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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Old Calabria, by Norman Douglas</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Old Calabria</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Norman Douglas</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 23, 2003 [eBook #7385]<br />
+[Most recently updated: January 13, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Eric Eldred</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD CALABRIA ***</div>
+
+<h1>Old Calabria</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by Norman Douglas</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">I. SARACEN LUCERA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">II. MANFRED&rsquo;S TOWN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">III. THE ANGEL OF MANFREDONIA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">IV. CAVE-WORSHIP</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">V. LAND OF HORACE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">VI. AT VENOSA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">VII. THE BANDUSIAN FOUNT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">VIII. TILLERS OF THE SOIL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">IX. MOVING SOUTHWARDS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">X. THE FLYING MONK</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">XI. BY THE INLAND SEA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">XII. MOLLE TARENTUM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">XIII. INTO THE JUNGLE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">XIV. DRAGONS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap15">XV. BYZANTINISM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap16">XVI. REPOSING AT CASTROVILLARI</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap17">XVII. OLD MORANO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap18">XVIII. AFRICAN INTRUDERS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap19">XIX. UPLANDS OF POLLINO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap20">XX. A MOUNTAIN FESTIVAL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap21">XXI. MILTON IN CALABRIA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap22">XXII. THE &ldquo;GREEK&rdquo; SILA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap23">XXIII. ALBANIANS AND THEIR COLLEGE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap24">XXIV. AN ALBANIAN SEER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap25">XXV. SCRAMBLING TO LONGOBUCCO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap26">XXVI. AMONG THE BRUTTIANS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap27">XXVII. CALABRIAN BRIGANDAGE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap28">XXVIII. THE GREATER SILA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap29">XXIX. CHAOS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap30">XXX. THE SKIRTS OF MONTALTO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap31">XXXI. SOUTHERN SAINTLINESS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap32">XXXII. ASPROMONTE, THE CLOUD-GATHERER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap33">XXXIII. MUSOLINO AND THE LAW</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap34">XXXIV. MALARIA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap35">XXXV. CAULONIA TO SERRA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap36">XXXVI. MEMORIES OF GISSING</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap37">XXXVII. COTRONE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap38">XXXVIII. THE SAGE OF CROTON</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap39">XXXIX. MIDDAY AT PETELIA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap40">XL. THE COLUMN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap41">INDEX</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus01"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-1.jpg" width="601" height="358" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Tower at Manfredonia</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h3>
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+</h3>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus01">TOWER AT MANFREDONIA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus02">LION OF LUCERA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus03">AT SIPONTUM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus04">RUIN OF TRINITÀ: EAST FRONT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus05">ROMAN ALTAR</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus06">NORMAN CAPITAL AT VENOSA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus07">SOLE RELIC OF OLD TARAS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus08">FISHING AT TARANTO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus09">BY THE INLAND SEA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus10">FOUNTAINS OF GALAESUS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus11">TARANTO: THE LAST PALM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus12">BUFFALO AT POLICORO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus13">THE SINNO RIVER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus14">CHAPEL OF SAINT MARK</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus15">SHOEING A COW</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus16">MORANO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus17">AN OLD SHEPHERD</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus18">THE SARACENIC TYPE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus19">PEAK OF POLLINO IN JUNE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus20">CALABRIAN COWS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus21">THE VALLEY OF GAUDOLINO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus22">SAN DEMETRIO CORONE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus23">THE TRIONTO VALLEY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus24">LONGOBUCCO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus25">GATEWAY AT CATANZARO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus26">IN THE CEMETERY OF REGGIO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus27">TIRIOLO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus28">EFFECTS OF DEFORESTATION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus29">OLD SOVERATO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus30">THE MODERN AESARUS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus31">CEMETERY OF COTRONE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#illus32">ROMAN MASONRY AT CAPO COLONNA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>OLD CALABRIA</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page1"></a><a name="chap01"></a>I<br />
+SARACEN LUCERA
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+I find it hard to sum up in one word the character of Lucera&mdash;the effect
+it produces on the mind; one sees so many towns that the freshness of their
+images becomes blurred. The houses are low but not undignified; the streets
+regular and clean; there is electric light and somewhat indifferent
+accommodation for travellers; an infinity of barbers and chemists. Nothing
+remarkable in all this. Yet the character is there, if one could but seize upon
+it, since every place has its genius. Perhaps it lies in a certain feeling of
+aloofness that never leaves one here. We are on a hill&mdash;a mere wave of
+ground; a kind of spur, rather, rising up from the south&mdash;quite an absurd
+little hill, but sufficiently high to dominate the wide Apulian plain. And the
+nakedness of the land stimulates this aerial sense. There are some trees in the
+&ldquo;Belvedere&rdquo; or public garden that lies on the highest part of the
+spur and affords a fine view north and eastwards. But the greater part were
+only planted a few years ago, and those stretches of brown earth, those
+half-finished walks and straggling pigmy shrubs, give the place a crude and
+embryonic appearance. One thinks that the designers might have done more in the
+way of variety; there are no conifers excepting a few cryptomerias and yews
+which will all be dead in a couple of years, and as for those yuccas, beloved
+of Italian municipalities, they will have grown more dyspeptic-looking than
+ever. None the less, the garden will be a pleasant spot when the ilex shall
+have grown higher; even now it is the favourite evening walk of the citizens.
+Altogether, these public parks, which are now being planted all over south
+Italy, testify to renascent taste; they and the burial-places are often the
+only spots where the deafened and light-bedazzled stranger may find a little
+green
+<a name="Page2"></a>
+content; the content, respectively, of <i>L&rsquo;Allegro</i> and <i>Il
+Penseroso.</i> So the cemetery of Lucera, with its ordered walks drowned in the
+shade of cypress&mdash;roses and gleaming marble monuments in between&mdash;is
+a charming retreat, not only for the dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Belvedere, however, is not my promenade. My promenade lies yonder, on the
+other side of the valley, where the grave old Suabian castle sits on its
+emerald slope. It does not frown; it reposes firmly, with an air of tranquil
+and assured domination; &ldquo;it has found its place,&rdquo; as an Italian
+observed to me. Long before Frederick Barbarossa made it the centre of his
+southern dominions, long before the Romans had their fortress on the site, this
+eminence must have been regarded as the key of Apulia. All round the outside of
+those turreted walls (they are nearly a mile in circumference; the enclosure,
+they say, held sixty thousand people) there runs a level space. This is my
+promenade, at all hours of the day. Falcons are fluttering with wild cries
+overhead; down below, a long unimpeded vista of velvety green, flecked by a few
+trees and sullen streamlets and white farmhouses&mdash;the whole vision framed
+in a ring of distant Apennines. The volcanic cone of Mount Vulture, land of
+Horace, can be detected on clear days; it tempts me to explore those regions.
+But eastward rises up the promontory of Mount Gargano, and on the summit of its
+nearest hill one perceives a cheerful building, some village or convent, that
+beckons imperiously across the intervening lowlands. Yonder lies the venerable
+shrine of the archangel Michael, and Manfred&rsquo;s town. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This castle being a <i>national monument,</i> they have appointed a custodian
+to take charge of it; a worthless old fellow, full of untruthful information
+which he imparts with the hushed and conscience-stricken air of a man who is
+selling State secrets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That corner tower, sir, is the King&rsquo;s tower. It was built by the
+King.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you said just now that it was the Queen&rsquo;s tower.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it is. The Queen&mdash;she built it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What Queen?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What Queen? Why, the Queen&mdash;the Queen the German professor was
+talking about three years ago. But I must show you some skulls which we found
+<i>(sotto voce)</i> in a subterranean crypt. They used to throw the poor dead
+folk in here by hundreds; and under the Bourbons the criminals were hanged
+here, thousands of them. The blessed times! And this tower is the Queen&rsquo;s
+tower.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you called it the King&rsquo;s tower just now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page3"></a>
+&ldquo;Just so. That is because the King built it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What King?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, sir, how can I remember the names of all those gentlemen? I
+haven&rsquo;t so much as set eyes on them! But I must now show you some round
+sling-stones which we excavated <i>(sotto voce)</i> in a subterranean
+crypt&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One or two relics from this castle are preserved in the small municipal museum,
+founded about five years ago. Here are also a respectable collection of coins,
+a few prehistoric flints from Gargano, some quaint early bronze figurines and
+mutilated busts of Roman celebrities carved in marble or the recalcitrant local
+limestone. A dignified old lion&mdash;one of a pair (the other was stolen) that
+adorned the tomb of Aurelius, prastor of the Roman Colony of Luceria&mdash;has
+sought a refuge here, as well as many inscriptions, lamps, vases, and a
+miscellaneous collection of modern rubbish. A plaster cast of a Mussulman
+funereal stone, found near Foggia, will attract your eye; contrasted with the
+fulsome epitaphs of contemporary Christianity, it breathes a spirit of noble
+resignation:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate. May God show
+kindness to Mahomet and his kinsfolk, fostering them by his favours! This is
+the tomb of the captain Jacchia Albosasso. God be merciful to him. He passed
+away towards noon on Saturday in the five days of the month Moharram of the
+year 745 (5th April, 1348). May Allah likewise show mercy to him who
+reads.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+One cannot be at Lucera without thinking of that colony of twenty thousand
+Saracens, the escort of Frederick and his son, who lived here for nearly eighty
+years, and sheltered Manfred in his hour of danger. The chronicler Spinelli<a href="#fn-1" name="fnref-1" id="fnref-1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+has preserved an anecdote which shows Manfred&rsquo;s infatuation for these
+loyal aliens. In the year 1252 and in the sovereign&rsquo;s presence, a Saracen
+official gave a blow to a Neapolitan knight&mdash;a blow which was immediately
+returned; there was a tumult, and the upshot of it was that the Italian was
+condemned to lose his hand; all that the Neapolitan nobles could obtain from
+Manfred was that his left hand should be amputated instead of his right; the
+Arab, the cause of all, was merely relieved of his office. Nowadays, all
+<a name="Page4"></a>
+memory of Saracens has been swept out of the land. In default of anything
+better, they are printing a local halfpenny paper called &ldquo;Il
+Saraceno&ldquo;&mdash;a very innocuous pagan, to judge by a copy which I bought
+in a reckless moment.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-1" id="fn-1"></a> <a href="#fnref-1">[1]</a>
+These journals are now admitted to have been manufactured in the sixteenth
+century by the historian Costanzo for certain genealogical purposes of his own.
+Professor Bernhardi doubted their authenticity in 1869, and his doubts
+have been confirmed by Capasso.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This museum also contains a buxom angel of stucco known as the &ldquo;Genius of
+Bourbonism.&rdquo; In the good old days it used to ornament the town hall,
+fronting the entrance; but now, degraded to a museum curiosity, it presents to
+the public its back of ample proportions, and the curator intimated that he
+considered this attitude quite appropriate&mdash;historically speaking, of
+course. Furthermore, they have carted hither, from the Chamber of Deputies in
+Rome, the chair once occupied by Ruggiero Bonghi. Dear Bonghi! From a sense of
+duty he used to visit a certain dull and pompous house in the capital and
+forthwith fall asleep on the nearest sofa; he slept sometimes for two hours at
+a stretch, while all the other visitors were solemnly marched to the spot to
+observe him&mdash;behold the great Bonghi: he slumbers! There is a statue
+erected to him here, and a street has likewise been named after another
+celebrity, Giovanni Bovio. If I informed the townsmen of my former acquaintance
+with these two heroes, they would perhaps put up a marble tablet commemorating
+the fact. For the place is infected with the patriotic disease of
+monumentomania. The drawback is that with every change of administration the
+streets are re-baptized and the statues shifted to make room for new
+favourites; so the civic landmarks come and go, with the swiftness of a
+cinematograph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Frederick II also has his street, and so has Pietro Giannone. This smacks of
+anti-clericalism. But to judge by the number of priests and the daily hordes of
+devout and dirty pilgrims that pour into the town from the fanatical fastnesses
+of the Abruzzi&mdash;picturesque, I suppose we should call them&mdash;the
+country is sufficiently orthodox. Every self-respecting family, they tell me,
+has its pet priest, who lives on them in return for spiritual consolations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a religious festival some nights ago in honour of Saint Espedito. No
+one could tell me more about this holy man than that he was a kind of
+pilgrim-warrior, and that his cult here is of recent date; it was imported or
+manufactured some four years ago by a rich merchant who, tired of the old local
+saints, built a church in honour of this new one, and thereby enrolled him
+among the city gods.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus02"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-2.jpg" width="546" height="362" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Lion of Lucera</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+On this occasion the square was seething with people: few
+<a name="Page5"></a>
+women, and the men mostly in dark clothes; we are already under Moorish and
+Spanish influences. A young boy addressed me with the polite question whether I
+could tell him the precise number of the population of London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That depended, I said, on what one described as London. There was what they
+called greater London&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It depended! That was what he had always been given to understand. . . . And
+how did I like Lucera? Rather a dull little place, was it not? Nothing like
+Paris, of course. Still, if I could delay my departure for some days longer,
+they would have the trial of a man who had murdered three people: it might be
+quite good fun. He was informed that they hanged such persons in England, as
+they used to do hereabouts; it seemed rather barbaric, because, naturally,
+nobody is ever responsible for his actions; but in England, no
+doubt<i>&mdash;&mdash;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That is the normal attitude of these folks towards us and our institutions. We
+are savages, hopeless savages; but a little savagery, after all, is quite
+endurable. Everything is endurable if you have lots of money, like these
+English.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for myself, wandering among that crowd of unshaven creatures, that rustic
+population, fiercely gesticulating and dressed in slovenly hats and garments, I
+realized once again what the average Anglo-Saxon would ask himself: Are they
+<i>all</i> brigands, or only some of them? That music, too&mdash;what is it
+that makes this stuff so utterly unpalatable to a civilized northerner? A
+soulless cult of rhythm, and then, when the simplest of melodies emerges, they
+cling to it with the passionate delight of a child who has discovered the moon.
+These men are still in the age of platitudes, so far as music is concerned; an
+infantile aria is to them what some foolish rhymed proverb is to the Arabs: a
+thing of God, a portent, a joy for ever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You may visit the cathedral; there is a fine <i>verde antico</i> column on
+either side of the sumptuous main portal. I am weary, just now, of these
+structures; the spirit of pagan Lucera&mdash;&ldquo;Lucera dei Pagani&rdquo; it
+used to be called&mdash;has descended upon me; I feel inclined to echo
+Carducci&rsquo;s &ldquo;<i>Addio, nume semitico!</i>&rdquo; One sees so many of
+these sombre churches, and they are all alike in their stony elaboration of
+mysticism and wrong-headedness; besides, they have been described, over and
+over again, by enthusiastic connaisseurs who dwell lovingly upon their artistic
+quaintnesses but forget the grovelling herd that reared them, with the lash at
+their backs, or the odd type of humanity&mdash;the gargoyle type&mdash;that has
+since grown up under their shadow and
+<a name="Page6"></a>
+influence. I prefer to return to the sun and stars, to my promenade beside the
+castle walls.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+But for the absence of trees and hedges, one might take this to be some English
+prospect of the drowsy Midland counties&mdash;so green it is, so golden-grey
+the sky. The sunlight peers down dispersedly through windows in this firmament
+of clouded amber, alighting on some mouldering tower, some patch of ripening
+corn or distant city&mdash;Troia, lapped in Byzantine slumber, or San Severo
+famed in war. This in spring. But what days of glistering summer heat, when the
+earth is burnt to cinders under a heavenly dome that glows like a brazier of
+molten copper! For this country is the Sahara of Italy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One is glad, meanwhile, that the castle does not lie in the natal land of the
+Hohenstaufen. The interior is quite deserted, to be sure; they have built half
+the town of Lucera with its stones, even as Frederick quarried them out of the
+early Roman citadel beneath; but it is at least a harmonious desolation. There
+are no wire-fenced walks among the ruins, no feeding-booths and cheap
+reconstructions of draw-bridges and police-notices at every corner; no gaudy
+women scribbling to their friends in the &ldquo;Residenzstadt&rdquo; post cards
+illustrative of the &ldquo;Burgruine,&rdquo; while their husbands perspire over
+mastodontic beer-jugs. There is only peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These are the delights of Lucera: to sit under those old walls and watch the
+gracious cloud-shadows dappling the plain, oblivious of yonder assemblage of
+barbers and politicians. As for those who can reconstruct the vanished glories
+of such a place&mdash;happy they! I find the task increasingly difficult. One
+outgrows the youthful age of hero-worship; next, our really keen edges are so
+soon worn off by mundane trivialities and vexations that one is glad to take
+refuge in simpler pleasures once more&mdash;to return to primitive
+emotionalism. There are so many Emperors of past days! And like the old
+custodian, I have not so much as set eyes on them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet this Frederick is no dim figure; he looms grandly through the intervening
+haze. How well one understands that craving for the East, nowadays; how modern
+they were, he and his son the &ldquo;Sultan of Lucera,&rdquo; and their friends
+and counsellors, who planted this garden of exotic culture! Was it some
+afterglow of the luminous world that had sunk below the horizon, or a pale
+streak of the coming dawn? And if you now glance down into this enclosure that
+once echoed with the song of minstrels
+<a name="Page7"></a>
+and the soft laughter of women, with the discourse of wits, artists and
+philosophers, and the clang of arms&mdash;if you look, you will behold nothing
+but a green lake, a waving field of grass. No matter. The ambitions of these
+men are fairly realized, and every one of us may keep a body-guard of pagans,
+an&rsquo;t please him; and a harem likewise&mdash;to judge by the newspapers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For he took his Orientalism seriously; he had a harem, with eunuchs, etc., all
+proper, and was pleased to give an Eastern colour to his entertainments.
+Matthew Paris relates how Frederick&rsquo;s brother-in-law, returning from the
+Holy Land, rested awhile at his Italian court, and saw, among other diversions,
+&ldquo;duas puellas Saracenicas formosas, quae in pavimenti planitie binis
+globis insisterent, volutisque globis huo illucque ferrentur canentes, cymbala
+manibus collidentes, corporaque secundum modulos motantes atque
+flectentes.&rdquo; I wish I had been there. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I walked to the castle yesterday evening on the chance of seeing an eclipse of
+the moon which never came, having taken place at quite another hour. A
+cloudless night, dripping with moisture, the electric lights of distant Foggia
+gleaming in the plain. There are brick-kilns at the foot of the incline, and
+from some pools in the neighbourhood issued a loud croaking of frogs, while the
+pallid smoke of the furnaces, pressed down by the evening dew, trailed
+earthward in a long twisted wreath, like a dragon crawling sulkily to his den.
+But on the north side one could hear the nightingales singing in the gardens
+below. The dark mass of Mount Gargano rose up clearly in the moonlight, and I
+began to sketch out some itinerary of my wanderings on that soil. There was
+Sant&rsquo; Angelo, the archangel&rsquo;s abode; and the forest region; and
+Lesina with its lake; and Vieste the remote, the end of all things. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then my thoughts wandered to the Hohenstaufen and the conspiracy whereby their
+fate was avenged. The romantic figures of Manfred and Conradin; their
+relentless enemy Charles; Costanza, her brow crowned with a poetic nimbus (that
+melted, towards the end, into an aureole of bigotry); Frangipani, huge in
+villainy; the princess Beatrix, tottering from the dungeon where she had been
+confined for nearly twenty years; her deliverer Roger de Lauria, without whose
+resourcefulness and audacity it might have gone ill with Aragon; Popes and
+Palæologus&mdash;brilliant colour effects; the king of England and Saint
+Louis of France; in the background, dimly discernible, the colossal shades of
+Frederick and Innocent, looked in deadly embrace; and the whole congress of
+figures enlivened and
+<a name="Page8"></a>
+interpenetrated as by some electric fluid&mdash;the personality of John of
+Procida. That the element of farce might not be lacking, Fate contrived that
+exquisite royal duel at Bordeaux where the two mighty potentates, calling each
+other by a variety of unkingly epithets, enacted a prodigiously fine piece of
+foolery for the delectation of Europe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From this terrace one can overlook both Foggia and Castel Fiorentino&mdash;the
+beginning and end of the drama; and one follows the march of this magnificent
+retribution without a shred of compassion for the gloomy papal hireling.
+Disaster follows disaster with mathematical precision, till at last he perishes
+miserably, consumed by rage and despair. Then our satisfaction is complete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No; not quite complete. For in one point the stupendous plot seems to have been
+imperfectly achieved. Why did Roger de Lauria not profit by his victory to
+insist upon the restitution of the young brothers of Beatrix, of those unhappy
+princes who had been confined as infants in 1266, and whose very existence
+seems to have faded from the memory of historians? Or why did Costanza, who
+might have dealt with her enemy&rsquo;s son even as Conradin had been dealt
+with, not round her magnanimity by claiming her own flesh and blood, the last
+scions of a great house? Why were they not released during the subsequent
+peace, or at least in 1302? The reason is as plain as it is unlovely; nobody
+knew what to do with them. Political reasons counselled their effacement, their
+non-existence. Horrible thought, that the sunny world should be too small for
+three orphan children! In their Apulian fastness they remained&mdash;in chains.
+A royal rescript of 1295 orders that they be freed from their fetters. Thirty
+years in fetters! Their fate is unknown; the night of mediævalism closes in
+upon them once more. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Further musings were interrupted by the appearance of a shape which approached
+from round the corner of one of the towers. It came nearer stealthily, pausing
+every now and then. Had I evoked, willy-nilly, some phantom of the buried past?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was only the custodian, leading his dog Musolino. After a shower of
+compliments and apologies, he gave me to understand that it was his duty, among
+other things, to see that no one should endeavour to raise the treasure which
+was hidden under these ruins; several people, he explained, had already made
+the attempt by night. For the rest, I was quite at liberty to take my pleasure
+about the castle at all hours. But as to touching the buried hoard, it was
+<i>proibito&mdash;</i>forbidden!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page9"></a>
+I was glad of the incident, which conjured up for me the Oriental mood with its
+genii and subterranean wealth. Straightway this incongruous and irresponsible
+old buffoon was invested with a new dignity; transformed into a threatening
+Ifrit, the guardian of the gold, or&mdash;who knows?&mdash;Iblis incarnate. The
+gods take wondrous shapes, sometimes.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page10"></a><a name="chap02"></a>II<br />
+MANFRED&rsquo;S TOWN</h2>
+
+<p>
+As the train moved from Lucera to Foggia and thence onwards, I had enjoyed
+myself rationally, gazing at the emerald plain of Apulia, soon to be scorched
+to ashes, but now richly dight with the yellow flowers of the giant fennel,
+with patches of ruby-red poppy and asphodels pale and shadowy, past their
+prime. I had thought upon the history of this immense tract of
+country&mdash;upon all the floods of legislation and theorizings to which its
+immemorial customs of pasturage have given birth. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, suddenly, the aspect of life seemed to change. I felt unwell, and so
+swift was the transition from health that I had wantonly thrown out of the
+window, beyond recall, a burning cigar ere realizing that it was only a little
+more than half smoked. We were crossing the Calendaro, a sluggish stream which
+carefully collects all the waters of this region only to lose them again in a
+swamp not far distant; and it was positively as if some impish sprite had leapt
+out of those noisome waves, boarded the train, and flung himself into me, after
+the fashion of the &ldquo;Horla&rdquo; in the immortal tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Doses of quinine such as would make an English doctor raise his eyebrows have
+hitherto only succeeded in provoking the Calendaro microbe to more virulent
+activity. Nevertheless, <i>on s&rsquo;y fait.</i> I am studying him and,
+despite his protean manifestations, have discovered three principal
+ingredients: malaria, bronchitis and hay-fever&mdash;not your ordinary
+hay-fever, oh, no! but such as a mammoth might conceivably catch, if thrust
+back from his germless, frozen tundras into the damply blossoming Miocene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlady of this establishment has a more commonplace name for the
+distemper. She calls it &ldquo;scirocco.&rdquo; And certainly this pest of the
+south blows incessantly; the mountain-line of Gargano is veiled, the
+sea&rsquo;s horizon veiled, the coast-lands of Apulia veiled by its tepid and
+unwholesome breath. To cheer
+<a name="Page11"></a>
+me up, she says that on clear days one can see Castel del Monte, the
+Hohenstaufen eyrie, shining yonder above Barletta, forty miles distant. It
+sounds rather improbable; still, yesterday evening there arose a sudden vision
+of a white town in that direction, remote and dream-like, far across the water.
+Was it Barletta? Or Margherita? It lingered awhile, poised on an errant
+sunbeam; then sank into the deep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From this window I look into the little harbour whose beach is dotted with
+fishing-boats. Some twenty or thirty sailing-vessels are riding at anchor; in
+the early morning they unfurl their canvas and sally forth, in amicable
+couples, to scour the azure deep&mdash;it is greenish-yellow at this
+moment&mdash;returning at nightfall with the spoils of ocean, mostly young
+sharks, to judge by the display in the market. Their white sails bear fabulous
+devices in golden colour of moons and crescents and dolphins; some are marked
+like the &ldquo;orange-tip&rdquo; butterfly. A gunboat is now stationed here on
+a mysterious errand connected with the Albanian rising on the other side of the
+Adriatic. There has been whispered talk of illicit volunteering among the youth
+on this side, which the government is anxious to prevent. And to enliven the
+scene, a steamer calls every now and then to take passengers to the Tremiti
+islands. One would like to visit them, if only in memory of those martyrs of
+Bourbonism, who were sent in hundreds to these rocks and cast into dungeons to
+perish. I have seen such places; they are vast caverns artificially excavated
+below the surface of the earth; into these the unfortunates were lowered and
+left to crawl about and rot, the living mingled with the dead. To this day they
+find mouldering skeletons, loaded with heavy iron chains and ball-weights.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A copious spring gushes up on this beach and flows into the sea. It is sadly
+neglected. Were I tyrant of Manfredonia, I would build me a fair marble
+fountain here, with a carven assemblage of nymphs and sea-monsters spouting
+water from their lusty throats, and plashing in its rivulets. It may well be
+that the existence of this fount helped to decide Manfred in his choice of a
+site for his city; such springs are rare in this waterless land. And from this
+same source, very likely, is derived the local legend of Saint Lorenzo and the
+Dragon, which is quite independent of that of Saint Michael the dragon-killer
+on the heights above us. These venerable water-spirits, these <i>dracs,</i> are
+interesting beasts who went through many metamorphoses ere attaining their
+present shape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Manfredonia lies on a plain sloping very gently
+<a name="Page12"></a>
+seawards&mdash;practically a dead level, and in one of the hottest districts of
+Italy. Yet, for some obscure reason, there is no street along the sea itself;
+the cross-roads end in abrupt squalor at the shore. One wonders what
+considerations&mdash;political, aesthetic or hygienic&mdash;prevented the
+designers of the town from carrying out its general principles of construction
+and building a decent promenade by the waves, where the ten thousand citizens
+could take the air in the breathless summer evenings, instead of being cooped
+up, as they now are, within stifling hot walls. The choice of Manfredonia as a
+port does not testify to any great foresight on the part of its
+founder&mdash;peace to his shade! It will for ever slumber in its bay, while
+commerce passes beyond its reach; it will for ever be malarious with the
+marshes of Sipontum at its edges. But this particular defect of the place is
+not Manfred&rsquo;s fault, since the city was razed to the ground by the Turks
+in 1620, and then built up anew; built up, says Lenormant, according to the
+design of the old city. Perhaps a fear of other Corsair raids induced the
+constructors to adhere to the old plan, by which the place could be more easily
+defended. Not much of Manfredonia seems to have been completed when
+Pacicchelli&rsquo;s view (1703) was engraved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Speaking of the weather, the landlady further told me that the wind blew so
+hard three months ago&mdash;&ldquo;during that big storm in the winter,
+don&rsquo;t you remember?&rdquo;&mdash;that it broke all the iron lamp-posts
+between the town and the station. Now here was a statement sounding even more
+improbable than her other one about Castel del Monte, but admitting of
+verification. Wheezing and sneezing, I crawled forth, and found it correct. It
+must have been a respectable gale, since the cast-iron supports are snapped in
+half, every one of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Those Turks, by the way, burnt the town on that memorable occasion. That was a
+common occurrence in those days. Read any account of their incursions into
+Italy during this and the preceding centuries, and you will find that the
+corsairs burnt the towns whenever they had time to set them alight. They could
+not burn them nowadays, and this points to a total change in economic
+conditions. Wood was cut down so heedlessly that it became too scarce for
+building purposes, and stone took its place. This has altered domestic
+architecture; it has changed the landscape, denuding the hill-sides that were
+once covered with timber; it has impoverished the country by converting
+fruitful plains into marshes or arid tracts of stone swept by irregular and
+intermittent floods; it has modified, if I mistake
+<a name="Page13"></a>
+not, the very character of the people. The desiccation of the climate has
+entailed a desiccation of national humour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Muratori has a passage somewhere in his &ldquo;Antiquities&rdquo; regarding the
+old method of construction and the wooden shingles, <i>scandulae,</i> in use
+for roofing&mdash;I must look it up, if ever I reach civilized regions again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the municipality, which occupies the spacious apartments of a former
+Dominican convent, they will show you the picture of a young girl, one of the
+Beccarini family, who was carried off at a tender age in one of these Turkish
+raids, and subsequently became &ldquo;Sultana.&rdquo; Such captive girls
+generally married sultans&mdash;or ought to have married them; the wish being
+father to the thought. But the story is disputed; rightly, I think. For the
+portrait is painted in the French manner, and it is hardly likely that a
+harem-lady would have been exhibited to a European artist. The legend goes on
+to say that she was afterwards liberated by the Knights of Malta, together with
+her Turkish son who, as was meet and proper, became converted to Christianity
+and died a monk. The Beccarini family (of Siena, I fancy) might find some traces
+of her in their archives. <i>Ben trovato,</i> at all events. When one looks at
+the pretty portrait, one cannot blame any kind of &ldquo;Sultan&rdquo; for
+feeling well-disposed towards the original.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The weather has shown some signs of improvement and tempted me, despite the
+persistent &ldquo;scirocco&rdquo; mood, to a few excursions into the
+neighbourhood. But there seem to be no walks hereabouts, and the hills, three
+miles distant, are too remote for my reduced vitality. The intervening region
+is a plain of rock carved so smoothly, in places, as to appear artificially
+levelled with the chisel; large tracts of it are covered with the Indian fig
+(cactus). In the shade of these grotesque growths lives a dainty flora:
+trembling grasses of many kinds, rue, asphodel, thyme, the wild asparagus, a
+diminutive blue iris, as well as patches of saxifrage that deck the stone with
+a brilliant enamel of red and yellow. This wild beauty makes one think how much
+better the graceful wrought-iron balconies of the town would look if enlivened
+with blossoms, with pendent carnations or pelargonium; but there is no great
+display of these things; the deficiency of water is a characteristic of the
+place; it is a flowerless and songless city. The only good drinking-water is
+that which is bottled at the mineral springs of Monte Vulture and sold cheaply
+enough all over the country. And the mass of the country people have small
+charm of feature. Their faces seem to have been chopped
+<a name="Page14"></a>
+with a hatchet into masks of sombre virility; a hard life amid burning
+limestone deserts is reflected in their countenances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+None the less, they have a public garden; even more immature than that of
+Lucera, but testifying to greater taste. Its situation, covering a forlorn
+semicircular tract of ground about the old Anjou castle, is <i>a priori</i> a
+good one. But when the trees are fully grown, it will be impossible to see this
+fine ruin save at quite close quarters&mdash;just across the moat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I lamented this fact to a solitary gentleman who was strolling about here and
+who replied, upon due deliberation:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One cannot have everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he added, as a suggestive afterthought:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Inasmuch as one thing sometimes excludes another.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I pause, to observe parenthetically that this habit of uttering platitudes in
+the grand manner as though disclosing an idea of vital novelty (which Charles
+Lamb, poor fellow, thought peculiar to natives of Scotland) is as common among
+Italians as among Englishmen. But veiled in sonorous Latinisms, the staleness
+of such remarks assumes an air of profundity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For my part,&rdquo; he went on, warming to his theme, &ldquo;I am
+thoroughly satisfied. Who will complain of the trees? Only a few makers of bad
+pictures. They can go elsewhere. Our country, dear sir, is <i>encrusted,</i>
+with old castles and other feudal absurdities, and if I had the management of
+things&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sentence was not concluded, for at that moment his hat was blown off by a
+violent gust of wind, and flew merrily over beds of flowering marguerites in
+the direction of the main street, while he raced after it, vanishing in a cloud
+of dust. The chase must have been long and arduous; he never returned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wandering about the upper regions of this fortress whose chambers are now used
+as a factory of cement goods and a refuge for some poor families, I espied a
+good pre-renaissance relief of Saint Michael and the dragon immured in the
+masonry, and overhung by the green leaves of an exuberant wild fig that has
+thrust its roots into the sturdy old walls. Here, at Manfredonia, we are
+already under the shadow of the holy mountain and the archangel&rsquo;s wings,
+but the usual representations of him are childishly emasculate&mdash;the
+negation of his divine and heroic character. This one portrays a genuine
+warrior-angel of the old type: grave and grim. Beyond this castle and the
+town-walls, which are best preserved on the north side, nothing in Manfredonia
+is older than 1620. There is a fine <i>campanile,</i> but the cathedral looks
+like a shed for disused omnibuses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page15"></a>
+Along the streets, little red flags are hanging out of the houses, at frequent
+intervals: signals of harbourage for the parched wayfarer. Within, you behold a
+picturesque confusion of rude chairs set among barrels and vats full of dark
+red wine where, amid Rembrandtesque surroundings, you can get as drunk as a
+lord for sixpence. Blithe oases! It must be delightful, in summer, to while
+away the sultry hours in their hospitable twilight; even at this season they
+seem to be extremely popular resorts, throwing a new light on those allusions
+by classical authors to &ldquo;thirsty Apulia.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But on many of the dwellings I noticed another symbol: an ominous blue metal
+tablet with a red cross, bearing the white-lettered words &ldquo;VIGILANZA
+NOTTURNA.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it some anti-burglary association? I enquired of a serious-looking
+individual who happened to be passing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His answer did not help to clear up matters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A pure job, <i>signore mio</i>, a pure job! There is a society in
+Cerignola or somewhere, a society which persuades the various town
+councils&mdash;<i>persuades</i> them, you understand&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ended abruptly, with the gesture of paying out money between his finger and
+thumb. Then he sadly shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I sought for more light on this cryptic utterance; in vain. What were the
+facts, I persisted? Did certain householders subscribe to keep a guardian on
+their premises at night&mdash;what had the municipalities to do with
+it&mdash;was there much house-breaking in Manfredonia, and, if so, had this
+association done anything to check it? And for how long had the institution
+been established?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the mystery grew ever darker. After heaving a deep sigh, he condescended to
+remark:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The usual camorra! Eat&mdash;eat; from father to son. Eat&mdash;eat!
+That&rsquo;s all they think about, the brood of assassins. . . . Just look at
+them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I glanced down the street and beheld a venerable gentleman of kindly aspect who
+approached slowly, leaning on the arm of a fair-haired youth&mdash;his
+grandson, I supposed. He wore a long white beard, and an air of apostolic
+detachment from the affairs of this world. They came nearer. The boy was
+listening, deferentially, to some remark of the elder; his lips were parted in
+attention and his candid, sunny face would have rejoiced the heart of della
+Robbia. They passed within a few feet of me, lovingly engrossed in one another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page16"></a>
+&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; I queried, turning to my informant and anxious to learn
+what misdeeds could be laid to the charge of such godlike types of humanity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But that person was no longer at my side. He had quietly withdrawn himself, in
+the interval; he had evanesced, &ldquo;moved on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An oracular and elusive citizen. ...
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page17"></a><a name="chap03"></a>III<br />
+THE ANGEL OF MANFREDONIA</h2>
+
+<p>
+Whoever looks at a map of the Gargano promontory will see that it is
+besprinkled with Greek names of persons and places&mdash;Matthew, Mark,
+Nikander, Onofrius, Pirgiano (Pyrgos) and so forth. Small wonder, for these
+eastern regions were in touch with Constantinople from early days, and the
+spirit of Byzance still hovers over them. It was on this mountain that the
+archangel Michael, during his first flight to Western Europe, deigned to appear
+to a Greek bishop of Sipontum, Laurentius by name; and ever since that time a
+certain cavern, sanctified by the presence of this winged messenger of God, has
+been the goal of millions of pilgrims.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fastness of Sant&rsquo; Angelo, metropolis of European angel-worship, has
+grown up around this &ldquo;devout and honourable cave&rdquo;; on sunny days
+its houses are clearly visible from Manfredonia. They who wish to pay their
+devotions at the shrine cannot do better than take with them Gregorovius, as
+cicerone and mystagogue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vainly I waited for a fine day to ascend the heights. At last I determined to
+have done with the trip, be the weather what it might. A coachman was summoned
+and negotiations entered upon for starting next morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sixty-five francs, he began by telling me, was the price paid by an Englishman
+last year for a day&rsquo;s visit to the sacred mountain. It may well be
+true&mdash;foreigners will do anything, in Italy. Or perhaps it was only said
+to &ldquo;encourage&rdquo; me. But I am rather hard to encourage, nowadays. I
+reminded the man that there was a diligence service there and back for a franc
+and a half, and even that price seemed rather extortionate. I had seen so many
+holy grottos in my life! And who, after all, was this Saint Michael? The
+Eternal Father, perchance? Nothing of the kind: just an ordinary angel! We had
+dozens of them, in England. Fortunately, I added, I had already received an
+offer to join one of the private parties who drive up, fourteen or fifteen
+persons behind
+<a name="Page18"></a>
+one diminutive pony&mdash;and that, as he well knew, would be a matter of only
+a few pence. And even then, the threatening sky . . . Yes, on second thoughts,
+it was perhaps wisest to postpone the excursion altogether. Another day, if God
+wills! Would he accept this cigar as a recompense for his trouble in coming?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In dizzy leaps and bounds his claims fell to eight francs. It was the tobacco
+that worked the wonder; a gentleman who will give <i>something for nothing</i>
+(such was his logic)&mdash;well, you never know what you may not get out of
+him. Agree to his price, and chance it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He consigned the cigar to his waistcoat pocket to smoke after dinner, and
+departed&mdash;vanquished, but inwardly beaming with bright anticipation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A wretched morning was disclosed as I drew open the shutters&mdash;gusts of
+rain and sleet beating against the window-panes. No matter: the carriage stood
+below, and after that customary and hateful apology for breakfast which
+suffices to turn the thoughts of the sanest man towards themes of suicide and
+murder&mdash;when will southerners learn to eat a proper breakfast at proper
+hours?&mdash;we started on our journey. The sun came out in visions of
+tantalizing briefness, only to be swallowed up again in driving murk, and of
+the route we traversed I noticed only the old stony track that cuts across the
+twenty-one windings of the new carriage-road here and there. I tried to picture
+to myself the Norman princes, the emperors, popes, and other ten thousand
+pilgrims of celebrity crawling up these rocky slopes&mdash;barefoot&mdash;on
+such a day as this. It must have tried the patience even of Saint Francis of
+Assisi, who pilgrimaged with the rest of them and, according to Pontanus,
+performed a little miracle here <i>en passant,</i> as was his wont.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After about three hours&rsquo; driving we reached the town of Sant&rsquo;
+Angelo. It was bitterly cold at this elevation of 800 metres. Acting on the
+advice of the coachman, I at once descended into the sanctuary; it would be
+warm down there, he thought. The great festival of 8 May was over, but flocks
+of worshippers were still arriving, and picturesquely pagan they looked in
+grimy, tattered garments&mdash;their staves tipped with pine-branches and a
+scrip.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the massive bronze doors of the chapel, that were made at Constantinople in
+1076 for a rich citizen of Amalfi, metal rings are inserted; these, like a true
+pilgrim, you must clash furiously, to call the attention of the Powers within
+to your visit; and on issuing, you must once more knock as hard as you can, in
+order
+<a name="Page19"></a>
+that the consummation of your act of worship may be duly reported: judging by
+the noise made, the deity must be very hard of hearing. Strangely deaf they
+are, sometimes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The twenty-four panels of these doors are naively encrusted with
+representations, in enamel, of angel-apparitions of many kinds; some of them
+are inscribed, and the following is worthy of note:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I beg and implore the priests of Saint Michael to cleanse these gates
+once a year as I have now shown them, in order that they may be always bright
+and shining.&rdquo; The recommendation has plainly not been carried out for a
+good many years past.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having entered the portal, you climb down a long stairway amid swarms of pious,
+foul clustering beggars to a vast cavern, the archangel&rsquo;s abode. It is a
+natural recess in the rock, illuminated by candles. Here divine service is
+proceeding to the accompaniment of cheerful operatic airs from an asthmatic
+organ; the water drops ceaselessly from the rocky vault on to the devout heads
+of kneeling worshippers that cover the floor, lighted candle in hand, rocking
+themselves ecstatically and droning and chanting. A weird scene, in truth. And
+the coachman was quite right in his surmise as to the difference in
+temperature. It is hot down here, damply hot, as in an orchid-house. But the
+aroma cannot be described as a floral emanation: it is the <i>bouquet,</i>
+rather, of thirteen centuries of unwashed and perspiring pilgrims.
