other
-Italian artist of the eighteenth century save Tiepolo,
-is Pietro Longhi, the <em>genre</em>-painter, whose exquisite
-little transcripts of Venetian domestic life now fetch
-their weight in gold at Christie’s or the Hôtel Drouot.
-Longhi’s talent is a peculiar one. To “taste” him,
-as the French say, one must understand the fundamental
-naïveté of that brilliant and corrupt Venetian
-society, as it is revealed in the comedies of Goldoni
-and in the memoirs of contemporary writers. The
-Venetians were, in fact, amoral rather than immoral.
-There was nothing complex or morbid in their vice;
-it was hardly vice at all, in the sense which implies the
-deliberate saying of “Evil, be thou my good.” Venetian<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-immorality was a mere yielding to natural instincts,
-to the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">joie de vivre</i> of a gay and sensuous
-temperament. There was no intellectual depravity
-in Venice because there was hardly any intellect:
-there was no thought of evil because there was no
-thought. The fashionable sinners whom posterity
-has pictured as revelling in the complexities of vice
-sat enchanted before the simple scenes of Goldoni’s
-drama, and the equally simple pictures of their favourite
-<em>genre</em>-painter. Nor must it be thought that
-this taste for simplicity and innocence was evidence
-of a subtler perversion. The French profligate
-sought in imagination the contrast of an ideal world,
-the milk and rose-water world of Gessner’s Idylls
-and the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">bergerie de Florian</i>. But Goldoni and
-Longhi are not idealists, or even sentimentalists.
-They draw with a frank hand the life of their day,
-from the fisherman’s hut to the patrician’s palace.
-Nothing can be more unmistakable than the realism
-of Goldoni’s dialect plays, and a people who could
-enjoy such simple pictures of the life about them
-must, in a sense, have led simple lives themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Longhi’s easel-pictures record every phase of Venetian
-middle-class and aristocratic existence. To<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203">203</a></span>
-some, indeed, it is difficult to find a clue, and it has
-been conjectured that these represent scenes from the
-popular comedies of the day. The others depict such
-well-known incidents as the visit to the convent parlour,
-where the nuns are entertaining their gallants
-with a marionette-show; the masked <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">nobil donna</i> consulting
-the fortune-teller, or walking with her <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">cicisbeo</i>
-in Saint Mark’s square; the same lady’s <em>lever</em>, where
-she is seen at her toilet-table surrounded by admirers;
-the family party at breakfast, with the nurse bringing
-in a swaddled baby; the little son and heir riding
-out attended by his governor; the actress rehearsing
-her aria with the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">maestro di cappella</i>; the visit to the
-famous hippopotamus in his tent in the Piazzetta; the
-dancing-lesson, the music-lesson, the portrait-painting,
-and a hundred other episodes of social and domestic
-life. The personages who take part in these
-scenes are always of one type: the young women with
-small oval faces, powdered but unrouged, with red
-lips and sloping foreheads; the men in cloaks and
-masks, or gay embroidered coats, with square brows
-and rather snub features, gallant, flourishing, <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">empressés</i>,
-but never in the least idealized or sentimentalized.