+&ldquo;TERRIBILIS EST LOCUS ISTE,&rdquo; says an inscription over the entrance
+of the shrine. Very true. In places like this one understands the uses, and
+possibly the origin, of incense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I lingered none the less, and my thoughts went back to the East, whence these
+mysterious practices are derived. But an Oriental crowd of worshippers does not
+move me like these European masses of fanaticism; I can never bring myself to
+regard without a certain amount of disquietude such passionate pilgrims. Give
+them their new Messiah, and all our painfully accumulated art and knowledge,
+all that reconciles civilized man to earthly existence, is blown to the winds.
+Society can deal with its criminals. Not they, but fond enthusiasts such as
+these, are the menace to its stability. Bitter reflections; but then&mdash;the
+drive upward had chilled my human sympathies, and besides&mdash;that so-called
+breakfast. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The grovelling herd was left behind. I ascended the stairs and, profiting by a
+gleam of sunshine, climbed up to where, above the town, there stands a proud
+aerial ruin known as the &ldquo;Castle of
+<a name="Page20"></a>
+the Giant.&rdquo; On one of its stones is inscribed the date 1491&mdash;a
+certain Queen of Naples, they say, was murdered within those now crumbling
+walls. These sovereigns were murdered in so many castles that one wonders how
+they ever found time to be alive at all. The structure is a wreck and its
+gateway closed up; nor did I feel any great inclination, in that icy blast of
+wind, to investigate the roofless interior.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was able to observe, however, that this &ldquo;feudal absurdity&rdquo; bears
+a number like any inhabited house of Sant&rsquo; Angelo&mdash;it is No. 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is the latest pastime of the Italian Government: to re-number dwellings
+throughout the kingdom; and not only human habitations, but walls, old ruins,
+stables, churches, as well as an occasional door-post and window. They are
+having no end of fun over the game, which promises to keep them amused for any
+length of time&mdash;in fact, until the next craze is invented. Meanwhile, so
+long as the fit lasts, half a million bright-eyed officials, burning with
+youthful ardour, are employed in affixing these numerals, briskly entering them
+into ten times as many note-books and registering them into thousands of
+municipal archives, all over the country, for some inscrutable but hugely
+important administrative purposes. &ldquo;We have the employes,&rdquo; as a
+Roman deputy once told me, &ldquo;and therefore: they must find some
+occupation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altogether, the weather this day sadly impaired my appetite for research and
+exploration. On the way to the castle I had occasion to admire the fine tower
+and to regret that there seemed to exist no coign of vantage from which it
+could fairly be viewed; I was struck, also, by the number of small figures of
+Saint Michael of an ultra-youthful, almost infantile, type; and lastly, by
+certain clean-shaven old men of the place. These venerable and decorative
+brigands&mdash;for such they would have been, a few years ago&mdash;now stood
+peacefully at their thresholds, wearing a most becoming cloak of thick brown
+wool, shaped like a burnous. The garment interested me; it may be a legacy from
+the Arabs who dominated this region for some little time, despoiling the holy
+sanctuary and leaving their memory to be perpetuated by the neighbouring
+&ldquo;Monte Saraceno.&rdquo; The costume, on the other hand, may have come
+over from Greece; it is figured on Tanagra statuettes and worn by modern Greek
+shepherds. By Sardinians, too. ... It may well be a primordial form of clothing
+with mankind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The view from this castle must be superb on clear days. Standing there, I
+looked inland and remembered all the places I had
+<a name="Page21"></a>
+intended to see&mdash;Vieste, and Lesina with its lakes, and Selva Umbra, whose
+very name is suggestive of dewy glades; how remote they were, under such
+dispiriting clouds! I shall never see them. Spring hesitates to smile upon
+these chill uplands; we are still in the grip of winter&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Aut aquilonibus<br />
+Querceti Gargani laborent<br />
+Et foliis viduantur orni&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+so sang old Horace, of Garganian winds. I scanned the horizon, seeking for his
+Mount Vulture, but all that region was enshrouded in a grey curtain of vapour;
+only the Stagno Salso&mdash;a salt mere wherein Candelaro forgets his mephitic
+waters&mdash;shone with a steady glow, like a sheet of polished lead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon the rain fell once more and drove me to seek refuge among the houses,
+where I glimpsed the familiar figure of my coachman, sitting disconsolately
+under a porch. He looked up and remarked (for want of something better to say)
+that he had been searching for me all over the town, fearing that some mischief
+might have happened to me. I was touched by these words; touched, that is, by
+his child-like simplicity in imagining that he could bring me to believe a
+statement of such radiant improbability; so touched, that I pressed a franc
+into his reluctant palm and bade him buy with it something to eat. A whole
+franc. . . . <i>Aha!</i> he doubtless thought, <i>my theory of the gentleman:
+it begins to work.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was barely midday. Yet I was already surfeited with the angelic metropolis,
+and my thoughts began to turn in the direction of Manfredonia once more. At a
+corner of the street, however, certain fluent vociferations in English and
+Italian, which nothing would induce me to set down here, assailed my ears,
+coming up&mdash;apparently&mdash;out of the bowels of the earth. I stopped to
+listen, shocked to hear ribald language in a holy town like this; then,
+impelled by curiosity, descended a long flight of steps and found myself in a
+subterranean wine-cellar. There was drinking and card-playing going on here
+among a party of emigrants&mdash;merry souls; a good half of them spoke English
+and, despite certain irreverent phrases, they quickly won my heart with a
+&ldquo;Here! You drink <i>this,</i> mister.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This dim recess was an instructive pendant to the archangel&rsquo;s cavern. A
+new type of pilgrim has been evolved; pilgrims who think no more of crossing to
+Pittsburg than of a drive to Manfredonia. But their cave was permeated with an
+odour of spilt wine and tobacco-smoke instead of the subtle <i>Essence des
+pèlerins</i>
+<a name="Page22"></a>
+<i>des Abruzzes fleuris,</i> and alas, the object of their worship was not the
+Chaldean angel, but another and equally ancient eastern shape: Mammon. They
+talked much of dollars; and I also heard several unorthodox allusions to the
+&ldquo;angel-business,&rdquo; which was described as &ldquo;played out,&rdquo;
+as well as a remark to the effect that &ldquo;only damn-fools stay in this
+country.&rdquo; In short, these men were at the other end of the human scale;
+they were the strong, the energetic; the ruthless, perhaps; but
+certainly&mdash;the intelligent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And all the while the cup circled round with genial iteration, and it was
+universally agreed that, whatever the other drawbacks of Sant&rsquo; Angelo
+might be, there was nothing to be said against its native liquor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was, indeed, a divine product; a <i>vino di montagna</i> of noble pedigree.
+So I thought, as I laboriously scrambled up the stairs once more, solaced by
+this incident of the competition-grotto and slightly giddy, from the
+tobacco-smoke. And here, leaning against the door-post, stood the coachman who
+had divined my whereabouts by some dark masonic intuition of sympathy. His face
+expanded into an inept smile, and I quickly saw that instead of fortifying his
+constitution with sound food, he had tried alcoholic methods of defence against
+the inclement weather. Just a glass of wine, he explained. &ldquo;But,&rdquo;
+he added, &ldquo;the horse is perfectly sober.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That quadruped was equal to the emergency. Gloriously indifferent to our fates,
+we glided down, in a vertiginous but masterly vol-plane, from the somewhat
+objectionable mountain-town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An approving burst of sunshine greeted our arrival on the plain.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page23"></a><a name="chap04"></a>IV<br />
+CAVE-WORSHIP</h2>
+
+<p>
+Why has the exalted archangel chosen for an abode this reeking cell, rather
+than some well-built temple in the sunshine? &ldquo;As symbolizing a ray of
+light that penetrates into the gloom,&rdquo; so they will tell you. It is more
+likely that he entered it as an extirpating warrior, to oust that heathen shape
+which Strabo describes as dwelling in its dank recesses, and to take possession
+of the cleft in the name of Christianity. Sant&rsquo; Angelo is one of many
+places where Michael has performed the duty of Christian Hercules, cleanser of
+Augean stables.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the rest, this cave-worship is older than any god or devil. It is the cult
+of the feminine principle&mdash;a relic of that aboriginal obsession of mankind
+to shelter in some Cloven Rock of Ages, in the sacred womb of Mother Earth who
+gives us food and receives us after death. Grotto-apparitions, old and new, are
+but the popular explanations of this dim primordial craving, and hierophants of
+all ages have understood the commercial value of the holy shudder which
+penetrates in these caverns to the heart of worshippers, attuning them to godly
+deeds. So here, close beside the altar, the priests are selling fragments of
+the so-called &ldquo;Stone of Saint Michael.&rdquo; The trade is brisk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The statuette of the archangel preserved in this subterranean chapel is a work
+of the late Renaissance. Though savouring of that mawkish elaboration which
+then began to taint local art and literature and is bound up with the name of
+the poet Marino, it is still a passably virile figure. But those countless
+others, in churches or over house-doors&mdash;do they indeed portray the
+dragon-killer, the martial prince of angels? This amiable child with girlish
+features&mdash;can this be the Lucifer of Christianity, the Sword of the
+Almighty? <i>Quis ut Déus!</i> He could hardly hurt a fly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hoary winged genius of Chaldea who has absorbed the essence of so many
+solemn deities has now, in extreme old age, entered upon a second childhood and
+grown altogether too
+<a name="Page24"></a>
+youthful for his <i>role,</i> undergoing a metamorphosis beyond the boundaries
+of legendary probability or common sense; every trace of divinity and manly
+strength has been boiled out of him. So young and earthly fair, he looks,
+rather, like some pretty boy dressed up for a game with toy sword and
+helmet&mdash;one wants to have a romp with him. No warrior this! <i>C&rsquo;est
+beau, mais ce n&rsquo;est pas la guerre.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gods, they say, are ever young, and a certain sensuous and fleshly note is
+essential to those of Italy if they are to retain the love of their
+worshippers. Granted. We do not need a scarred and hirsute veteran; but we
+need, at least, a personage capable of wielding the sword, a figure something
+like this:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+His starry helm unbuckled show&rsquo;d his prime<br />
+In manhood where youth ended; by his side<br />
+As in a glist&rsquo;ring zodiac hung the sword,<br />
+Satan&rsquo;s dire dread, and in his hand the spear. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There! That is an archangel of the right kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the great dragon, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, has
+suffered a similar transformation. He is shrunk into a poor little reptile, the
+merest worm, hardly worth crushing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But how should a sublime conception like the apocalyptic hero appeal to the
+common herd? These formidable shapes emerge from the dusk, offspring of
+momentous epochs; they stand aloof at first, but presently their luminous
+grandeur is dulled, their haughty contour sullied and obliterated by attrition.
+They are dragged down to the level of their lowest adorers, for the whole flock
+adapts its pace to that of the weakest lamb. No self-respecting deity will
+endure this treatment&mdash;to be popularized and made intelligible to a crowd.
+Divinity comprehended of the masses ceases to be efficacious; the Egyptians and
+Brahmans understood that. It is not giving gods a chance to interpret them in
+an incongruous and unsportsmanlike fashion. But the vulgar have no idea of
+propriety or fair play; they cannot keep at the proper distance; they are for
+ever taking liberties. And, in the end, the proudest god is forced to yield.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We see this same fatality in the very word Cherub. How different an image does
+this plump and futile infant evoke to the stately Minister of the Lord, girt
+with a sword of flame! We see it in the Italian Madonna of whom, whatever her
+mental acquirements may have been, a certain gravity of demeanour is to be
+presupposed, and who, none the less, grows more childishly
+<a name="Page25"></a>
+smirking every day; in her Son who&mdash;hereabouts at least&mdash;has doffed
+all the serious attributes of manhood and dwindled into something not much
+better than a doll. It was the same in days of old. Apollo (whom Saint Michael
+has supplanted), and Eros, and Aphrodite&mdash;they all go through a process of
+saccharine deterioration. Our fairest creatures, once they have passed their
+meridian vigour, are liable to be assailed and undermined by an insidious
+diabetic tendency.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is this coddling instinct of mankind which has reduced Saint Michael to his
+present state. And an extraneous influence has worked in the same
+direction&mdash;the gradual softening of manners within historical times, that
+demasculinization which is an inevitable concomitant of increasing social
+security. Divinity reflects its human creators and their environment; grandiose
+or warlike gods become superfluous, and finally incomprehensible, in humdrum
+days of peace. In order to survive, our deities (like the rest of us) must have
+a certain plasticity. If recalcitrant, they are quietly relieved of their
+functions, and forgotten. This is what has happened in Italy to God the Father
+and the Holy Ghost, who have vanished from the vulgar Olympus; whereas the
+devil, thanks to that unprincipled versatility for which he is famous, remains
+ever young and popular.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The art-notions of the Cinque-Cento are also to blame; indeed, so far as the
+angelic shapes of south Italy are concerned, the influence of the Renaissance
+has been wholly malefic. Aliens to the soil, they were at first quite
+unknown&mdash;not one is pictured in the Neapolitan catacombs. Next came the
+brief period of their artistic glory; then the syncretism of the Renaissance,
+when these winged messengers were amalgamated with pagan <i>amoretti</i> and
+began to flutter in foolish baroque fashion about the Queen of Heaven, after
+the pattern of the disreputable little genii attendant upon a Venus of a bad
+school. That same instinct which degraded a youthful Eros into the childish
+Cupid was the death-stroke to the pristine dignity and holiness of angels.
+Nowadays, we see the perversity of it all; we have come to our senses and can
+appraise the much-belauded revival at its true worth; and our modern sculptors
+will rear you a respectable angel, a grave adolescent, according to the best
+canons of taste&mdash;should you still possess the faith that once
+requisitioned such works of art.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+We travellers acquaint ourselves with the lineage of this celestial Messenger,
+but it can hardly be supposed that the worshippers now swarming at his shrine
+know much of these things. How
+<a name="Page26"></a>
+shall one discover their real feelings in regard to this great cave-saint and
+his life and deeds?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, some idea of this may be gathered from the literature sold on the spot. I
+purchased three of these modern tracts printed respectively at Bitonto,
+Molfetta and Naples. The &ldquo;Popular Song in honour of St. Michael&rdquo;
+contains this verse:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Nell&rsquo; ora della morte<br />
+Ci salvi dall&rsquo; inferno<br />
+E a Regno Sempiterno<br />
+Ci guidi per pietà.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ci guidi per pietà. . . .</i> This is the Mercury-heritage. Next, the
+&ldquo;History and Miracles of St. Michael&rdquo; opens with a rollicking
+dialogue in verse between the archangel and the devil concerning a soul; it
+ends with a goodly list, in twenty-five verses, of the miracles performed by
+the angel, such as helping women in childbirth, curing the blind, and other
+wonders that differ nothing from those wrought by humbler earthly saints.
+Lastly, the &ldquo;Novena in Onore di S. Michele Arcangelo,&rdquo; printed in
+1910 (third edition) with ecclesiastical approval, has the following noteworthy
+paragraph on the
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+&ldquo;DEVOTION FOR THE SACRED STONES OF THE GROTTO OF ST. MICHAEL.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is very salutary to hold in esteem the STONES which are taken from
+the sacred cavern, partly because from immemorial times they have always been
+held in veneration by the faithful and also because they have been placed as
+relics of sepulchres and altars. Furthermore, it is known that during the
+plague which afflicted the kingdom of Naples in the year 1656, Monsignor G. A.
+Puccini, archbishop of Manfredonia, recommended every one to carry devoutly on
+his person a fragment of the sacred STONE, whereby the majority were saved from
+the pestilence, and this augmented the devotion bestowed on them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The cholera is on the increase, and this may account for the rapid sale of the
+STONES at this moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This pamphlet also contains a litany in which the titles of the archangel are
+enumerated. He is, among other things, Secretary of God, Liberator from
+Infernal Chains, Defender in the Hour of Death, Custodian of the Pope, Spirit
+of Light, Wisest of Magistrates, Terror of Demons, Commander-in-Chief of the
+Armies of the Lord, Lash of Heresies, Adorer of the Word
+<a name="Page27"></a>
+Incarnate, Guide of Pilgrims, Conductor of Mortals: Mars, Mercury, Hercules,
+Apollo, Mithra&mdash;what nobler ancestry can angel desire? And yet, as if
+these complicated and responsible functions did not suffice for his energies,
+he has twenty others, among them being that of &ldquo;Custodian of the Holy
+Family &ldquo;&mdash;who apparently need a protector, a Monsieur Paoli, like
+any mortal royalties.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Blasphemous rubbish!&rdquo; I can hear some Methodist exclaiming. And
+one may well be tempted to sneer at those pilgrims for the more enlightened of
+whom such literature is printed. For they are unquestionably a repulsive crowd:
+travel-stained old women, under-studies for the Witch of Endor; dishevelled,
+anaemic and dazed-looking girls; boys, too weak to handle a spade at home,
+pathetically uncouth, with mouths agape and eyes expressing every grade of
+uncontrolled emotion&mdash;from wildest joy to downright idiotcy. How one
+realizes, down in this cavern, the effect upon some cultured ancient like
+Rutilius Namatianus of the catacomb-worship among those early Christian
+converts, those <i>men who shun the light,</i> drawn as they were from the same
+social classes towards the same dark underground rites! One can neither love
+nor respect such people; and to affect pity for them would be more consonant
+with their religion than with my own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is perfectly easy to understand them. For thirteen centuries this
+pilgrim-movement has been going on. Thirteen centuries? No. This site was an
+oracle in heathen days, and we know that such were frequented by men not a whit
+less barbarous and bigoted than their modern representatives&mdash;nothing is a
+greater mistake than to suppose that the crowds of old Rome and Athens were
+more refined than our own (&ldquo;Demosthenes, sir, was talking to an assembly
+of brutes&rdquo;). For thirty centuries then, let us say, a deity has attracted
+the faithful to his shrine&mdash;Sant&rsquo; Angelo has become a vacuum, as it
+were, which must be periodically filled up from the surrounding country. These
+pilgrimages are in the blood of the people: infants, they are carried there;
+adults, they carry their own offspring; grey-beards, their tottering steps are
+still supported by kindly and sturdier fellow-wanderers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Popes and emperors no longer scramble up these slopes; the spirit of piety has
+abated among the great ones of the earth; so much is certain. But the rays of
+light that strike the topmost branches have not yet penetrated to the rank and
+seething undergrowth. And then&mdash;what else can one offer to these Abruzzi
+<a name="Page28"></a>
+mountain-folk? Their life is one of miserable, revolting destitution. They have
+no games or sports, no local racing, clubs, cattle-shows, fox-hunting,
+politics, rat-catching, or any of those other joys that diversify the lives of
+our peasantry. No touch of humanity reaches them, no kindly dames send them
+jellies or blankets, no cheery doctor enquires for their children; they read no
+newspapers or books, and lack even the mild excitements of church <i>versus</i>
+chapel, or the vicar&rsquo;s daughter&rsquo;s love-affair, or the
+squire&rsquo;s latest row with his lady&mdash;nothing! Their existence is
+almost bestial in its blankness. I know them&mdash;I have lived among them. For
+four months in the year they are cooped up in damp dens, not to be called
+chambers, where an Englishman would deem it infamous to keep a dog&mdash;cooped
+up amid squalor that must be seen to be believed; for the rest of the time they
+struggle, in the sweat of their brow, to wrest a few blades of corn from the
+ungrateful limestone. Their visits to the archangel&mdash;these vernal and
+autumnal picnics&mdash;are their sole form of amusement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The movement is said to have diminished since the early nineties, when thirty
+thousand of them used to come here annually. It may well be the case; but I
+imagine that this is due not so much to increasing enlightenment as to the
+depopulation caused by America; many villages have recently been reduced to
+half their former number of inhabitants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here they kneel, candle in hand, on the wet flags of this foetid and
+malodorous cave, gazing in rapture upon the blandly beaming idol, their
+sensibilities tickled by resplendent priests reciting full-mouthed Latin
+phrases, while the organ overhead plays wheezy extracts from &ldquo;La Forza
+del Destino&rdquo; or the Waltz out of Boito&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Mefistofele&rdquo;... for sure, it must be a foretaste of Heaven! And
+likely enough, these are &ldquo;the poor in heart&rdquo; for whom that kingdom
+is reserved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One may call this a debased form of Christianity. Whether it would have been
+distasteful to the feelings of the founder of that cult is another question,
+and, debased or not, it is at least alive and palpitating, which is more than
+can be said of certain other varieties. But the archangel, as was inevitable,
+has suffered a sad change. His fairest attribute of Light-bringer, of Apollo,
+is no longer his own; it has been claimed and appropriated by the &ldquo;Light
+of the World,&rdquo; his new master. One by one, his functions have been
+stripped from him, all save in name, as happens to men and angels alike, when
+they take service under &ldquo;jealous&rdquo; lords.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page29"></a>
+What is now left of Saint Michael, the glittering hierarch? Can he still endure
+the light of sun? Or has he not shrivelled into a spectral Hermes, a grisly
+psychopomp, bowing his head in minished glory, and leading men&rsquo;s souls no
+longer aloft but downwards&mdash;down to the pale regions of things that have
+been? And will it be long ere he, too, is thrust by some flaming Demogorgon
+into these same realms of Minos, into that shadowy underworld where dwell
+Saturn, and Kronos, and other cracked and shivered ideals?
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+So I mused that afternoon, driving down the slopes from Sant&rsquo; Angelo
+comfortably sheltered against the storm, while the generous mountain wine sped
+through my veins, warming my fancy. Then, at last, the sun came out in a sudden
+burst of light, opening a rift in the vapours and revealing the whole chain of
+the Apennines, together with the peaked crater of Mount Vulture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spectacle cheered me, and led me to think that such a day might worthily be
+rounded off by a visit to Sipontum, which lies a few miles beyond Manfredonia
+on the Foggia road. But I approached the subject cautiously, fearing that the
+coachman might demur at this extra work. Far from it. I had gained his
+affection, and he would conduct me whithersoever I liked. Only to Sipontum? Why
+not to Foggia, to Naples, to the ends of the earth? As for the horse, he was
+none the worse for the trip, not a bit the worse; he liked nothing better than
+running in front of a carriage; besides, <i>è suo dovere&mdash;</i>it was his
+duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sipontum is so ancient that it was founded, they say, by that legendary Diomed
+who acted in the same capacity for Beneven-tum, Arpi, and other cities. But
+this record does not satisfy Monsignor Sarnelli, its historian, according to
+whom it was already a flourishing town when Shem, first son of Noah, became its
+king. He reigned about the year 1770 of the creation of the world. Two years
+after the deluge he was 100 years old, and at that age begat a son Arfaxad,
+after whose birth he lived yet another five hundred years. The second king of
+Sipontum was Appulus, who ruled in the year 2213. . . . Later on, Saint Peter
+sojourned here, and baptized a few people.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Sipontum nothing is left; nothing save a church, and even that built only
+yesterday&mdash;in the eleventh century; a far-famed church, in the Pisan
+style, with wrought marble columns reposing on lions, sculptured diamond
+ornaments, and other crafty stonework that gladdens the eye. It used to be the
+seat
+<a name="Page30"></a>
+of an archbishopric, and its fine episcopal chairs are now preserved at
+Sant&rsquo; Angelo; and you may still do homage to the authentic Byzantine
+Madonna painted on wood by Saint Luke, brown-complexioned, long-nosed, with
+staring eyes, and holding the Infant on her left arm. Earthquakes and Saracen
+incursions ruined the town, which became wholly abandoned when Manfredonia was
+built with its stones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of pagan antiquity there are a few capitals lying about, as well as granite
+columns in the curious old crypt. A pillar stands all forlorn in a field; and
+quite close to the church are erected two others&mdash;the larger of cipollino,
+beautified by a patina of golden lichen; a marble well-head, worn half through
+with usage of ropes, may be found buried in the rank grass. The plain whereon
+stood the great city of Sipus is covered, now, with bristly herbage. The sea
+has retired from its old beach, and half-wild cattle browse on the site of
+those lordly quays and palaces. Not a stone is left. Malaria and desolation
+reign supreme.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a profoundly melancholy spot. Yet I was glad of the brief vision. I shall
+have fond and enduring memories of that sanctuary&mdash;the travertine of its
+artfully carven fabric glowing orange-tawny in the sunset; of the forsaken
+plain beyond, full of ghostly phantoms of the past.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for Manfredonia&mdash;it is a sad little place, when the south wind moans
+and mountains are veiled in mists.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus03"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-3.jpg" width="303" height="498" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">At Sipontum</p>
+</div>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page31"></a><a name="chap05"></a>V<br />
+LAND OF HORACE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Venosa, nowadays, lies off the beaten track. There are only three trains a day
+from the little junction of Rocchetta, and they take over an hour to traverse
+the thirty odd kilometres of sparsely inhabited land. It is an uphill journey,
+for Venosa lies at a good elevation. They say that German professors, bent on
+Horatian studies, occasionally descend from those worn-out old railway
+carriages; but the ordinary travellers are either peasant-folk or commercial
+gentlemen from north Italy. Worse than malaria or brigandage, against both of
+which a man may protect himself, there is no escaping from the companionship of
+these last-named&mdash;these pathologically inquisitive, empty-headed, and
+altogether dreadful people. They are the terror of the south. And it stands to
+reason that only the most incapable and most disagreeable of their kind are
+sent to out-of-the-way places like Venosa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One asks oneself whether this town has greatly changed since Roman times. To be
+sure it has; domestic calamities and earthquakes (such as the terrible one of
+1456) have altered it beyond recognition. The amphitheatre that seated ten
+thousand spectators is merged into the earth, and of all the buildings of Roman
+date nothing is left save a pile of masonry designated as the tomb of the
+Marcellus who was killed here by Hannibal&rsquo;s soldiery, and a few
+reticulated walls of the second century or thereabouts known as the
+&ldquo;House of Horace&rdquo;&mdash;as genuine as that of Juliet in Verona or
+the Mansion of Loreto. Yet the tradition is an old one, and the builder of the
+house, whoever he was, certainly displayed some poetic taste in his selection
+of a fine view across the valley. There is an indifferent statue of Horace in
+the marketplace. A previous one, also described as Horace, was found to be the
+effigy of somebody else. Thus much I learn from Lupoli&rsquo;s &ldquo;Iter
+Venusinum.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there are ancient inscriptions galore, worked into the masonry of buildings
+or lying about at random. Mommsen has collected numbers of them in his
+<i>Corpus,</i> and since that time some sixty new ones have been discovered.
+And then&mdash;the
+<a name="Page32"></a>
+stone lions of Roman days, couched forlornly at street corners, in courtyards
+and at fountains, in every stage of decrepitude, with broken jaws and noses,
+missing legs and tails! Venosa is a veritable infirmary for mutilated antiques
+of this species. Now the lion is doubtless a nobly decorative beast,
+but&mdash;<i>toujours perdrix!</i> Why not a few griffons or other ornaments?
+The Romans were not an imaginative race.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The country around must have looked different in olden days. Horace describes
+it as covered with forests, and from a manuscript of the early seventeenth
+century which has lately been printed one learns that the surrounding regions
+were full of &ldquo;hares, rabbits, foxes, roe deer, wild boars, martens,
+porcupines, hedgehogs, tortoises and wolves&rdquo;&mdash;wood-loving creatures
+which have now, for the most part, deserted Venosa. Still, there are left some
+stretches of oak at the back of the town, and the main lines of the land cannot
+change. Yonder lies the Horatian Forense and &ldquo;Acherontia&rsquo;s
+nest&rdquo;; further on, the glades of Bantia (the modern Banzi); the
+long-drawn Garganian Mount, on which the poet&rsquo;s eye must often have
+rested, emerges above the plain of Apulia like an island (and such it is: an
+island of Austrian stone, stranded upon the beach of Italy). Monte Vulture
+still dominates the landscape, although at this nearness the crater loses its
+shapely conical outline and assumes a serrated edge. On its summit I perceive a
+gigantic cross&mdash;one of a number of such symbols which were erected by the
+clericals at the time of the recent rationalist congress in Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From this chronicler I learn another interesting fact: that Venosa was not
+malarious in the author&rsquo;s day. He calls it healthy, and says that the
+only complaint from which the inhabitants suffered was &ldquo;ponture&rdquo;
+(pleurisy). It is now within the infected zone. I dare say the deforestation of
+the country, which prevented the downflow of the rivers&mdash;choking up their
+beds with detritus and producing stagnant pools favourable to the breeding of
+the mosquito&mdash;has helped to spread the plague in many parts of Italy. In
+Horace&rsquo;s days Venosa was immune, although Rome and certain rural
+districts were already malarious. Ancient votive tablets to the fever-goddess
+Mephitis (malaria) have been found not far from here, in the plain below the
+present city of Potenza.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A good deal of old Roman blood and spirit seems to survive here. After the
+noise of the Neapolitan provinces, where chattering takes the place of
+thinking, it is a relief to find oneself in the company of these grave
+self-respecting folks, who really
+<a name="Page33"></a>
+converse, like the Scotch, in disinterested and impersonal fashion. Their
+attitude towards religious matters strikes me as peculiarly Horatian; it is not
+active scepticism, but rather a bland tolerance or what one of them described
+as &ldquo;indifferentismo&rdquo;&mdash;submission to acts of worship and all
+other usages (whatever they may be) consecrated by time: the
+<i>pietàs&mdash;</i>the conservative, law-abiding Roman spirit. And if you walk
+towards sunset along any of the roads leading into the country, you will meet
+the peasants riding home from their field labours accompanied by their dogs,
+pigs and goats; and among them you will recognize many types of Roman
+physiognomies&mdash;faces of orators and statesmen&mdash;familiar from old
+coins. About a third of the population are of the dark-fair complexion, with
+blue or green eyes. But the women are not handsome, although the town derives
+its name from Benoth (Venus). Some genuine Roman families have continued to
+exist to this day, such as that of Cenna (Cinna). One of them was the author of
+the chronicle above referred to; and there is an antique bas-relief worked into
+the walls of the Trinità abbey, depicting some earlier members of this local
+family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One is astonished how large a literature has grown up around this small
+place&mdash;but indeed, the number of monographs dealing with every one of
+these little Italian towns is a ceaseless source of surprise. Look below the
+surface and you will find, in all of them, an undercurrent of keen
+spirituality&mdash;a nucleus of half a dozen widely read and thoughtful men,
+who foster the best traditions of the mind. You will not find them in the town
+council or at the café. No newspapers commend their labours, no millionaires or
+learned societies come to their assistance, and though typography is cheap in
+this country, they often stint themselves of the necessities of life in order
+to produce these treatises of calm research. There is a deep gulf, here,
+between the mundane and the intellectual life. These men are retiring in their
+habits; and one cannot but revere their scholarly and almost ascetic spirit
+that survives like a green oasis amid the desert of &ldquo;politics,&rdquo;
+roguery and municipal corruption.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The City Fathers of Venosa are reputed rich beyond the dreams of avarice. Yet
+their town is by no means a clean place&mdash;it is twice as dirty as Lucera: a
+reposeful dirtiness, not vulgar or chaotic, but testifying to time-honoured
+neglect, to a feudal contempt of cleanliness. You crawl through narrow,
+ill-paved streets, looking down into subterranean family bedrooms that must be
+insufferably damp in winter, and filled, during the hot months, with an odour
+hard to conceive. There is electric lighting,
+<a name="Page34"></a>
+of course&mdash;a paternal government having made the price of petroleum
+so prohibitive that the use of electricity for street-lighting became quite
+common in the lowliest places; but the crude glare only serves to show up the
+general squalor. One reason for this state of affairs is that there are no
+quarries for decent paving-stones in the neighbourhood. And another, that
+Venosa possesses no large citizen class, properly so called. The inhabitants
+are mostly peasant proprietors and field labourers, who leave the town in the
+morning and return home at night with their beasts, having learned by bitter
+experience to take up their domiciles in the towns rather than in the
+country-side, which was infested with brigandage and in an unsettled state up
+to a short time ago. The Cincinnatus note dominates here, and with an
+agricultural population no city can be kept clean.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+But Venosa has one inestimable advantage over Lucera and most Italian towns:
+there is no octroi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Would it be believed that Naples is surrounded by a towering Chinese wall,
+miles upon miles of it, crowned with a complicated apparatus of alarm-bells and
+patrolled night and day by a horde of <i>doganieri</i> armed to the
+teeth&mdash;lest some peasant should throw a bundle of onions into the sacred
+precincts of the town without paying the duty of half a farthing? No nation
+with any sense of humour would endure this sort of thing. Every one resents the
+airs of this army of official loafers who infest the land, and would be far
+better employed themselves in planting onions upon the many miles of Italy
+which now lie fallow; the results of the system have been shown to be
+inadequate, &ldquo;but,&rdquo; as my friend the Roman deputy once asked me,
+&ldquo;if we dismiss these fellows from their job, how are we to employ
+them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing is simpler,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;Enrol them into the Town
+Council of Naples. It already contains more <i>employes</i> than all the
+government offices of London put together; a few more will surely make no
+difference?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By Bacchus,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;you foreigners have ideas! We could
+dispose of ten or fifteen thousand of them, at least, in the way you suggest.
+I&rsquo;ll make a note of that, for our next session.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so he did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the <i>Municipio</i> of Naples, though extensive, is a purely local
+charity, and I question whether its inmates will hear of any one save their own
+cousins and brothers-in-law figuring as colleagues in office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every attempt at innovation in agriculture, as in industry,
+<a name="Page35"></a>
+is forthwith discouraged by new and subtle impositions, which lie in wait for
+the enterprising Italian and punish him for his ideas. There is, of course, a
+prohibitive duty on every article or implement manufactured abroad; there is
+the octroi, a relic of medisevalism, the most unscientific, futile, and
+vexatious of taxes; there are municipal dues to be paid on animals bought and
+animals sold, on animals kept and animals killed, on milk and vine-props and
+bricks, on timber for scaffolding and lead and tiles and wine&mdash;on every
+conceivable object which the peasant produces or requires for his existence.
+And one should see the faces of the municipal <i>employes</i> who extort these
+tributes. God alone knows from what classes of the populace they are recruited;
+certain it is that their physiognomy reflects their miserable calling. One can
+endure the militarism of Germany and the bureaucracy of Austria; but it is
+revolting to see decent Italian countryfolk at the mercy of these uncouth
+savages, veritable cave-men, whose only intelligible expression is one of
+malice striving to break through a crust of congenital cretinism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We hear much of the great artists and speculative philosophers of old Italy.
+The artists of modern Italy are her bureaucrats who design and elaborate the
+taxes; her philosophers, the peasants who pay them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In point of method, at least, there is nothing to choose between the exactions
+of the municipal and governmental ruffians. I once saw an old woman fined fifty
+francs for having in her possession a pound of sea-salt. By what logic will you
+make it clear to ignorant people that it is wrong to take salt out of the sea,
+whence every one takes fish which are more valuable? The waste of time employed
+over red tape alone on these occasions would lead to a revolution anywhere save
+among men inured by long abuses to this particular form of tyranny. No wonder
+the women of the country-side, rather than waste three precious hours in
+arguments about a few cheeses, will smuggle them past the authorities under the
+device of being <i>enceintes;</i> no wonder their wisest old men regard the
+paternal government as a successfully organized swindle, which it is the
+citizen&rsquo;s bounden duty to frustrate whenever possible. Have <i>you</i>
+ever tried to convey&mdash;in legal fashion&mdash;a bottle of wine from one
+town into another; or to import, by means of a sailing-boat, an old frying-pan
+into some village by the sea? It is a fine art, only to be learnt by years of
+apprenticeship. The regulations on these subjects, though ineffably childish,
+look simple enough on paper; they take no account of that &ldquo;personal
+element&rdquo; which is everything
+<a name="Page36"></a>
+in the south, of the ruffled tempers of those gorgeous but inert
+creatures who, disturbed in their siestas or mandolin-strummings, may keep you
+waiting half a day while they fumble ominously over some dirty-looking scrap of
+paper. For on such occasions they are liable to provoking fits of
+conscientiousness. This is all very well, my dear sir, but&mdash;Ha! Where,
+where is that certificate of origin, that stamp, that <i>lascia-passare?</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And all for one single sou!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No wonder even Englishmen discover that law-breaking, in Italy, becomes a
+necessity, a rule of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, soon enough, much more than a mere necessity. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For even as the traveller new to Borneo, when they offer him a durian-fruit, is
+instantly brought to vomiting-point by its odour, but after a few mouthfuls
+declares it to be the very apple of Paradise, and marvels how he could have
+survived so long in the benighted lands where such ambrosial fare is not; even
+as the true connaisseur who, beholding some rare scarlet idol from the
+Tingo-Tango forests, at first casts it aside and then, light dawning as he
+ponders over those monstrous complexities, begins to realize that they, and
+they alone, contain the quintessential formulae of all the fervent dreamings of
+Scopas and Michelangelo; even as he who first, upon a peak in Darien, gazed
+awestruck upon the grand Pacific slumbering at his feet, till presently his
+senses reeled at the blissful prospect of fresh regions unrolling themselves,
+boundless, past the fulfilment of his fondest hopes&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even so, in Italy, the domesticated Englishman is amazed to find that he
+possesses a sense hitherto unrevealed, opening up a new horizon, a new zest in
+life&mdash;the sense of law-breaking. At first, being an honest man, he is
+shocked at the thought of such a thing; next, like a sensible person,
+reconciled to the inevitable; lastly, as befits his virile race, he learns to
+play the game so well that the horrified officials grudgingly admit (and it is
+their highest praise):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Inglese italianizzato&mdash;<br />
+Diavolo incarnato.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes; slowly the charm of law-breaking grows upon the Italianated Saxon; slowly,
+but surely. There is a neo-barbarism not only in matters of art.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page37"></a><a name="chap06"></a>VI<br />
+AT VENOSA</h2>
+
+<p>
+There has always, no doubt, been a castle at Venosa. Frederick Barbarossa lived
+here oftener than in Sicily; from these regions he could look over to his
+beloved East, and the security of this particular keep induced him to store his
+treasures therein. The indefatigable Huillard Bréholles has excavated some
+account of them from the Hohenstaufen records. Thus we learn that here, at
+Venosa, the Emperor deposited that marvel, that <i>tentorium,</i> I mean,
+<i>mirifica arte constructum, in quo imagines solis et lunæ artificialiter
+motæ, cursum suum certis et debitis spatiis peragrant, et horas diei et noctis
+infallibiliter indicant. Cuius tentorii valor viginti millium marcarum pretium
+dicitur transcendisse.</i> It was given him by the Sultan of Babylonia. Always
+the glowing Oriental background!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The present castle, a picturesque block with moat and corner towers, was built
+in 1470 by the redoubtable Pierro del Balzo. A church used to occupy the site,
+but the warrior, recognizing its strategic advantages, transplanted the holy
+edifice to some other part of the town. It is now a ruin, the inhabitable
+portions of which have been converted into cheap lodgings for sundry poor
+folk&mdash;a monetary speculation of some local magnate, who paid 30,000 francs
+for the whole structure. You can climb up into one of the shattered towers
+whereon reposes an old cannon amid a wind-sown garden of shrubs and weeds. Here
+the jackdaws congregate at nightfall, flying swiftly and noiselessly to their
+resting-place. Odd, how quiet Italian jackdaws are, compared with those of
+England; they have discarded their voices, which is the best thing they could
+have done in a land where every one persecutes them. There is also a dungeon at
+this castle, an underground recess with cunningly contrived projections in its
+walls to prevent prisoners from climbing upwards; and other horrors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cathedral of Venosa contains a chapel with an unusually fine portal of
+Renaissance work, but the chief architectural beauty of the town is the decayed
+Benedictine abbey of La Trinità. The building is roofless; it was never
+completed, and the ravages
+<a name="Page38"></a>
+of time and of man have not spared it; earthquakes, too, have played sad tricks
+with its arches and columns, particularly that of 1851, which destroyed the
+neighbouring town of Melfi. It stands beyond the more modern settlement on what
+is now a grassy plain, and attached to it is a Norman chapel containing the
+bones of Alberada, mother of Boemund, and others of her race. Little of the
+original structure of this church is left, though its walls are still adorned,
+in patches, with frescoes of genuine angels&mdash;attractive creatures, as far
+removed from those bloodless Byzantine anatomies as from the plethoric and
+insipid females of the <i>settecento.</i> There is also a queenly portrait
+declared to represent Catherine of Siena. I would prefer to follow those who
+think it is meant for Sigilgaita.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Small as it is, this place&mdash;the church and the abbey&mdash;is not one for
+a casual visit. Lenormant calls the Trinità a &ldquo;<i>Musée
+épigraphique&rdquo;&mdash;</i>so many are the Latin inscriptions which the
+monks have worked into its masonry. They have encrusted the walls with them;
+and many antiquities of other kinds have been deposited here since those days.
+The ruin is strewn with columns and capitals of fantastic devices; the
+inevitable lions, too, repose upon its grassy floor, as well as a pagan
+altar-stone that once adorned the neighbouring amphitheatre. One thinks of the
+labour expended in raising those prodigious blocks and fitting them together
+without mortar in their present positions&mdash;they, also, came from the
+amphitheatre, and the sturdy letterings engraved on some of them formed, once
+upon a time, a sentence that ran round that building, recording the names of
+its founders.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus04"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-4.jpg" width="460" height="372" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Ruin of Trinità: East front</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Besides the Latin inscriptions, there are Hebrew funereal stones of great
+interest, for a colony of Jews was established here between the years 400 and
+800; poor folks, for the most part; no one knows whence they came or whither
+they went. One is apt to forget that south Italy was swarming with Jews for
+centuries. The catacombs of Venosa were discovered in 1853. Their entrance lies
+under a hill-side not far from the modern railway station, and Professor
+Mueller, a lover of Venosa, has been engaged for the last twenty-five years in
+writing a ponderous tome on the subject. Unfortunately (so they say) there is
+not much chance of its ever seeing the light, for just as he is on the verge of
+publication, some new Jewish catacombs are discovered in another part of the
+world which cause the Professor to revise all his previous theories. The work
+must be written anew and brought up to date, and hardly is this accomplished
+when
+<a name="Page39"></a>
+fresh catacombs are found elsewhere, necessitating a further revision. The
+Professor once more rewrites the whole. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You will find accounts of the Trinità in Bertaux, Schulz and other writers.
+Italian ones tell us what sounds rather surprising, namely, that the abbey was
+built after a Lombard model, and not a French one. Be that as it may&mdash;and
+they certainly show good grounds for their contention&mdash;the ruin is a place
+of rare charm. Not easily can one see relics of Roman, Hebrew and Norman life
+crushed into so small a space, welded together by the massive yet fair
+architecture of the Benedictines, and interpenetrated, at the same time, with a
+Mephistophelian spirit of modern indifference. Of cynical <i>insouciance;</i>
+for although this is a &ldquo;national monument,&rdquo; nothing whatever is
+done in the way of repairs. Never a month passes without some richly carven
+block of stonework toppling down into the weeds,<a href="#fn-6.1" name="fnref-6.1" id="fnref-6.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+and were it not for the zeal of a private citizen, the interior of the building
+would long ago have become an impassable chaos of stones and shrubbery. The
+Trinità cannot be <i>restored</i> without enormous outlay; nobody dreams of
+such a thing. A yearly expenditure of ten pounds, however, would go far towards
+arresting its fall. But where shall the money be found? This enthusiastic
+nation, so enamoured of all that is exquisite in art, will spend sixty million
+francs on a new Ministry of Justice which, barely completed, is already showing
+signs of disrupture; it will cheerfully vote <i>(vide</i> daily press) the
+small item of eighty thousand francs to supply that institution with pens and
+ink&mdash;lucky contractor!&mdash;while this and a hundred other buildings of
+singular beauty are allowed to crumble to pieces, day by day.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-6.1" id="fn-6.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-6.1">[1]</a>
+The process of decay can be seen by comparing my photograph of the east front
+with that taken to illustrate Giuseppe de Lorenzo&rsquo;s monograph
+&ldquo;Venosa e la Regione del Vulture&rdquo; (Bergamo, 1906).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not far from the abbey there stands a church dedicated to Saint Roque. Go
+within, if you wish to see the difference between Benedictine dignity and the
+buffoonery which subsequently tainted the Catholicism of the youth. On its
+gable sits a strange emblem: a large stone dog, gazing amiably at the
+landscape. The saint, during his earthly career, was always accompanied by a
+dog, and now likes to have him on the roof of his sanctuary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Norman church attached to the Trinità lies at a lower level than that
+building, having been constructed, says Lupoli, on the foundations of a temple
+to Hymenæus. It may be so; but one distrusts Lupoli. A remarkable Norman
+capital, now wrought into a font, is preserved here, and I was interested in
+<a name="Page40"></a>
+watching the behaviour of a procession of female pilgrims in regard to it.
+Trembling with emotion, they perambulated the sacred stone, kissing every one
+of its corners; then they dipped their hands into its basin, and kissed them
+devoutly. An old hag, the mistress of the ceremonies, muttered: &ldquo;tutti
+santi&mdash;tutti santi!&rdquo; at each osculation. Next, they prostrated
+themselves on the floor and licked the cold stones, and after wallowing there
+awhile, rose up and began to kiss a small fissure in the masonry of the wall,
+the old woman whispering, &ldquo;Santissimo!&rdquo; A familiar spectacle, no
+doubt; but one which never fails of its effect. This anti-hygienic crack in the
+wall, with its suggestions of yoni-worship, attracted me so strongly that I
+begged a priest to explain to me its mystical signification. But he only said,
+with a touch of mediæval contempt:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Sono femine!</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He showed me, later on, a round Roman pillar near the entrance of the church
+worn smooth by the bodies of females who press themselves between it and the
+wall, in order to become mothers. The notion caused him some amusement&mdash;he
+evidently thought this practice a speciality of Venosa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In my country, I said, pillars with a contrary effect would be more popular
+among the fair sex.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lear gives another account of this phallic emblem. He says that perambulating
+it hand in hand with another person, the two are sure to remain friends for
+life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is pre-eminently a &ldquo;Victorian&rdquo; version.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus05"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-5.jpg" width="360" height="502" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Roman Altar-stone</p>
+</div>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page41"></a><a name="chap07"></a>VII<br />
+THE BANDUSIAN FOUNT</h2>
+
+<p>
+The traveller in these parts is everlastingly half-starved. Here, at Venosa,
+the wine is good&mdash;excellent, in fact; but the food monotonous and
+insufficient. This improper dieting is responsible for much mischief; it
+induces a state of chronic exacerbation. Nobody would believe how nobly I
+struggle, day and night, against its evil suggestions. A man&rsquo;s worst
+enemy is his own empty stomach. None knew it better than Horace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet he declared that lettuces and such-like stuff sufficed him. No doubt,
+no doubt. &ldquo;Olives nourish me.&rdquo; Just so! One does not grow up in the
+school of Maecenas without learning the subtle delights of the simple life. But
+I would wager that after a week of such feeding as I have now undergone at his
+native place, he would quickly have remembered some urgent business to be
+transacted in the capital&mdash;Caesar Augustus, me-thinks, would have desired
+his company. And even so, I have suddenly woke up to the fact that Taranto, my
+next resting-place, besides possessing an agreeably warm climate, has some
+passable restaurants. I will pack without delay. Mount Vulture must wait. The
+wind alone, the Vulturnus or south-easterly wind, is quite enough to make one
+despair of climbing hills. It has blown with objectionable persistency ever
+since my arrival at Venosa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To escape from its attentions, I have been wandering about the secluded valleys
+that seam this region. Streamlets meander here amid rustling canes and a
+luxuriant growth of mares&rsquo; tails and creepers; their banks are shaded by
+elms and poplars&mdash;Horatian trees; the thickets are loud with songs of
+nightingale, black-cap and oriole. These humid dells are a different country
+from the uplands, wind-swept and thriftily cultivated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was here, yesterday, that I came upon an unexpected sight&mdash;an army of
+workmen engaged in burrowing furiously into the bowels of Mother Earth. They
+told me that this tunnel would presently become one of the arteries of that
+vast system, the
+<a name="Page42"></a>
+Apulian Aqueduct. The discovery accorded with my Roman mood, for the conception
+and execution alike of this grandiose project are worthy of the Romans. Three
+provinces where, in years of drought, wine is cheaper than water, are being
+irrigated&mdash;in the teeth of great difficulties of engineering and finance.
+Among other things, there are 213 kilometres of subterranean tunnellings to be
+built; eleven thousand workmen are employed; the cost is estimated at 125
+million francs. The Italian government is erecting to its glory a monument more
+durable than brass. This is their heritage from the Romans&mdash;this talent
+for dealing with rocks and waters; for bridling a destructive environment and
+making it subservient to purposes of human intercourse. It is a part of that
+practical Roman genius for &ldquo;pacification.&rdquo; Wild nature, to the
+Latin, ever remains an obstacle to be overcome&mdash;an enemy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was Horace&rsquo;s point of view. The fruitful fields and their hardy
+brood of tillers appealed to him;<a href="#fn-7.1" name="fnref-7.1" id="fnref-7.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+the ocean and snowy Alps were beyond the range of his affections. His love of
+nature was heartfelt, but his nature was not ours; it was nature as we see it
+in those Roman landscapes at Pompeii; nature ancillary to human needs, in her
+benignant and comfortable moods. Virgil&rsquo;s <i>lachrymae rerum</i> hints at
+mystic and extra-human yearnings; to the troubadours nature was conventionally
+stereotyped&mdash;a scenic decoration to set off sentiments more or less
+sincere; the romanticists wallow in her rugged aspects. Horace never allowed
+phantasy to outrun intelligence; he kept his feet on earth; man was the measure
+of his universe, and a sober mind his highest attribute. Nature must be kept
+&ldquo;in her place.&rdquo; Her extravagances are not to be admired. This
+anthropocentric spirit has made him what he is&mdash;the ideal
+anti-sentimentalist and anti-vulgarian. For excess of sentiment, like all other
+intemperance, is the mark of that unsober and unsteady beast&mdash;the crowd.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-7.1" id="fn-7.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-7.1">[1]</a>
+See next chapter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Things have changed since those days; in proportion as the world has grown
+narrower and the element of fear and mystery diluted, our sympathies have
+broadened; the Goth, in particular, has learnt the knack of detecting natural
+charm where the Latin, to this day, beholds nothing but confusion and strife.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus06"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-6.jpg" width="415" height="385" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Norman Capital at Venosa</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+On the spot, I observe, one is liable to return to the antique outlook; to see
+the beauty of fields and rivers, yet only when subsidiary to man&rsquo;s
+personal convenience; to appreciate a fair landscape&mdash;with a shrewd
+worldly sense of its potential uses. &ldquo;The garden that I love,&rdquo; said
+an Italian once to me, &ldquo;contains
+<a name="Page43"></a>
+good vegetables.&rdquo; This utilitarian flavour of the south has become very
+intelligible to me during the last few days. I, too, am thinking less of
+calceolarias than of cauliflowers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+A pilgrimage to the Bandusian Fount (if such it be) is no great
+undertaking&mdash;a morning&rsquo;s trip. The village of San Gervasio is the
+next station to Venosa, lying on an eminence only thirteen kilometres from
+there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here once ran a fountain which was known as late as the twelfth century as the
+Fons Bandusinus, and Ughelli, in his &ldquo;Italia Sacra,&rdquo; cites a deed
+of the year 1103 speaking of a church &ldquo;at the Bandusian Fount near
+Venosa.&rdquo; Church and fountain have now disappeared; but the site of the
+former, they say, is known, and close to it there once issued a copious spring
+called &ldquo;Fontana Grande.&rdquo; This is probably the Horatian one; and is
+also, I doubt not, that referred to in Cenna&rsquo;s chronicle of Venosa:
+&ldquo;At Torre San Gervasio are the ruins of a castle and an abundant spring
+of water colder than all the waters of Venosa,&rdquo; <i>Frigus amabile. . .
+.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could discover no one in the place to show me where this now vanished church
+stood. I rather think it occupied the site of the present church of Saint
+Anthony, the oldest in San Gervasio.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to the fountain&mdash;there are now two of them, at some considerable
+distance from each other. Both of them are copious, and both lie near the foot
+of the hill on which the village now stands. Capmartin de Chaupy has reasons
+for believing that in former times San Gervasio did not occupy its present
+exalted position (vol. iii, p. 538).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of them gushes out on the plain near the railway station, and has been
+rebuilt within recent times. It goes by the name of &ldquo;Fontana
+rotta.&rdquo; The other, the &ldquo;Fontana del Fico,&rdquo; lies on the high
+road to Spinazzola; the water spouts out of seven mouths, and near at hand is a
+plantation of young sycamores. The basin of this fount was also rebuilt about
+ten years ago at no little expense, and has now a thoroughly modern and
+businesslike aspect. But I was told that a complicated network of subterranean
+pipes and passages, leading to &ldquo;God knows where,&rdquo; was unearthed
+during the process of reconstruction. It was magnificent masonry, said my
+informant, who was an eye-witness of the excavations but could tell me nothing
+more of interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The problem how far either of these fountains fulfils the conditions postulated
+in the last verse of Horace&rsquo;s ode may be solved by every one according as
+he pleases. In fact, there is
+<a name="Page44"></a>
+no other way of solving it. In my professorial mood, I should cite the cavern
+and the &ldquo;downward leaping&rdquo; waters against the hypothesis that the
+Bandusian Fount stood on either of these modern sites; in favour of it, one
+might argue that the conventional rhetoric of all Roman art may have added
+these embellishing touches, and cite, in confirmation thereof, the last two
+lines of the previous verse, mentioning animals that could hardly have slaked
+their thirst with any convenience at a cavernous spring such as he describes.
+Caverns, moreover, are not always near the summits of hills; they may be at the
+foot of them; and water, even the Thames at London Bridge, always leaps
+downhill&mdash;more or less. Of more importance is old Chaupy&rsquo;s discovery
+of the northerly aspect of one of these springs&mdash;&ldquo;thee the fierce
+season of the blazing dog-star cannot touch.&rdquo; There may have been a cave
+at the back of the &ldquo;Fontana del Fico&rdquo;; the &ldquo;Fontana
+rotta&rdquo; is hopelessly uncavernous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the rest, there is no reason why the fountain should not have changed its
+position since ancient days. On the contrary, several things might incline one
+to think that it has been forced to abandon the high grounds and seek its
+present lower level. To begin with, the hill on which the village stands is
+honeycombed by hives of caves which the inhabitants have carved out of the
+loose conglomerate (which, by the way, hardly corresponds with the poet&rsquo;s
+<i>saxum);</i> and it may well be that a considerable collapse of these
+earth-dwellings obstructed the original source of the waters and obliged them
+to seek a vent lower down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next, there are the notorious effects of deforestation. An old man told me that
+in his early days the hill was covered with timber&mdash;indeed, this whole
+land, now a stretch of rolling grassy downs, was decently wooded up to a short
+time ago. I observed that the roof of the oldest of the three churches, that of
+Saint Anthony, is formed of wooden rafters (a rare material hereabouts).
+Deforestation would also cause the waters to issue at a lower level.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lastly, and chiefly&mdash;the possible shatterings of earthquakes. Catastrophes
+such as those which have damaged Venosa in days past may have played havoc with
+the water-courses of this place by choking up their old channels. My
+acquaintance with the habits of Apulian earthquakes, with the science of
+hydrodynamics and the geological formation of San Gervasio is not sufficiently
+extensive to allow me to express a mature opinion. I will content myself with
+presenting to future investigators the plausible theory&mdash;plausible because
+conveniently difficult to refute&mdash;that
+<a name="Page45"></a>
+some terrestrial upheaval in past days is responsible for the present state of
+things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But these are merely three hypotheses. I proceed to mention three facts which
+point in the same direction; i.e. that the water used to issue at a higher
+level. Firstly, there is that significant name &ldquo;Fontana
+rotta&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;the broken fountain.&rdquo; . . . Does not this
+suggest that its flow may have been interrupted, or intercepted, in former
+times?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next, if you climb up from this &ldquo;Fontana rotta&rdquo; to the village by
+the footpath, you will observe, on your right hand as you ascend the slope, at
+about a hundred yards below the Church of Saint Anthony, an old well standing
+in a field of corn and shaded by three walnuts and an oak. This well is still
+running, and was described to me as &ldquo;molto antico.&rdquo; Therefore an
+underground stream&mdash;in diminished volume, no doubt&mdash;still descends
+from the heights.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thirdly, in the village you will notice an alley leading out of the Corso
+Manfredi (one rejoices to find the name of Manfred surviving in these
+lands)&mdash;an alley which is entitled &ldquo;Vico Sirene.&rdquo; The name
+arrests your attention, for what have the Sirens to do in these inland regions?
+Nothing whatever, unless they existed as ornamental statuary: statuary such as
+frequently gives names to streets in Italy, witness the &ldquo;Street of the
+Faun&rdquo; in Ouida&rsquo;s novel, or that of the &ldquo;Giant&rdquo; in
+Naples (which has now been re-christened). It strikes me as a humble but quite
+scholarly speculation to infer that, the chief decorative uses of Sirens being
+that of fountain deities, this obscure roadway keeps alive the tradition of the
+old &ldquo;Fontana Grande&rdquo;&mdash;ornamented, we may suppose, with marble
+Sirens&mdash;whose site is now forgotten, and whose very name has faded from
+the memory of the countryfolk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What, then, does my ramble of two hours at San Gervasio amount to? It shows
+that there is a possibility, at least, of a now vanished fountain having
+existed on the heights where it might fulfil more accurately the conditions of
+Horace&rsquo;s ode. If Ughelli&rsquo;s church &ldquo;at the Bandusian
+Fount&rdquo; stood on this eminence&mdash;well, I shall be glad to corroborate,
+for once in the way, old Ughelli, whose book contains a deal of dire nonsense.
+And if the Abbe Chaupy&rsquo;s suggestion that the village lay at the foot of
+the hill should ever prove to be wrong&mdash;well, his amiable ghost may be
+pleased to think that even this does not necessitate the sacrifice of his
+Venosa theory in favour of that of the scholiast Akron; there is still a way
+out of the difficulty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page46"></a>
+But whether this at San Gervasio is the actual fountain hymned by
+Horace&mdash;ah, that is quite another affair! Few poets, to be sure, have
+clung more tenaciously to the memories of their childhood than did he and
+Virgil. And yet, the whole scene may be a figment of his imagination&mdash;the
+very word Bandusia may have been coined by him. Who can tell? Then there is the
+Digentia hypothesis. I know it, I know it! I have read some of its defenders,
+and consider <i>(entre nous)</i> that they have made out a pretty strong case.
+But I am not in the mood for discussing their proposition&mdash;not just now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here at San Gervasio I prefer to think only of the Roman singer, so sanely
+jovial, and of these waters as they flowed, limpid and cool, in the days when
+they fired his boyish fancy. Deliberately I refuse to hear the charmer
+Boissier. Deliberately, moreover, I shut my eyes to the present condition of
+affairs; to the herd of squabbling laundresses and those other incongruities
+that spoil the antique scene. Why not? The timid alone are scared by
+microscopic discords of time and place. The sage can invest this prosaic
+water-trough with all its pristine dignity and romance by an unfailing
+expedient. He closes an eye. It is an art he learns early in life; a simple
+art, and one that greatly conduces to happiness. The ever alert, the
+conscientiously wakeful&mdash;how many fine things they fail to see! Horace
+knew the wisdom of being genially unwise; of closing betimes an eye, or an ear;
+or both. <i>Desipere in loco. . . .</i>
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page47"></a><a name="chap08"></a>VIII<br />
+TILLERS OF THE SOIL</h2>
+
+<p>
+I remember watching an old man stubbornly digging a field by himself. He toiled
+through the flaming hours, and what he lacked in strength was made up in the
+craftiness, <i>malizia,</i> born of long love of the soil. The ground was baked
+hard; but there was still a chance of rain, and the peasants were anxious not
+to miss it. Knowing this kind of labour, I looked on from my vine-wreathed
+arbour with admiration, but without envy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I asked whether he had not children to work for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All dead&mdash;and health to you!&rdquo; he replied, shaking his white
+head dolefully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And no grandchildren?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All Americans (emigrants).&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke in dreamy fashion of years long ago when he, too, had travelled,
+sailing to Africa for corals, to Holland and France; yes, and to England also.
+But our dockyards and cities had faded from his mind; he remembered only our
+men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Che bella gioventù&mdash;che bella gioventù!</i>&rdquo; (&ldquo;a
+sturdy brood&rdquo;), he kept on repeating. &ldquo;And lately,&rdquo; he added,
+&ldquo;America has been discovered.&rdquo; He toiled fourteen hours a day, and
+he was 83 years old.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Apart from that creature of fiction, the peasant <i>in fabula</i> whom we all
+know, I can find little to admire in this whole class of men, whose talk and
+dreams are of the things of the soil, and who knows of nothing save the regular
+interchange of summer and winter with their unvarying tasks and rewards. None
+save a Cincinnatus or Garibaldi can be ennobled by the spade. In spleenful
+moments, it seems to me that the most depraved of city-dwellers has flashes of
+enthusiasm and self-abnegation never experienced by this shifty, retrogressive
+and ungenerous brood, which lives like the beasts of the field and has learnt
+all too much of their logic. But they have a beast-virtue hereabouts which
+compels respect&mdash;contentment in adversity. In this point they resemble the
+Russian peasantry. And yet, who can pity the
+<a name="Page48"></a>
+moujik? His cheeks are altogether too round, and his morals too superbly
+bestial; he has clearly been created to sing and starve by turns. But the
+Italian peasant who speaks in the tongue of Homer and Virgil and Boccaccio is
+easily invested with a halo of martyrdom; it is delightful to sympathize with
+men who combine the manners of Louis Quatorze with the profiles of Augustus or
+Plato, and who still recall, in many of their traits, the pristine life of
+Odyssean days. Thus, they wear to-day the identical &ldquo;clouted leggings of
+oxhide, against the scratches of the thorns&rdquo; which old Laertes bound
+about his legs on the upland farm in Ithaka. They call them
+&ldquo;galandrine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On occasions of drought or flood there is not a word of complaint. I have known
+these field-faring men and women for thirty years, and have yet to hear a
+single one of them grumble at the weather. It is not indifference; it is true
+philosophy&mdash;acquiescence in the inevitable. The grievances of cultivators
+of lemons and wholesale agriculturalists, whose speculations are often ruined
+by a single stroke of the human pen in the shape of new regulations or tariffs,
+are a different thing; <i>their</i> curses are loud and long. But the
+bean-growers, dependent chiefly on wind and weather, only speak of God&rsquo;s
+will. They have the same forgiveness for the shortcomings of nature as for a
+wayward child. And no wonder they are distrustful. Ages of oppression and
+misrule have passed over their heads; sun and rain, with all their caprice,
+have been kinder friends to them than their earthly masters. Some day,
+presumably, the government will wake up to the fact that Italy is not an
+industrial country, and that its farmers might profitably be taken into account
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a change is upon the land. Types like this old man are becoming extinct;
+for the patriarchal system of Coriolanus, the glory of southern Italy, is
+breaking up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is not the fault of conscription which, though it destroys old dialects,
+beliefs and customs, widens the horizon by bringing fresh ideas into the
+family, and generally sound ones. It does even more; it teaches the conscripts
+to read and write, so that it is no longer as dangerous to have dealings with a
+man who possesses these accomplishments as in the days when they were the
+prerogative of <i>avvocati</i> and other questionable characters. A countryman,
+nowadays, may read and write and yet be honest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What is shattering family life is the speculative spirit born of emigration. A
+continual coming and going; two-thirds of the adolescent and adult male
+population are at this moment in Argentina or the United States&mdash;some as
+far afield as New
+<a name="Page49"></a>
+Zealand. Men who formerly reckoned in sous now talk of thousands of francs;
+parental authority over boys is relaxed, and the girls, ever quick to grasp the
+advantages of money, lose all discipline and steadiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My sons won&rsquo;t touch a spade,&rdquo; said a peasant to me;
+&ldquo;and when I thrash them, they complain to the police. They simply gamble
+and drink, waiting their turn to sail. If I were to tell you the beatings
+<i>we</i> used to get, sir, you wouldn&rsquo;t believe me. You wouldn&rsquo;t
+believe me, not if I took my oath, you wouldn&rsquo;t! I can feel them
+still&mdash;speaking with respect&mdash;here!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These emigrants generally stay away three or four years at a stretch, and then
+return, spend their money, and go out again to make more. Others remain for
+longer periods, coming back with huge incomes&mdash;twenty to a hundred francs
+a day. Such examples produce the same effect as those of the few lucky winners
+in the State lottery; every one talks of them, and forgets the large number of
+less fortunate speculators. Meanwhile the land suffers. The carob-tree is an
+instance. This beautiful and almost eternal growth, the &ldquo;hope of the
+southern Apennines&rdquo; as Professor Savastano calls it, whose pods
+constitute an important article of commerce and whose thick-clustering leaves
+yield a cool shelter, comparable to that of a rocky cave, in the noonday heat,
+used to cover large tracts of south Italy. Indifferent to the scorching rays of
+the sun, flourishing on the stoniest declivities, and sustaining the soil in a
+marvellous manner, it was planted wherever nothing else would grow&mdash;a
+distant but sure profit. Nowadays carobs are only cut down. Although their
+produce rises in value every year, not one is planted; nobody has time to wait
+for the fruit.<a href="#fn-8.1" name="fnref-8.1" id="fnref-8.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-8.1" id="fn-8.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-8.1">[1]</a>
+There are a few laudable exceptions, such as Prince Belmonte, who has covered
+large stretches of bad land with this tree. (See Consular Reports, Italy, No.
+431.) But he is not a peasant!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is nothing short of a social revolution, depopulating the country of its
+most laborious elements. 788,000 emigrants left in one year alone (1906); in
+the province of Basilicata the exodus exceeds the birthrate. I do not know the
+percentage of those who depart never to return, but it must be considerable;
+the land is full of chronic grass-widows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Things will doubtless right themselves in due course; it stands to reason that
+in this acute transitional stage the demoralizing effects of the new system
+should be more apparent than its inevitable benefits. Already these are not
+unseen; houses are springing up round villages, and the emigrants return
+<a name="Page50"></a>
+home with a disrespect for many of their country&rsquo;s institutions which,
+under the circumstances, is neither deplorable nor unjustifiable. A large
+family of boy-children, once a dire calamity, is now the soundest of
+investments. Soon after their arrival in America they begin sending home
+rations of money to their parents; the old farm prospers once more, the
+daughters receive decent dowries. I know farmers who receive over three pounds
+a month from their sons in America&mdash;all under military age.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We work, yes,&rdquo; they will then tell you, &ldquo;but we also smoke
+our pipe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Previous to this wholesale emigration, things had come to such a pass that the
+landed proprietor could procure a labourer at a franc a day, out of which he
+had to feed and clothe himself; it was little short of slavery. The roles are
+now reversed, and while landlords are impoverished, the rich emigrant buys up
+the farms or makes his own terms for work to be done, wages being trebled. A
+new type of peasant is being evolved, independent of family, fatherland or
+traditions&mdash;with a sure haven of refuge across the water when life at home
+becomes intolerable.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Yes; a change is at hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And another of those things which emigration and the new order of affairs are
+surely destroying is that ancient anthropomorphic way of looking at nature,
+with its expressive turns of speech. A small boy, whom I watched gathering figs
+last year, informed me that the fig-tree was <i>innamorato delle pietre e
+cisterne&mdash;</i>enamoured of stones and cisterns; meaning, that its roots
+are searchingly destructive to masonry and display a fabulous intuition for the
+proximity of water. He also told me, what was news to me, that there are more
+than two or three varieties of figs. Will you have his list of them? Here it
+is:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is the <i>fico arnese,</i> the smallest of all, and the <i>fico
+santillo,</i> both of which are best when dried; the <i>fico vollombola,</i>
+which is never dried, because it only makes the spring fruit; the <i>fico
+molegnano,</i> which ripens as late as the end of October and must be eaten
+fresh; the <i>fico coretorto (&ldquo;</i> wry-heart&rdquo;&mdash;from its
+shape), which has the most leathery skin of all and is often destroyed by grubs
+after rain; the <i>fico troiano;</i> the <i>fico arzano;</i> and the <i>fico
+vescovo,</i> which appears when all the others are over, and is eaten in
+February (this may be the kind referred to in Stamer&rsquo;s &ldquo;Dolce
+Napoli&rdquo; as deriving from Sorrento, where the first tree of its kind was
+discovered growing out of the garden wall of the bishop&rsquo;s palace, whence
+the name). All these are <i>neri&mdash;</i>black.
+<a name="Page51"></a>
+Now for the white kinds. The <i>fico paradiso</i> has a tender skin, but is
+easily spoilt by rain and requires a ridiculous amount of sun to dry it; the
+<i>fico vottato</i> is also better fresh; the <i>fico pez-zottolo</i> is often
+attacked by grubs, but grows to a large size every two or three years; the
+<i>fico pascarello</i> is good up till Christmas; the <i>fico natalino;</i>
+lastly, the <i>fico &mdash;&mdash;</i>, whose name I will not record, though it
+would be an admirable illustration of that same anthropomorphic turn of mind.
+The <i>santillo</i> and <i>arnese,</i> he added, are the varieties which are
+cut into two and laid lengthwise upon each other and so dried (Query: Is not
+this the &ldquo;duplex ficus&rdquo; of Horace?).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course there are other kinds,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I
+don&rsquo;t remember them just now.&rdquo; When I asked whether he could tell
+these different fig-trees apart by the leaves and stems alone and without the
+fruit, he said that each kind, even in winter, retained its peculiar
+&ldquo;faccia&rdquo; (face), but that some varieties are more easy to
+distinguish than others. I enquired into the mysteries of caprification, and
+learned that artificial ripening by means of a drop of oil is practised with
+some of them, chiefly the <i>santillo, vollombola, pascarello</i> and
+<i>natalino.</i> Then he gave me an account of the prices for the different
+qualities and seasons which would have astonished a grocer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All of which proves how easy it is to misjudge of folks who, although they do
+not know that Paris is the capital of France, yet possess a training adapted to
+their present needs. They are specialists for things of the grain-giving earth;
+it is a pleasure to watch them grafting vines and olives and lemons with the
+precision of a trained horticulturist. They talk of &ldquo;governing&rdquo;
+<i>(governare}</i> their soil; it is the word they use in respect to a child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now figs are neither white nor black, but such is the terminology. Stones are
+white or black; prepared olives are white or black; wine is white or black. Are
+they become colour-blind because impregnated, from earliest infancy, with a
+perennial blaze of rainbow hues&mdash;colour-blinded, in fact; or from
+negligence, attention to this matter not bringing with it any material
+advantage? Excepting that sign-language which is profoundly interesting from an
+artistic and ethnological point of view&mdash;why does not some scholar bring
+old Iorio&rsquo;s &ldquo;Mimica degli Antichi&rdquo; up to date?&mdash;few
+things are more worthy of investigation than the colour-sense of these people.
+Of blue they have not the faintest conception, probably because there are so
+few blue solids in nature; Max Mueller holds the idea of blue to be quite
+<a name="Page52"></a>
+a modern acquisition on the part of the human race. So a cloudless sky is
+declared to be &ldquo;quite white.&rdquo; I once asked a lad as to the colour
+of the sea which, at the moment, was of the most brilliant sapphire hue. He
+pondered awhile and then said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pare come fosse un colore morto&rdquo; (a sort of dead colour).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Green is a little better known, but still chiefly connected with things not out
+of doors, as a green handkerchief. The reason may be that this tint is too
+common in nature to be taken note of. Or perhaps because their chain of
+association between green and grass is periodically broken up&mdash;our fields
+are always verdant, but theirs turn brown in summer. Trees they sometimes call
+yellow, as do some ancient writers; but more generally &ldquo;half-black&rdquo;
+or &ldquo;tree-colour.&rdquo; A beech in full leaf has been described to me as
+black. <i>&ldquo;Rosso&rdquo;</i> does not mean red, but rather dun or dingy;
+earth is <i>rosso.</i> When our red is to be signified, they will use the word
+&ldquo;turco,&rdquo; which came in with the well-known dye-stuff of which the
+Turks once monopolized the secret. Thus there are &ldquo;Turkish&rdquo; apples
+and &ldquo;Turkish&rdquo; potatoes. But &ldquo;turco&rdquo; may also mean
+black&mdash;in accordance with the tradition that the Turks, the Saracens, were
+a black race. Snakes, generally greyish-brown in these parts, are described as
+either white or black; an eagle-owl is half-black; a kestrel <i>un quasi
+bianco.</i> The mixed colours of cloths or silks are either beautiful or ugly,
+and there&rsquo;s an end of it. It is curious to compare this state of affairs
+with that existing in the days of Homer, who was, as it were, feeling his way
+in a new region, and the propriety of whose colour epithets is better
+understood when one sees things on the spot. Of course I am only speaking of
+the humble peasant whose blindness, for the rest, is not incurable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One might enlarge the argument and deduce his odd insensibility to delicate
+scents from the fact that he thrives in an atmosphere saturated with violent
+odours of all kinds; his dullness in regard to finer shades of sound&mdash;from
+the shrieks of squalling babies and other domestic explosions in which he lives
+from the cradle to the grave. That is why these people have no
+&ldquo;nerves&rdquo;; terrific bursts of din, such as the pandemonium of
+Piedigrotta, stimulate them in the same way that others might be stimulated by
+a quartette of Brahms. And if they who are so concerned about the massacre of
+small birds in this country would devote their energies to the invention of a
+noiseless and yet cheap powder, their efforts would at last have some prospects
+of success. For it is not so much the joy of killing, as the pleasurable noise
+of the gun, which creates these local sportsmen; as the sagacious
+<a name="Page53"></a>
+&ldquo;Ultramontain&rdquo; observed long ago. &ldquo;Le napolitain est
+passionné pour la chasse,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;parce que les coups de fusil
+flattent son oreille.&rdquo;<a href="#fn-8.2" name="fnref-8.2" id="fnref-8.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+This ingenuous love of noise may be connected, in some way, with their rapid
+nervous discharges.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-8.2" id="fn-8.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-8.2">[2]</a>
+I have looked him up in Jos. Blanc&rsquo;s &ldquo;Bibliographic.&rdquo; His
+name was C. Haller.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+I doubt whether intermediate convulsions have left much purity of Greek blood
+in south Italy, although emotional travellers, fresh from the north, are for
+ever discovering &ldquo;classic Hellenic profiles&rdquo; among the people.
+There is certainly a scarce type which, for want of a better hypothesis, might
+be called Greek: of delicate build and below the average height, small-eared
+and straight-nosed, with curly hair that varies from blonde to what Italians
+call <i>castagno chiaro.</i> It differs not only from the robuster and yet
+fairer northern breed, but also from the darker surrounding races. But so many
+contradictory theories have lately been promulgated on this head, that I prefer
+to stop short at the preliminary question&mdash;did a Hellenic type ever exist?
+No more, probably, than that charming race which the artists of Japan have
+invented for our delectation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strains of Greek blood can be traced with certainty by their track of folklore
+and poetry and song, such as still echoes among the vales of Sparta and along
+the Bosphorus. Greek words are rather rare here, and those that one
+hears&mdash;such as <i>sciusciello, caruso, crisommele,</i> etc.&mdash;have
+long ago been garnered by scholars like De Grandis, Moltedo, and Salvatore
+Mele. So Naples is far more Hellenic in dialect, lore, song and gesture than
+these regions, which are still rich in pure latinisms of speech, such as
+surgere (to arise); scitare (excitare&mdash;to arouse); è (est&mdash;yes);
+fetare (foetare); trasete (transitus&mdash;passage of quails); titillare (to
+tickle); craje (cras&mdash;to-morrow); pastena (a plantation of young vines;
+Ulpian has &ldquo;pastinum instituere&rdquo;). A woman is called
+&ldquo;muliera,&rdquo; a girl &ldquo;figliola,&rdquo; and children speak of
+their fathers as &ldquo;tata&rdquo; (see Martial, epig. I, 101). Only yesterday
+I added a beautiful latinism to my collection, when an old woman, in whose
+cottage I sometimes repose, remarked to me, &ldquo;Non avete virtù
+oggi&rdquo;&mdash;you are not <i>up to the mark</i> to-day. The real, antique
+virtue! I ought to have embraced her. No wonder I have no &ldquo;virtue&rdquo;
+just now. This savage Vulturnian wind&mdash;did it not sap the Roman virtue at
+Cannae?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All those relics of older civilizations are disappearing under the
+standardizing influence of conscription, emigration and national schooling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page54"></a>
+And soon enough the <i>Contranome-</i>system will become a thing of the past. I
+shall be sorry to see it go, though it has often driven me nearly crazy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What is a <i>contranome?</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same as a <i>sopranome.</i> It is a nickname which, as with the Russian
+peasants, takes the place of Christian and surname together. A man will tell
+you: &ldquo;My name is Luigi, but they call me, by <i>contranome,</i>
+O&rsquo;Canzirro. I don&rsquo;t know my surname.&rdquo; Some of these nicknames
+are intelligible, such as O&rsquo;Sborramurella, which refers to the
+man&rsquo;s profession of building those walls without mortar which are always
+tumbling down and being repaired again; or O&rsquo;Sciacquariello
+(acqua&mdash;a leaking&mdash;one whose money leaks from his pocket&mdash;a
+spendthrift); or San Pietro, from his saintly appearance; O&rsquo;Civile, who
+is so uncivilized, or Cristoforo Colombo, because he is so very wideawake. But
+eighty per cent of them are quite obscure even to their owners, going back, as
+they do, to some forgotten trick or incident during childhood or to some pet
+name which even in the beginning meant nothing. Nearly every man and boy has
+his contranome by which, and <i>by which alone,</i> he is known in his village;
+the women seldomer, unless they are conspicuous by some peculiarity, such as
+A&rsquo;Sbirra (the spy), or A&rsquo;Paponnessa (the fat one)&mdash;whose
+counterpart, in the male sex, would be O&rsquo;Tripone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conceive, now, what trouble it entails to find a man in a strange village if
+you happen not to know his contranome (and how on earth are you to discover
+it?), if his surname means nothing to the inhabitants, and his Christian name
+is shared by a hundred others. For they have an amazing lack of inventiveness
+in this matter; four or five Christian names will include the whole population
+of the place. Ten to one you will lose a day looking for him, unless something
+like this takes place:
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+THE HAPPY HAZARDS OF THE CONTRANOME
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You set forth your business to a crowd of villagers that have collected around.
+It is simple enough. You want to speak to Luigi So-and-so. A good-natured
+individual, who seems particularly anxious to help, summarizes affairs by
+saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The gentleman wants Luigi So-and-so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is evidently some joke in the mere suggestion of such a thing; they all
+smile. Then a confused murmur of voices goes up:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Luigi&mdash;Luigi. . . . Now which Luigi does he mean?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page55"></a>
+You repeat his surname in a loud voice. It produces no effect, beyond that of
+increased hilarity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Luigi&mdash;Luigi. . . .&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps O&rsquo;Zoccolone?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps O&rsquo;Seticchio?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or the figlio d&rsquo; O&rsquo;Zibalocchio?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The good-natured individual volunteers to beat the surrounding district and
+bring in all the Luigis he can find. After half an hour they begin to arrive,
+one by one. He is not among them. Dismissed with cigars, as compensation for
+loss of time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile half the village has gathered around, vastly enjoying the fun, which
+it hopes will last till bedtime. You are getting bewildered; new people flock
+in from the fields to whom the mysterious joke about Luigi must be explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Luigi&mdash;Luigi,&rdquo; they begin again. &ldquo;Now, which of them
+can he mean?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps O&rsquo;Marzariello?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or O&rsquo;Cuccolillo?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never thought of him,&rdquo; says the good-natured individual.
+&ldquo;Here, boy, run and tell O&rsquo;Cuccolillo that a foreign gentleman
+wants to give him a cigar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the time O&rsquo;Cuccolillo appears on the scene the crowd has thickened.