-The scenes of “high life” take place for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-most part in tall bare rooms, with stone window-frames,
-a family portrait of a doge or an admiral
-above the chimney-piece, and a few stiff arm-chairs
-of the heavy Venetian baroque. There is nothing
-sumptuous in the furnishing of the apartments or in
-the dress of their inmates. The ladies, if they are
-going abroad or paying a visit, wear a three-cornered
-hat above the black lace <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">zendaletto</i> which hides their
-hair and the lower part of the face, while their dresses
-are covered by the black silk <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">bauto</i> or domino. Indoors,
-they are attired in simple short gowns of silk
-or brocade, with a kerchief on the shoulders, and a
-rose or a clove-pink in the unpowdered hair. That
-pleasure in the painting of gorgeous stuffs, and in
-all the material splendours of life, derived by Tiepolo
-from his great predecessors of the Renaissance, was
-not shared by Longhi. His charm lies in a less definable
-quality, a quality of unstudied simplicity and
-naturalness, which gives to his easel-pictures the
-value of actual transcripts from life. One feels that
-he did not “arrange” his scenes, any more than Goldoni
-constructed his comedies. Both were content to
-reflect, in the mirror of a quietly humorous observation,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205">205</a></span>
-the every-day incidents of the piazza, the convent
-and the palace.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that Longhi, in his <em>genre</em>-pictures, sought
-so little variety of grouping, and was content to limit
-his figures to so small a range of gestures, has given
-rise to the idea that he was incapable of versatility
-and breadth of composition. To be undeceived on
-this point, however, one has only to see his frescoes
-in the Palazzo Grassi (now Sina) on the Grand
-Canal. This fine palace, built about 1740 by Massari,
-the architect of the Gesuati, has a magnificent
-double stairway leading from the colonnaded court
-to the state apartments above; and on the walls of
-this stairway Longhi, for once laying aside his small
-canvases and simple methods, has depicted, in a series
-of charmingly-animated groups, the members of the
-Grassi family leaning over a marble balustrade to see
-their guests ascending the stairs. The variety of
-these groups, the expressiveness of the faces, and the
-general breadth of treatment, prove that Longhi had
-far more technical and imaginative power than he
-chose to put into his little pictures, and that his naïveté
-was a matter of choice. Probably no one who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206">206</a></span>
-knows his work regrets this self-imposed limitation.
-Additional movement and complexity of grouping
-would destroy the sense of leisure, of spacious rooms
-and ample time, of that absence of hurry and confusion
-so typical of a society untroubled by moral responsibilities
-or social rivalries, and pursuing pleasure
-with the well-bred calmness which was one of
-the most charming traits obliterated by the French
-Revolution.</p>
-
-<h3>VIII</h3>
-
-<p>On a quiet canal not far from the church of the Frari
-there stands an old palace where, in a series of undisturbed
-rooms, may be seen the very setting in which
-the personages of Goldoni and Longhi played out
-their social comedy.</p>
-
-<p>The Palazzo Querini-Stampaglia was bequeathed
-to the city of Venice some fifty years since by the
-last Count Querini, and with its gallery, its library
-and its private apartments has since then stood open
-to a public which never visits it. Yet here the student
-of Venetian backgrounds may find the unchanged
-atmosphere of the eighteenth century. The gallery,
-besides some good paintings of earlier schools, contains<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-a large collection of Bellotti’s pictures, representing
-all the great religious and popular festivals
-of Venice, as well as a half-dozen Longhis and a
-charming series of <em>genre</em>-pictures by unknown artists
-of his school.</p>
-
-<p>Of far greater interest, however, are the private
-apartments, with their seventeenth and eighteenth
-century decorations still intact, and the walls lined
-with the heavy baroque consoles and arm-chairs so
-familiar to students of Longhi’s interiors, and of the
-charming prints in the first edition of Goldoni. Here
-is the typical <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">chambre de parade</i>, with its pale-green
-damask curtains and bed-hangings, and its furniture
-painted with flowers on a ground of pale-green <em>laque</em>;
-here the tapestried saloon with its Murano chandeliers,
-the boudoir with looking-glass panels set in delicately
-carved and painted wreaths of flowers and
-foliage, and the portrait-room hung with pictures of
-the three great Querini: the Doge, the Cardinal and
-the Admiral. Here, too, is the long gallery, with a
-bust of the Cardinal (a seventeenth-century prince
-of the Church) surrounded by marble effigies of his
-seven <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">bravi</i>: a series of Berniniesque heads of remarkable
-vigour and individuality, from that of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-hoary hang-dog scoundrel with elf-locks drooping
-over an evil scowl, to the smooth young villain with
-bare throat and insolent stare, who seems to glory in
-his own sinister beauty.</p>
-
-<p>These busts give an insight into a different phase
-of Italian life: the life of the violent and tragical
-seventeenth century, when every great personage, in
-the Church no less than in the world, had his bodyguard
-of hardened criminals, outlaws and galley-slaves,
-who received sanctuary in their patron’s palace,
-and performed in return such acts of villany and
-violence as the Illustrissimo required. It seems a far
-cry from the peaceable world of Goldoni and Longhi
-to this prelate surrounded by the effigies of his hired
-assassins; yet <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">bravi</i>, though no longer openly acknowledged
-or immortalized in marble, lurked in the
-background of Italian life as late as the end of the
-eighteenth century, and Stendhal, who knew Italy as
-few foreigners have known it, declares that in his day
-the great Lombard nobles still had their retinue of
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">bauli</i>, as the knights of the stiletto were called in the
-Milanese.</p>
-
-<p>It is not in art only that the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">bravi</i> have been commemorated.
-Lovers of “I Promessi Sposi,” the one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-great Italian novel, will not soon forget the followers
-of Don Rodrigo; and an idea of the part they played
-at the end of the eighteenth century may be obtained
-from the pages of Ippolito Nievo’s “Confessioni di
-un Ottuagenario,” that delightful book, half romance,
-half autobiography, which, after many years
-of incredible neglect, has just been republished in
-Italy. Ippolito Nievo, one of Garibaldi’s young soldiers,
-was among those who perished in the wreck of
-the <i>Ercole</i>, on the return from Palermo in 1860. He
-was but twenty-nine at the time of his death, and it
-is said that his impatience to see a lady to whom he
-was attached caused him, despite the entreaties of his
-friends, to take passage in the notoriously unseaworthy
-<i>Ercole</i>. Four years earlier he had written the
-“Confessioni,” a volume which, for desultory charm
-and simple rendering of domestic incidents, is not
-unworthy to take rank with “Dichtung und Wahrheit,”
-while its capricious heroine, La Pisana, is as
-vivid a creation as Goethe’s Philina or (one had almost
-said) as the Beatrix of Thackeray.</p>
-
-<p>Ippolito Nievo was himself a native of the Veneto,
-and intimately acquainted, through family tradition,
-with the life of the small towns and villa-castles of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-the Venetian mainland at the close of the eighteenth
-century. The “Confessioni” picture the life of a
-young lad in a nobleman’s castle near the town of
-Portogruaro, and later in Venice; and not the least
-remarkable thing about the book is the fact that, at
-a period when other Italian novelists were depicting
-the high-flown adventures of mediæval knights and
-ladies, its young author, discarding the old stage-properties
-of romanticism, should have set himself to
-recording, with the wealth of detail and quiet humour
-of a Dutch <em>genre</em>-painter, the manners and customs
-of his own little corner of Italy, as his parents had
-described it to him. Nievo’s account of the provincial
-nobles in the Veneto shows that to the very end
-of the eighteenth century, mediæval customs, with all
-their violence and treachery, prevailed within a day’s
-journey of polished and peaceful Venice. His nobles
-in their fortified castles, of which the drawbridges are
-still raised at night, have their little trains of men-at-arms,
-composed in general of the tattered peasantry
-on their estates, but sometimes of professional fighters,
-smugglers or outlaws, who have been taken into
-the service of some truculent lord of the manor; and
-Nievo describes with much humour the conflicts between<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-these little armies, and the ruses, plots and
-negotiations of their quarrelsome masters.</p>
-
-<p>In another novel, published at about the same
-time, Pietro Scudo, a Venetian who wrote in French,
-has drawn, with far less talent, a picture of another
-side of Venetian life: the life of the musical schools
-and the Opera, which George Sand had attempted to
-represent in “Consuelo.” Scudo’s book, “Le Chevalier
-Sarti,” has fallen into not unmerited oblivion. It
-is written in the insipid style of the romantic period—that
-style which Flaubert, in a moment of exasperation,
-described as “les embêtements bleuâtres du
-lyrisme poitrinaire”; and its heroine, like Châteaubriand’s
-unhappy Madame de Beaumont, dies of the
-fashionable ailment of the day, <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">une maladie de langueur</i>.
-The book, moreover, is badly constructed to
-the verge of incoherence, and the characters are the
-stock mannikins of romantic fiction; yet in spite of
-these defects, Scudo has succeeded (where George
-Sand failed) in reproducing the atmosphere of eighteenth-century
-Venice. He has done this not by
-force of talent but by the patient accumulation of
-detail. Though not the most important feature in
-the construction of a good historical novel, this is an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212">212</a></span>
-essential part of the process. George Sand, however,
-was above such humble methods. Totally lacking in
-artistic sensibility and in its accompanying faculty,
-the historic imagination, she was obliged to confine
-herself to the vaguest generalities in describing
-scenes and manners so alien to the “romantic” conception
-of life. Nature and passion were the only
-things which interested her, and in the Venice of the
-eighteenth century there was no nature and little
-passion. Hence the Venetian scenes of “Consuelo”
-give the impression of having been done <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">de chic</i>, while
-Scudo’s bear the impress of an unimaginative accuracy.