+You explain the business for the fiftieth time; no&mdash;he is Luigi, of
+course, but not the right Luigi, which he regrets considerably. Then the joke
+is made clear to him, and he laughs again. You have lost all your nerve, but
+the villagers are beginning to love you,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can it be O&rsquo;Sciabecchino?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or the figlio d&rsquo; O&rsquo;Chiappino?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It might be O&rsquo;Busciardiello (the liar).&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So he is. I quite forgot. Well, then it must be the husband of
+A&rsquo;Cicivetta (the flirt).&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s in prison. But how about O&rsquo;Caccianfierno?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly a withered hag croaks authoritatively:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know! The gentleman wants OTentillo.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Chorus of villagers:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then why doesn&rsquo;t he say so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O&rsquo;Tentillo lives far, far away. An hour elapses; at last he comes, full
+of bright expectations. No, this is not your Luigi, he is another Luigi. You
+are ready to sink into the earth, but there is no escape. The crowd surges all
+around, the news having evidently spread to neighbouring hamlets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page56"></a>
+<i>&ldquo;</i>Luigi&mdash;Luigi. . . . Let me see. It might be
+O&rsquo;Rappo.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O&rsquo;Massassillo, more likely.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have it! It&rsquo;s O&rsquo;Spennatiello.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never thought of him,&rdquo; says a well-known voice. &ldquo;Here,
+boy, run and tell&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or O&rsquo;Cicereniello.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O&rsquo;Vergeniello.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O&rsquo;Sciabolone. ...&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never mind the G&mdash;&mdash; d&mdash;&mdash; son of
+b&mdash;&mdash;,&rdquo; says a cheery person in excellent English, who has just
+arrived on the scene. &ldquo;See here, I live fifteen years in Brooklyn; damn
+fine! &rsquo;Ave a glass of wine round my place. Your Luigi&rsquo;s in America,
+sure. And if he isn&rsquo;t, send him to Hell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sound advice, this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s his surname, anyhow?&rdquo; he goes on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You explain once more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, there&rsquo;s the very man you&rsquo;re looking for. There,
+standing right in front of you! He&rsquo;s Luigi, and that&rsquo;s his surname
+right enough. He don&rsquo;t know it himself, you bet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he points to the good-natured individual. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+These countryfolk can fare on strange meats. A boy consumed a snake that was
+lying dead by the roadside; a woman ate thirty raw eggs and then a plate of
+maccheroni; a man swallowed six kilograms of the uncooked fat of a freshly
+slaughtered pig (he was ill for a week afterwards); another one devoured two
+small birds alive, with beaks, claws and feathers. Such deeds are sternly
+reprobated as savagery; still, they occur, and nearly always as the result of
+wagers. I wish I could couple them with equally heroic achievements in the
+drinking line, but, alas! I have only heard of one old man who was wont
+habitually to en-gulph twenty-two litres of wine a day; eight are spoken of as
+&ldquo;almost too much&rdquo; in these degenerate days. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mice, says Movers, were sacrificially eaten by the Babylonians. Here, as in
+England, they are cooked into a paste and given to children, to cure a certain
+complaint. To take away the dread of the sea from young boys, they mix into
+their food small fishes which have been devoured by larger ones and taken from
+their stomachs&mdash;the underlying idea being that these half-digested fry are
+thoroughly familiar with the storms and perils of the deep, and will
+communicate these virtues to the boys who eat them. It is the same principle as
+that of giving chamois blood to the goat-boys of the Alps, to strengthen their
+nerves against
+<a name="Page57"></a>
+giddiness&mdash;pure sympathetic magic, of which there is this, at least, to be
+said, that &ldquo;its fundamental conception is identical with that of modern
+science&mdash;a faith in the order or uniformity of nature.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have also met persons who claim to have been cured of rachitic troubles in
+their youth by eating a puppy dog cooked in a saucepan. But only one kind of
+dog is good for this purpose, to be procured from those foundling hospitals
+whither hundreds of illegitimate infants are taken as soon as possible after
+birth. The mothers, to relieve the discomfort caused by this forcible
+separation from the new-born, buy a certain kind of puppy there, bring them
+home, and nourish them <i>in loco infantis.</i> These puppies cost a franc
+apiece, and are generally destroyed after performing their duties; it is they
+who are cooked for curing the scrofulous tendencies of other children.
+Swallows&rsquo; hearts are also used for another purpose; so is the blood of
+tortoises&mdash;for strengthening the backs of children (the tortoise being a
+<i>hard</i> animal). So is that of snakes, who are held up by head and tail and
+pricked with needles; the greater their pain, the more beneficial their blood,
+which is soaked up with cotton-wool and applied as a liniment for swollen
+glands. In fact, nearly every animal has been discovered to possess some
+medicinal property.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But of the charm of such creatures the people know nothing. How different from
+the days of old! These legendary and gracious beasts, that inspired poets and
+artists and glyptic engravers&mdash;these things of beauty have now descended
+into the realm of mere usefulness, into the pharmacopoeia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The debasement is quite intelligible, when one remembers what accumulated
+miseries these provinces have undergone. Memories of refinement were starved
+out of the inhabitants by centuries of misrule, when nothing was of interest or
+of value save what helped to fill the belly. The work of bestialization was
+carried on by the despotism of Spanish Viceroys and Bourbons. They, the
+Spaniards, fostered and perhaps imported the Camorra, that monster of many
+heads which has established itself in nearly every town of the south. Of the
+deterioration in taste coincident with this period, I lately came across this
+little bit of evidence, curious and conclusive:&mdash;In 1558 a number of the
+country-folk were captured in one of the usual Corsair raids; they were
+afterwards ransomed, and among the Christian names of the women I note: Livia,
+Fiula, Cassandra, Aurelia, Lucrezia, Verginia, Medea, Violanta, Galizia,
+Vittoria, Diamanta, etc. Where were these full-sounding noble names two
+centuries
+<a name="Page58"></a>
+later&mdash;where are they nowadays? Do they not testify to a state of culture
+superior to that of the present time, when Maria, Lucia, and about four others
+of the most obvious catholic saints exhaust the list of all female Christian
+names hereabouts?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this is changing once more; a higher standard of comfort is being evolved,
+though relics of this former state of insecurity may still be found; such as
+the absence, even in houses of good families, of clocks and watches, and
+convenient storage for clothes and domestic utensils; their habits of living in
+penury and of buying their daily food by farthings, as though one never knew
+what the next day might bring; their dread of going out of doors by night (they
+have a proverb which runs, <i>di notte, non parlar forte; di giorno, guardati
+attorno],</i> their lack of humour. For humour is essentially a product of
+ease, and nobody can be at ease in unquiet times. That is why so few poets are
+humorous; their restlessly querulous nature has the same effect on their
+outlook as an insecure environment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it will be long ere these superstitions are eradicated. The magic of south
+Italy deserves to be well studied, for the country is a cauldron of demonology
+wherein Oriental beliefs&mdash;imported direct from Egypt, the classic home of
+witchcraft&mdash;commingled with those of the West. A foreigner is at an
+unfortunate disadvantage; if he asks questions, he will only get answers
+dictated by suspicion or a deliberate desire to mislead&mdash;prudent answers;
+whoso accepts these explanations in good faith, might produce a wondrous
+contribution to ethnology.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wise women and wizards abound, but they are not to be compared with that
+<i>santa</i> near Naples whom I used to visit in the nineties, and who was so
+successful in the magics that the Bishop of Pozzuoli, among hundreds of other
+clients, was wont to drive up to her door once a week for a consultation. These
+mostly occupy themselves with the manufacture of charms for gaining lucky
+lottery numbers, and for deluding fond women who wish to change their lovers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lore of herbs is not much studied. For bruises, a slice of the Opuntia is
+applied, or the cooling parietaria (known as &ldquo;pareta&rdquo; or
+&ldquo;paretone&rdquo;); the camomile and other common remedies are in vogue;
+the virtues of the male fern, the rue, sabina and (home-made) ergot of rye are
+well known but not employed to the extent they are in Russia, where a large
+progeny is a disaster. There is a certain respect for the legitimate unborn,
+and even in cases of illegitimacy some neighbouring foundling hospital, the
+house of the Madonna, is much more convenient.
+<a name="Page59"></a>
+It is a true monk&rsquo;s expedient; it avoids the risk of criminal
+prosecution; the only difference being that the Mother of God, and not the
+natural mother of the infant, becomes responsible for its prompt and almost
+inevitable destruction.<a href="#fn-8.3" name="fnref-8.3" id="fnref-8.3"><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-8.3" id="fn-8.3"></a> <a href="#fnref-8.3">[3]</a>
+The scandals that occasionally arise in connection with that saintly
+institution, the Foundling Hospital at Naples, are enough to make humanity
+shudder. Of 856 children living under its motherly care during 1895, 853
+&ldquo;died&rdquo; in the course of that one year&mdash;only three survived; a
+wholesale massacre. These 853 murdered children were carried forward in the
+books as still living, and the institution, which has a yearly revenue of over
+600,000 francs, was debited with their maintenance, while 42 doctors (instead
+of the prescribed number of 19) continued to draw salaries for their services
+to these innocents that had meanwhile been starved and tortured to death. The
+official report on these horrors ends with the words: &ldquo;There is no
+reason to think that these facts are peculiar to the year 1895.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That the moon stands in sympathetic relations with living vegetation is a fixed
+article of faith among the peasantry. They will prune their plants only when
+the satellite is waxing&mdash;<i>al sottile della luna,</i> as they say.
+Altogether, the moon plays a considerable part in their lore, as might be
+expected in a country where she used to be worshipped under so many forms. The
+dusky markings on her surface are explained by saying that the moon used to be
+a woman and a baker of bread, her face gleaming with the reflection of the
+oven, but one day she annoyed her mother, who took up the brush they use for
+sweeping away the ashes, and smirched her face. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Whoever reviews the religious observances of these people as a whole will find
+them a jumble of contradictions and incongruities, lightly held and as lightly
+dismissed. Theirs is the attitude of mind of little children&mdash;of those, I
+mean, who have been so saturated with Bible stories and fairy tales that they
+cease to care whether a thing be true or false, if it only amuses for the
+moment. That is what makes them an ideal prey for the quack physician. They
+will believe anything so long as it is strange and complicated; a
+straightforward doctor is not listened to; they want that mystery-making
+&ldquo;priest-physician&rdquo; concerning whom a French writer&mdash;I forget
+his name&mdash;has wisely discoursed. I once recommended a young woman who was
+bleeding at the nose to try the homely remedy of a cold key. I thought she
+would have died of laughing! The expedient was too absurdly simple to be
+efficacious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The attitude of the clergy in regard to popular superstitions is the same here
+as elsewhere. They are too wise to believe them, and too shrewd to discourage
+the belief in others; these things can be turned to account for keeping the
+people at
+<a name="Page60"></a>
+a conveniently low level of intelligence. For the rest, these priests are
+mostly good fellows of the live-and-let-live type, who would rather cultivate
+their own potatoes than quarrel about vestments or the Trinity. Violently
+acquisitive, of course, like most southerners. I know a parish priest, a son of
+poor parents, who, by dint of sheer energy, has amassed a fortune of half a
+million francs. He cannot endure idleness in any shape, and a fine mediæval
+scene may be witnessed when he suddenly appears round the corner and catches
+his workmen wasting their time and his money&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ha, loafers, rogues, villains, vermin and sons of <i>bastardi
+cornuti!</i> If God had not given me these garments and thereby closed my lips
+to all evil-speaking (seizing his cassock and displaying half a yard of purple
+stocking)&mdash;wouldn&rsquo;t I just tell you, spawn of adulterous assassins,
+what I think of you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But under the new regime these priests are becoming mere decorative survivals,
+that look well enough in the landscape, but are not taken seriously save in
+their match-making and money-lending capacities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The intense realism of their religion is what still keeps it alive for the poor
+in spirit. Their saints and devils are on the same familiar footing towards
+mankind as were the old gods of Greece. Children do not know the meaning of
+&ldquo;Inferno&rdquo;; they call it &ldquo;casa del diavolo&rdquo; (the
+devil&rsquo;s house); and if they are naughty, the mother says, &ldquo;La
+Madonna strilla&rdquo;&mdash;the Madonna will scold. Here is a legend of Saint
+Peter, interesting for its realism and because it has been grafted upon a very
+ancient <i>motif:&mdash;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The apostle Peter was a dissatisfied sort of man, who was always grumbling
+about things in general and suggesting improvements in the world-scheme. He
+thought himself cleverer even than &ldquo;N. S. G. C.&rdquo; One day they were
+walking together in an olive orchard, and Peter said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just look at the trouble and time it takes to collect all those
+miserable little olives. Let&rsquo;s have them the size of melons.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very well. Have your way, friend Peter! But something awkward is bound
+to happen. It always does, you know, with those improvements of yours.&rdquo;
+And, sure enough, one of these enormous olives fell from the tree straight on
+the saint&rsquo;s head, and ruined his new hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I told you so,&rdquo; said N. S. G. C.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I remember a woman explaining to me that the saints in Heaven took their food
+exactly as we do, and at the same hours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page61"></a>
+&ldquo;The same food?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Does the Madonna really eat
+</p>
+
+<p>
+beans?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Beans? Not likely! But fried fish, and beefsteaks of veal.&rdquo; I
+tried to picture the scene, but the effort was too much for my hereditary
+Puritan leanings. Unable to rise to these heights of realism, I was rated a
+pagan for my ill-timed spirituality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Madame est servie. . . .</i>
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page62"></a><a name="chap09"></a>IX<br />
+MOVING SOUTHWARDS</h2>
+
+<p>
+The train conveying me to Taranto was to halt for the night at the second
+station beyond Venosa&mdash;at Spinazzola. Aware of this fact, I had enquired
+about the place and received assuring reports as to its hotel accommodation.
+But the fates were against me. On my arrival in the late evening I learnt that
+the hotels were all closed long ago, the townsfolk having gone to bed
+&ldquo;with the chickens&rdquo;; it was suggested that I had better stay at the
+station, where the manageress of the restaurant kept certain sleeping quarters
+specially provided for travellers in my predicament.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the gentle dame lighted a dim lantern and led me across what seemed
+to be a marsh (it was raining) to the door of a hut which was to be my
+resting-place. At the entrance she paused, and after informing me that a band
+of musicians had taken all the beds save one which was at my disposal if I were
+good enough to pay her half a franc, she placed the lantern in my hand and
+stumbled back into the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stepped into a low chamber, the beds of which were smothered under a
+profusion of miscellaneous wraps. The air was warm&mdash;the place exhaled an
+indescribable <i>esprit de corps.</i> Groping further, I reached another
+apartment, vaulted and still lower than the last, an old-fashioned cow-stable,
+possibly, converted into a bedroom. One glance sufficed me: the couch was
+plainly not to be trusted. Thankful to be out of the rain at least, I lit a
+pipe and prepared to pass the weary hours till 4 a.m.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not long ere I discovered that there was another bed in this den,
+opposite my own; and judging by certain undulatory and saltatory movements
+within, it was occupied. Presently the head of a youth emerged, with closed
+eyes and flushed features. He indulged in a series of groans and spasmodic
+kicks, that subsided once more, only to recommence. A flute projected from
+under his pillow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This poor young man,&rdquo; I thought, &ldquo;is plainly in bad case. On
+account of illness, he has been left behind by the rest of the
+<a name="Page63"></a>
+band, who have gone to Spinazzola to play at some marriage festival. He is
+feverish, or possibly subject to fits&mdash;to choriasis or who knows what
+disorder of the nervous system. A cruel trick, to leave a suffering youngster
+alone in this foul hovel.&rdquo; I misliked his symptoms&mdash;that anguished
+complexion and delirious intermittent trembling, and began to run over the
+scanty stock of household remedies contained in my bag, wondering which of them
+might apply to his complaint. There was court plaster and boot polish, quinine,
+corrosive sublimate and Worcester sauce (detestable stuff, but indispensable
+hereabouts).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just as I had decided in favour of the last-named, he gave a more than usually
+vigorous jerk, sat up in bed and, opening his eyes, remarked:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Those fleas!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This, then, was the malady. I enquired why he had not joined his companions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was tired, he said; tired of life in general, and of flute-playing in
+particular. Tired, moreover, of certain animals; and with a tiger-like spring
+he leapt out of bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once thoroughly awake, he proved an amiable talker, though oppressed with an
+incurable melancholy which no amount of tobacco and Venosa wine could dispel.
+In gravely boyish fashion he told me of his life and ambitions. He had passed a
+high standard at school, but&mdash;what would you?&mdash;every post was
+crowded. He liked music, and would gladly take it up as a profession, if
+anything could be learnt with a band such as his; he was sick, utterly sick, of
+everything. Above all things, he wished to travel. Visions of America floated
+before his mind&mdash;where was the money to come from? Besides, there was the
+military service looming close at hand; and then, a widowed mother at
+home&mdash;the inevitable mother&mdash;with a couple of little sisters; how
+shall a man desert his family? He was born on a farm on the Murge, the
+watershed between this country and the Adriatic. Thinking of the Murge, that
+shapeless and dismal range of limestone hills whose name suggests its sad
+monotony, I began to understand the origin of his pagan wistfulness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Happy foreigners!&rdquo;&mdash;such was his constant
+refrain&mdash;&ldquo;happy foreigners, who can always do exactly what they
+like! Tell me something about other countries,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Something true?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Anything&mdash;anything!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To cheer him up, I replied with improbable tales of Indian life, of rajahs and
+diamonds, of panthers whose eyes shine like
+<a name="Page64"></a>
+moonbeams in the dark jungle, of elephants huge as battleships, of sportive
+monkeys who tie knots in each others&rsquo; tails and build themselves huts
+among the trees, where they brew iced lemonade, which they offer in friendliest
+fashion to the thirsty wayfarer, together with other light
+refreshment&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cigarettes as well?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. They are not allowed to cultivate tobacco.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, that <i>monopolio,</i> the curse of humanity!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was almost smiling when, at 2.30 a.m., there resounded a furious knocking at
+the door, and the rest of the band appeared from their unknown quarters in the
+liveliest of spirits. Altogether, a memorable night. But at four o&rsquo;clock
+the lantern was extinguished and the cavern, bereft of its Salvator-Rosa
+glamour, resolved itself into a prosaic and infernally unclean hovel. Issuing
+from the door, I saw those murky recesses invaded by the uncompromising light
+of dawn, and shuddered. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The railway journey soon dispelled the phantoms of the night. As the train sped
+downhill, the sun rose in splendour behind the Murge hills, devouring mists so
+thickly couched that, struck by the first beams, they glistered like compact
+snow-fields, while their shaded portions might have been mistaken for stretches
+of mysterious swamp, from which an occasional clump of tree-tops emerged, black
+and island-like. These dreamland effects lasted but a brief time, and soon the
+whole face of the landscape was revealed. An arid region, not unlike certain
+parts of northern Africa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet the line passes through places renowned in history. Who would not like to
+spend a day at Altamura, if only in memory of its treatment by the ferocious
+Cardinal Ruffo and his army of cut-throats? After a heroic but vain resistance
+comparable only to that of Saguntum or Petelia, during which every available
+metal, and even money, was converted into bullets to repel the assailers, there
+followed a three days&rsquo; slaughter of young and old; then the cardinal
+blessed his army and pronounced, in the blood-drenched streets, a general
+absolution. Even this man has discovered apologists. No cause so vile, that
+some human being will not be found to defend it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So much I called to mind that morning from the pages of Colletta, and
+straightway formed a resolution to slip out of the carriage and arrest my
+journey at Altamura for a couple of days. But I must have been asleep while the
+train passed through the station, nor did I wake up again till the blue Ionian
+was in sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Venosa one thinks of Roman legionaries fleeing from
+<a name="Page65"></a>
+Hannibal, of Horace, of Norman ambitions; Lucera and Manfredonia call up
+Saracen memories and the ephemeral gleams of Hohenstaufen; Gargano takes us
+back into Byzantine mysticism and monkery. And now from Altamura with its dark
+record of Bourbon horrors, we glide into the sunshine of Hellenic days when the
+wise Archytas, sage and lawgiver, friend of Plato, ruled this ancient city of
+Tarentum. A wide sweep of history! And if those Periclean times be not remote
+enough, yonder lies Oria on its hilltop, the stronghold of pre-Hellenic and
+almost legendary Messapians; while for such as desire more recent associations
+there is the Albanian colony of San Giorgio, only a few miles distant, to
+recall the glories of Scanderbeg and his adventurous bands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Herein lies the charm of travel in this land of multiple
+civilizations&mdash;the ever-changing layers of culture one encounters, their
+wondrous juxtaposition.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+My previous experiences of Taranto hotels counselled me to take a private room
+overlooking the inland sea (the southern aspect is already intolerably hot),
+and to seek my meals at restaurants. And in such a one I have lived for the
+last ten days or so, reviving old memories. The place has grown in the
+interval; indeed, if one may believe certain persons, the population has
+increased from thirty to ninety thousand in&mdash;I forget how few years. The
+arsenal brings movement into the town; it has appropriated the lion&rsquo;s
+share of building sites in the &ldquo;new&rdquo; town. Is it a ripple on the
+surface of things, or will it truly stir the spirits of the city? So many
+arsenals have come and gone, at Taranto!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This arsenal quarter is a fine example of the Italian mania of <i>fare
+figura&mdash;</i>everything for effect. It is an agglomeration of dreary
+streets, haunted by legions of clamorous black swifts, and constructed on the
+rectangular principle dear to the Latin mind. Modern, and surpassingly
+monotonous. Are such interminable rows of stuccoed barracks artistic to look
+upon, are they really pleasant to inhabit? Is it reasonable or even sanitary,
+in a climate of eight months&rsquo; sunshine, to build these enormous roadways
+and squares filled with glaring limestone dust that blows into one&rsquo;s eyes
+and almost suffocates one; these Saharas that even at the present season of the
+year (early June) cannot be traversed comfortably unless one wears brown
+spectacles and goes veiled like a Tuareg? This arsenal quarter must be a hell
+during the really not season, which continues into October.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For no trees whatever are planted to shade the walking population, as in Paris
+or Cairo or any other sunlit city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page66"></a>
+And who could guess the reason? An Englishman, at least, would never bring
+himself to believe what is nevertheless a fact, namely, that if the streets are
+converted into shady boulevards, the rents of the houses immediately fall. When
+trees are planted, the lodgers complain and finally emigrate to other quarters;
+the experiment has been tried, at Naples and elsewhere, and always with the
+same result. Up trees, down rents. The tenants refuse to be deprived of their
+chief pleasure in life&mdash;that of gazing at the street-passengers, who must
+be good enough to walk in the sunshine for their delectation. But if you are of
+an inquisitive turn of mind, you are quite at liberty to return the compliment
+and to study from the outside the most intimate details of the tenants&rsquo;
+lives within. Take your fill of their domestic doings; stare your hardest. They
+don&rsquo;t mind in the least, not they! That feeling of privacy which the
+northerner fosters doggedly even in the centre of a teeming city is alien to
+their hearts; they like to look and be looked at; they live like fish in an
+aquarium. It is a result of the whole palazzo-system that every one knows his
+neighbour&rsquo;s business better than his own. What does it matter, in the
+end? Are we not all &ldquo;Christians&rdquo;?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The municipality, meanwhile, is deeply indebted for the sky-piercing ambitions
+which have culminated in the building of this new quarter. To meet these
+obligations, the octroi prices have been raised to the highest pitch by the
+City Fathers. This octroi is farmed out and produces (they tell me) 120 pounds
+a day; there are some hundred toll-collecting posts at the outskirts of the
+town, and the average salary of their officials is three pounds a month. They
+are supposed to be respectable and honest men, but it is difficult to see how a
+family can be supported on that wage, when one knows how high the rents are,
+and how severely the most ordinary commodities of life are taxed.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus07"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-7.jpg" width="394" height="551" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Sole Relic of old Taras</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+I endeavoured to obtain photographs of the land as it looked ere it was covered
+by the arsenal quarter, but in vain. Nobody seems to have thought it worth
+while preserving what would surely be a notable economic document for future
+generations. Out of sheer curiosity I also tried to procure a plan of the old
+quarter, that labyrinth of thick-clustering humanity, where the streets are
+often so narrow that two persons can barely squeeze past each other. I was
+informed that no such plan had ever been drawn up; it was agreed that a map of
+this kind might be interesting, and suggested, furthermore, that I might
+undertake the task myself; the authorities would doubtless appreciate my
+labours. We foreigners, be it understood, have ample means and
+<a name="Page67"></a>
+unlimited leisure, and like nothing better than doing unprofitable jobs of this
+kind.<a href="#fn-9.1" name="fnref-9.1" id="fnref-9.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-9.1" id="fn-9.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-9.1">[1]</a>
+There is a map of old Taranto in Lasor a Varea (Savonarola) <i>Universus
+terrarum etc.,</i> Vol. II, p. 552, and another in J. Blaev&rsquo;s <i>Theatrum
+Civitatum</i> (1663). He talks of the &ldquo;rude houses&rdquo; of this town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One is glad to leave the scintillating desert of this arsenal quarter, and
+enter the cool stone-paved streets of the other, which remind one somewhat of
+Malta. In the days of Salis-Marschlins this city possessed only 18,000
+inhabitants, and &ldquo;outdid even the customary Italian filth, being hardly
+passable on account of the excessive nastiness and stink.&rdquo; It is now
+scrupulously clean&mdash;so absurdly clean, that it has quite ceased to be
+picturesque. Not that its buildings are particularly attractive to me; none,
+that is, save the antique &ldquo;Trinità&rdquo; column of Doric
+gravity&mdash;sole survivor of Hellenic Taras, which looks wondrously out of
+place in its modern environment. One of the finest of these earlier monuments,
+the Orsini tower depicted in old prints of the place, has now been demolished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lovers of the baroque may visit the shrine of Saint Cataldo, a jovial nightmare
+in stone. And they who desire a literary pendant to this fantastic structure
+should read the life of the saint written by Morone in 1642. Like the shrine,
+it is the quintessence of insipid exuberance; there is something preposterous
+in its very title &ldquo;Cataldiados,&rdquo; and whoever reads through those
+six books of Latin hexameters will arise from the perusal half-dazed. Somehow
+or other, it dislocates one&rsquo;s whole sense of terrestrial values to see a
+frowsy old monk<a href="#fn-9.2" name="fnref-9.2" id="fnref-9.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+treated in the heroic style and metre, as though he were a new Achilles. As a
+<i>jeu d&rsquo;esprit</i> the book might pass; but it is deadly serious. Single
+men will always be found to perpetrate monstrosities of literature; the marvel
+is that an entire generation of writers should have worked themselves into a
+state of mind which solemnly approved of such freaks.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-9.2" id="fn-9.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-9.2">[2]</a>
+This wandering Irish missionary is supposed to have died here in the seventh
+century, and they who are not satisfied with his printed biographies will find
+one in manuscript of 550 pages, compiled in 1766, in the Cuomo Library at
+Naples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every one has heard of the strange position of this hoary island-citadel (a
+metropolis, already, in neolithic days). It is of oval shape, the broad sides
+washed by the Ionian Sea and an oyster-producing lagoon; bridges connect it at
+one extremity with the arsenal or new town, and at the other with the so-called
+commercial quarter. It is as if some precious gem were set, in a ring, between
+two others of minor worth. Or, to vary the simile, this acropolis, with its
+close-packed alleys, is the throbbing heart
+<a name="Page68"></a>
+of Taranto; the arsenal quarter&mdash;its head; and that other one&mdash;well,
+its stomach; quite an insignificant stomach as compared with the head and
+corroborative, in so far, of the views of Metchnikoff, who holds that this
+hitherto commendable organ ought now to be reduced in size, if not abolished
+altogether. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From out of this window I gaze upon the purple lagoon flecked with warships and
+sailing-boats; and beyond it, upon the venerable land of Japygia, the heel of
+Italy, that rises in heliotrope-tinted undulations towards the Adriatic
+watershed. At night-time an exquisite perfume of flowers and ripe corn comes
+wafted into my room over the still waters, and when the sun rises, white
+settlements begin to sparkle among its olives and vineyards. My eyes often rest
+upon one of them; it is Grottaglie, distant a few miles from Taranto on the
+Brindisi line. I must visit Grottaglie, for it was here that the flying monk
+received his education.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The flying monk!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The theme is not inappropriate at this moment, when the newspapers are ringing
+with the Paris-Rome aviation contest and the achievements of Beaumont, Garros
+and their colleagues. I have purposely brought his biography with me, to
+re-peruse on the spot. But let me first explain how I became acquainted with
+this seventeenth-century pioneer of aviation.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+It was an odd coincidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had arrived in Naples, and was anxious to have news of the proceedings at a
+certain aviation meeting in the north, where a rather inexperienced friend of
+mine had insisted upon taking a part; the newspaper reports of these
+entertainments are enough to disturb anybody. While admiring the great
+achievements of modern science in this direction, I wished devoutly, at that
+particular moment, that flying had never been invented; and it was something of
+a coincidence, I say, that stumbling in this frame of mind down one of the
+unspeakable little side-streets in the neighbourhood of the University, my
+glance should have fallen upon an eighteenth-century engraving in a
+bookseller&rsquo;s window which depicted a man raised above the ground without
+any visible means of support&mdash;flying, in short. He was a monk, floating
+before an altar. A companion, near at hand, was portrayed as gazing in
+rapturous wonder at this feat of levitation. I stepped within and demanded the
+volume to which this was the frontispiece.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The salesman, a hungry-looking old fellow with incredibly dirty hands and face,
+began to explain.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus08"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-8.jpg" width="405" height="499" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">CanFishing at Tarantoyon</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page69"></a>
+&ldquo;The Flying Monk, sir, Joseph of Copertino. A mighty saint and conjuror!
+Or perhaps you would like some other book? I have many, many lives of
+<i>santi</i> here. Look at this one of the great Egidio, for instance. I can
+tell you all about him, for he raised my mother&rsquo;s grand-uncle from the
+dead; yes, out of the grave, as one may say. You&rsquo;ll find out all about it
+in this book; and it&rsquo;s only one of his thousand miracles. And here is the
+biography of the renowned Giangiuseppe, a mighty saint and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was paying little heed; the flying monk had enthralled me. An unsuspected
+pioneer of aviation . . . here was a discovery!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He flew?&rdquo; I queried, my mind reverting to the much-vaunted
+triumphs of modern science.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not? The only reason why people don&rsquo;t fly like that nowadays
+is because&mdash;well, sir, because they can&rsquo;t. They fly with machines,
+and think it something quite new and wonderful. And yet it&rsquo;s as old as
+the hills! There was Iscariot, for example&mdash;Icarus, I
+mean&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pure legend, my good man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Everything becomes legend, if the gentleman will have the goodness to
+wait. And here is the biography of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How much for Joseph of Copertino?&rdquo; Cost what it may, I said to
+myself, that volume must be mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took it up and began to turn over the pages lovingly, as though handling
+some priceless Book of Hours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A fine engraving,&rdquo; he observed, <i>sotto voce.</i> &ldquo;And this
+is the best of many biographies of the flying monk. It is by Rossi, the
+Minister-General of the Franciscan order to which our monk belonged; the
+official biography, it might be called&mdash;dedicated, by permission, to His
+Holiness Pope Clemens XIII, and based on the documents which led to the
+saint&rsquo;s beatification. Altogether, a remarkable
+volume&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he paused awhile. Then continued:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I possess a cheaper biography of him, also with a frontispiece, by
+Montanari, which has the questionable advantage of being printed as recently as
+1853. And here is yet another one, by Antonio Basile&mdash;oh, he has been much
+written about; a most celebrated <i>taumaturgo,</i> (wonder-worker)! As to this
+<i>Life</i> of 1767, I could not, with a good conscience, appraise it at less
+than five francs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I respect your feelings. But&mdash;five francs! I have certain scruples
+of my own, you know, and it irks my sense of rectitude to pay five francs for
+the flying monk unless you can supply me with six or seven additional books to
+be included in that sum.
+<a name="Page70"></a>
+Twelve <i>soldi</i> (sous) apiece&mdash;that strikes me as the proper price of
+such literature, for foreigners, at least. Therefore I&rsquo;ll have the great
+Egidio as well, and Montanari&rsquo;s life of the flying monk, and that other
+one by Basile, and Giangiuseppe, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By all means! Pray take your choice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so it came about that, relieved of a tenuous and very sticky five-franc
+note, and loaded down with three biographies of the flying monk, one of Egidio,
+two of Giangiuseppe&mdash;I had been hopelessly swindled, but there! no man can
+bargain in a hurry, and my eagerness to learn something of the life of this
+early airman had made me oblivious of the natural values of things&mdash;and
+with sundry smaller volumes of similar import bulging out of my pockets I
+turned in the direction of the hotel, promising myself some new if not exactly
+light reading.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But hardly had I proceeded twenty paces before the shopkeeper came running
+after me with another formidable bundle under his arm. More books! An ominous
+symptom&mdash;the clearest demonstration of my defeat; I was already a marked
+man, a good customer. It was humiliating, after my long years&rsquo; experience
+of the south.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there resounded an unmistakable note of triumph in his voice, as he said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Some more biographies, sir. Read them at your leisure, and pay me what
+you like. You cannot help being generous; I see it in your face.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I always try to encourage polite learning, if that is what you think to
+decipher in my features. But it rains <i>santi</i> this morning,&rdquo; I
+added, rather sourly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The gentleman is pleased to joke! May it rain <i>soldi</i>
+tomorrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little shower, possibly. But not a cloud-burst, like today. . .
+.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page71"></a><a name="chap10"></a>X<br />
+THE FLYING MONK</h2>
+
+<p>
+As to the flying monk, there is no doubt whatever that he deserved his name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He flew. Being a monk, these feats of his were naturally confined to convents
+and their immediate surroundings, but that does not alter the facts of the
+case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the flights that he took in the little town of Copertino alone, more than
+seventy, says Father Rossi whom I follow throughout, are on record in the
+depositions which were taken on oath from eye-witnesses after his death. This
+is one of them, for example:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stupendous likewise was the <i>ratto</i> (flight or rapture) which he
+exhibited on a night of Holy Thursday. . . . He suddenly flew towards the altar
+in a straight line, leaving untouched all the ornaments of that structure; and
+after some time, being called back by his superior, returned flying to the spot
+whence he had set out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And another:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He flew similarly upon an olive tree . . . and there remained in
+kneeling posture for the space of half an hour. A marvellous thing it was to
+see the branch which sustained him swaying lightly, as though a bird had
+alighted upon it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Copertino is a remote little place, already famous in the annals of
+miraculous occurrences. It can be urged that a kind of enthusiasm for their
+distinguished brother-monk may have tempted the inmates of the convent to
+exaggerate his rare gifts. Nothing of the kind. He performed flights not only
+in Copertino, but in various large towns of Italy, such as Naples, Rome, and
+Assisi. And the spectators were by no means an assemblage of ignorant
+personages, but men whose rank and credibility would have weight in any section
+of society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;While the Lord High Admiral of Castille, Ambassador of Spain at the
+Vatican, was passing through Assisi in the year 1645, the custodian of the
+convent commanded Joseph to descend from the room into the church, where the
+Admiral&rsquo;s lady was waiting
+<a name="Page72"></a>
+for him, desirous of seeing him. and speaking to him; to whom Joseph replied,
+&lsquo;I will obey, but I do not know whether I shall be able to speak to
+her.&rsquo; And, as a matter of fact, hardly had he entered the church and
+raised his eyes to a statue . . . situated above the altar, when he threw
+himself into a flight in order to embrace its feet at a distance of twelve
+paces, passing over the heads of all the congregation; then, after remaining
+there some time, he flew back over them with his usual cry, and immediately
+returned to his cell. The Admiral was amazed, his wife fainted away, and all
+the onlookers became piously terrified.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And if this does not suffice to win credence, the following will assuredly do
+so:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And since it was God&rsquo;s wish to render him marvellous even in the
+sight of men of the highest sphere, He ordained that Joseph, having arrived in
+Rome, should be conducted one day by the Father-General (of the Franciscan
+Order) to kiss the feet of the High Pontiff, Urban the Eighth; in which act,
+while contemplating Jesus Christ in the person of His Vicar, he was
+ecstatically raised in air, and thus remained till called back by the General,
+to whom His Holiness, highly astonished, turned and said that &lsquo;if Joseph
+were to die during his pontificate, he himself would bear witness to this
+<i>successo.&rsquo;&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But his most remarkable flights took place at Fossombrone, where once
+&ldquo;detaching himself in swiftest manner from the altar with a cry like
+thunder, he went, like lightning, gyrating hither and thither about the chapel,
+and with such an impetus that he made all the cells of the dormitory tremble,
+so that the monks, issuing thence in consternation, cried, &lsquo;An
+earthquake! An earthquake!&rsquo;&rdquo; Here, too, he cast a young sheep into
+the air, and took flight after it to the height of the trees, where he
+&ldquo;remained in kneeling posture, ecstatic and with extended arms, for more
+than two hours, to the extraordinary marvel of the clergy who witnessed
+this.&rdquo; This would seem to have been his outdoor record&mdash;two hours
+without descent to earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sometimes, furthermore, he took a passenger, if such a term can properly be
+applied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So once, while the monks were at prayers, he was observed to rise up and run
+swiftly towards the Confessor of the convent, and &ldquo;seizing him by the
+hand, he raised him from the ground by supernatural force, and with jubilant
+rapture drew him along, turning him round and round in a <i>violento ballo;</i>
+the Confessor moved by Joseph, and Joseph by God.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And what happened at Assisi is still more noteworthy, for here
+<a name="Page73"></a>
+was a gentleman, a suffering invalid, whom Joseph &ldquo;snatched by the hair,
+and, uttering his customary cry of &lsquo;oh!&rsquo; raised himself from the
+earth, while he drew the other after him by his hair, carrying him in this
+fashion for a short while through the air, to the intensest admiration of the
+spectators.&rdquo; The patient, whose name was Chevalier Baldassarre,
+discovered, on touching earth again, that he had been cured by this flight of a
+severe nervous malady which had hitherto afflicted him. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Searching in the biography for some other interesting traits of Saint Joseph of
+Copertino, I find, in marked contrast to his heaven-soaring virtues, a humility
+of the profoundest kind. Even as a full-grown man he retained the exhilarating,
+childlike nature of the pure in heart. &ldquo;<i>La Mamma
+mia</i>&rdquo;&mdash;thus he would speak, in playful-saintly fashion, of the
+Mother of God&mdash;&ldquo;<i>la Mamma mia</i> is capricious. When I bring Her
+flowers, She tells me She does not want them; when I bring Her candles, She
+also does not want them; and when I ask Her what She wants, She says, &lsquo;I
+want the heart, for I feed only on hearts.&rsquo;&rdquo; What wonder if the
+&ldquo;mere pronouncement of the name of Maria often sufficed to raise him from
+the ground into the air&rdquo;?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless, the arch-fiend was wont to creep into his cell at night and to
+beat and torture him; and the monks of the convent were terrified when they
+heard the hideous din of echoing blows and jangling chains. &ldquo;We were only
+having a little game,&rdquo; he would then say. This is refreshingly boyish. He
+once induced a flock of sheep to enter the chapel, and while he recited to them
+the litany, it was observed with amazement that &ldquo;they responded at the
+proper place to his verses&mdash;he saying <i>Sancta Maria,</i> and they
+answering, after their manner, <i>Bah!&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am not disguising from myself that an incident like the last-named may smack
+of childishness to a certain austere type of northern Puritan. Childishness!
+But to go into this question of the relative hilarity and moroseness of
+religions would take us far afield; for aught I know it may, at bottom, be a
+matter of climatic influences, and there we can leave it. Under the sunny sky
+of Italy, who would not be disposed to see the bright side of things?
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Saint Joseph of Copertino performed a variety of other miracles. He multiplied
+bread and wine, calmed a tempest, drove out devils, caused the lame to walk and
+the blind to see&mdash;all of which are duly attested by eye-witnesses on oath.
+Though &ldquo;illiterate,&rdquo; he had an innate knowledge of ecclesiastical
+dogma; he detected persons of impure life by their smell, and sinners were
+revealed to
+<a name="Page74"></a>
+his eyes with faces of black colour (the Turks believe that on judgment day the
+damned will be thus marked); he enjoyed the company of two guardian angels,
+which were visible not only to himself but to other people. And, like all too
+many saints, he duly fell into the clutches of the Inquisition, ever on the
+look-out for victims pious or otherwise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is one little detail which it would be disingenuous to slur over. It is
+this. We are told that Saint Joseph was awkward and backward in his
+development. As a child his boy-comrades used to laugh at him for his
+open-mouthed staring habits; they called him &ldquo;bocca-aperta&rdquo;
+(gape-mouth), and in the frontispiece to Montanari&rsquo;s life of him, which
+depicts him as a bearded man of forty or fifty, his mouth is still agape; he
+was, moreover, difficult to teach, and Rossi says he profited very little by
+his lessons and was of <i>niuna letteratura.</i> As a lad of seventeen he could
+not distinguish white bread from brown, and he used to spill water-cans, break
+vases and drop plates to such an extent that the monks of the convent who
+employed him were obliged, after eight months&rsquo; probation, to dismiss him
+from their service. He was unable to pass his examination as priest. At the age
+of twenty-five he was ordained by the Bishop of Castro, without that formality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this points to a certain weak-mindedness or arrested development, and were
+this an isolated case one might be inclined to think that the church had made
+Saint Joseph an object of veneration on the same principles as do the Arabs,
+who elevate idiots, epileptics, and otherwise deficient creatures to the rank
+of marabouts, and credit them with supernatural powers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is not an isolated case. The majority of these southern saints are
+distinguished from the vulgar herd by idiosyncrasies to which modern physicians
+give singular names such as &ldquo;gynophobia,&rdquo; &ldquo;glossolalia&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;demonomania&rdquo;<a href="#fn-10.1" name="fnref-10.1" id="fnref-10.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>;
+even the founder of the flying monk&rsquo;s order, the great Francis of Assisi,
+has been accused of some strange-sounding mental disorder because, with
+touching humility, he doffed his vestments and presented himself naked before
+his Creator. What are we to conclude therefrom?