-In “Le Chevalier Sarti” the lover of “decadent”
-Venice will find innumerable curious details,
-descriptions of life in the villas of the Brenta, of
-concerts in the famous Scuole, carnival scenes at the
-ridotto, and <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">parties fines</i> at the Orto di San Stefano,
-the favourite resort of the world of gallantry; while
-the minor characters of the book, who have escaped
-the obligatory romanticism of the hero and heroine,
-help to make up the crowded picture of a world as
-bright and brittle as a sun-shot Murano glass.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213">213</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>IX</h3>
-
-<p>But it is, after all, not in Nievo or Scudo, nor even in
-Longhi and Goldoni, that one comes closest to the
-vanished Venice of the eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>In the Museo Correr, on the Grand Canal, there
-has recently been opened a room containing an assemblage
-of life-sized mannikins dressed in the various
-costumes of the <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">sette cento</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Here are the red-robed Senator, the proud Procuratessa
-in brocade and Murano lace, the Abatino in
-his plum coloured taffeta coat and black small-clothes,
-the fashionable reveller in <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">bauto</i> and mask,
-the lacquey in livery of pale-blue silk, the lawyer,
-the gondolier, the groom, and the noble Marquess
-in his hunting-dress of white buckskin. Surely
-nowhere else does one come into such actual contact
-with that little world which was so essentially a world
-of <em>appearances</em>—of fine clothes, gay colours and
-graceful courtly attitudes. The mannikins indeed
-are not graceful. The Cavaliere Leandro can no
-longer execute a sweeping bow at the approach of
-the Procuratessa, or slip a love-letter into the muff
-of the charming Angelica; the Senator may stare as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214">214</a></span>
-haughtily as he pleases at the Abate and the lawyer,
-without compelling those humble clients to stir an
-inch from his path; and the noble Marquess, in his
-spotless buckskin leggings and gauntlets, will never
-again be off to shoot thrushes from a “bird-tower”
-in the Euganeans. But the very rigidity of their
-once supple joints seems an allegory of their latter
-state. There they stand, poor dolls of destiny, discarded
-playthings of the gods, in attitudes of puzzled
-wonder, as if arrested in their revels by the stroke
-of the dread Corsican magician—for it was not
-Death but Napoleon who “stepped tacitly and took
-them” from the plots and pleasures, the sunshine
-and music of the canals, to that pale world of oblivion
-where only now and then some dreamer curious of
-the day of little things revisits their melancholy
-ghosts.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak p1"><a id="Transcribers_Notes"></a>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>The spelling of non-English words was not checked.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.</p>
-
-<p>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.</p>
-
-<p>Redundant chapter titles removed by Transcriber.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Italian Backgrounds, by Edith Wharton
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ITALIAN BACKGROUNDS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 54932-h.htm or 54932-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/4/9/3/54932/
-
-Produced by Mary Glenn Krause, MFR, Charlie Howard, and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c6d7e50..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_004.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_004.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 597597c..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_004.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_005.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_005.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 0cf34db..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_005.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_035.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_035.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 31f2779..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_035.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_047.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_047.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d0582c9..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_047.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_059.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_059.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 33fe1be..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_059.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_073.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_073.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 4a2fbaf..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_073.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_087.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_087.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 4e5532b..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_087.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_145.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_145.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ba56362..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_145.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_155.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_155.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a84ff8c..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_155.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_163.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_163.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e817eaa..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_163.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_187.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_187.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 99bdbae..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_187.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_207.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_207.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c3e8a3d..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_207.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_217.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_217.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index b4fb367..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_217.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54932-h/images/i_227.jpg b/old/54932-h/images/i_227.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 60db44b..0000000
--- a/old/54932-h/images/i_227.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