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-10.1" id="fn-10.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-10.1">[1]</a>
+Good examples of what Max Nordau calls <i>Echolalie</i> are to be found in this
+biography (p. 22).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The flying monk resembles Saint Francis in more than one feature. He, too,
+removed his clothes and even his shirt, and exposed himself thus to a crucifix,
+exclaiming, &ldquo;Here I am, Lord, deprived of everything.&rdquo; He followed
+his prototype, further, in that charming custom of introducing the animal world
+into his
+<a name="Page75"></a>
+ordinary talk (&ldquo;Brother Wolf, Sister Swallow,&rdquo; etc.). So Joseph
+used to speak of himself as <i>l&rsquo;asinelio&mdash;</i>the little ass; and a
+pathetic scene was witnessed on his death-bed when he was heard to mutter:
+&ldquo;<i>L&rsquo;asinelio</i> begins to climb the mountain;
+<i>l&rsquo;asinelio</i> is half-way up; <i>l&rsquo;asinelio</i> has reached the
+summit; <i>l&rsquo;asinelio</i> can go no further, and is about to leave his
+skin behind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is to be noted, in this connection, that Saint Joseph of Coper-tino was born
+in a stable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This looks like more than a mere coincidence. For the divine Saint Francis was
+likewise born in a stable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But why should either of these holy men be born in stables?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A reasonable explanation lies at hand. A certain Japanese statesman is credited
+with that shrewd remark that the manifold excellencies and diversities of
+Hellenic art are due to the fact that the Greeks had no &ldquo;old
+masters&rdquo; to copy from&mdash;no &ldquo;schools&rdquo; which supplied their
+imagination with ready-made models that limit and smother individual
+initiative. And one marvels to think into what exotic beauties these southern
+saints would have blossomed, had they been at liberty, like those Greeks,
+freely to indulge their versatile genius&mdash;had they not been bound to the
+wheels of inexorable precedent. If the flying monk, for example, were an
+ordinary mortal, there was nothing to prevent him from being born in an omnibus
+or some other of the thousand odd places where ordinary mortals occasionally
+are born. But&mdash;no! As a Franciscan saint, he was obliged to conform to the
+school of Bethlehem and Assisi. He was obliged to select a stable. Such is the
+force of tradition. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joseph of Copertino lived during the time of the Spanish viceroys, and his fame
+spread not only over all Italy, but to France, Germany and Poland. Among his
+intimates and admirers were no fewer than eight cardinals, Prince Leopold of
+Tuscany, the Duke of Bouillon, Isabella of Austria, the Infanta Maria of Savoy
+and the Duke of Brunswick, who, during a visit to various courts of Europe in
+1649, purposely went to Assisi to see him, and was there converted from the
+Lutheran heresy by the spectacle of one of his flights. Prince Casimir, heir to
+the throne of Poland, was his particular friend, and kept up a correspondence
+with him after the death of his father and his own succession to the throne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Towards the close of his life, the flying monk became so celebrated that his
+superiors were obliged to shut him up in the convent of Osimo, in close
+confinement, in order that his aerial voyages &ldquo;should not be disturbed by
+the concourse of the vulgar.&rdquo; And here he expired, in his sixty-first
+year, on the 18th September,
+<a name="Page76"></a>
+1663. He had been suffering and infirm for some little time previous to that
+event, but managed to take a short flight on the very day preceding his demise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthwith the evidences of his miraculous deeds were collected and submitted to
+the inspired examination of the Sacred Congregation of Rites in Rome. Their
+conscientiousness in sifting and weighing the depositions is sufficiently
+attested by the fact that ninety years were allowed to elapse ere Joseph of
+Copertino was solemnly received into the number of the Blessed. This occurred
+in 1753; and though the date may have been accidentally chosen, some people
+will be inclined to detect the hand of Providence in the ordering of the event,
+as a challenge to Voltaire, who was just then disquieting Europe with certain
+doctrines of a pernicious nature.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page77"></a><a name="chap11"></a>XI<br />
+BY THE INLAND SEA</h2>
+
+<p>
+The railway line to Grottaglie skirts the shore of the inland sea for two or
+three miles, and then turns away. Old Taranto glimmers in lordly fashion across
+the tranquil waters; a sense of immemorial culture pervades this region of
+russet tilth, and olives, and golden corn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They led me, at Grottaglie, to the only convent of males now in use, San
+Francesco, recently acquired by the Jesuits. In the sacristy of its church,
+where I was told to wait, a slender young priest was praying rapturously before
+some image, and the clock that stood at hand recorded the flight of twenty
+minutes ere his devotions were ended. Then he arose slowly and turned upon me a
+pair of lustrous, dreamy eyes, as though awakened from another world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was quite a new convent, he explained; it could not possibly be the one I
+was seeking. But there was another one, almost a ruin, and now converted into a
+refuge for a flock of poor old women; he would gladly show me the way. Was I a
+&ldquo;Germanese&rdquo;?<a href="#fn-11.1" name="fnref-11.1" id="fnref-11.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+No, I replied; I came from Scotland.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-11.1" id="fn-11.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-11.1">[1]</a>
+<i>Germanese</i> or <i>Allemanno</i> = a German. <i>Tedesco,</i> hereabouts,
+signifies an Austrian&mdash;a detested nationality, even at this distance of
+time. I have wondered, since writing the above, whether this is really the
+place of which Rossi speaks. He calls it Grot-tole (the difference in spelling
+would be of little account), and says it lies not far distant from Copertino.
+But there may be a place of this name still nearer; it is a common appellation
+in these honeycombed limestone districts. This Grottaglie is certainly the
+birth-place of another religious hero, the priest-brigand Ciro, who gave so
+much trouble to Sir R. Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A Calvinist,&rdquo; he remarked, without bitterness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A Presbyterian,&rdquo; I gently corrected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure&mdash;a Presbyterian.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we walked along the street under the glowing beams of midday I set forth the
+object of my visit. He had never heard of the flying monk&mdash;it was
+astonishing, he said. He would look up the subject without delay. The flying
+monk! That a Protestant should come all the way from &ldquo;the other end of
+the world&rdquo; to enquire about a local Catholic saint of whose existence he
+himself was unaware, seemed not so much to surprise as positively to alarm him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page78"></a>
+Among other local curiosities, he pointed out the portal of the parish church,
+a fine but dilapidated piece of work, with a large rosette window overhead. The
+town, he told me, derives its name from certain large grottoes wherein the
+inhabitants used to take refuge during Saracen raids. This I already knew, from
+the pages of Swinburne and Sanchez; and in my turn was able to inform him that
+a certain Frenchman, Bertaux by name, had written about the Byzantine
+wall-paintings within these caves. Yes, those old Greeks! he said. And that
+accounted for the famous ceramics of the place, which preserved the Hellenic
+traditions in extraordinary purity. I did not inform him that Hector Preconi,
+who purposely visited Grottaglie to study these potteries, was considerably
+disappointed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the door of the decayed convent my guide left me, with sundry polite
+expressions of esteem. I entered a spacious open courtyard; a well stood in the
+centre of a bare enclosure whereon, in olden days, the monks may have
+cultivated their fruit and vegetables; round this court there ran an arched
+passage, its walls adorned with frescoes, now dim and faded, depicting sacred
+subjects. The monastery itself was a sombre maze of stairways and cells and
+corridors&mdash;all the free spaces, including the very roof, encumbered with
+gleaming potteries of every shape and size, that are made somewhere near the
+premises.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wandered about this sunless and cobwebby labyrinth, the old woman pensioners
+flitting round me like bats in the twilight. I peered into many dark closets;
+which of them was it&mdash;Joseph&rsquo;s famous blood-bespattered cell?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He tormented his body so continuously and obstinately with pins, needles
+and blades of steel, and with such effusion of blood, that even now, after
+entire years, the walls of his cell and other places of retirement are
+discoloured and actually encrusted with blood.&rdquo; Which of them was
+it&mdash;the chamber that witnessed these atrocious macerations? It was all so
+gloomy and forlorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, pushing aside a door in these tenebrous regions, I suddenly found myself
+bathed in dazzling light. A loggia opened here, with a view over stretches of
+gnarled olives, shining all silvery under the immaculate sky of noonday and
+bounded by the sapphire belt of the Ionian. Sunshine and blue sea! Often must
+the monks have taken pleasure in this fair prospect; and the wiser among them,
+watching the labourers returning home at nightfall, the children at play, and
+all the happy life of a world so alien to their own, may well have heaved a
+sigh.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus09"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-9.jpg" width="412" height="338" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">By the Inland Sea</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile a crowd of citizens had assembled below, attracted
+<a name="Page79"></a>
+by the unusual novelty of a stranger in their town. The simple creatures
+appeared to regard my investigations in the light of a good joke; they had
+heard of begging monks, and thieving monks, and monks of another variety whose
+peculiarities I dare not attempt to describe; but a flying monk&mdash;no,
+never!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Dark Ages,&rdquo; said one of them&mdash;the mayor, I dare
+say&mdash;with an air of grave authority. &ldquo;Believe me, dear sir, the days
+of such fabulous monsters are over.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they seem to be, for the present.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No picture or statue records the life of this flying wonder, this masterpiece
+of Spanish priestcraft; no mural tablet&mdash;in this land of commemorative
+stones&mdash;has been erected to perpetuate the glory of his signal
+achievements; no street is called after him. It is as if he had never existed.
+On the contrary, by a queer irony of fate, the roadway leading past his convent
+evokes the memory of a misty heathen poet, likewise native of these favoured
+regions, a man whose name Joseph of Copertino had assuredly never
+heard&mdash;Ennius, of whom I can now recall nothing save that one
+unforgettable line which begins &ldquo;O Tite tute Tati
+tibi&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;; Ennius, who never so much as tried to fly, but
+contented himself with singing, in rather bad Latin, of the things of this
+earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Via Ennio. . . .</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is the swing of the pendulum. The old pagan, at this moment, may be nearer
+to our ideals and aspirations than the flying monk who died only yesterday, so
+to speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a few years hence&mdash;who can tell?
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+A characteristic episode. I had carefully timed myself to catch the returning
+train to Taranto. Great was my surprise when, half-way to the station, I
+perceived the train swiftly approaching. I raced it, and managed to jump into a
+carriage just as it drew out of the station. The guard straightway demanded my
+ticket and a fine for entering the train without one (return tickets, for
+weighty reasons of &ldquo;internal administration,&rdquo; are not sold). I
+looked at my watch, which showed that we had left six minutes before the
+scheduled hour. He produced his; it coincided with my own. &ldquo;No
+matter,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I am not responsible for the eccentricities of
+the driver, who probably had some urgent private affairs to settle at Taranto.
+The fine must be paid.&rdquo; A fellow-passenger took a more charitable view of
+the case. He suggested that an inspector of the line had been travelling along
+with us, and that the driver, knowing this, was naturally ambitious to show how
+fast he could go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page80"></a>
+A mile or so before reaching Taranto the railway crosses a stream that flows
+into the inland sea. One would be glad to believe those sages who hold it to be
+the far-famed Galaesus. It rises near at hand in a marsh, amid mighty tufts of
+reeds and odorous flowers, and the liquid bubbles up in pools of crystalline
+transparency&mdash;deep and perfidious cauldrons overhung by the trembling soil
+on which you stand. These fountains form a respectable stream some four hundred
+yards in length; another copious spring rises up in the sea near its mouth. But
+can this be the river whose virtues are extolled by: Virgil, Horace, Martial,
+Statius, Propertius, Strabo, Pliny, Varrò and Columella? What a constellation
+of names around these short-lived waters! Truly, <i>minuit praesentia
+famam,</i> as Boccaccio says of the once-renowned Sebethus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Often have I visited this site and tried to reconstruct its vanished glories.
+My enthusiasm even led me, some years ago, to the town hall, in order to
+ascertain its true official name, and here they informed me that &ldquo;it is
+vulgarly called Citrezze; but the correct version is &lsquo;Le
+Giadrezze,&rsquo; which, as you are aware, sir, signifies
+<i>pleasantness&rdquo;</i> This functionary was evidently ignorant of the fact
+that so long ago as 1771 the learned commentator (Carducci) of the
+&ldquo;Delizie Tarentine&rdquo; already sneered at this popular etymology;
+adding, what is of greater interest, that &ldquo;in the time of our
+fathers&rdquo; this region was covered with woods and rich in game. In the days
+of Keppel Craven, the vale was &ldquo;scantily cultivated with cotton.&rdquo;
+Looking at it from above, it certainly resembles an old river-bed of about five
+hundred yards in breadth, and I hold it possible that the deforestation of the
+higher lands may have suffocated the original sources with soil carried down
+from thence, and forced them to seek a lower level, thus shortening the stream
+and reducing its volume of water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But who shall decide? If we follow Polybius, another brook at the further end
+of the inland sea has more valid claims to the title of Galaesus. Virgil called
+it &ldquo;black Galaesus&rdquo;&mdash;a curious epithet, still applied to water
+in Italy as well as in Greece (Mavromati, etc.). &ldquo;For me,&rdquo; says
+Gissing, &ldquo;the Galaesus is the stream I found and tracked, whose waters I
+heard mingle with the little sea.&rdquo; There is something to be said for such
+an attitude, on the part of a dilettante traveller, towards these desperate
+antiquarian controversies.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus10"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-10.jpg" width="411" height="288" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Fountains of Galaesus</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+It is an agreeable promenade from the Giadrezze rivulet to Taranto along the
+shore of this inland sea. Its clay banks are full of shells and potteries of
+every age, and the shallow waters planted
+<a name="Page81"></a>
+with stakes indicating the places where myriads of oysters and mussels are
+bred&mdash;indeed, if you look at a map you will observe that the whole of this
+lagoon, as though to shadow forth its signification, is split up into two
+basins like an opened oyster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here and there along this beach are fishermen&rsquo;s huts constructed of
+tree-stems which are smothered under multitudinous ropes of grass, ropes of all
+ages and in every stage of decomposition, some fairly fresh, others dissolving
+once more into amorphous bundles of hay. There is a smack of the stone ages, of
+primeval lake-dwellings, about these shelters on the deserted shore; two or
+three large fetichistic stones stand near their entrance; wickerwork objects of
+dark meaning strew the ground; a few stakes emerge, hard by, out of the placid
+and oozy waters. In such a cabin, methinks, dwelt those two old fishermen of
+Theocritus&mdash;here they lived and slumbered side by side on a couch of sea
+moss, among the rude implements of their craft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The habits of these fisherfolk are antique, because the incidents of their
+calling have remained unchanged. Some people have detected traces of
+&ldquo;Greek&rdquo; in the looks and language of these of Taranto. I can detect
+nothing of the kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the same with the rest of the population. Hellenic traits have disappeared
+from Taranto, as well they may have done, when one remembers its history. It
+was completely latinized under Augustus, and though Byzantines came hither
+under Nicephorus Phocas&mdash;Benjamin of Tudela says the inhabitants are
+&ldquo;Greeks&rdquo;&mdash;they have long ago become merged into the Italian
+element. Only the barbers seem to have preserved something of the old
+traditions: grandiloquent and terrible talkers, like the cooks in Athenæus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I witnessed an Aristophanic scene in one of their shops lately, when a
+simple-minded stranger, a north Italian&mdash;some arsenal
+official&mdash;brought a little boy to have his hair cut &ldquo;not too
+short&rdquo; and, on returning from a brief visit to the tobacconist next door,
+found it cropped much closer than he liked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, damn it,&rdquo; he said (or words to that effect), &ldquo;I told
+you not to cut the hair too short.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The barber, immaculate and imperturbable, gave a preliminary bow. He was
+collecting his thoughts, and his breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say, I told you not to cut it too short. It looks
+horrible&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; &ldquo;Horrible? That, sir&mdash;pardon my
+frankness!&mdash;is a matter of opinion. I fully admit that you desired the
+child&rsquo;s hair to be cut not too short. Those, in fact, were your very
+words. Notwithstanding, I venture to think you will come round to my point of
+<a name="Page82"></a>
+view, on due reflection, like most of my esteemed customers. In the first
+place, there is the ethnological aspect of the question. You are doubtless
+sufficiently versed in history to know that under the late regime it was
+considered improper, if not criminal, to wear a moustache. Well, nowadays we
+think differently. Which proves that fashions change; yes, they change, sir;
+and the wise man bends to them&mdash;up to a certain point, of course; up to a
+certain reasonable point&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; &ldquo;But, damn
+it&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And in favour of my contention that hair should be worn short nowadays,
+I need only cite the case of His Majesty the King, whose august head, we all
+know, is clipped like that of a racehorse. Horrible (as you call it) or not,
+the system has momentarily the approval of royalty, and that alone should
+suffice for all loyal subjects to deem it not unworthy of imitation. Next,
+there are what one might describe as hygienic and climatic considerations.
+Summer is approaching, sir, and apart from certain unpleasant risks which I
+need not specify, you will surely agree with me that the solstitial heat is a
+needlessly severe trial for a boy with long hair. My own children are all
+cropped close, and I have reason to think they are grateful for it. Why not
+yours? Boys may differ in strength or complexion, in moral character and mental
+attainments, but they are remarkably unanimous as to what constitutes personal
+comfort. And it is obviously the duty of parents to consult the personal
+comfort of their offspring&mdash;within certain reasonable limits, of
+course&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lastly, we come to the much-debated point: I mean the aesthetic side of
+the matter. No doubt, to judge by some old pictures such as those of the
+renowned Mantegna, there must have been a time when men thought long hair in
+children rather beautiful than otherwise. And I am not so rigorous as to deny a
+certain charm to these portraits&mdash;a charm which is largely due I fancy, to
+the becoming costumes of the period. At the same time&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger did not trust himself to listen any longer. He threw down a coin
+and walked out of the shop with his son, muttering something not very
+complimentary to the barber&rsquo;s female relations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the other was quite unmoved. &ldquo;And after all,&rdquo; he continued,
+addressing the half-opened door through which his visitor had fled, &ldquo;the
+true question is this: What is &lsquo;too short&rsquo;? Don&rsquo;t cut it too
+short, you said. <i>Che vuol dire?</i> An ambiguous phrase!
+<a name="Page83"></a>
+&ldquo;Too short for one man may be too long for another. Everything is
+relative. Yes, gentlemen&rdquo; (turning to myself and his shop-assistant),
+&ldquo;everything on this earth is relative.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With this sole exception, I have hitherto garnered no Hellenic traits in
+Taranto.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Visible even from Giadrezze, on the other side of the inland sea and beyond the
+arsenal, there stands a tall, solitary palm. It is the last, the very last, or
+almost the very last, of a race of giants that adorned the gardens which have
+now been converted into the &ldquo;New Quarter.&rdquo;I imagine it is the
+highest existing palm in Italy, and am glad to have taken a likeness of it, ere
+it shall have been cut down like the rest of its fellows. Taranto was once
+celebrated for these queenly growths, which the Saracens brought over from
+their flaming Africa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same fate has overtaken the trees of the Villa Beaumont, which used to be a
+shady retreat, but was bought by the municipality and forthwith
+&ldquo;pulizzato&rdquo;&mdash;i.e. cleaned. This is in accordance with that
+<i>mutilomania</i> of the south: that love of torturing trees which causes them
+to prune pines till they look like paint-brushes that had been out all night,
+and which explains their infatuation for the much-enduring robinia that allows
+itself to be teased into any pattern suggested by their unhealthy phantasy. It
+is really as if there were something offensive to the Latin mind in the sight
+of a well-grown tree, as if man alone had the right of expanding normally. But
+I must not do the City Fathers an injustice. They have planted two rows of
+cryptomerias. Will people never learn that cryptomerias cannot flourish in
+south Italy? Instead of this amateurish gardening, why not consult some
+competent professional, who with bougain-villeas, hibiscus and fifty other such
+plants would soon transform this favoured spot into a miniature paradise?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Villa Beaumont and the road along the Admiralty canal are now the
+citizens&rsquo; chief places of disport. Before the year 1869 the Corso
+Vittorio Emmanuele, that skirts the sea on the south side of the old town, was
+their sole promenade. And even this street was built only a short time ago.
+Vainly one conjectures where the medieval Tarentines took the air. It must have
+been like Manfredonia at the present day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Corso, which has a most awkward pavement and is otherwise disagreeable as
+looking due south, becomes interesting after sunset. Here you may see the young
+bloods of Taranto leaning in rows against the railing with their backs to the
+sea&mdash;they are
+<a name="Page84"></a>
+looking across the road whence, from balconies and windows, the fair sex are
+displaying their charms. Never a word is spoken. They merely gaze at each other
+like lovesick puppies; and after watching the performance for several evenings,
+I decided in favour of robuster methods&mdash;I decided that courtship, under
+conditions such as the Corso supplies, can only be pursued by the very young or
+the hopelessly infatuated. But in the south, this gazing is only part of a huge
+game. They are not really in love at all, these excellent young men&mdash;not
+at all, at all; they know better. They are only pretending, because it looks
+manly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We must revise our conceptions as to the love-passions of these southerners; no
+people are more fundamentally sane in matters of the heart; they have none of
+our obfuscated sentimentality; they are seldom naively enamoured, save in early
+stages of life. It is then that small girls of eight or ten may be seen
+furtively recording their feelings on the white walls of their would-be
+lovers&rsquo; houses; these archaic scrawls go straight to the point, and are
+models of what love-letters may ultimately become, in the time-saving
+communities of the future. But when the adolescent and perfumed-pink-paper
+stage is reached, the missives relapse into barbarous ambiguity; they grow
+allegorical and wilfully exuberant as a Persian carpet, the effigy of a pierced
+heart at the end, with enormous blood-drops oozing from it, alone furnishing a
+key to the document.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So far they are in earnest, and it is the girl who takes the lead; her youthful
+<i>innamorato</i> ties these letters into bundles and returns them
+conscientiously, in due course, to their respective senders. Seldom does a boy
+make overtures in love; he gets more of it than he knows what to do with; he is
+still torpid, and slightly bored by all these attentions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But presently he wakes up to the fact that he is a man among men, and the
+obsession of &ldquo;looking manly&rdquo; becomes a part of his future
+artificial and rhetorical life-scheme. From henceforth he plays to the gallery.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus11"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-11.jpg" width="381" height="476" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Taranto: the last palm</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Reading the city papers, one would think that south Italian youths are the most
+broken-hearted creatures in the world; they are always trying to poison
+themselves for love. Sometimes they succeed, of course; but
+sometimes&mdash;dear me, no! Suicides look manly, that is all. They are part of
+the game. The more sensible youngsters know exactly how much corrosive
+sublimate to take without immediate fatal consequences, allowing for time to
+reach the nearest hospital. There, the kindly physician and his stomach-pump
+will perform their duty, and the patient wears a
+<a name="Page85"></a>
+feather in his cap for the rest of his life. The majority of these suicides are
+on a par with French duels&mdash;a harmless institution whereby the
+protagonists honour themselves; they confer, as it were, a patent of virility.
+The country people are as warmblooded as the citizens, but they rarely indulge
+in suicides because&mdash;well, there are no hospitals handy, and the doctor
+may be out on his rounds. It is too risky by half.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And a good proportion of these suicides are only simulated. The wily victim
+buys some innocuous preparation which sends him into convulsions with ghastly
+symptoms of poisoning, and, after treatment, remains the enviable hero of a
+mysterious masculine passion. Ask any town apothecary. A doctor friend of mine
+lately analysed the results of his benevolent exertions upon a young man who
+had been seen to drink some dreadful liquid out of a bottle, and was carried to
+his surgery, writhing in most artistic agonies. He found not only no poison,
+but not the slightest trace of any irritant whatever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The true courtship of these Don Giovannis of Taranto will be quite another
+affair&mdash;a cash transaction, and no credit allowed. They will select a life
+partner, upon the advice of <i>ma mère</i> and a strong committee of uncles and
+aunts, but not until the military service is terminated. Everything in its
+proper time and place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile they gaze and perhaps even serenade. This looks as if they were
+furiously in love, and has therefore been included among the rules of the game.
+Youth must keep up the poetic tradition of &ldquo;fiery.&rdquo; Besides, it is
+an inexpensive pastime&mdash;the cinematograph costs forty centimes&mdash;and
+you really cannot sit in the barber&rsquo;s all night long.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But catch them marrying the wrong girl!
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+POSTSCRIPT.&mdash;Here are two samples of youthful love-letters from my
+collection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1.&mdash;From a disappointed maiden, aged 13. Interesting, because intermediate
+between the archaic and pink-paper stages:
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+&ldquo;IDOL OF MY HEART,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do not the stars call you when you look to Heaven? Does not the moon
+tell you, the black-cap on the willow when it says farewell to the sun? The
+birds of nature, the dreary country sadly covered by a few flowers that remain
+there? Once your look was passionate and pierced me like a sunny ray, now it
+seems the flame of a day. Does nothing tell you of imperishable love?&rdquo; I
+love you and love you as (illegible) loves its liberty, as the
+<a name="Page86"></a>
+corn in the fields loves the sun, as the sailor loves the sea tranquil or
+stormy. To you I would give my felicity, my future; for one of your words I
+would spill my blood drop by drop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of all my lovers you are the only ideal consort <i>(consorto)</i> to
+whom I would give my love and all the expansion of my soul and youthful
+enthusiasm <i>(intusiamo),</i> the greatest enthusiasm <i>(co-tusiamo)</i> my
+heart has ever known. O cruel one who has deigned to put his sweet poison in my
+heart to-day, while to-morrow you will pass me with indifference. Cold, proud
+as ever, serious and disdainful&mdash;you understand? However that may be, I
+send you the unrepenting cry of my rebellious heart: I love you!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is late at night, and I am still awake, and at this hour my soul is
+sadder than ever in its great isolation <i>(insolamende);</i> I look on my past
+love and your dear image. Too much I love you and (illegible) without your
+affection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How sadly I remember your sweet words whispered on a pathetic evening
+when everything around was fair and rosy. How happy I then was when life seemed
+radiant with felicity and brightened by your love. And now nothing more remains
+of it; everything is finished. How sad even to say it. My heart is shipwrecked
+far, far away from that happiness which I sought.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(Three further pages of this.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+2.&mdash;From a boy of 14 who takes the initiative; such letters are rare. Note
+the business-like brevity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;DEAR Miss ANNE,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I write you these few lines to say that I have understood your character
+<i>(carattolo).</i> Therefore, if I may have the honour of being your
+sweetheart, you will let me know the answer at your pleasure. I salute you, and
+remain,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Signing myself,&rdquo; SALVATORE. &ldquo;Prompt reply requested!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page87"></a><a name="chap12"></a>XII<br />
+MOLLE TARENTUM</h2>
+
+<p>
+One looks into the faces of these Tarentines and listens to their casual
+conversations, trying to unravel what manner of life is theirs. But it is
+difficult to avoid reading into their characters what history leads one to
+think should be there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The upper classes, among whom I have some acquaintance, are mellow and
+enlightened; it is really as if something of the honied spirit of those old
+Greek sages still brooded over them. Their charm lies in the fact that they are
+civilized without being commercialized. Their politeness is unstrained, their
+suaveness congenital; they remind me of that New England type which for Western
+self-assertion substitutes a yielding graciousness of disposition. So it is
+with persistent gentle upbringing, at Taranto and elsewhere. It tones the
+individual to reposeful sweetness; one by one, his anfractuosities are worn
+off; he becomes as a pebble tossed in the waters, smooth, burnished, and (to
+outward appearances) indistinguishable from his fellows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I do not care about the ordinary city folk. They have an air of elaborate
+superciliousness which testifies to ages of systematic half-culture. They seem
+to utter that hopeless word, <i>connu!</i> And what, as a matter of fact, do
+they know? They are only dreaming in their little backwater, like the oysters
+of the lagoon, distrustful of extraneous matter and oblivious of the movement
+in a world of men beyond their shell. You hear next to nothing of
+&ldquo;America,&rdquo; that fruitful source of fresh notions; there is no
+emigration to speak of; the population is not sufficiently energetic&mdash;they
+prefer to stay at home. Nor do they care much about the politics of their own
+country: one sees less newspapers here than in most Italian towns. &ldquo;Our
+middle classes,&rdquo; said my friend the Italian deputy of whom I have already
+spoken, &ldquo;are like our mules: to be endurable, they must be worked
+thirteen hours out of the twelve.&rdquo; But these have no industries to keep
+them awake, no sports, no ambitions; and this has gone on for long centuries,
+In Taranto it is always afternoon. &ldquo;The Tarentines,&rdquo; says Strabo,
+&ldquo;have more holidays than workdays in the year.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page88"></a>
+And never was city-population more completely cut off from the country; never
+was wider gulf between peasant and townsman. There are charming walks beyond
+the New Quarter&mdash;a level region, with olives and figs and almonds and
+pomegranates standing knee-deep in ripe odorous wheat; but the citizens might
+be living at Timbuctu for all they know of these things. It rains little here;
+on the occasion of my last visit not a drop had fallen <i>for fourteen
+months;</i> and consequently the country roads are generally smothered in dust.
+Now, dusty boots are a scandal and an offence in the eyes of the gentle
+burghers, who accordingly never issue out of their town walls. They have
+forgotten the use of ordinary appliances of country life, such as thick boots
+and walking-sticks; you will not see them hereabouts. Unaware of this
+idiosyncrasy, I used to carry a stick on my way through the streets into the
+surroundings, but left it at home on learning that I was regarded as a kind of
+perambulating earthquake. The spectacle of a man clattering through the streets
+on horseback, such as one often sees at Venosa, would cause them to barricade
+their doors and prepare for the last judgment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altogether, essentially nice creatures, lotus-eaters, fearful of fuss or
+novelty, and drowsily satisfied with themselves and life in general. The breezy
+healthfulness of travel, the teachings of art or science, the joys of rivers
+and green lanes&mdash;all these things are a closed book to them. Their
+interests are narrowed down to the purely human: a case of partial atrophy. For
+the purely human needs a corrective; it is not sufficiently humbling, and that
+is exactly what makes them so supercilious. We must take a little account of
+the Cosmos nowadays&mdash;it helps to rectify our bearings. They have their
+history, no doubt. But save for that one gleam of Periclean sunshine the
+record, though long and varied, is sufficiently inglorious and does not testify
+to undue exertions.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+A change is at hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gregorovius lamented the filthy condition of the old town. It is now spotless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He deplored that Taranto possessed no museum. This again is changed, and the
+provincial museum here is justly praised, though the traveller may be annoyed
+at finding his favourite rooms temporarily closed (is there any museum in Italy
+not &ldquo;partially closed for alterations&rdquo;?). New accessions to its
+store are continually pouring in; so they lately discovered, in a tomb, a
+Hellenistic statuette of Eros and Aphrodite, 30 centimetres high, terra-cotta
+work of the third century. The goddess stands,
+<a name="Page89"></a>
+half-timidly,
+while Eros alights in airy fashion on her shoulders and fans her with
+his wings&mdash;an exquisite little thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was grieved, likewise, that no public collection of books existed here. But
+the newly founded municipal library is all that can be desired. The stranger is
+cordially welcomed within its walls and may peruse, at his leisure, old
+Galateus, Giovan Giovene, and the rest of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wandering among those shelves, I hit upon a recent volume (1910) which gave me
+more food for thought than any of these ancients. It is called &ldquo;Cose di
+Puglie,&rdquo; and contains some dozen articles, all by writers of this
+province of old Calabria,<a href="#fn-12.1" name="fnref-12.1" id="fnref-12.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+on matters of exclusively local interest&mdash;its history, meteorology,
+dialects, classical references to the country, extracts from old economic
+documents, notes on the development of Apulian printing, examples of modern
+local caricature, descriptions of mediæval monuments; a kind of anthology, in
+short, of provincial lore. The typography, paper and illustrations of this
+remarkable volume are beyond all praise; they would do honour to the best firm
+in London or Paris. What is this book? It is no commercial speculation at all;
+it is a wedding present to a newly married couple&mdash;a bouquet of flowers,
+of intellectual blossoms, culled from their native Apulian meadows. One notes
+with pleasure that the happy pair are neither dukes nor princes. There is no
+trace of snobbishness in the offering, which is simply a spontaneous expression
+of good wishes on the part of a few friends. But surely it testifies to most
+refined feelings. How immeasurably does this permanent and yet immaterial feast
+differ from our gross wedding banquets and ponderous gilt clocks and tea
+services! Such persons cannot but have the highest reverence for things of the
+mind; such a gift is the fairest efflorescence of civilization. And this is
+only another aspect of that undercurrent of spirituality in south Italy of
+whose existence the tourist, harassed by sordid preoccupations, remains wholly
+unaware.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-12.1" id="fn-12.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-12.1">[1]</a>
+It included the heel of Italy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This book was printed at Bari. Bari, not long ago, consisted of a dark and
+tortuous old town, exactly like the citadel of Taranto. It has now its glaring
+New Quarter, not a whit less disagreeable than the one here. Why should Taranto
+not follow suit in the matter of culture? Heraclea, Sybaris and all the Greek
+settlements along this coast have vanished from earth; only Taranto and Cotrone
+have survived to carry on, if they can, the old traditions. They have survived,
+thanks to peculiar physical conditions that have safeguarded them from
+invaders. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page90"></a>
+But these very conditions have entailed certain drawbacks&mdash;drawbacks which
+Buckle would have lovingly enumerated to prove their influence upon the habits
+and disposition of the Tarentines. That marine situation . . . only think of
+three thousand years of scirocco, summer and winter! It is alone enough to
+explain <i>molle Tarentum&mdash;</i>enough to drain the energy out of a
+Newfoundland puppy! And then, the odious dust of the country roadways&mdash;for
+it <i>is</i> odious. Had the soil been granitic, or even of the ordinary
+Apennine limestone, the population might have remained in closer contact with
+wild things of nature, and retained a perennial fountain of enjoyment and
+inspiration. A particular kind of rock, therefore, has helped to make them
+sluggish and incurious. The insularity of their citadel has worked in the same
+direction, by focussing their interests upon the purely human. That inland sea,
+again: were it not an ideal breeding-place for shell-fish, the Tarentines would
+long ago have learnt to vary their diet. Thirty centuries of mussel-eating
+cannot but impair the physical tone of a people.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And had the inland sea not existed, the Government would not have been tempted
+to establish that arsenal which has led to the erection of the new town and
+consequent municipal exactions. &ldquo;The arsenal,&rdquo; said a grumbling old
+boatman to me, &ldquo;was the beginning of our purgatory.&rdquo; A milk diet
+would work wonders with the health and spirits of the citizens. But since the
+building of the new quarter, such a diet has become a luxury; cows and goats
+will soon be scarce as the megatherium. There is a tax of a franc a day on
+every cow, and a herd of ten goats, barely enough to keep a poor man alive,
+must pay annually 380 francs in octroi. These and other legalized robberies,
+which among a more virile populace would cause the mayor and town council to be
+forthwith attached to the nearest lamp-post, are patiently borne. It is
+<i>imbelle Tarentum&mdash;</i>a race without grit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I would also recommend the burghers some vegetables, so desirable for their
+sedentary habits, but there again! it seems to be a peculiarity of the local
+soil to produce hardly a leaf of salad or cabbage. Potatoes are plainly
+regarded as an exotic&mdash;they are the size of English peas, and make me
+think of Ruskin&rsquo;s letter to those old ladies describing the asparagus
+somewhere in Tuscany. And all this to the waiter&rsquo;s undisguised
+astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The gentleman is rich enough to pay for meat. Why trouble about this
+kind of food?&rdquo;...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet&mdash;a change is at hand. These southern regions are waking up from
+their slumber of ages. Already some of Italy&rsquo;s
+<a name="Page91"></a>
+acutest thinkers and most brilliant politicians are drawn from these
+long-neglected shores. For we must rid ourselves of that incubus of
+&ldquo;immutable race characters&rdquo;: think only of our Anglo-Saxon race!
+What has the Englishman of to-day in common with that rather lovable fop,
+drunkard and bully who would faint with ecstasy over Byron&rsquo;s
+<i>Parisina</i> after pistolling his best friend in a duel about a wench or a
+lap-dog? Such differences as exist between races of men, exist only at a given
+moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And what, I sometimes ask myself&mdash;what is now the distinguishing feature
+between these southern men and ourselves? Briefly this, I think. In mundane
+matters, where the personal equation dominates, their judgment is apt to be
+turbid and perverse; but as one rises into questions of pure intelligence, it
+becomes serenely impartial. We, on the other hand, who are pre-eminently
+clear-sighted in worldly concerns of law and government and in all subsidiary
+branches of mentality, cannot bring ourselves to reason dispassionately on
+non-practical subjects. &ldquo;L&rsquo;esprit aussi a sa pudeur,&rdquo; says
+Remy de Gourmont. Well, this <i>pudeur de l&rsquo;esprit,</i> discouraged among
+the highest classes in England, is the hall-mark of respectability hereabouts.
+A very real difference, at this particular moment. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+There is an end of philosophizing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They have ousted me from my pleasant quarters, the landlady&rsquo;s son and
+daughter-in-law having returned unexpectedly and claiming their apartments. I
+have taken refuge in a hotel. My peace is gone; my days in Taranto are
+numbered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Loath to depart, I linger by the beach of the Ionian Sea beyond the new town.
+It is littered with shells and holothurians, with antique tesser&raquo; of blue
+glass and marble fragments, with white mosaic pavements and potteries of every
+age, from the glossy Greco-Roman ware whose delicately embossed shell devices
+are emblematic of this sea-girt city, down to the grosser products of
+yesterday. Of marbles I have found <i>cipollino, pavonazzetto, giallo</i> and
+<i>rosso antico,</i> but no harder materials such as porphyry or serpentine.
+This, and the fact that the mosaics are pure white, suggests that the houses
+here must have dated, at latest, from Augustan times.<a href="#fn-12.2" name="fnref-12.2" id="fnref-12.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-12.2" id="fn-12.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-12.2">[2]</a>
+Nor is there any of the fashionable <i>verde</i> <i>antico,</i> and this
+points in the same direction. Corsi says nothing as to the date of its
+introduction, and I have not read the treatise of Silenziario, but my own
+observations lead me to think that the <i>lapis</i> <i>atracius</i> can hardly
+have been known under Tiberius. Not so those hard ones: they imported wholesale
+by his predecessor Augustus, who was anxious to be known as a scorner of luxury
+(a favourite pose with monarchs), yet spent incalculable sums on ornamental
+stones both for public and private ends. One is struck by a certain waste of
+material; either the expense was deliberately disregarded or finer methods of
+working the stones were not yet in vogue. A revolution in the technique of
+stone-cutting must have set in soon after his death, for thenceforward we find
+the most intractable rocks cut into slices thin as card-board: too thin for
+pavements, and presumably for encrusting walls and colonnades. The Augustans,
+unable to produce these effects naturally, attempted imitation-stones, and with
+wonderful success. I have a fragment of their plaster postiche copying the
+close-grained Egyptian granite; the oily lustre of the quartz is so fresh and
+the peculiar structure of the rock, with its mica scintillations, so admirably
+rendered as to deceive, after two thousand years, the eye of a trained
+mineralogist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page92"></a>
+Here I sit, on the tepid shingle, listening to the plash of the waves and
+watching the sun as it sinks over the western mountains that are veiled in
+mists during the full daylight, but loom up, at this sunset hour, as from a
+fabulous world of gold. Yonder lies the Calabrian Sila forest, the
+brigands&rsquo; country. I will attack it by way of Rossano, and thence wander,
+past Longobucco, across the whole region. It may be well, after all, to come
+again into contact with streams and woodlands, after this drenching of
+classical associations and formal civic life!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Near me stands a shore-battery which used to be called &ldquo;Batteria
+Chianca.&rdquo; It was here they found, some twenty years ago, a fine marble
+head described as a Venus, and now preserved in the local museum. I observe
+that this fort has lately been re-christened &ldquo;Batteria Archyta.&rdquo;
+Can this be due to a burst of patriotism for the Greek warrior-sage who ruled
+Taranto, or is it a subtle device to mislead the foreign spy?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, too, are kilns where they burn the blue clay into tiles and vases. I time
+a small boy at work shaping the former. His average output is five tiles in
+four minutes, including the carrying to and fro of the moist clay; his wages
+about a shilling a day. But if you wish to see the manufacture of more
+complicated potteries, you must go to the unclean quarter beyond the railway
+station. Once there, you will not soon weary of that potter&rsquo;s wheel and
+the fair shapes that blossom forth under its enchanted touch. This ware of
+Taranto is sent by sea to many parts of south Italy, and you may see
+picturesque groups of it, here and there, at the street corners.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hardly has the sun disappeared before the lighthouse in the east begins to
+flash. The promontory on which it stands is called San Vito after one of the
+musty saints, now almost forgotten, whose names survive along these shores.
+Stoutly this venerable one defended his ancient worship against the radiant and
+victorious Madonna; nor did she dislodge him from a certain famous sanctuary
+save by the questionable expedient of adopting his
+<a name="Page93"></a>
+name: she called herself S. M. &ldquo;della Vita.&rdquo; That settled it. He
+came from Mazzara in Sicily, whither they still carry, to his lonely shrine,
+epileptics and others distraught in mind. And were I in a discursive mood, I
+would endeavour to trace some connection between his establishment here and the
+tarantella&mdash;between St. Vitus&rsquo; dance and that other one which cured,
+they say, the bite of the Tarentine spider.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I am not inclined for such matters at present. The Cala-brian uplands are
+still visible in the gathering twilight; they draw me onwards, away from
+Taranto. It must be cool up there, among the firs and beeches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And a land, moreover, of multiple memories and interests&mdash;this Calabria. A
+land of great men. In 1737 the learned Aceti was able to enumerate over two
+thousand celebrated Calabrians&mdash;athletes, generals, musicians,
+centenarians, inventors, martyrs, ten popes, ten kings, as well as some sixty
+conspicuous women. A land of thinkers. Old Zavarroni, born in 1705, gives us a
+list of seven hundred Calabrian writers; and I, for one, would not care to
+bring his catalogue up to date. The recently acquired <i>Biblioteca Calabra</i>
+at Naples alone contains God knows how many items, nearly all modern!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And who shall recount its natural attractions? Says another old writer:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is all sorts of Corn, sundry Wines, and in great abundance, all
+kinds of Fruits, Oyle, Hony, Wax, Saffron, Bombace, Annis and Coriander seeds.
+There groweth Gum, Pitch, Turpentine and liquid Storax. In former times it was
+never without Mettals, but at this present it doth much abound, having in most
+parts divers sorts of Mines, as Gold, Silver, Iron, Marble, Alabaster, Cristal,
+Marchesite, three sorts of white Chaulk, Virmilion, Alume, Brimstone, and the
+Adamant stone, which being in the fifth degree, draweth not Iron, and is in
+colour black. There groweth hemp and flax of two sorts, the one called the
+male, the other the female: there falleth Manna from heaven, truly a thing very
+rare; and although there is not gathered such abundance of Silk, yet I dare say
+there is not had so much in all <i>Italy</i> besides. There are also bathes,
+both hot, luke-warm, and cold, to cure many diseases. Near the Seaside, and
+likewise on the Mediterrane are goodly Gardens full of Oringes, Citrons, and
+Lemons of divers sorts. It is watered with many Rivers. There are on the hils
+of the Apennine, thick Woods of high Firrs, Holms, Platanes, Oaks, where grows
+the white odoriferous Mushrome which shineth in the night. Here is bred the
+soft stone <i>Frigia,</i> which every month
+<a name="Page94"></a>
+yields a delicate and wholesome Gum, and the stone <i>Aetites,</i> by us called
+the stone <i>Aquilina.</i> In this Province there is excellent hunting of
+divers creatures, as wild Hoggs, Staggs, Goats, Hares, Foxes, Porcupines,
+Marmosets. There are also ravenous beasts, as Wolves, Bears, Luzards, which are
+quick-sighted, and have the hinder parts spotted with divers colours. This kind
+of Beast was brought from <i>France</i> to <i>Rome</i> in the sports of
+<i>Pompey</i> the great, and Hunters affirm this Beast to be of so frail a
+memory, that although he eateth with hunger, if he chance to look back,
+remembreth no more his meat, and departing searcheth for other.&rdquo; Who
+would not visit Calabria, if only on the chance of beholding the speckled
+posterior of the absent-minded Luzard?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page95"></a><a name="chap13"></a>XIII<br />
+INTO THE JUNGLE</h2>
+
+<p>
+This short plunge into the jungle was a relief, after the all-too-human
+experiences of Taranto. The forest of Policoro skirts the Ionian; the railway
+line cleaves it into two unequal portions, the seaward tract being the smaller.
+It is bounded on the west by the river Sinno, and I imagine the place has not
+changed much since the days when Keppel Craven explored its recesses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Twilight reigns in this maze of tall deciduous trees. There is thick
+undergrowth, too; and I measured an old lentiscus&mdash;a shrub, in
+Italy&mdash;which was three metres in circumference. But the exotic feature of
+the grove is its wealth of creeping vines that clamber up the trunks, swinging
+from one tree-top to another, and allowing the merest threads of sunlight to
+filter through their matted canopy. Policoro has the tangled beauty of a
+tropical swamp. Rank odours arise from the decaying leaves and moist earth; and
+once within that verdant labyrinth, you might well fancy yourself in some
+primeval region of the globe, where the foot of man has never penetrated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet long ago it resounded with the din of battle and the trumpeting of
+elephants&mdash;in that furious first battle between Pyrrhus and the Romans.
+And here, under the very soil on which you stand, lies buried, they say, the
+ancient city of Siris.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They have dug canals to drain off the moisture as much as possible, but the
+ground is marshy in many places and often quite impassable, especially in
+winter. None the less, winter is the time when a little shooting is done here,
+chiefly wild boars and roe-deer. They are driven down towards the sea, but only
+as far as the railway line. Those that escape into the lower portions are safe
+for another year, as this is never shot over but kept as a permanent preserve.
+I have been told that red-deer were introduced, but that the experiment failed;
+probably the country was too hot and damp. In his account of Calabria, Duret de
+Tavel<a href="#fn-13.1" name="fnref-13.1" id="fnref-13.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+sometimes speaks of killing the fallow-deer, an autochthonous
+<a name="Page96"></a>
+Tyrrhenian beast which is now extinct on the mainland in its wild state. Nor
+can he be confounding it with the roe, since he mentions the two
+together&mdash;for instance, in the following note from Corigliano (February,
+1809), which must make the modern Calabrian&rsquo;s mouth water:
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-13.1" id="fn-13.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-13.1">[1]</a>
+An English translation of his book appeared in 1832.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Game has multiplied to such an extent that the fields are ravaged, and
+we are rendering a real service in destroying it. I question whether there
+exists in Europe a country offering more varied species. . . . We return home
+followed by carriages and mules loaded with wild boars, roe-deer, fallow-deer,
+hares, pheasants, wild duck, wild geese&mdash;to say nothing of foxes and
+wolves, of which we have already killed an immense quantity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pheasants seem to have likewise died out, save in royal preserves. They
+were introduced into Calabria by that mighty hunter Frederick II.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The parcelling out of many of these big properties has been followed by a
+destruction of woodland and complete disappearance of game. It is hailed as the
+beginning of a new era of prosperity; and so it well may be, from a commercial
+point of view. But the traveller and lover of nature will be glad to leave some
+of these wild districts in the hands of their rich owners, who have no great
+interests in cultivating every inch of ground, levelling rocky spaces, draining
+the land and hewing down every tree that fails to bear fruit. Split into
+peasant proprietorships, this forest would soon become a scientifically
+irrigated campagna for the cultivation of tomatoes or what not, like the
+&ldquo;Colonia Elena,&rdquo; near the Pontine Marshes. The national exchequer
+would profit, without a doubt. But I question whether we should all take the
+economical point of view&mdash;whether it would be wise for humanity to do so.
+There is a prosperity other than material. Some solitary artist or poet,
+drawing inspiration from scenes like this, might have contributed more to the
+happiness of mankind than a legion of narrow-minded, grimy and litigious
+tomato-planters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To all appearances, Italy is infected just now with a laudable mania for the
+&ldquo;exploitation of natural resources&rdquo;&mdash;at the expense, of
+course, of wealthy landowners, who are described as withholding from the people
+their due. The programme sounds reasonable enough; but one must not forget that
+what one reads on this subject in the daily papers is largely the campaign of a
+class of irresponsible pressmen and politicians, who exploit the ignorance of
+weak people to fill their own pockets. How one learns to loathe, in Italy and
+in England, that lovely word <i>socialism,</i> when one knows a little of the
+inner workings of the cause and a few&mdash;just a
+<a name="Page97"></a>
+few!&mdash;details of the private lives of these unsavoury saviours of their
+country!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lot of the southern serfs was bad enough before America was
+&ldquo;discovered&rdquo;; and quite unendurable in earlier times. There is a
+village not many hours from Naples where, in 1789, only the personal attendants
+of the feudal lord lived in ordinary houses; the two thousand inhabitants, the
+serfs, took refuge in caves and shelters of straw. Conceive the conditions in
+remote Calabria! Such was the anguished poverty of the country-folk that up to
+the eighties of last century they used to sell their children by regular
+contracts, duly attested before the local mayors. But nowadays I listen to
+their complaints with comparative indifference.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are badly treated, my friend? I quite believe it; indeed, I can see
+it. Well, go to Argentina and sell potatoes, or to the mines of Pennsylvania.
+There you will grow rich, like the rest of your compatriots. Then return and
+send your sons to the University; let them become <i>avvocati</i> and members
+of Parliament, who shall harass into their graves these wicked owners of the
+soil.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This, as a matter of fact, is the career of a considerable number of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the rest, the domain of Policoro&mdash;it is spelt <i>Pelicaro</i> in older
+maps like those of Magini and Rizzi-Zannone&mdash;seems to be well
+administered, and would repay a careful study. I was not encouraged, however,
+to undertake this study, the manager evidently suspecting some ulterior motive
+to underlie my simple questions. He was not at all responsive to friendly
+overtures. Restive at first, he soon waxed ambiguous, and finally taciturn.
+Perhaps he thought I was a tax-gatherer in disguise. A large structure
+combining the features of palace, fortress and convent occupies an eminence,
+and is supposed by some to stand on the site of old Heracleia; it was erected
+by the Jesuits; the work-people live in humble dwellings that cluster around it.
+Those that are now engaged in cutting the corn receive a daily wage of two
+carlini (eightpence)&mdash;the Bourbon coinage still survives in name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You walk to this building from the station along an avenue of eucalypti planted
+some forty years ago. Detesting, as I do, the whole tribe of gum trees, I never
+lose an opportunity of saying exactly what I think about this particularly
+odious representative of the brood, this eyesore, this grey-haired scarecrow,
+this reptile of a growth with which a pack of misguided enthusiasts have
+<a name="Page98"></a>
+disfigured the entire Mediterranean basin. They have now realized that it is
+useless as a protection against malaria. Soon enough they will learn that
+instead of preventing the disease, it actually fosters it, by harbouring clouds
+of mosquitoes under its scraggy so-called foliage. These abominations may look
+better on their native heath: I sincerely hope they do. Judging by the
+&ldquo;Dead Heart of Australia&rdquo;&mdash;a book which gave me a nightmare
+from which I shall never recover&mdash;I should say that a varnished hop-pole
+would be an artistic godsend out there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But from here the intruder should be expelled without mercy. A single
+eucalyptus will ruin the fairest landscape. No plant on earth rustles in such a
+horribly metallic fashion when the wind blows through those everlastingly
+withered branches; the noise chills one to the marrow; it is like the sibilant
+chattering of ghosts. Its oil is called &ldquo;medicinal&rdquo; only because it
+happens to smell rather nasty; it is worthless as timber, objectionable in form
+and hue&mdash;objectionable, above all things, in its perverse, anti-human
+habits. What other tree would have the effrontery to turn the sharp edges of
+its leaves&mdash;as if these were not narrow enough already!&mdash;towards the
+sun, so as to be sure of giving at all hours of the day the minimum of shade
+and maximum of discomfort to mankind?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I confess that this avenue of Policoro almost reconciled me to the
+existence of the anaemic Antipodeans. Almost; since for some reason or other
+(perhaps on account of the insufferably foul nature of the soil) their foliage
+is here thickly tufted; it glows like burnished bronze in the sunshine, like
+enamelled scales of green and gold. These eucalypti are unique in Italy. Gazing
+upon them, my heart softened and I almost forgave the gums their manifold
+iniquities, their diabolical thirst, their demoralizing aspect of precocious
+senility and vice, their peeling bark suggestive of unmentionable skin
+diseases, and that system of radication which is nothing short of a scandal on
+this side of the globe. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the exuberance of his joy at the prospect of getting rid of me, the manager
+of the estate lent me a dog-cart to convey me to the forest&rsquo;s edge, as
+well as a sleepy-looking boy for a guide, warning me, however, not to put so
+much as the point of my nose inside the jungle, on account of the malaria which
+has already begun to infect the district. One sees all too many wan faces
+hereabouts. Visible from the intervening plain is a large building on the
+summit of a hill; it is called Acinapura, and this is the place I should have
+gone to, had time permitted, for the sake of the fine view which it must afford
+over the whole Policoro region.
+<a name="Page99"></a>
+Herds of buffaloes wallow in the mire. An old bull, reposing in solitary
+grandeur, allowed me so near an approach that I was able to see two or three
+frogs hopping about his back, and engaged in catching the mosquitoes that
+troubled him. How useful, if something equally efficient and inexpensive could
+be devised for humanity!
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus12"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-12.jpg" width="394" height="322" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Buffalo at Policoro</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+We entered the darksome forest. The boy, who had hitherto confined himself to
+monosyllables, suddenly woke up under its mysterious influence; he became alert
+and affable; he related thrilling tales of the outlaws who used to haunt these
+thickets, lamenting that those happy days were over. There were the makings of
+a first-class brigand in Paolo. I stimulated his brave fancy; and it was
+finally proposed that I should establish myself permanently with the manager of
+the estate, so that on Sundays we could have some brigand-sport together, on
+the sly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then out again&mdash;into the broad and sunlit bed of the Sinno. The water now
+ripples in bland content down a waste of shining pebbles. But its wintry
+convulsions are terrific, and higher up the stream, where the banks are steep,
+many lives are lost in those angry floods that rush down from the hill-sides,
+filling the riverbed with a turmoil of crested waves. At such moments, these
+torrents put on new faces. From placid waterways they are transformed into
+living monsters, Aegirs or dragons, that roll themselves seaward, out of their
+dark caverns, in tawny coils of destruction.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page100"></a><a name="chap14"></a>XIV<br />
+DRAGONS</h2>
+
+<p>
+And precisely this angry aspect of the waters has been acclaimed as one of the
+origins of that river-dragon idea which used to be common in south Italy,
+before the blight of Spaniardism fell upon the land and withered up the pagan
+myth-making faculty. There are streams still perpetuating this name&mdash;the
+rivulet Dragone, for instance, which falls into the Ionian not far from Cape
+Colonne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A non-angry aspect of them has also been suggested as the origin: the tortuous
+wanderings of rivers in the plains, like the Meander, that recall the
+convolutions of the serpent. For serpent and dragon are apt to be synonymous
+with the ancients.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Both these explanations, I think, are late developments in the evolution of the
+dragon-image. They leave one still puzzling as to what may be the aboriginal
+conception underlying this legendary beast of earth and clouds and waters. We
+must go further back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What is a dragon? An animal, one might say, which looks or regards (Greek
+<i>drakon);</i> so called, presumably, from its terrible eyes. Homer has
+passages which bear out this interpretation:
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+&#931;&#956;&#949;&#961;&#948;&#945;&#955;&#8051;&#959;&#957;
+&#948;&#8050; &#948;&#8051;&#948;&#959;&#961;&#954;&#949;&#957;, etc.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the Greeks were certainly sensitive to the expression of animal
+eyes&mdash;witness &ldquo;cow-eyed&rdquo; Hera, or the opprobrious epithet
+&ldquo;dog-eyed&rdquo;; altogether, the more we study what is left of their
+zoological researches, the more we realize what close observers they were in
+natural history. Aristotle, for instance, points out sexual differences in the
+feet of the crawfish which were overlooked up to a short time ago. And Hesiod
+also insists upon the dragon&rsquo;s eyes. Yet it is significant that
+<i>ophis,</i> the snake, is derived, like <i>drakon,</i> from a root meaning
+nothing more than to perceive or regard. There is no connotation of ferocity in
+either of the words. Gesner long ago suspected that the dragon was so called
+simply from its keen or rapid perception.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One likes to search for some existing animal prototype of a
+<a name="Page101"></a>
+fabled creature like this, seeing that to invent such things out of sheer
+nothing is a feat beyond human ingenuity&mdash;or, at least, beyond what the
+history of others of their kind leads us to expect. It may well be that the
+Homeric writer was acquainted with the Uromastix lizard that occurs in Asia
+Minor, and whoever has watched this beast, as I have done, cannot fail to have
+been impressed by its contemplative gestures, as if it were gazing intently
+<i>(drakon)</i> at something. It is, moreover, a &ldquo;dweller in rocky
+places,&rdquo; and more than this, a vegetarian&mdash;an &ldquo;eater of
+poisonous herbs&rdquo; as Homer somewhere calls his dragon. So Aristotle says:
+&ldquo;When the dragon has eaten much fruit, he seeks the juice of the bitter
+lettuce; he has been seen to do this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Are we tracking the dragon to his lair? Is this the aboriginal beast? Not at
+all, I should say. On the contrary, this is a mere side-issue, to follow which
+would lead us astray. The reptile-dragon was invented when men had begun to
+forget what the arch-dragon was; it is the product of a later stage&mdash;the
+materializing stage; that stage when humanity sought to explain, in
+naturalistic fashion, the obscure traditions of the past. We must delve still
+deeper. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+My own dragon theory is far-fetched&mdash;perhaps necessarily so, dragons being
+somewhat remote animals. The dragon, I hold, is the personification of the life
+within the earth&mdash;of that life which, being unknown and uncontrollable, is
+<i>eo ipso</i> hostile to man. Let me explain how this point is reached.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The animal which <i>looks or regards. . . .</i> Why&mdash;why an animal? Why
+not <i>drakon =</i> that which looks?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, what looks?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is the key to the understanding of the problem, the key to the
+subterranean dragon-world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The conceit of fountains or sources of water being things that see
+<i>(drakon)&mdash;</i>that is, eyes&mdash;or bearing some resemblance to eyes,
+is common to many races. In Italy, for example, two springs in the inland sea
+near Taranto are called &ldquo;Occhi&rdquo;&mdash;eyes; Arabs speak of a watery
+fountain as an eye; the notion exists in England top&mdash;in the
+&ldquo;Blentarn&rdquo; of Cumberland, the blind tarn (tarn = a trickling of
+tears), which is &ldquo;blind&rdquo; because dry and waterless, and therefore
+lacking the bright lustre of the open eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is an eye, then, in the fountain: an eye which looks or regards. And
+inasmuch as an eye presupposes a head, and a head without body is hard to
+conceive, a material existence was presently
+<a name="Page102"></a>
+imputed to that which looked upwards out of the liquid depths. This, I think,
+is the primordial dragon, the archetype. He is of animistic descent and
+survives all over the earth; and it is precisely this universality of the
+dragon-idea which induces me to discard all theories of local origin and to
+seek for some common cause. Fountains are ubiquitous, and so are dragons. There
+are fountain dragons in Japan, in the superstitions of Keltic races, in the
+Mediterranean basin. The dragon of Wantley lived in a well; the Lambton Worm
+began life in fresh water, and only took to dry land later on. I have elsewhere
+spoken of the Manfredonia legend of Saint Lorenzo and the dragon, an indigenous
+fable connected, I suspect, with the fountain near the harbour of that town,
+and quite independent of the newly-imported legend of Saint Michael. Various
+springs in Greece and Italy are called Dragoneria; there is a cave-fountain
+Dragonara on Malta, and another of the same name near Cape Misenum&mdash;all
+are sources of apposite lore. The water-drac. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the dragon has grown into a subterranean monster, who peers up from his dark
+abode wherever he can&mdash;out of fountains or caverns whence fountains issue.
+It stands to reason that he is sleepless; all dragons are
+&ldquo;sleepless&rdquo;; their eyes are eternally open, for the luminous
+sparkle of living waters never waxes dim. And bold adventurers may well be
+devoured by dragons when they fall into these watery rents, never to appear
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Furthermore, since gold and other treasures dear to mankind lie hidden in the
+stony bowels of the earth and are hard to attain, the jealous dragon has been
+accredited with their guardianship&mdash;hence the plutonic element in his
+nature. The dragon, whose &ldquo;ever-open eye&rdquo; protected the garden of
+the Hesperides, was the <i>Son of Earth.</i> The earth or cave-dragon. . . .
+Calabria has some of these dragons&rsquo; caves; you can read about them in the
+<i>Campania. Sotteranea</i> of G. Sanchez.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus13"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-13.jpg" width="402" height="334" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">The Sinno River</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+In volcanic regions there are fissures in the rocks exhaling pestiferous
+emanations; these are the <i>spiracula,</i> the breathing-holes, of the dragon
+within. The dragon legends of Naples and Mondragone are probably of this
+origin, and so is that of the Roman Campagna (1660) where the dragon-killer
+died from the effects of this poisonous breath. Sometimes the confined monster
+issues in a destructive lava-torrent&mdash;Bellerophon and the Chimæra. The
+fire-dragon. ... Or floods of water suddenly stream down from the hills and
+fountains are released. It is the hungry dragon, rushing from his den in search
+of prey; the river-dragon. . . . He rages among the mountains with such
+swiftness and impetuosity
+<a name="Page103"></a>
+that wings must be his portion; yes, he can cleave the heavens in the guise of
+lightning, or descend upon the fertile fields as a ruinous thunderstorm; the
+cloud-dragon. . . . Or again, he remains permanently overhead, a flaming meteor
+in the firmament; this is the <i>draco volans</i> of the schoolmen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In all his protean manifestations, he represents the envious and devastating
+principle; the spleenful wrath of untamed (untamable) telluric forces.
+Everything strong and spiteful has conspired to fashion our conception of the
+dragon. No wonder mankind, impotent, offers sacrifices to propitiate his rage.
+These tributary offerings are the dragon&rsquo;s due&mdash;the toll exacted
+from the weak by the strong in all mundane affairs. They are paid until the
+dragon-killer appears, that rare mortal who puts an end to his depredations.
+For the real dragon must be exterminated; he cannot be mollified by kindness;
+nobody ever heard of a domesticated dragon; compromise is out of the question.
+Only the victim of Saint George allowed himself to be led like a &ldquo;meke
+beest&rdquo; into the city. But that was the mediæval dragon, of whom anything
+can be expected.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+He ultimately received a concrete form from that innate craving on the part of
+humanity to give a poetic or pictorial image to its hopes and fears. This
+derivative (modern) dragon is winged or unwinged, fiery or cold, crested or
+smooth, of manifold hue, four-footed, two-footed, serpentine or vermiform. Such
+relative variety of structure is seen in all imaginings that spring up
+independently in different regions of the globe, and are yet due to a common
+belief or cause. Why has he assimilated so much of the reptilian physiognomy
+and framework? Well, seeing that he had to approximate his shape to some type
+of beast familiar to mankind, what better general model could have been found?
+The reptile&rsquo;s glassy eye; its earthward-creeping and cleft-loving habits;
+its blood that recalls that chill temperature of stones and water; its hostile
+pose; its ferocious tenacity of life and scaly covering, as of metals? Memories
+of extinct reptilian monsters may have helped to colour the picture, as well as
+that hatred of the serpent tribe which has haunted us ever since our own
+arboreal days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A prehistoric idea like this, interpretive of such diverse natural phenomena,
+cannot but absorb into itself all kinds of extraneous material, ridiculous and
+sublime. Like some avalanche rolling downhill, the dragon gathers momentum on
+his journey athwart the ages, and is swollen in size both by kindred beliefs
+that have lain in his path, and by quite incongruous accretions.
+<a name="Page104"></a>
+This is chiefly the poets&rsquo; work, though the theologians have added one or
+two embellishing touches. But in whatever shape he appears, whether his eyes
+have borrowed a more baleful fire from heathen basilisks, or traits of moral
+evil are instilled into his pernicious physique by amalgamation with the
+apocalyptic Beast, he remains the vindictive enemy of man and his ordered ways.
+Of late&mdash;like the Saurian tribe in general&mdash;he has somewhat
+degenerated. So in modern Greece, by that process of stultified
+anthropomorphism which results from grafting Christianity upon an alien
+mythopoesis, he dons human attributes, talking and acting as a man (H. F.
+Tozer). And here, in Calabria, he lingers in children&rsquo;s fables, as
+&ldquo;sdrago,&rdquo; a mockery of his former self.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To follow up his wondrous metamorphoses through mediævalism would be a pastime
+worthy of some leisured dilettante. How many noble shapes acquired a tinge of
+absurdity in the Middle Ages! Switzerland alone, with its mystery of untrodden
+crevices, used to be crammed with dragons&mdash;particularly the calcareous
+(cavernous) province of Rhaetia. Secondary dragons; for the good monks saw to
+it that no reminiscences of the autochthonous beast survived. Modern scholars
+have devoted much learning to the local Tazzelwurm and Bergstutz. But dragons
+of our familiar kind were already well known to the chroniclers from whom old
+Cysat extracted his twenty-fifth chapter (wherein, by the way, you will learn
+something of Calabrian dragons); then came J. J. Wagner (1680); then
+Scheuchzer, prince of dragon-finders, who informs us that <i>multorum draconum
+historia mendax.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is rather a far cry from Calabria to the asthmatic Scheuchzer, wiping
+the perspiration off his brow as he clambers among the Alps to record truthful
+dragon yarns and untruthful barometrical observations; or to China, dragon-land
+<i>par excellence;</i><a href="#fn-14.1" name="fnref-14.1" id="fnref-14.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+or even to our own Heralds&rsquo; College, where these and other beasts have
+sought a refuge from prying professors under such queer disguises that their
+own mothers would hardly recognize them.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-14.1" id="fn-14.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-14.1">[1]</a>
+In Chinese mythology the telluric element has remained untarnished. The
+dragon is an earth-god, who controls the rain and thunder clouds.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page105"></a><a name="chap15"></a>XV<br />
+BYZANTINISM</h2>
+
+<p>
+Exhausted with the morning&rsquo;s walk at Policoro, a railway journey and a
+long drive up nearly a thousand feet to Rossano in the heat of midday, I sought
+refuge, contrary to my usual custom, in the chief hotel, intending to rest
+awhile and then seek other quarters. The establishment was described as
+&ldquo;ganz ordentlich&rdquo; in Baedeker. But, alas! I found little peace or
+content. The bed on which I had hoped to repose was already occupied by several
+other inmates. Prompted by curiosity, I counted up to fifty-two of them; after
+that, my interest in the matter faded away. It became too monotonous. They were
+all alike, save in point of size (some were giants). A Swammerdam would have
+been grieved by their lack of variety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And this, I said to myself, in a renowned city that has given birth to poets
+and orators, to saints like the great Nilus, to two popes and&mdash;last, but
+not least&mdash;one anti-pope! I will not particularize the species beyond
+saying that they did not hop. Nor will I return to this theme. Let the reader
+once and for all take <i>them</i> for granted.<a href="#fn-15.1" name="fnref-15.1" id="fnref-15.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+Let him note that most of the inns of this region are quite uninhabitable, for
+this and other reasons, unless he takes the most elaborate precautions. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-15.1" id="fn-15.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-15.1">[1]</a>
+They have their uses, to be sure. Says Kircher: <i>Cunices lectularii potens
+remedium contra quartanum est, si ab inscio aegro cum vehiculo congruo
+potentur; mulierum morbis medentur et uterum prolapsum solo odore in suum locum
+restituunt.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where, then, do I generally go for accommodation?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, as a rule I begin by calling for advice at the chemist&rsquo;s shop,
+where a fixed number of the older and wiser citizens congregate for a little
+talk. The cafés and barbers and wine-shops are also meeting-places of men; but
+those who gather here are not of the right type&mdash;they are the young, or
+empty-headed, or merely thirsty. The other is the true centre of the leisured
+class, the philosophers&rsquo; rendezvous. Your <i>speciale</i> (apothecary) is
+himself an elderly and honoured man, full of responsibility and local
+knowledge; he is altogether a superior person, having been
+<a name="Page106"></a>
+trained in a University. You enter the shop, therefore, and purchase a
+pennyworth of vaseline. This act entitles you to all the privileges of the
+club. Then is the moment to take a seat, smiling affably at the assembled
+company, but without proffering a syllable. If this etiquette is strictly
+adhered to, it will not be long ere you are politely questioned as to your
+plans, your present accommodation, and so forth; and soon several members will
+be vying with each other to procure you a clean and comfortable room at half
+the price charged in a hotel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even when this end is accomplished, my connection with the pharmacy coterie is
+not severed. I go there from time to time, ostensibly to talk, but in reality
+to listen. Here one can feel the true pulse of the place. Local questions are
+dispassionately discussed, with ample forms of courtesy and in a language
+worthy of Cicero. It is the club of the <i>élite.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In olden days I used to visit south Italy armed with introductions to
+merchants, noblemen and landed proprietors. I have quite abandoned that system,
+as these people, bless their hearts, have such cordial notions of hospitality
+that from morning to night the traveller has not a moment he can call his own.
+Letters to persons in authority, such as syndics or police officers, are
+useless and worse than useless. Like Chinese mandarins, these officials are so
+puffed up with their own importance that it is sheer waste of time to call upon
+them. If wanted, they can always be found; if not, they are best left alone.
+For besides being usually the least enlightened and least amiable of the
+populace, they are inordinately suspicious of political or commercial designs
+on the part of strangers&mdash;God knows what visions are fermenting in their
+turbid brains&mdash;and seldom let you out of their sight, once they have known
+you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Excepting at Cosenza, Cotrone and Catanzaro, an average white man will seldom
+find, in any Calabrian hostelry, what he is accustomed to consider as ordinary
+necessities of life. The thing is easily explicable. These men are not yet in
+the habit of &ldquo;handling&rdquo; civilized travellers; they fail to realize
+that hotel-keeping is a business to be learnt, like tailoring or politics. They
+are still in the patriarchal stage, wealthy proprietors for the most part, and
+quite independent of your custom. They have not learnt the trick of Swiss
+servility. You must therefore be prepared to put up with what looks like very
+bad treatment. On your entrance nobody moves a step to enquire after your
+wants; you must begin by foraging for yourself, and thank God if any notice is
+taken of what you say; it is as if your presence were barely
+<a name="Page107"></a>
+tolerated. But once the stranger has learnt to pocket his pride and treat his
+hosts in the same offhand fashion, he will find among them an unconventional
+courtesy of the best kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The establishment being run as a rule by the proprietor&rsquo;s own family,
+gratuities with a view to exceptional treatment are refused with quiet dignity,
+and even when accepted will not further your interests in the least; on the
+contrary, you are thenceforward regarded as tactless and weak in the head.
+Discreet praise of their native town or village is the best way to win the
+hearts of the younger generation; for the parents a little knowledge of
+American conditions is desirable, to prove that you are a man of the world and
+worthy, a priori, of some respect. But if there exists a man-cook, he is
+generally an importation and should be periodically and liberally bribed,
+without knowledge of the family, from the earliest moment. Wonderful, what a
+cook can do!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is customary here not to live <i>en pension</i> or to pay a fixed price for
+any meal, the smallest item, down to a piece of bread, being conscientiously
+marked against you. My system, elaborated after considerable experimentation,
+is to call for this bill every morning and, for the first day or two after
+arrival, dispute in friendly fashion every item, remorselessly cutting down
+some of them. Not that they overcharge; their honesty is notorious, and no
+difference is made in this respect between a foreigner and a native. It is a
+matter of principle. By this system, which must not be overdone, your position
+in the house gradually changes; from being a guest, you become a friend, a
+brother. For it is your duty to show, above all things, that you are not
+<i>scemo</i>&mdash;witless, soft-headed&mdash;the unforgivable sin in the
+south. You may be a forger or cut-throat&mdash;why not? It is a vocation like
+any other, a vocation for <i>men.</i> But whoever cannot take care of
+himself&mdash;i.e. of his money&mdash;is not to be trusted, in any walk of
+life; he is of no account; he is no man. I have become firm friends with some
+of these proprietors by the simple expedient of striking a few francs off their
+bills; and should I ever wish to marry one of their daughters, the surest way
+to predispose the whole family in my favour would be this method of amiable but
+unsmiling contestation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course the inns are often dirty, and not only in their sleeping
+accommodation. The reason is that, like Turks or Jews, their owners do not see
+dirt (there is no word for dirt in the Hebrew language); they think it odd when
+you draw their attention to it. I remember complaining, in one of my fastidious
+moments,
+<a name="Page108"></a>
+of a napkin, plainly not my own, which had been laid at my seat. There was
+literally not a clean spot left on its surface, and I insisted on a new one. I
+got it; but not before hearing the proprietor mutter something about &ldquo;the
+caprices of pregnant women.&rdquo; . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The view from these my new quarters at Rossano compensates for divers other
+little drawbacks. Down a many-folded gorge of glowing red earth decked with
+olives and cistus the eye wanders to the Ionian Sea shining in deepest
+turquoise tints, and beautified by a glittering margin of white sand. To my
+left, the water takes a noble sweep inland; there lies the plain of Sybaris,
+traversed by the Crathis of old that has thrust a long spit of sand into the
+waves. On this side the outlook is bounded by the high range of Pollino and
+Dolcedorme, serrated peaks that are even now (midsummer) displaying a few
+patches of snow. Clear-cut in the morning light, these exquisite mountains
+evaporate, towards sunset, in an amethystine haze. A restful prospect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But great was my amazement, on looking out of the window during the night after
+my arrival, to observe the Polar star placed directly over the Ionian
+Sea&mdash;the south, as I surely deemed it. A week has passed since then, and
+in spite of the map I have not quite familiarized myself with this spectacle,
+nor yet with that other one of the sun setting apparently due east, over Monte
+Pollino.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The glory of Rossano is the image of the Madonna Achiropita. Bartholomaeus
+tells us, in his life of Saint Nilus, that in olden days she was wont to
+appear, clothed in purple, and drive away with a divine torch the Saracen
+invaders of this town. In more recent times, too, she has often saved the
+citizens from locusts, cholera, and other calamitous visitations. Unlike most
+of her kind, she was not painted by Saint Luke. She is
+<i>acheiropœta</i>&mdash;not painted by any human hands whatever, and in so
+far resembles a certain old image of the Magna Mater, her prototype, which was
+also of divine origin. It is generally supposed that this picture is painted on
+wood. Not so, says Diehl; it is a fragment of a fresco on stone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hard by, in the clock-tower of the square, is a marble tablet erected to the
+memory of the deputy Felice Cavalotti. We all remember Cavalotti, the
+last&mdash;with Imbriani&mdash;of the republican giants, a blustering
+rhetorician-journalist, annihilator of monarchs and popes; a fire-eating
+duellist, who deserved his uncommon and unlovely fate. He provoked a colleague
+to an encounter and, during a frenzied attack, received into his open mouth the
+point
+<a name="Page109"></a>
+of his adversary&rsquo;s sword, which sealed up for ever that fountain of
+eloquence and vituperation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cavalotti and the Virgin Achiropita&mdash;the new and the old. Really, with
+such extreme ideals before his eyes, the burghers of Rossano must sometimes
+wonder where righteousness lies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They call themselves Calabrians. <i>Noi siamo calabresi!</i> they proudly say,
+meaning that they are above suspicion of unfair dealing. As a matter of fact,
+they are a muddled brood, and considerably given to cheating when there is any
+prospect of success. You must watch the peasants coming home at night from
+their field-work if you wish to see the true Calabrian type&mdash;whiskered,
+short and wiry, and of dark complexion. There is that indescribable mark of
+<i>race</i> in these countrymen; they are different in features and character
+from the Italians; it is an ascetic, a Spanish type. Your Calabrian is
+strangely scornful of luxury and even comfort; a creature of few but
+well-chosen words, straightforward, indifferent to pain and suffering, and
+dwelling by preference, when religiously minded, on the harsher aspects of his
+faith. A note of unworldliness is discoverable in his outlook upon life.
+Dealing with such men, one feels that they are well disposed not from impulse,
+but from some dark sense of preordained obligation. Greek and other strains
+have infused versatility and a more smiling exterior; but the groundwork of the
+whole remains that old <i>homo ibericus</i> of austere gentlemanliness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rossano was built by the Romans, says Procopius, and during Byzantine days
+became a fortress of primary importance. An older settlement probably lay by
+the seashore, and its harbour is marked as &ldquo;good&rdquo; so late as the
+days of Edrisius. Like many of these old Calabrian ports, it is now invaded by
+silt and sand, though a few ships still call there. Wishful to learn something
+of the past glories of the town, I enquired at the municipality for the public
+library, but was informed by the supercilious and not over-polite secretary
+that this proud city possesses no such institution. A certain priest, he added,
+would give me all the desired information.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Canonico Rizzo was a delightful old man, with snowy hair and candid blue eyes.
+Nothing, it seemed, could have given him greater pleasure than my appearance at
+that particular moment. He discoursed awhile, and sagely, concerning England
+and English literature, and then we passed on, <i>via</i> Milton, to Calvin and
+the Puritan movement in Scotland; next, <i>via</i> Livingstone, to colonial
+enterprises in Africa; and finally, <i>via</i> Egypt, Abyssinia, and
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Prester John, to the early history of the eastern churches.
+<a name="Page110"></a>
+Byzantinism&mdash;Saint Nilus; that gave me the desired opportunity, and I
+mentioned the object of my visit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The history of Rossano? Well, well! The secretary of the municipality
+does me too much honour. You must read the Book of Genesis and Hesiod and
+Berosus and the rest of them. But stay! I have something of more modern date,
+in which you will find these ancient authors conveniently classified.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From this book by de Rosis, printed in 1838, I gleaned two facts, firstly, that
+the city of Rossano is now 3663 years old&mdash;quite a respectable age, as
+towns go&mdash;and lastly, that in the year 1500 it had its own academy of
+lettered men, who called themselves &ldquo;I spensierati,&rdquo; with the motto
+<i>Non alunt curas</i>&mdash;an echo, no doubt, of the Neapolitan renaissance
+under Alfonso the Magnificent. The popes Urban VIII and Benedict XIII belonged
+to this association of &ldquo;thoughtless ones.&rdquo; The work ends with a
+formidable list of local personages distinguished in the past for their
+gentleness of birth and polite accomplishments. One wonders how all these
+delicately nurtured creatures can have survived at Rossano, if their sleeping
+accommodation&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You might live here some little time before realizing that this place, which
+seems to slope gently downhill against a pleasing background of wooded
+mountains, is capable of being strongly fortified. It lies, like other inland
+Calabrian (and Etruscan) cities, on ground enclosed by stream-beds, and one of
+these forms a deep gully above which Rossano towers on a smooth and
+perpendicular precipice. The upper part of this wall of rock is grey sandstone;
+the lower a bed of red granitic matter. From this coloured stone, which crops
+up everywhere, the town may have drawn its name of Rossano (rosso = red); not a
+very old settlement, therefore; although certain patriotic philologers insist
+upon deriving it from &ldquo;rus sanum,&rdquo; healthy country. Its older names
+were Roscia, and Ruscianum; it is not marked in Peutinger. Countless jackdaws
+and kestrels nestle in this cliff, as well as clouds of swifts, both Alpine and
+common. These swifts are the ornithological phenomenon of Rossano, and I think
+the citizens have cause to be thankful for their existence; to them I attribute
+the fact that there are so few flies, mosquitoes, and other aerial plagues
+here. If only the amiable birds could be induced to extend their attentions to
+the bedrooms as well!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This shady glen at the back of the city, with its sparse tufts of vegetation
+and monstrous blocks of deep red stone cloven into rifts and ravines by the
+wild waters, has a charm of its own. There are undeniable suggestions of Hell
+about the place. A pathway
+<a name="Page111"></a>
+runs adown this vale of Hinnom, and if you follow it upwards to the junction of
+the streams you will reach a road that once more ascends to the town, past the
+old church of Saint Mark, a most interesting building. It has five little
+cupolas, but the interior, supported by eight columns, has been whitewashed.
+The structure has now rightly been declared a &ldquo;national monument.&rdquo;
+It dates from the ninth or tenth century and, according to Bertaux, has the
+same plan and the same dimensions as the famous &ldquo;Cattolica&rdquo; at
+Stilo, which the artistic Lear, though he stayed some time at that picturesque
+place, does not so much as mention. They say that this chapel of Saint Mark was
+built by Euprassius, protos-padarius of Calabria, and that in the days of Nilus
+it was dedicated to Saint Anastasius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, at Rossano, we are once more <i>en plein Byzance.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Rossano was not only a political bulwark, the most formidable citadel of this
+Byzantine province. It was a great intellectual centre, upon which literature,
+theology and art converged. Among the many perverse historical notions of which
+we are now ridding ourselves is this&mdash;that Byzantinism in south Italy was
+a period of decay and torpid dreamings. It needed, on the contrary, a
+resourceful activity to wipe out, as did those colonists from the east, every
+trace of Roman culture and language (Latin rule only revived at Rossano in the
+fifteenth century). There was no lethargy in their social and political
+ambitions, in their military achievements, which held the land against
+overwhelming numbers of Saracens, Lombards and other intruders. And the life of
+those old monks of Saint Basil, as we now know it, represented a veritable
+renaissance of art and letters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the ten Basilean convents that grew up in the surroundings of Rossano the
+most celebrated was that of S. M. del Patir. Together with the others, it
+succeeded to a period of eremitism
+</p>
+
+<p>
+of solitary anchorites whose dwellings honeycombed the warm slopes that
+confront the Ionian. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lives of some of these Greco-Calabrian hermits are valuable documents. In
+the <i>Vitae Sanctorum Siculorum</i> of O. Caietanus (1657) the student will
+find a Latin translation of the biography of one of them, Saint Elia Junior. He
+died in 903. It was written by a contemporary monk, who tells us that the holy
+man performed many miracles, among them that of walking over a river dryshod.
+And the Bollandists <i>(Acta Sanctorum,</i> 11th September) have reprinted the
+biography of Saint Elia Spelaeotes&mdash;the cave-dweller, as composed in Greek
+by a disciple. It is yet more
+<a name="Page112"></a>
+interesting. He lived in a &ldquo;honesta spelunca&rdquo; which he discovered
+in 864 by means of a flight of bats issuing therefrom; he suffered persecutions
+from a woman, exactly after the fashion of Joseph and Potiphar&rsquo;s wife; he
+grew to be 94 years old; the Saracens vainly tried to burn his dead body, and
+the water in which this corpse was subsequently washed was useful for curing
+another holy man&rsquo;s toothache. Yet even these creatures were subject to
+gleams of common sense. &ldquo;Virtues,&rdquo; said this one, &ldquo;are better
+than miracles.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How are we to account for these rock-hermits and their inelegant habits? How
+explain this poisoning of the sources of manly self-respect?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus, I think: that under the influence of their creed they reverted perforce
+to the more bestial traits of aboriginal humanity. They were thrust back in
+their development. They became solitaries, animalesque and shy&mdash;such as we
+may imagine our hairy progenitors to have been. Hence their dirt and vermin,
+their horror of learning, their unkempt hair, their ferocious independence,
+their distrust of sunshine and ordered social life, their foul dieting, their
+dread of malign spirits, their cave-dwelling propensities. All bestial
+characteristics!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This atavistic movement, this retrogression towards primevalism, must have
+possessed a certain charm, for it attracted vast multitudes; it was only
+hemmed, at last, by a physical obstacle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The supply of caves ran out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not till then were its votaries forced to congregate in those unhealthy
+clusters which afterwards grew to be monasteries. Where many of them were
+gathered together under one roof there imposed itself a certain rudimentary
+discipline and subordination; yet they preserved as much as they could of their
+savage traits, cave-like cells and hatred of cleanliness, terror of demons,
+matted beards.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus14"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-14.jpg" width="371" height="455" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Chapel of Saint Mark</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Gradually the social habits of mundane fellow-creatures insinuated themselves
+into these hives of squalor and idleness. The inmates began to wash and to
+shave; they acquired property, they tilled the ground, they learnt to read and
+write, and finally became connaisseurs of books and pictures and wine and
+women. They were pleased to forget that the eunuch and the beggar are the true
+Christian or Buddhist. In other words, the allurements of rational life grew
+too strong for their convictions; they became reasonable beings in spite of
+their creed. This is how coenobitism grew out of eremitism not only in
+Calabria, but in every part of the world which has been afflicted with these
+<a name="Page113"></a>
+eccentrics. Go to Mount Athos, if you wish to see specimens of all the
+different stages conveniently arranged upon a small area. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This convent of Patir exercised a great local influence as early as the tenth
+century; then, towards the end of the eleventh, it was completely rebuilt
+without and reorganized within. The church underwent a thorough restoration in
+1672. But it was shattered, together with the rest of the edifice, by the
+earthquake of 1836 which, Madonna Achiropita notwithstanding, levelled to the
+ground one-half of the fifteen thousand houses then standing at Rossano.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These monastic establishments, as a general rule, were occupied later on by the
+Benedictines, who ousted the Basileans and were supplanted, in their turn, by
+popular orders of later days like the Theatines. Those that are conveniently
+situated have now been turned into post offices, municipalities, and other
+public buildings&mdash;such has been the common procedure. But many of them,
+like this of Patir, are too decayed and remote from the life of man. Fiore, who
+wrote in 1691, counts up 94 dilapidated Basilean monasteries in Calabria out of
+a former total of about two hundred; Patir and thirteen others he mentions as
+having, in his day, their old rites still subsisting. Batiffol has recently
+gone into the subject with his usual thoroughness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing is uglier than a modern ruin, and the place would assuredly not be
+worth the three hours&rsquo; ride from Rossano were it not for the church,
+which has been repaired, and for the wondrous view to be obtained from its
+site. The journey, too, is charming, both by the ordinary track that descends
+from Rossano and skirts the foot of the hills through olives and pebbly
+stream-beds, ascending, finally, across an odorous tangle of cistus, rosemary
+and myrtle to the platform on which the convent stands&mdash;or by the
+alternative and longer route which I took on the homeward way, and which
+follows the old water conduit built by the monks into a forest of enormous
+chestnuts, oaks, hollies and Calabrian pines, emerging out of an ocean of
+glittering bracken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was pursued into the church of Patir by a bevy of country wenches who
+frequented this region for purposes of haymaking. There is a miraculous
+crucifix in this sanctuary, hidden behind a veil which, with infinite ceremony,
+these females withdrew for my edification. There it was, sure enough; but what,
+I wondered, would happen from the presence of these impure creatures in such a
+place? Things have changed considerably since the days of old, for such was the
+contamination to be expected from the mere
+<a name="Page114"></a>
+presence of a woman within these walls that even the Mother of God, while
+visiting Saint Nilus&mdash;the builder, not the great saint&mdash;at work upon
+the foundations, often conversed with him, but never ventured to step within
+the area of the building itself. And later on it was a well-authenticated
+phenomenon recorded by Beltrano and others, that if a female entered the
+church, the heavens immediately became cloudy and sent down thunders and
+lightnings and such-like signs of celestial disapproval, which never ceased
+until the offending monster had left the premises.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From this ancient monastery comes, I fancy, the Achiropita image. Montorio will
+tell you all about it; he learnt its history in June 1712 from the local
+archbishop, who had extracted his information out of the episcopal archives.
+Concerning another of these wonder-working idols&mdash;that of S. M. del
+Patirion&mdash;you may read in the ponderous tomes of Ughelli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whether the celebrated Purple Codex of Rossano ever formed part of the library
+of Patirion has not yet been determined. This wonderful parchment&mdash;now
+preserved at Rossano&mdash;is mentioned for the first time by Cesare Malpica,
+who wrote some interesting things about the Albanian and Greek colonies in
+Calabria, but it was only discovered, in the right sense of that word, in March
+1879 by Gebhardt and Harnack. They illustrated it in their <i>Evangeliorum
+Codex Graecus.</i> Haseloff also described it in 1898 <i>(Codex Purpureus
+Rossanensis),</i> and pointed out that its iconographical value consists in the
+fact that it is the only Greek Testament MS. containing pictures of the life of
+Christ before the eighth-ninth century. These pictures are indeed
+marvellous&mdash;more marvellous than beautiful, like so many Byzantine
+productions; their value is such that the parchment has now been declared a
+&ldquo;national monument.&rdquo; It is sternly guarded, and if it is moved out
+of Rossano&mdash;as happened lately when it was exhibited at
+Grottaferrata&mdash;it travels in the company of armed carbineers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still pursued by the flock of women, I took to examining the floor of this
+church, which contains tesselated marble pavements depicting centaurs,
+unicorns, lions, stags, and other beasts. But my contemplation of these choice
+relics was disturbed by irrelevant remarks on the part of the worldly females,
+who discovered in the head of the stag some subtle peculiarity that stirred
+their sense of humour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look!&rdquo; said one of them to her neighbour. &ldquo;He has horns.
+Just like your Pasquale.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pasquale indeed! And how about Antonio?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page115"></a>
+I enquired whether they knew what kind of animals these were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Beasts of the ancients. Beasts that nobody knows. Beasts that have
+horns&mdash;like certain Christians. . . .&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the terrace of green sward that fronts this ruined monastery you can see
+the little town of Corigliano, whose coquettish white houses lie in a fold of
+the hills. Corigliano&mdash;[Greek: xorion hellaion] (land of olives): the
+derivation, if not correct, is at least appropriate, for it lies embowered in a
+forest of these trees. A gay place it was, in Bourbon times, with a ducal ruler
+of its own. Here, they say, the remnants of the Sybarites took refuge after the
+destruction of their city whose desolate plain lies at our feet, backed by the
+noble range of Dolcedorme. Swinburne, like a sensible man, takes the Sybarites
+under his protection; he defends their artificially shaded streets and those
+other signs of voluptuousness which, to judge by certain modern researches,
+seem to have been chiefly contrived for combating the demon of malaria. Earthly
+welfare, the cult of material health and ease&mdash;such was <i>their</i>
+ideal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In sharpest contrast to these strivings stands the aim of those old monks who
+scorned the body as a mere encumbrance, seeking spiritual enlightenment and
+things not of this earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now, Sybarites and Basileans&mdash;alike in ruins!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man of to-day, asked which of the two civilizations he would wish restored,
+would not hesitate long in deciding for the Hellenic one. Readers of Lenormant
+will call to mind his glowing pages on the wonders that might be found buried
+on the site of Sybaris. His plan of excavation sounds feasible enough. But how
+remote it becomes, when one remembers the case of Herculaneum! Here, to our
+certain knowledge, many miracles of antique art and literature lie within a few
+feet of our reach; yet nothing is done. These hidden monuments, which are the
+heritage of all humanity, are withheld from our eyes by the dog-in-the-manger
+policy of a country which, even without foreign assistance, could easily
+accomplish the work, were it to employ thereon only half the sum now spent in
+feeding, clothing and supervising a horde of criminals, every one of whom ought
+to be hanged ten times over. Meanwhile other nations are forbidden to
+co-operate; the fair-minded German proposals were scornfully rejected; later
+on, those of Sir Charles Waldstein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What!&rdquo; says the <i>Giornale d&rsquo; Italia, &ldquo;</i>are we to
+have international excavation-committees thrust upon us? Are we to be treated
+like the Turks?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page116"></a>
+That, gentle sirs, is precisely the state of the case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The object of such committees is to do for the good of mankind what a single
+nation is powerless or unwilling to do. Your behaviour at Herculaneum is
+identical with that of the Turks at Nineveh. The system adopted should likewise
+be the same.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shall never see that consummation.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+But I shall not forget a certain article in an American paper&mdash;&ldquo;The
+New York Times,&rdquo; I fancy&mdash;which gave me fresh food for thought, here
+at Patirion, in the sight of that old Hellenic colony, and with the light
+chatter of those women still ringing in my ears. Its writer, with whom not all
+of us will agree, declared that first in importance of all the antiquities
+buried in Italian soil come the lost poems of Sappho. The lost poems of
+Sappho&mdash;a singular choice! In corroboration whereof he quoted the
+extravagant praise of J. A. Symonds upon that amiable and ambiguous young
+person. And he might have added Algernon Swinburne, who calls her &ldquo;the
+greatest poet who ever was at all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sappho and these two Victorians, I said to myself. . . . Why just these two?
+How keen is the cry of elective affinity athwart the ages! <i>The soul,</i>
+says Plato, <i>divines that which it seeks, and traces obscurely the footsteps
+of its obscure desire.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The footsteps of its obscure desire&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So one stumbles, inadvertently, upon problems of the day concerning which our
+sages profess to know nothing. And yet I do perceive a certain Writing upon the
+Wall setting forth, in clearest language, that 1 + 1 = 3; a legend which it
+behoves them not to expunge, but to expound. For it refuses to be expunged; and
+we do not need a German lady to tell us how much the &ldquo;synthetic&rdquo;
+sex, the hornless but not brainless sex, has done for the life of the spirit
+while those other two were reclaiming the waste places of earth, and
+procreating, and fighting&mdash;as befits their horned anatomy.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page117"></a><a name="chap16"></a>XVI<br />
+REPOSING AT CASTROVILLARI</h2>
+
+<p>
+I remember asking my friend the Roman deputy of whom I have already spoken, and
+whom I regard as a fountain of wisdom on matters Italian, how it came about
+that the railway stations in his country were apt to be so far distant from the
+towns they serve. Rocca Bernarda, I was saying, lies 33 kilometres from its
+station; and even some of the largest towns in the kingdom are inconveniently
+and unnecessarily remote from the line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;Very true! Inconveniently . . . but
+perhaps not unnecessarily. . . .&rdquo; He nodded his head, as he often does,
+when revolving some deep problem in his mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, sir?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Inasmuch as everything has its reasons, be they geographical,
+sociological, or otherwise . . .&rdquo; and he mused again. &ldquo;Let me tell
+you what I think as regards our respective English and Italian points of
+view,&rdquo; he said at last. &ldquo;And to begin with&mdash;a few
+generalities! We may hold that success in modern life consists in correctly
+appreciating the principles which underlie our experiences&mdash;in what may be
+called the scientific attitude towards things in general. Now, do the English
+cultivate this attitude? Not sufficiently. They are in the stage of those
+mediæval scholars who contentedly alleged separate primary causes for each
+phenomenon, instead of seeking, by the investigation of secondary ones, for the
+inevitable interdependence of the whole. In other words, they do not
+subordinate facts; they co-ordinate them. Your politicians and all your public
+men are guided by impulse&mdash;by expediency, as they prefer to call it; they
+are empirical; they never attempt to codify their conduct; they despise it as
+theorizing. What happens? This old-fashioned hand-to-mouth system of theirs
+invariably breaks down here and there. And then? Then they trust to some
+divine interposition, some accident, to put things to rights again. The success
+of the English is largely built up on such accidents&mdash;on the mistakes of
+other people. Providence has favoured them so far, on the whole; but one day
+it
+<a name="Page118"></a>
+may leave them in the lurch, as it did the anti-scientific Russians in their
+war with the Japanese. One day other people will forget to make these pleasant
+mistakes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paused, and I forbore to interrupt his eloquence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To come now to the practical application&mdash;to this particular
+instance. Tell me, does your English system testify to any constructive
+forethought? In London, I am assured, the railway companies have built stations
+at enormous expense in the very heart of the town. What will be the consequence
+of this hand-to-mouth policy? This, that in fifty years such structures will
+have become obsolete&mdash;stranded in slums at the back of new quarters yet
+undreamed of. New depots will have to be built. Whereas in Italy the now
+distant city will in fifty years have grown to reach its station and, in
+another half-century, will have encircled it. Thanks to our sagacity, the
+station will then be in its proper place, in the centre of the town. Our
+progeny will be grateful; and that again, you will admit, is a worthy aim for
+our politicians. Besides, what would happen to our coachmen if nobody needed
+their services on arriving at his destination? The poor men must not be allowed
+to starve! Cold head and warm heart, you know; humanitarian considerations
+cannot be thrust aside by a community that prides itself on being truly
+civilized. I trust I have made myself intelligible?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You always do. But why should I incommode myself to please your progeny,
+or even my own? And I don&rsquo;t like the kind of warm heart that subordinates
+my concerns to those of a cab-driver. You don&rsquo;t altogether convince me,
+dear sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To speak frankly, I sometimes don&rsquo;t convince myself. My own
+country station, for example, is curiously remote from the city, and it is
+annoying on wintry nights to drive through six miles of level mud when you are
+anxious to reach home and dinner; so much so that, in my egoistical moments, I
+would have been glad if our administration had adopted the more specious
+British method. But come now! You cannot raise that objection against the
+terminus at Rome.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that one. But I can raise two others. The platforms are
+inconveniently arranged, and a traveller will often find it impossible to wash
+his hands and face there; as to hot water&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Granting a certain deplorable disposition of the lines&mdash;why on
+earth, pray, should a man cleanse himself at the station when there are
+countless hotels and lodging-houses in the city? O you English
+originals!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page119"></a>
+&ldquo;And supposing,&rdquo; I urged, &ldquo;he is in a hurry to catch another
+train going south, to Naples or Palermo?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There I have you, my illustrious friend! <i>Nobody travels south of
+Rome.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nobody travels south of Rome. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Often have I thought upon those words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This conversation was forcibly recalled to my mind by the fact that it took our
+creaky old diligence two and a half hours (one of the horses had been bought
+the day before, for six pounds) to drive from the station of Castrovillari to
+the entrance of the town, where we were delayed another twenty minutes, while
+the octroi zealots searched through every bag and parcel on the post-waggon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many people have said bad things about this place. But my once unpleasant
+impressions of it have been effaced by my reception at its new and decent
+little hostelry. What a change after the sordid filth of Rossano!
+Castrovillari, to be sure, has no background of hoary eld to atone for such
+deficiencies. It was only built the other day, by the Normans; or by the
+Romans, who called it Aprustum; or possibly by the Greeks, who founded their
+Abystron on this particular site for the same reasons that commended it in yet
+earlier times to certain bronze and stone age primitives, whose weapons you may
+study in the British Museum and elsewhere.<a href="#fn-16.1" name="fnref-16.1" id="fnref-16.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-16.1" id="fn-16.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-16.1">[1]</a>
+Even so Taranto, Cumae, Paestum, Metapontum, Monteleone and other southern
+towns were founded by the ancients on the site of prehistoric stations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what are the stone ages compared with immortal and immutable Rossano? An
+ecclesiastical writer has proved that Calabria was inhabited before the
+Noachian flood; and Rossano, we may be sure, was one of the favourite haunts of
+the antediluvians. None the less, it is good to rest in a clean bed, for a
+change; and to feed off a clean plate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We are in the south. One sees it in sundry small ways&mdash;in the behaviour of
+the cats, for instance. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Tarentines, they say, imported the cat into Europe. If those of south Italy
+still resemble their old Nubian ancestors, the beast would assuredly not have
+been worth the trouble of acclimatizing. On entering these regions, one of the
+first things that strikes me is the difference between the appearance of cats
+and dogs hereabouts, and in England or any northern country; and the difference
+in their temperaments. Our dogs are alert in their movements and of wideawake
+features; here they are drowsy and degraded mongrels, with expressionless eyes.
+Our cats are sleek and slumberous; here they prowl about haggard,
+<a name="Page120"></a>
+shifty and careworn, their fur in patches and their ears a-tremble from nervous
+anxiety. That domestic animals such as these should be fed at home does not
+commend itself to the common people; they must forage for their food abroad.
+Dogs eat offal, while the others hunt for lizards in the fields. A lizard diet
+is supposed to reduce their weight (it would certainly reduce mine); but I
+suspect that southern cats are emaciated not only from this cause, but from
+systematic starvation. Many a kitten is born that never tastes a drop of
+cow&rsquo;s milk from the cradle to the grave, and little enough of its own
+mother&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To say that our English <i>zoophilomania</i>&mdash;our cult of
+lap-dogs&mdash;smacks of degeneracy does not mean that I sympathize with the
+ill-treatment of beasts which annoys many visitors to these parts and has been
+attributed to &ldquo;Saracenic&rdquo; influences. Wrongly, of course; one might
+as well attribute it to the old Greeks.<a href="#fn-16.2" name="fnref-16.2" id="fnref-16.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+Poor Saracens! They are a sort of whipping-boy, all over the country. The chief
+sinner in this respect is the Vatican, which has authorized cruelty to animals
+by its official teaching. When Lord Odo Russell enquired of the Pope regarding
+the foundation of a society for the prevention of cruelty to animals in Italy,
+the papal answer was: &ldquo;Such an association <i>could not be sanctioned</i>
+by the Holy See, being founded on a theological error, to wit, that Christians
+owed any duties to animals.&rdquo; This language has the inestimable and rather
+unusual merit of being perspicuous. Nevertheless, Ouida&rsquo;s flaming letters
+to &ldquo;The Times&rdquo; inaugurated an era of truer humanity. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-16.2" id="fn-16.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-16.2">[2]</a>
+Whose attitude towards animals, by the way, was as far removed from
+callousness as from sentimentalism. We know how those Hellenic oxen fared who
+had laboured to draw up heavy blocks for the building of a temple&mdash;how, on
+the completion of their task, they were led into green fields, there to pasture
+unmolested for the rest of their lives. We know that the Greeks were
+appreciative of the graces and virtues of canine nature&mdash;is not the
+Homeric Argo still the finest dog-type in literature? Yet to them the dog, even
+he of the tender Anthology, remained what he is: a tamed beast. The Greeks,
+sitting at dinner, resented the insolence of a creature that, watching every
+morsel as it disappeared into the mouth of its master, plainly discovered by
+its physiognomy the desire, the presumed right, to devour what he considered
+fit only for himself. Whence that profound word [Greek:
+kunopes]&mdash;dog-eyed, shameless. In contrast to this sanity, observe what an
+Englishman can read into a dog&rsquo;s eye:<br />
+<br />
+                    That liquid, melancholy eye,<br />
+                    From whose pathetic, soul-fed springs<br />
+                    Seemed surging the Virgilian cry&mdash;<br />
+                    The sense of tears in mortal things. . . .<br />
+<br />
+That is how Matthew Arnold interprets the feelings of Fido, watching his master
+at work upon a tender beefsteak. . . .
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus15"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-15.jpg" width="399" height="311" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Shoeing a Cow</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+And the lateness of the dining-hour&mdash;another symptom of the south. It was
+eleven o&rsquo;clock when I sat down to dinner on the night of my arrival, and
+habitues of the hotel, engineers and so
+<a name="Page121"></a>
+forth, were still dropping in for their evening meal. Appetite comes more
+slowly than ever, now that the heats have begun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They have begun in earnest. The swoon of summer is upon the land, the grass is
+cut, cicadas are chirping overhead. Despite its height of a thousand feet,
+Castrovillari must be blazing in August, surrounded as it is by parched fields
+and an amphitheatre of bare limestone hills that exhale the sunny beams. You
+may stroll about these fields observing the construction of the line which is
+to pass through Cassano, a pretty place, famous for its wine and mineral
+springs; or studying the habits of the gigantic grasshoppers that hang in
+clusters to the dried thistles and start off, when scared, with the noise of a
+covey of partridges; or watching how the cows are shod, at this season, to
+thresh the corn. Old authors are unanimous in declaring that the town was
+embowered in oak forests; as late as 1844 it was lamented that this
+&ldquo;ancient barbarous custom&rdquo; of cutting them down had not yet been
+discontinued. The mischief is now done, and it would be interesting to know the
+difference between the present summer temperature and that of olden days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The manna ash used to be cultivated in these parts. I cannot tell whether its
+purgative secretion is still in favour. The confusion between this stuff and
+the biblical manna gave rise to the legends about Calabria where &ldquo;manna
+droppeth as dew from Heaven.&rdquo; Sandys says it was prepared out of the
+mulberry. He copied assiduously, did old Sandys, and yet found room for some
+original blunders of his own. R. Pococke, by the way, is one of those who were
+dissatisfied with Castrovillari. He found no accommodation save an empty house.
+&ldquo;A poor town.&rdquo; . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Driving through modern Castrovillari one might think the place flat and
+undeserving of the name of <i>castrum.</i> But the old town is otherwise. It
+occupies a proud eminence&mdash;the head of a promontory which overlooks the
+junction of two streams; the newer settlement stands on the more level ground
+at its back. This acropolis, once thronged with folk but now well-nigh
+deserted, has all the macabre fascination of decay. A mildewy spirit haunts
+those tortuous and uneven roadways; plaster drops unheeded from the walls; the
+wild fig thrusts luxuriant arms through the windows of palaces whose balconies
+are rusted and painted loggias crumbling to earth ... a mournful and malarious
+agglomeration of ruins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is a castle, of course. It was built, or rebuilt, by the Aragonese, with
+four corner towers, one of which became
+<a name="Page122"></a>
+infamous
+for a scene that rivals the horrors of the Black Hole of Calcutta.
+Numbers of confined brigands, uncared-for, perished miserably of starvation
+within its walls. Says the historian Botta:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The abominable taint prevented the guards from approaching; the dead
+bodies were not carried away. The pestilence increased; in pain and exhaustion,
+the dying fell shuddering on the dead; the hale on the dying; all tearing
+themselves like dogs with teeth and nails. The tower of Castrovillari became a
+foul hole of corruption, and the stench was spread abroad for a long
+season.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This castle is now used as a place of confinement. Sentries warned me at one
+point not to approach too near the walls; it was &ldquo;forbidden.&rdquo; I had
+no particular desire to disobey this injunction. Judging by the number of rats
+that swarm about the place, it is not exactly a model prison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the streets in this dilapidated stronghold bears to this day the
+inscription &ldquo;Giudea,&rdquo; or Jewry. Southern Italy was well stocked
+with those Hebrews concerning whom Mr. H. M. Adler has sagely discoursed. They
+lived in separate districts, and seem to have borne a good reputation. Those
+of Castrovillari, on being ejected by Ferdinand the Catholic in 1511,
+obligingly made a donation of their school to the town. But they returned anon,
+and claimed it again. Persecuted as they were, they never suffered the
+martyrdom of the ill-starred Waldensian colonies in Calabria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The houses of this Jewry overlook the Coscile river, the Sybaris of old, and
+from a spot in the quarter a steep path descends to its banks. Here you will
+find yourself in another climate, cool and moist. The livid waters tumble
+gleefully towards the plain, amid penurious plots of beans and tomatoes, and a
+fierce tangle of vegetation wherever the hand of man has not made clearings.
+Then, mounting aloft once more, you will do well to visit the far-famed chapel
+that sits at the apex of the promontory, Santa Maria del Castello. There is a
+little platform where you may repose and enjoy the view, as I have done for
+some evenings past&mdash;letting the eye roam up-country towards Dolcedorme and
+its sister peaks, and westwards over the undulating Sila lands whose highest
+point, Botte Donato, is unmistakable even at this distance of forty miles, from
+its peculiar shape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Madonna picture preserved within the sanctuary has performed so many
+miracles in ages past that I despair of giving any account of them. It is high
+time, none the less, for a new sign from Heaven. Shattered by earthquakes, the
+chapel is in a disruptured and even menacing condition. Will some returned
+emigrant from America come forward with the necessary funds?
+<a name="Page123"></a>
+That would be a miracle, too, in its way. But gone, for the present, are the
+ages of Faith&mdash;the days when the peevishly-protestant J. H. Bartels
+sojourned here and groaned as he counted up the seven monasteries of
+Castrovillari (there used to be nearly twice that number), and viewed the 130
+priests, &ldquo;fat-paunched rascals, loafing about the streets and
+doorways.&rdquo; . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From my window in the hotel I espy a small patch of snow on the hills. I know
+the place; it is the so-called &ldquo;Montagna del Principe&rdquo; past which
+the track winds into the Pollino regions. Thither I am bound; but so
+complicated is life that even for a short three days&rsquo; ramble among those
+forests a certain amount of food and clothing must be provided&mdash;a mule is
+plainly required. There seem to be none of these beasts available at
+Castrovillari.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To Morano!&rdquo; they tell me. &ldquo;It is nearer the mountain, and
+there you will find mules plentiful as blackberries. To Morano!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morano lies a few miles higher up the valley on the great military road to
+Lagonegro, which was built by Murat and cuts through the interior of
+Basilicata, rising at Campo Tenese to a height of 1100 metres. They are now
+running a public motor service along this beautiful stretch of 52 kilometres,
+at the cheap rate of a sou per kilometre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>En route!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+POSTSCRIPT.&mdash;Another symptom of the south:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once you have reached the latitude of Naples, the word <i>grazie</i> (thank
+you) vanishes from the vocabulary of all save the most cultured. But to
+conclude therefrom that one is among a thankless race is not altogether the
+right inference. They have a wholly different conception of the affair. Our
+septentrional &ldquo;thanks&rdquo; is a complicated product in which
+gratefulness for things received and for things to come are unconsciously
+balanced; while their point of view differs in nothing from that of the
+beau-ideal of Greek courtesy, of Achilles, whose mother procured for him a suit
+of divine armour from Hephaistos, which he received without a word of
+acknowledgment either for her or for the god who had been put to some little
+trouble in the matter. A thing given they regard as a thing found, a hermaion,
+a happy hit in the lottery of life; the giver is the blind instrument of
+Fortune. This chill attitude repels us; and our effusive expressions of
+thankfulness astonish these people and the Orientals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A further difference is that the actual gift is viewed quite extrinsically,
+intellectually, either in regard to what it would fetch
+<a name="Page124"></a>
+if bartered or sold, or, if to be kept, as to how far its possession may raise
+the recipient in the eyes of other men. This is purely Homeric, once
+more&mdash;Homeric or primordial, if you prefer. Odysseus told his kind host
+Alkinoos, whom he was never to see again, that he would be glad to receive
+farewell presents from him&mdash;to cherish as a friendly memory? No, but
+&ldquo;because they would make him look a finer fellow when he got home.&rdquo;
+The idea of a keepsake, of an emotional value attaching to some trifle, is a
+northern one. Here life is give and take, and lucky he who takes more than he
+gives; it is what Professor Mahaffy calls the &ldquo;ingrained selfishness of
+the Greek character.&rdquo; Speaking of all below the upper classes, I should
+say that disinterested benevolence is apt to surpass their comprehension, a
+good-natured person being regarded as weak in the head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Has this man, then, no family, that he should benefit strangers? Or is he one
+of nature&rsquo;s unfortunates&mdash;soft-witted? Thus they argue. They will do
+acts of spontaneous kindness towards their family, far oftener than is
+customary with us. But outside that narrow sphere, <i>interesse</i> (Odyssean
+self-advantage) is the mainspring of their actions. Whence their smooth and
+glozing manners towards the stranger, and those protestations of undying
+affection which beguile the unwary&mdash;they wish to be forever in your good
+graces, for sooner or later you may be of use; and if perchance you do content
+them, they will marvel (philosophically) at your grotesque generosity, your
+lack of discrimination and restraint. Such <i>malizia</i> (cleverness) is none
+the more respectable for being childishly transparent. The profound and
+unscrupulous northerner quickly familiarizes himself with its technique, and
+turns it to his own profit. Lowering his moral notions, he soon&mdash;so one of
+them expressed it to me&mdash;&ldquo;walks round them without getting off his
+chair&rdquo; and, on the strength of his undeserved reputation for simplicity
+and fair dealing, keeps them dangling a lifetime in a tremble of obsequious
+amiability, cheered on by the hope of ultimately over-reaching him. Idle dream,
+where a pliant and sanguine southerner is pitted against the unswerving Saxon
+or Teuton! This accounts for the success of foreign trading houses in the
+south. Business is business, and the devil take the hindmost! By all means; but
+they who are not rooted to the spot by commercial exigencies nor ready to adopt
+debased standards of conduct will find that a prolonged residence in a centre
+like Naples&mdash;the daily attrition of its ape-and-tiger
+elements&mdash;sullies their homely candour and self-respect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a tigerish flavour does exist in most of these southern towns.
+<a name="Page125"></a>
+Camorra, the law of intimidation, rules the city. This is what Stendhal meant
+when, speaking of the &ldquo;simple and inoffensive&rdquo; personages in the
+<i>Vicar of Wakefield,</i> he remarked that &ldquo;in the sombre Italy, a
+simple and inoffensive creature would be quickly destroyed.&rdquo; It is not
+easy to be inoffensive and yet respected in a land of teeth and claws, where a
+man is reverenced in proportion as he can browbeat his fellows. So much
+ferocity tinctures civic life, that had they not dwelt in towns while we were
+still shivering in bogs, one would deem them not yet ripe for herding together
+in large numbers; one would say that post-patriarchal conditions evoked the
+worst qualities of the race. And we must revise our conceptions of fat and lean
+men; we must pity Cassius, and dread Falstaff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What has happened&rdquo;&mdash;you ask some enormous
+individual&mdash;&ldquo;to your adversary at law?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To which one of them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Signor M&mdash;&mdash;, the timber merchant.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>L&rsquo;abbiamo mangiato!</i>&rdquo; (I have eaten him.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beware of the fat Neapolitan. He is fat from prosperity, from, dining off his
+leaner brothers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Which reminds me of a supremely important subject, eating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The feeding here is saner than ours with its all-pervading animal grease (even
+a boiled egg tastes of mutton fat in England), its stock-pot, suet, and those
+other inventions of the devil whose awful effects we only survive because we
+are continually counteracting or eliminating them by the help of (1) pills, (2)
+athletics, and (3) alcohol. Saner as regards material, but hopelessly
+irrational in method. Your ordinary employé begins his day with a thimbleful of
+black coffee, nothing more. What work shall be got out of him. under such
+anti-hygienic conditions? Of course it takes ten men to do the work of one; and
+of course all ten of them are sulky and irritable throughout the morning,
+thinking only of their luncheon. Then indeed&mdash;then they make up for lost
+time; those few favoured ones, at least, who can afford it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I once watched a young fellow, a clerk of some kind, in a restaurant at midday.
+He began by informing the waiter that he had no appetite that
+morning&mdash;<i>sangue di Dio!</i> no appetite whatever; but at last allowed
+himself to be persuaded into consuming a <i>hors d&rsquo; oeuvres</i> of
+anchovies and olives. Then he was induced to try the maccheroni, because they
+were &ldquo;particularly good that morning&rdquo;; he ate, or rather drank, an
+immense plateful. After that came some slices of meat and a dish of green stuff
+sufficient to satisfy a starving bullock. A little fish? asked the
+<a name="Page126"></a>
+waiter. Well, perhaps yes, just for form&rsquo;s sake&mdash;two fried mullets
+and some nondescript fragments. Next, he devoured a couple of raw eggs
+&ldquo;on account of his miserably weak stomach,&rdquo; a bowl of salad and a
+goodly lump of fresh cheese. Not without a secret feeling of envy I left him at
+work upon his dessert, of which he had already consumed some six peaches. Add
+to this (quite an ordinary repast) half a bottle of heavy wine, a cup of black
+coffee and three glasses of water&mdash;what work shall be got out of a man
+after such a boa-constrictor collation? He is as exasperated and prone to take
+offence as in the morning&mdash;this time from another cause. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That is why so many of them suffer from chronic troubles of the digestive
+organs. The head of a hospital at Naples tells me that stomach diseases are
+more prevalent there than in any other part of Europe, and the stomach,
+whatever sentimentalists may say to the contrary, being the true seat of the
+emotions, it follows that a judicious system of dieting might work wonders upon
+their development. Nearly all Mediterranean races have been misfed from early
+days; that is why they are so small. I would undertake to raise the Italian
+standard of height by several inches, if I had control of their nutrition for a
+few centuries. I would undertake to alter their whole outlook upon life, to
+convert them from utilitarians into romantics&mdash;were such a change
+desirable. For if utilitarianism be the shadow of starvation, romance is
+nothing but the vapour of repletion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet men still talk of race-characteristics as of something fixed and
+immutable! The Jews, so long as they starved in Palestine, were the most
+acrimonious bigots on earth. Now that they live and feed sensibly, they have
+learnt to see things in their true perspective&mdash;they have become
+rationalists. Their less fortunate fellow-Semites, the Arabs, have continued to
+starve and to swear by the Koran&mdash;empty in body and empty in mind. No
+poise or balance is possible to those who live in uneasy conditions. The wisest
+of them can only attain to stoicism&mdash;a dumb protest against the
+environment. There are no stoics among well-fed people. The Romans made that
+discovery for themselves, when they abandoned the cheese-paring habits of the
+Republic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In short, it seems to me that virtues and vices which cannot be expressed in
+physiological terms are not worth talking about; that when a morality refuses
+to derive its sanction from the laws which govern our body, it loses the right
+to exist. This being so, what is the most conspicuous native vice?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Envy, without a doubt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page127"></a>
+Out of envy they pine away and die; out of envy they kill one another. To
+produce a more placid race,<a href="#fn-16.3" name="fnref-16.3" id="fnref-16.3"><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+to dilute envious thoughts and the acts to which they lead, is at bottom a
+question of nutrition. One would like to know for how much black brooding and
+for how many revengeful deeds that morning thimbleful of black coffee is
+responsible.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-16.3" id="fn-16.3"></a> <a href="#fnref-16.3">[3]</a>
+By placid I do not mean peace-loving and pitiful in the Christian sense. That
+doctrine of loving and forgiving one&rsquo;s enemies is based on sheer funk;
+our pity for others is dangerously akin to self-pity, most odious of vices.
+Catholic teaching&mdash;in practice, if not in theory&mdash;-glides artfully
+over the desirability of these imported freak-virtues, knowing that they cannot
+appeal to a masculine stock. By placid I mean steady, self-contained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The very faces one sees in the streets would change. Envy is reflected in all
+too many of those of the middle classes, while the poorest citizens are often
+haggard and distraught from sheer hunger&mdash;hunger which has not had time to
+be commuted into moral poison; college-taught men, in responsible positions,
+being forced to live on salaries which a London lift-boy would disdain. When
+that other local feature, that respect for honourable poverty&mdash;the reverse
+of what we see in England where, since the days of the arch-snob Pope, a
+slender income has grown to be considered a subject of reproach.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet another symptom of the south&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Enough! The clock points to 6.20; it is time for an evening walk&mdash;my final
+one&mdash;to the terrace of S. M. del Castello.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page128"></a><a name="chap17"></a>XVII<br />
+OLD MORANO</h2>
+
+<p>
+This Morano is a very ancient city; Tufarelli, writing in 1598, proves that it
+was then exactly 3349 years old. Oddly enough, therefore, its foundation almost
+coincides with that of Rossano. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There may be mules at Morano; indeed, there are. But they are illusive beasts:
+phantom-mules. Despite the assistance of the captain of the carbineers, the
+local innkeeper, the communal policeman, the secretary of the municipality, an
+amiable canon of the church and several non-official residents, I vainly
+endeavoured, for three days, to procure one&mdash;flitting about, meanwhile,
+between this place and Castrovillari. For Morano, notwithstanding its size
+(they say it is larger than the other town) offers no accommodation or food in
+the septentrional sense of those terms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Its situation, as you approach from Castrovillari, is striking. The white
+houses stream in a cataract down one side of a steep conical hill that
+dominates the landscape&mdash;on the summit sits the inevitable castle, blue
+sky peering through its battered windows. But the interior is not at all in
+keeping with this imposing aspect. Morano, so far as I was able to explore it,
+is a labyrinth of sombre, tortuous and fetid alleys, where black pigs wallow
+amid heaps of miscellaneous and malodorous filth&mdash;in short, the town
+exemplifies that particular idea of civic liberty which consists in everybody
+being free to throw their own private refuse into the public street and leave
+it there, from generation to generation. What says Lombroso? &ldquo;The
+street-cleaning is entrusted, in many towns, to the rains of heaven and, in
+their absence, to the voracity of the pigs.&rdquo; None the less, while waiting
+for mules that never came, I took to patrolling those alleys, at first out of
+sheer boredom, but soon impelled by that subtle fascination which emanates from
+the <i>ne plus ultra</i> of anything&mdash;even of grotesque dirtiness. On the
+second day, however, a case of cholera was announced, which chilled my ardour
+for further investigations. It was on that account that I failed to inspect
+what was afterwards described to me as the chief marvel of the place&mdash;a
+carved wooden altar-piece in a certain church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page129"></a>
+<i>&ldquo;</i>It is prodigious and <i>antichissimo,&rdquo;</i> said an obliging
+citizen to whom I applied for information. &ldquo;There is nothing like it on
+earth, and I have been six times to America, sir. The artist&mdash;a real
+artist, mind you, not a common professor&mdash;spent his whole life in carving
+it. It was for the church, you see, and he wanted to show what he could do in
+the way of a masterpiece. Then, when it was finished and in its place, the
+priests refused to pay for it. It was made not for them, they said, but for the
+glory of God; the man&rsquo;s reward was sufficient. And besides, he could have
+remission of sins for the rest of his life. He said he did not care about
+remission of sins; he wanted money&mdash;money! But he got nothing. Whereupon
+he began to brood and to grow yellow. Money&mdash;money! That was all he ever
+said. And at last he became quite green and died. After that, his son took up
+the quarrel, but he got as little out of the priests as the father. It was
+fixed in the church, you understand, and he could not take it away. He climbed
+through the window one night and tried to burn it&mdash;the marks are there to
+this day&mdash;but they were too sharp for him. And he took the business so
+much to heart that he also soon died quite young! And quite green&mdash;like
+his father.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most characteristic item in the above history is that about growing green.
+People are apt to put on this colour in the south from disappointment or from
+envy. They have a proverb which runs &ldquo;sfoga o
+schiatta&rdquo;&mdash;relieve yourself or burst; our vaunted ideal of
+self-restraint, of dominating the reflexes, being thought not only fanciful but
+injurious to health. Therefore, if relief is thwarted, they either brood
+themselves into a green melancholy, or succumb to a sudden &ldquo;colpo di
+sangue,&rdquo; like a young woman of my acquaintance who, considering herself
+beaten in a dispute with a tram-conductor about a penny, forthwith had a
+&ldquo;colpo di sangue,&rdquo; and was dead in a few hours. A primeval
+assertion of the ego . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unable to perambulate the streets of Morano, I climbed to the ruined fortress
+along the verdant slope at its back, and enjoyed a fair view down the fertile
+valley, irrigated by streamlets and planted with many-hued patches of culture,
+with mulberries, pomegranates and poplars. Some boys were up here, engaged in
+fishing&mdash;fishing for young kestrels in their nest above a shattered
+gateway. The tackle consisted of a rod with a bent piece of wire fixed to one
+end, and it seemed to me a pretty unpromising form of sport. But suddenly, amid
+wild vociferations, they hooked one, and carried it off in triumph to supper.
+The mother bird, meanwhile, sailed restlessly about the aether watching every
+movement,
+<a name="Page130"></a>
+as I could see by my glasses; at times she drifted quite near, then swerved
+again and hovered, with vibrating pinions, directly overhead. It was clear that
+she could not tear herself away from the scene, and hardly had the marauders
+departed, when she alighted on the wall and began to inspect what was left of
+her dwelling. It was probably rather untidy. I felt sorry for her; yet such
+harebrained imprudence cannot go unpunished. With so many hundred crannies in
+this old castle, why choose one which any boy can reach with a stick? She will
+know better next season.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then an old shepherd scrambled up, and sat on the stone beside me. He was
+short-sighted, asthmatic, and unable to work; the doctor had recommended an
+evening walk up to the castle. We conversed awhile, and he extracted a
+carnation out of his waistcoat pocket&mdash;unusual receptacle for
+flowers&mdash;which he presented to me. I touched upon the all-absorbing topic
+of mules.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo; Mules are very busy animals in Morano,&rdquo; he explained.
+<i>&ldquo;Animali occupatissimi.&rdquo;</i> However, he promised to exert
+himself on my behalf; he knew a man with a mule&mdash;two mules&mdash;he would
+send him round, if possible.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Quite a feature in the landscape of Morano is the costume of the women, with
+their home-dyed red skirts and ribbons of the same hue plaited into their hair.
+It is a beautiful and reposeful shade of red, between Pompeian and
+brick-colour, and the tint very closely resembles that of the cloth worn by the
+beduin (married) women of Tunisia. Maybe it was introduced by the Saracens. And
+it is they, I imagine, who imported that love of red peppers (a favourite dish
+with most Orientals) which is peculiar to these parts, where they eat them
+voraciously in every form, particularly in that of red sausages seasoned with
+these fiery condiments.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus16"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-16.jpg" width="402" height="316" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Morano</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+The whole country is full of Saracen memories. The name of Morano, they say, is
+derived from <i>moro</i>,<a href="#fn-17.1" name="fnref-17.1" id="fnref-17.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+a Moor; and in its little piazza&mdash;an irregular and picturesque spot,
+shaded by a few grand old elms amid the sound of running waters&mdash;there is
+a sculptured head of a Moor inserted into the wall, commemorative, I was told,
+of some ancient anti-Saracen exploit. It is the escutcheon of the town. This
+Moor wears a red fez, and his features are painted black (this is <i>de
+rigueur,</i> for &ldquo;Saracens&rdquo;); he bears the legend <i>Vivit</i>
+<a name="Page131"></a>
+<i>sub arbore morus.</i> Near at hand, too, lies the prosperous village
+Saracena, celebrated of old for its muscatel wines. They are made from the
+grape which the Saracens brought over from Maskat, and planted all over
+Sicily.<a href="#fn-17.2" name="fnref-17.2" id="fnref-17.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-17.1" id="fn-17.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-17.1">[1]</a>
+This is all wrong, of course. And equally wrong is the derivation from
+<i>morus,</i> a mulberry&mdash;abundant as these trees are. And more wrong
+still, if possible, is that which is drawn from a saying of the mysterious
+Oenotrians&mdash;that useful tribe&mdash;who, wandering in search of homesteads
+across these regions and observing their beauty, are supposed to have remarked:
+<i>Hic moremur&mdash;</i>here let us stay! Morano (strange to say) is simply
+the Roman Muranum.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-17.2" id="fn-17.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-17.2">[2]</a>
+See next chapter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men of Morano emigrate to America; two-thirds of the adult and adolescent
+male population are at this moment on the other side of the Atlantic. But the
+oldsters, with their peaked hats (capello pizzuto) shading gnarled and canny
+features, are well worth studying. At this summer season they leave the town at
+3.30 a.m. to cultivate their fields, often far distant, returning at nightfall;
+and to observe these really wonderful types, which will soon be extinct, you
+must take up a stand on the Castrovillari road towards sunset and watch them
+riding home on their donkeys, or walking, after the labours of the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poorly dressed, these peasants are none the less wealthy; the post office
+deposit of Morano is said to have two million francs to its credit, mostly the
+savings of these humble cultivators, who can discover an astonishing amount of
+money when it is a question, for example, of providing their daughters with a
+dowry. The bridal dress alone, a blaze of blue silk and lace and gold
+embroidery, costs between six hundred and a thousand francs. Altogether, Morano
+is a rich place, despite its sordid appearance; it is also celebrated as the
+birthplace of various learned men. The author of the &ldquo;Calascione
+Scordato,&rdquo; a famous Neapolitan poem of the seventeenth century, certainly
+lived here for some time and has been acclaimed as a son of Morano, though he
+distinctly speaks of Naples as his home. Among its elder literary glories is
+that Leonardo Tufarelli, who thus apostrophizes his birthplace:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And to proceed&mdash;how many <i>letterati</i> and <i>virtuosi</i> have
+issued from you in divers times? Among whom&mdash;not to name all of
+them&mdash;there has been in our days Leopardo de l&rsquo;Osso of happy memory,
+physician and most excellent philosopher, singular in every science, of whom I
+dare say that he attained to Pythagorean heights. How many are there to-day,
+versed in every faculty, in theology, in the two laws, and in medicine? How
+many historians, how many poets, grammarians, artists, actors?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The modern writer Nicola Leoni is likewise a child of Morano; his voluminous
+&ldquo;Della Magna Grecia e delle Tre Calabrie&rdquo; appeared in 1844-1846.
+He, too, devotes much space to the praises of his natal city, and to
+lamentations regarding the sad condition of Calabrian letters during those dark
+years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Closed for ever is the academy of Amantea! Closed for ever is
+<a name="Page132"></a>
+the academy of Rossano! Rare are the lectures in the academy of Monteleone!
+Rare indeed the lectures in the academy of Catanzaro! Closed for ever is the
+public library of Monteleone! O ancient days! O wisdom of our fathers! Where
+shall I find you?.. .&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To live the intellectual life amid the ferociously squalid surroundings of
+Morano argues an enviable philosophic calm&mdash;a detachment bordering on
+insensibility. But perhaps we are too easily influenced by externals, in these
+degenerate times. Or things may have been better in days of old&mdash;who can
+tell? One always likes to think so, though the evidence usually points to the
+contrary.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+When least I expected it, a possessor of mules presented himself. He was a
+burly ruffian of northern extraction, with clear eyes, fair moustache, and an
+insidious air of cheerfulness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, he had a mule, he said; but as to climbing the mountain for three or four
+days on end&mdash;ha, ha!&mdash;that was rather an undertaking, you know. Was I
+aware that there were forests and snow up there? Had I ever been up the
+mountain? Indeed! Well, then I must know that there was no food&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I pointed to my store of provisions from Castrovillari. His eye wandered
+lovingly over the pile and reposed, finally, upon sundry odd bottles and a
+capacious demijohn, holding twelve litres.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wine of family,&rdquo; I urged. &ldquo;None of your eating-house
+stuff.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thought he could manage it, after all. Yes; the trip could be undertaken,
+with a little sacrifice. And he had a second mule, a lady-mule, which it struck
+him I might like to ride now and then; a pleasant beast and a companion, so to
+speak, for the other one. Two mules and two Christians&mdash;that seemed
+appropriate. . . . And only four francs a day more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Done! It was really cheap. So cheap, that I straightway grew suspicious of the
+&ldquo;lady-mule.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We sealed the bargain in a glass of the local mixture, and I thereupon demanded
+a <i>caparra&mdash;</i>a monetary security that he would keep his word, i.e.
+be round at my door with the animals at two in the morning, so as to reach the
+uplands before the heat became oppressive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His face clouded&mdash;a good omen, indicating that he was beginning to respect
+me. Then he pulled out his purse, and reluctantly laid two francs on the table.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus17"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-17.jpg" width="377" height="476" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">An old Shepherd</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+The evening was spent in final preparations; I retired early to bed, and tried
+to sleep. One o&rsquo;clock came, and two o&rsquo;clock, and
+<a name="Page133"></a>
+three o&rsquo;clock&mdash;no mules! At four I went to the man&rsquo;s house,
+and woke him out of ambrosial slumbers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You come to see me so early in the morning?&rdquo; he enquired, sitting
+up in bed and rubbing his eyes. &ldquo;Now that&rsquo;s really nice of
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the mules, he airily explained, had lost a shoe in the afternoon. He
+would get it put right at once&mdash;at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You might have told me so yesterday evening, instead of keeping me awake
+all night waiting for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I thought of it at the time. But then I
+went to bed, and slept. Ah, sir, it is good to sleep!&rdquo; and he stretched
+himself voluptuously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The beast was shod, and at 5 a.m. we left.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page134"></a><a name="chap18"></a>XVIII<br />
+AFRICAN INTRUDERS</h2>
+
+<p>
+There is a type of physiognomy here which is undeniably Semitic&mdash;with
+curly hair, dusky skin and hooked nose. We may take it to be of Saracenic
+origin, since a Phoenician descent is out of the question, while mediæval Jews
+never intermarried with Christians. It is the same class of face which one sees
+so abundantly at Palermo, the former metropolis of these Africans. The
+accompanying likeness is that of a native of Cosenza, a town that was
+frequently in their possession. Eastern traits of character, too, have lingered
+among the populace. So the humour of the peddling Semite who will allow himself
+to be called by the most offensive epithets rather than lose a chance of
+gaining a sou; who, eternally professing poverty, cannot bear to be twitted on
+his notorious riches; their ceaseless talk of hidden treasures, their
+secretiveness and so many other little Orientalisms that whoever has lived in
+the East will be inclined to echo the observation of Edward Lear&rsquo;s Greek
+servant: &ldquo;These men are Arabs, but they have more clothes on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many Saracenic words (chiefly of marine and commercial import) have survived
+from this period; I could quote a hundred or more, partly in the literary
+language (balio, dogana, etc.), partly in dialect (cala, tavuto, etc.) and in
+place-names such as Tamborio (the Semitic Mount Tabor), Kalat (Calatafimi),
+Marsa (Marsala).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dramatic plays with Saracen subjects are still popular with the lower classes;
+you can see them acted in any of the coast towns. In fact, the recollection of
+these intruders is very much alive to this day. They have left a deep scar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such being the case, it is odd to find local writers hardly referring to the
+Saracenic period. Even a modern like l&rsquo;Occaso, who describes the
+Castrovillari region in a conscientious fashion, leaps directly from
+Greco-Roman events into those of the Normans. But this is in accordance with
+the time-honoured ideal of writing such works: to say nothing in dispraise of
+your subject (an exception may be made in favour of Spano-Bolani&rsquo;s
+History of Reggio). Malaria and earthquakes and Saracen irruptions are
+<a name="Page135"></a>
+awkward arguments when treating of the natural attractions and historical
+glories of your native place. So the once renowned descriptions of this
+province by Grano and the rest of them are little more than rhetorical
+exercises; they are &ldquo;Laus Calabriæ.&rdquo; And then&mdash;their sources
+of information were limited and difficult of access. Collective works like
+those of Muratori and du Chesne had not appeared on the market; libraries were
+restricted to convents; and it was not to be expected that they should know all
+the chroniclers of the Byzantines, Latins, Lombards, Normans and
+Hohenstaufen&mdash;to say nothing of Arab writers like Nowairi, Abulfeda, Ibn
+Chaldun and Ibn Alathir&mdash;who throw a little light on those dark times, and
+are now easily accessible to scholars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dipping into this old-world literature of murders and prayers, we gather that
+in pre-Saracenic times the southern towns were denuded of their garrisons, and
+their fortresses fallen into disrepair. &ldquo;Nec erat formido aut metus
+bellorum, quoniam alta pace omnes gaudebant usque ad tempora
+Saracenorum.&rdquo; In this part of Italy, as well as at Taranto and other
+parts of old &ldquo;Calabria,&rdquo; the invaders had an easy task before them,
+at first.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In 873, on their return from Salerno, they poured into Calabria, and by 884
+already held several towns, such as Tropea and Amantea, but were driven out
+temporarily. In 899 they ravaged, says Hepidanus, the country of the Lombards
+(? Calabria). In 900 they destroyed Reggio, and renewed their incursions in
+919, 923, 924, 925, 927, till the Greek Emperor found it profitable to pay them
+an annual tribute. In 953, this tribute not being forthcoming, they defeated
+the Greeks in Calabria, and made further raids in 974, 975; 976, 977, carrying
+off a large store of captives and wealth. In 981 Otto II repulsed them at
+Cotrone, but was beaten the following year near Squillace, and narrowly escaped
+capture. It was one of the most romantic incidents of these wars. During the
+years 986, 988, 991, 994, 998, 1002, 1003 they were continually in the country;
+indeed, nearly every year at the beginning of the eleventh century is marked by
+some fresh inroad. In 1009 they took Cosenza for the third or fourth time; in
+1020 they were at Bisignano in the Crati valley, and returned frequently into
+those parts, defeating, in 1025, a Greek army under Orestes, and, in 1031, the
+assembled forces of the Byzantine Catapan&mdash;&mdash;<a href="#fn-18.1" name="fnref-18.1" id="fnref-18.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-18.1" id="fn-18.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-18.1">[1]</a>
+I have not seen Moscato&rsquo;s &ldquo;Cronaca dei Musulmani in
+Calabria,&rdquo; where these authorities might be conveniently tabulated. It
+must be a rare book. Martorana deals only with the Saracens of Sicily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No bad record, from their point of view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But they never attained their end, the subjection of the
+<a name="Page136"></a>
+mainland. And their methods involved appalling and enduring evils.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet the presumable intent or ambition of these aliens must be called reasonable
+enough. They wished to establish a provincial government here on the same lines
+as in Sicily, of which island it has been said that it was never more
+prosperous than under their administration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Literature, trade, industry, and all the arts of peace are described as
+flourishing there; in agriculture they paid especial attention to the olive;
+they initiated, I believe, the art of terracing and irrigating the hill-sides;
+they imported the date-palm, the lemon and sugar-cane (making the latter
+suffice not only for home consumption, but for export); their silk manufactures
+were unsurpassed. Older writers like Mazzella speak of the abundant growth of
+sugar-cane in Calabria (Capialbi, who wallowed in learning, has a treatise on
+the subject); John Evelyn saw it cultivated near Naples; it is now extinct from
+economical and possibly climatic causes. They also introduced the papyrus into
+Sicily, as well as the cotton-plant, which used to be common all over south
+Italy, where I have myself seen it growing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this sounds praiseworthy, no doubt. But I see no reason why they should
+have governed Sicily better than they did North Africa, which crumbled into
+dust at their touch, and will take many long centuries to recover its
+pre-Saracen prosperity. There is something flame-like and anti-constructive in
+the Arab, with his pastoral habits and contempt of forethought. In favour of
+their rule, much capital has been made out of Benjamin of Tudela&rsquo;s
+account of Palermo. But it must not be forgotten that his brief visit was made
+a hundred years after the Norman occupation had begun. Palermo, he says, has
+about 1500 Jews and a large number of Christians and Mohammedans; Sicily
+&ldquo;contains all the pleasant things of this world.&rdquo; Well, so it did
+in pre-Saracen times; so it does to-day. Against the example of North Africa,
+no doubt, may be set their activities in Spain.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus18"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-18.jpg" width="373" height="454" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">The &ldquo;Saracenic&rdquo; Type</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+They have been accused of destroying the old temples of Magna Gracia from
+religious or other motives. I do not believe it; this was against their usual
+practice. They sacked monasteries, because these were fortresses defended by
+political enemies and full of gold which they coveted; but in their African
+possessions, during all this period, the ruins of ancient civilizations were
+left untouched, while Byzantine cults lingered peacefully side by side with
+Moslemism; why not here? Their fanaticism has been much exaggerated. Weighing
+the balance between conflicting writers, it
+<a name="Page137"></a>
+would appear that Christian rites were tolerated in Sicily during all their
+rule, though some governors were more bigoted than others; the proof is this,
+that the Normans found resident fellow-believers there, after 255 years of Arab
+domination.<a href="#fn-18.2" name="fnref-18.2" id="fnref-18.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+It was the Christians rather, who with the best intentions set the example of
+fanaticism during their crusades; these early Saracen raids had no more
+religious colouring than our own raids into the Transvaal or elsewhere. The
+Saracens were out for plunder and fresh lands, exactly like the English.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-18.2" id="fn-18.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-18.2">[2]</a>
+The behaviour of the Normans was wholly different from that of the Arabs,
+immediately on their occupation of the country they razed to the ground
+thousands of Arab temples and sanctuaries. Of several hundred in Palermo alone,
+not a single one was left standing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor were they tempted to destroy these monuments for decorative purposes, since
+they possessed no palaces on the mainland like the Palermitan Cuba or Zisa; and
+that sheer love of destructive-ness with which they have been credited
+certainly spared the marbles of Paestum which lay within a short distance of
+their strongholds, Agropoli and Cetara. No. What earthquakes had left intact of
+these classic relics was filched by the Christians, who ransacked every corner
+of Italy for such treasures to adorn their own temples in Pisa, Rome and
+Venice&mdash;displaying small veneration for antiquity, but considerable taste.
+In Calabria, for instance, the twenty granite pillars of the cathedral of
+Gerace were drawn from the ruins of old Locri; those of Melito came from the
+ancient Hipponium (Monteleone). So Paestum, after the Saracens, became a
+regular quarry for the Lombards and the rich citizens of Amalfi when they built
+their cathedral; and above all, for the shrewdly pious Robert Guiscard.
+Altogether, these Normans, dreaming through the solstitial heats in pleasaunces
+like Ravello, developed a nice taste in the matter of marbles, and were not
+particular where they came from, so long as they came from somewhere. The
+antiquities remained intact, at least, which was better than the subsequent
+system of Colonna and Frangipani, who burnt them into lime.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whatever one may think of the condition of Sicily under Arab rule, the
+proceedings of these strangers was wholly deplorable so far as the mainland of
+Italy was concerned. They sacked and burnt wherever they went; the sea-board of
+the Tyrrhenian, Ionian and Adriatic was depopulated of its inhabitants, who
+fled inland; towns and villages vanished from the face of the earth, and the
+richly cultivated land became a desert; they took 17,000 prisoners from Reggio
+on a single occasion&mdash;13,000 from Termula;
+<a name="Page138"></a>
+they reduced Matera to such distress, that a mother is said to have slaughtered
+and devoured her own child. Such was their system on the mainland, where they
+swarmed. Their numbers can be inferred from a letter written in 871 by the
+Emperor Ludwig II to the Byzantine monarch, in which he complains that
+&ldquo;Naples has become a second Palermo, a second Africa,&rdquo; while three
+hundred years later, in 1196, the Chancellor Konrad von Hildesheim makes a
+noteworthy observation, which begins: &ldquo;In Naples I saw the Saracens, who
+with their spittle destroy venomous beasts, and will briefly set forth how they
+came by this virtue. . . .<a href="#fn-18.3" name="fnref-18.3" id="fnref-18.3"><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-18.3" id="fn-18.3"></a> <a href="#fnref-18.3">[3]</a>
+He goes on to say, &ldquo;Paulus Apostolus naufragium passus, apud Capream
+insulam applicuit <i>[sic]</i> quae in Actibus Apostolorum Mitylene nuncupatur,
+et cum multis allis evadens, ab indigenis terrae benigne acceptatus est.&rdquo;
+Then follows the episode of the fire and of the serpent which Paul casts from
+him; whereupon the Saracens, naturally enough, begin to adore him as a saint.
+In recompense for this kind treatment Paul grants to them and their descendants
+the power of killing poisonous animals in the manner aforesaid&mdash;i.e. with
+their spittle&mdash;a superstition which is alive in south Italy to this day.
+These gifted mortals are called Sanpaulari, or by the Greek word Cerauli; they
+are men who are born either on St. Paul&rsquo;s night (24-25 January) or on 29
+June.<br />
+    Saint Paul, the &ldquo;doctor of the Gentiles,&rdquo; is a great wizard
+hereabouts, and an invocation to him runs as follows: &ldquo;Saint Paul, thou
+wonder-worker, kill this beast, which is hostile to God; and save me, for I am
+a son of Maria.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is therefore no exaggeration to say that the coastal regions of south Italy
+were practically in Arab possession for centuries, and one is tempted to dwell
+on their long semi-domination here because it has affected to this day the
+vocabulary of the people, their lore, their architecture, their very
+faces&mdash;and to a far greater extent than a visitor unacquainted with Moslem
+countries and habits would believe. Saracenism explains many anomalies in their
+mode of life and social conduct.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From these troublous times dates, I should say, that use of the word
+<i>cristiano</i> applied to natives of the country&mdash;as opposed to
+Mohammedan enemies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Saraceno&rdquo; is still a common term of abuse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fall of Luceria may be taken as a convenient time-boundary to mark the end
+of the Saracenic period. A lull, but no complete repose from attacks, occurs
+between that event and the fall of Granada. Then begins the activity of the
+corsairs. There is this difference between them, that the corsairs merely paid
+flying visits; a change of wind, the appearance of an Italian sail, an
+unexpected resistance on the part of the inhabitants, sufficed to unsettle
+their ephemeral plans. The coast-lands were never in their possession; they
+only harried the natives. The system of the Saracens on the mainland, though it
+seldom attained the form of
+<a name="Page139"></a>
+a provincial or even military government, was different. They had the <i>animus
+manendi.</i> Where they dined, they slept.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In point of destructiveness, I should think there was little to choose between
+them. One thinks of the hundreds of villages the corsairs devastated; the
+convents and precious archives they destroyed,<a href="#fn-18.4" name="fnref-18.4" id="fnref-18.4"><sup>[4]</sup></a>
+the thousands of captives they carried off&mdash;sometimes in such numbers that
+the ships threatened to sink till the more unsaleable portion of the human
+freight had been cast overboard. And it went on for centuries. Pirates and
+slave-hunters they were; but not a whit more so than their Christian
+adversaries, on whose national rivalries they thrived. African slaves, when not
+chained to the galleys, were utilized on land; so the traveller Moore records
+that the palace of Caserta was built by gangs of slaves, half of them Italian,
+half Turkish. We have not much testimony as to whether these Arab slaves
+enjoyed their lot in European countries; but many of the Christians in Algiers
+certainly enjoyed theirs. A considerable number of them refused to profit by
+Lord Exmouth&rsquo;s arrangement for their ransom. I myself knew the descendant
+of a man who had been thus sent back to his relations from captivity, and who
+soon enough returned to Africa, declaring that the climate and religion of
+Europe were alike insupportable.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-18.4" id="fn-18.4"></a> <a href="#fnref-18.4">[4]</a>
+In this particular branch, again, the Christians surpassed the unbeliever.
+More archives were destroyed in the so-called &ldquo;Age of
+Lead&rdquo;&mdash;the closing period of Bour-bonism&mdash;than under Saracens
+and Corsairs combined. It was quite the regular thing to sell them as
+waste-paper to the shopkeepers. Some of them escaped this fate by the veriest
+miracle&mdash;so those of the celebrated Certoza of San Lorenzo in Padula. The
+historian Marincola, walking in the market of Salerno, noticed a piece of
+cheese wrapped up in an old parchment. He elicited the fact that it came from
+this Certosa, intercepted the records on their way for sale in Salerno, and
+contrived by a small present to the driver that next night two cartloads of
+parchments were deposited in the library of La Cava.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Saracen times the Venetians actually sold Christian slaves to the Turks.
+Parrino cites the severe enactments which were issued in the sixteenth century
+against Christian sailors who decoyed children on board their boats and sold
+them as slaves to the Moslem. I question whether the Turks were ever guilty of
+a corresponding infamy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Parrino, by the way, is useful as showing the trouble to which the Spanish
+viceroys were put by the perpetual inroads of these Oriental pests. Local
+militia were organized, heavy contributions levied, towers of refuge sprang up
+all along the coast&mdash;every respectable house had its private tower as well
+(for the dates, see G. del Giudice, <i>Del Grande Archivio di Napoli,</i>
+1871, p. 108). The daring of the pirates knew no bounds; they actually landed a
+fleet at Naples itself, and carried off a number of prisoners. The
+<a name="Page140"></a>
+entire kingdom, save the inland parts, was terrorized by their lightning-like
+descents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A particular literature grew up about this time&mdash;those
+&ldquo;Lamenti&rdquo; in rime, which set forth the distress of the various
+places they afflicted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The saints had work to do. Each divine protector fought for his own town or
+village, and sometimes we see the pleasing spectacle of two patrons of
+different localities joining their forces to ward off a piratical attack upon
+some threatened district by means of fiery hail, tempests, apparitions and
+other celestial devices. A bellicose type of Madonna emerges, such as S. M.
+della Libera and S. M. di Constantinopoli, who distinguishes herself by a
+fierce martial courage in the face of the enemy. There is no doubt that these
+inroads acted as a stimulus to the Christian faith; that they helped to seat
+the numberless patron saints of south Italy more firmly on their thrones. The
+Saracens as saint-makers. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But despite occasional successes, the marine population suffered increasingly.
+Historians like Summonte have left us descriptions of the prodigious exodus of
+the country people from Calabria and elsewhere into the safer capital, and how
+the polished citizens detested these new arrivals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ominous name &ldquo;Torre di Guardia&rdquo; (tower of outlook)&mdash;a
+cliff whence the sea was scanned for the appearance of Turkish
+vessels&mdash;survives all over the south. Barbarossa, too, has left his mark;
+many a hill, fountain or castle has been named after him. In the two
+Barbarossas were summed up the highest qualities of the pirates, and it is
+curious to think that the names of those scourges of Christendom, Uruj and
+Kheir-eddin, should have been contracted into the classical forms of Horace and
+Ariadne. The picturesque Uruj was painted by Velasquez; the other entertained a
+polite epistolatory correspondence with Aretino, and died, to his regret,
+&ldquo;like a coward&rdquo; in bed. I never visit Constantinople without paying
+my respects to that calm tomb at Beshiktah, where, after life&rsquo;s fitful
+fever, sleeps the <i>Chief of the Sea.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so things went on till recently. K. Ph. Moritz writes that King Ferdinand
+of Naples, during his sporting excursions to the islands of his dominions, was
+always accompanied by two cruisers, to forestall the chance of his being
+carried off by these <i>Turchi.</i> But his loyal subjects had no cruisers at
+their disposal; they lived <i>Turcarum praedonibus semper obnoxii.</i> Who
+shall calculate the effects of this long reign of terror on the national mind?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a thousand years&mdash;from 830 to 1830&mdash;from the days when the
+Amalfitans won the proud title of &ldquo;Defenders of the Faith&rdquo;
+<a name="Page141"></a>
+up to those of the sentimental poet Waiblinger (1826), these shores were
+infested by Oriental ruffians, whose activities were an unmitigated evil. It is
+all very well for Admiral de la Gravière to speak of &ldquo;Gallia Victrix
+&ldquo;&mdash;the Americans, too, might have something to say on that point.
+The fact is that neither European nor American arms crushed the pest. But for
+the invention of steam, the Barbary corsairs might still be with us.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page142"></a><a name="chap19"></a>XIX<br />
+UPLANDS OF POLLINO</h2>
+
+<p>
+It has a pleasant signification, that word &ldquo;Dolcedorme&rdquo;: it means
+<i>Sweet slumber.</i> But no one could tell me how the mountain group came by
+this name; they gave me a number of explanations, all fanciful and
+unconvincing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pollino, we are told, is derived from Apollo, and authors of olden days
+sometimes write of it as &ldquo;Monte Apollino.&rdquo; But Barrius suggests an
+alternative etymology, equally absurd, and connected with the medicinal herbs
+which are found there. <i>Pollino,</i> he says, <i>a polleo dictus, quod
+nobilibus herbis medelae commodis polleat. Provenit enim ibi, ut ab herbariis
+accepi, tragium dictamnum Cretense, chamaeleon bigenum, draucus, meum, nardus,
+celtica, anonides, anemone, peucedamum, turbit, reubarbarum, pyrethrum,
+juniperus ubertim, stellaria, imperatoria, cardus masticem fundens, dracagas,
+cythisus</i>&mdash;whence likewise the magnificent cheeses; gold and the
+Phrygian stone, he adds, are also found here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unhappily Barrius&mdash;we all have a fling at this &ldquo;Strabo and Pliny of
+Calabria&rdquo;! So jealous was he of his work that he procured a prohibition
+from the Pope against all who might reprint it, and furthermore invoked the
+curses of heaven and earth upon whoever should have the audacity to translate
+it into Italian. Yet his shade ought to be appeased with the monumental edition
+of 1737, and, as regards his infallibility, one must not forget that among his
+contemporaries the more discerning had already censured his <i>philopatria,</i>
+his immoderate love of Calabria. And that is the right way to judge of men who
+were not so much ignorant as unduly zealous for the fair name of their natal
+land. To sneer at them is to misjudge their period. It was the very spirit of
+the Renaissance to press rhetorical learning into the service of patriotism.
+They made some happy guesses and not a few mistakes; and when they lied
+deliberately, it was done in what they held a just cause&mdash;as scholars and
+gentlemen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <i>Calabria Illustrata</i> of Fiore also fares badly at the hands of
+critics. But I shall not repeat what they say; I confess to a sneaking fondness
+for Father Fiore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page143"></a>
+Marafioti, a Calabrian monk, likewise dwells on these same herbs of Pollino,
+and gives a long account of a medical secret which he learnt on the spot from
+two Armenian botanists. Alas for Marafioti! Despite his excellent index and
+seductively chaste Paduan type and paper, the impartial Soria is driven to say
+that &ldquo;to make his shop appear more rich in foreign merchandise, he did
+not scruple to adorn it with books and authors apocryphal, imaginary, and
+unknown to the whole human race.&rdquo; In short, he belonged to the school of
+Pratilli, who wrote a wise and edifying history of Capua on the basis of
+inscriptions which he himself had previously forged; of Ligorio Pirro, prince
+of his tribe, who manufactured thousands of coins, texts and marbles out of
+sheer exuberance of creative artistry!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gone are those happy days of authorship, when the constructive imagination was
+not yet blighted and withered. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Marching comfortably, it will take you nearly twelve hours to go from Morano to
+the village of Terranova di Pollino, which I selected as my first
+night-quarter. This includes a scramble up the peak of Pollino, locally termed
+&ldquo;telegrafo,&rdquo; from a pile of stones&mdash;? an old
+signal-station&mdash;erected on the summit. But since decent accommodation can
+only be obtained at Castrovillari, a start should be made from there, and this
+adds another hour to the trip. Moreover, as the peak of Pollino lies below that
+of Dolcedorme, which shuts off a good deal of its view seaward, this second
+mountain ought rather to be ascended, and that will probably add yet another
+hour&mdash;fourteen altogether. The natives, ever ready to say what they think
+will please you, call it a six hours&rsquo; excursion. As a matter of fact,
+although I spoke to numbers of the population of Morano, I only met two men who
+had ever been to Terranova, one of them being my muleteer; the majority had not
+so much as heard its name. They dislike mountains and torrents and forests, not
+only as an offence to the eye, but as hindrances to agriculture and enemies of
+man and his ordered ways. &ldquo;La montagna&rdquo; is considerably abused, all
+over Italy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It takes an hour to cross the valley and reach the slopes of the opposite
+hills. Here, on the plain, lie the now faded blossoms of the monstrous arum,
+the botanical glory of these regions. To see it in flower, in early June, is
+alone almost worth the trouble of a journey to Calabria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On a shady eminence at the foot of these mountains, in a most picturesque site,
+there stands a large castellated building, a monastery. It is called Colorito,
+and is now a ruin; the French, they
+<a name="Page144"></a>
+say, shelled it for harbouring the brigand-allies of Bourbonism. Nearly all
+convents in the south, and even in Naples, were at one time or another refuges
+of bandits, and this association of monks and robbers used to give much trouble
+to conscientious politicians. It is a solitary building, against the dark
+hill-side; a sombre and romantic pile such as would have charmed Anne
+Radcliffe; one longs to explore its recesses. But I dreaded the coming heats of
+midday. Leone da Morano, who died in 1645, belonged to this congregation, and
+was reputed an erudite ecclesiastic. The life of one of its greatest
+luminaries, Fra Bernardo da Rogliano, was described by Tufarelli in a volume
+which I have never been able to catch sight of. It must be very rare, yet it
+certainly was printed.<a href="#fn-19.1" name="fnref-19.1" id="fnref-19.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-19.1" id="fn-19.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-19.1">[1]</a>
+Haym has no mention of this work. But it is fully quoted in old Toppi&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Biblioteca&rdquo; (p. 317), and also referred to in Savonarola&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Universus Terrarum,&rdquo; etc. (1713, Vol. I, p. 216). Both say it was
+printed at Cosenza; the first, in 1650; the second, in 1630.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The path ascends now through a long and wearisome limestone gap called Valle di
+Gaudolino, only the last half-hour of the march being shaded by trees. It was
+in this gully that an accidental encounter took place between a detachment of
+French soldiers and part of the band of the celebrated brigand Scarolla, whom
+they had been pursuing for months all over the country. The brigands were
+sleeping when the others fell upon them, killing numbers and carrying off a
+large booty; so rich it was, that the soldiers were seen playing at
+&ldquo;petis palets&rdquo;&mdash;whatever that may be&mdash;with quadruples of
+Spain&mdash;whatever <i>that</i> may be. Scarolla escaped wounded, but was
+afterwards handed over to justice, for a consideration of a thousand ducats, by
+some shepherds with whom he had taken refuge; and duly hanged. His band
+consisted of four thousand ruffians; it was one of several that infested south
+Italy. This gives some idea of the magnitude of the evil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was my misfortune that after weeks of serene weather this particular morning
+should be cloudy. There was sunshine in the valley below, but wreaths of mist
+were skidding over the summit of Pollino; the view, I felt sure, would be
+spoilt. And so it was. Through swiftly-careering cloud-drifts I caught glimpses
+of the plain and the blue Ionian; of the Sila range confronting me; of the peak
+of Dolcedorme to the left, and the &ldquo;Montagna del Principe&rdquo; on the
+right; of the large forest region at my back. Tantalizing visions!
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus19"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-19.jpg" width="376" height="600" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">The Peak of Pollino in June</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Viewed from below, this Pollino is shaped like a pyramid, and promises rather a
+steep climb over bare limestone; but the ascent is quite easy. No trees grow on
+the pyramid. The rock is covered
+<a name="Page145"></a>
+with a profusion of forget-me-nots and gay pansies; some mezereon and a few
+dwarfed junipers&mdash;earthward-creeping&mdash;nearly reach the summit. When I
+passed here on a former trip, on the 6th of June, this peak was shrouded in
+snow. There are some patches of snow even now, one of them descending in
+glacier fashion down the slope on the other side; they call it
+&ldquo;eternal,&rdquo; but I question whether it will survive the heats of
+autumn. Beyond a brace of red-legged partridges, I saw no birds whatever. This
+group of Pollino, descending its seven thousand feet in a precipitous flight of
+terraces to the plain of Sibari, is an imposing <i>finale</i> to the Apennines
+that have run hitherward, without a break, from Genoa and Bologna. Westward of
+this spot there are mountains galore; but no more Apennines; no more limestone
+precipices. The boundary of the old provinces of Calabria and Basilicata ran
+over this spot. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was glad to descend once more, and to reach the <i>Altipiano di
+Pollino&mdash;</i>an Alpine meadow with a little lake (the merest puddle),
+bright with rare and beautiful flowers. It lies 1780 metres above sea-level,
+and no one who visits these regions should omit to see this exquisite tract
+encircled by mountain peaks, though it lies a little off the usual paths.
+Strawberries, which I had eaten at Rossano, had not yet opened their flowers
+here; the flora, boreal in parts, has been studied by Terracciano and other
+Italian botanists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was on this verdant, flower-enamelled mead that, fatigued with the climb, I
+thought to try the powers of my riding mule. But the beast proved vicious;
+there was no staying on her back. A piece of string attached to her nose by way
+of guiding-rope was useless as a rein; she had no mane wherewith I might have
+steadied myself in moments of danger, and as to seizing her ears for that
+purpose, it was out of the question, for hardly was I in the saddle before her
+head descended to the ground and there remained, while her hinder feet essayed
+to touch the stars. After a succession of ignominious and painful flights to
+earth, I complained to her owner, who had been watching the proceedings with
+quiet interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That lady-mule,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is good at carrying loads. But
+she has never had a Christian on her back till now. I was rather curious to see
+how she would behave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Santo Dio!</i> And do you expect me to pay four francs a day for
+having my bones broken in this fashion?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What would you, sir? She is still young&mdash;barely four years old.
+Only wait! Wait till she is ten or twelve.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To do him justice, however, he tried to make amends in other
+<a name="Page146"></a>
+ways. And he certainly knew the tracks. But he was a returned emigrant, and
+when an Italian has once crossed the ocean he is useless for my purposes, he
+has lost his savour&mdash;the virtue has gone out of him. True Italians will
+soon be rare as the dodo in these parts. These <i>americani</i> cast off their
+ancient animistic traits and patriarchal disposition with the ease of a
+serpent; a new creature emerges, of a wholly different
+character&mdash;sophisticated, extortionate at times, often practical and in so
+far useful; scorner of every tradition, infernally wideawake and curiously
+deficient in what the Germans call &ldquo;Gemüt&rdquo; (one of those words
+which we sadly need in our own language). Instead of being regaled with tales
+of Saint Venus and fairies and the Evil Eye, I learnt a good deal about the
+price of food in the Brazilian highlands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The only piece of local information I was able to draw from him concerned a
+mysterious plant in the forest that &ldquo;shines by night.&rdquo; I dare say
+he meant the <i>dictamnus fraxinella,</i> which is sometimes luminous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The finest part of the forest was traversed in the afternoon. It is called
+Janace, and composed of firs and beeches. The botanist Tenore says that firs
+150 feet in height are &ldquo;not difficult to find&rdquo; here, and some of
+the beeches, a forestal inspector assured me, attain the height of 35 metres.
+They shoot up in straight silvery trunks; their roots are often intertwined
+with those of the firs. The track is not level by any means. There are torrents
+to be crossed; rocky ravines with splashing waters where the sunshine pours
+down through a dense network of branches upon a carpet of russet leaves and
+grey boulders&mdash;the envious beeches allowing of no vegetation at their
+feet; occasional meadows, too, bright with buttercups and orchids. No pines
+whatever grow in this forest. Yet a few stunted ones are seen clinging to the
+precipices that descend into the Coscile valley; their seeds may have been
+wafted across from the Sila mountains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In olden days all this country was full of game; bears, stags and fallow-deer
+are mentioned. Only wolves and a few roe-deer are now left. The forest is
+sombre, but not gloomy, and one would like to spend some time in these wooded
+regions, so rare in Italy, and to study their life and character&mdash;but how
+set about it? The distances are great; there are no houses, not even a
+shepherd&rsquo;s hut or a cave; the cold at night is severe, and even in the
+height of midsummer one must be prepared for spells of mist and rain. I shall
+be tempted, on another occasion, to provide myself with a tent such as is
+supplied to military officers. They are light and handy, and perhaps camping
+out with a man-cook of the kind that
+<a name="Page147"></a>
+one finds in the Abruzzi provinces would be altogether the best way of seeing
+the remoter parts of south and central Italy. For decent food-supplies can
+generally be obtained in the smallest places; the drawback is that nobody can
+cook them. Dirty food by day and dirty beds by night will daunt the most
+enterprising natures in the long run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These tracks are only traversed in summer. When I last walked through this
+region&mdash;in the reverse direction, from Lagonegro over Latronico and San
+Severino to Castrovillari&mdash;the ground was still covered with stretches of
+snow, and many brooks were difficult to cross from the swollen waters. This was
+in June. It was odd to see the beeches rising, in full leaf, out of the deep
+snow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During this afternoon ramble I often wondered what the burghers of Taranto
+would think of these sylvan solitudes. Doubtless they would share the opinion
+of a genteel photographer of Morano who showed me some coloured pictures of
+local brides in their appropriate costumes, such as are sent to relatives in
+America after weddings. He possessed a good camera, and I asked whether he had
+never made any pictures of this fine forest scenery. No, he said; he had only
+once been to the festival of the Madonna di Pollino, but he went
+alone&mdash;his companion, an <i>avvocato,</i> got frightened and failed to
+appear at the last moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I went alone,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and those forests, it must be
+confessed, are too savage to be photographed. Now, if my friend had come, he
+might have posed for me, sitting comically at the foot of a tree, with crossed
+legs, and smoking a cigar, like this. ... Or he might have pretended to be a
+wood-cutter, bending forwards and felling a tree . . . tac, tac, tac . . .
+without his jacket, of course. That would have made a picture. But those woods
+and mountains, all by themselves&mdash;no! The camera revolts. In photography,
+as in all good art, the human element must predominate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is sad to think that in a few years&rsquo; time nearly all these forests
+will have ceased to exist; another generation will hardly recognize the site of
+them. A society from Morbegno (Valtellina) has acquired rights over the timber,
+and is hewing down as fast as it can. They import their own workmen from north
+Italy, and have built at a cost of two million francs (say the newspapers) a
+special funicular railway, 23 kilometres long, to carry the trunks from the
+mountain to Francavilla at its foot, where they are sawn up and conveyed to the
+railway station of Cerchiara, near Sibari. This concession, I am told, extends
+to twenty-five years&mdash;they have now been at work for two, and the results
+are already apparent in some almost bare slopes once clothed with these huge
+primeval trees.
+<a name="Page148"></a>
+There are inspectors, some of them conscientious, to see that a due proportion
+of the timber is left standing; but we all know what the average Italian
+official is, and must be, considering his salary. One could hardly blame them
+greatly if, as I have been assured is the case, they often sell the wood which
+they are paid to protect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same fate is about to overtake the extensive hill forests which lie on the
+watershed between Morano and the Tyrrhenian. These, according to a
+Castrovillari local paper, have lately been sold to a German firm for
+exploitation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is useless to lament the inevitable&mdash;this modern obsession of
+&ldquo;industrialism&rdquo; which has infected a country purely agricultural.
+Nor is it any great compensation to observe that certain small tracts of
+hill-side behind Morano are being carefully reafforested by the Government at
+this moment. Whoever wishes to see these beautiful stretches of woodland ere
+their disappearance from earth&mdash;let him hasten!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After leaving the forest region it is a downhill walk of nearly three hours to
+reach Terranova di Pollino, which lies, only 910 metres above sea-level,
+against the slope of a wide and golden amphitheatre of hills, at whose entrance
+the river Sarmento has carved itself a prodigious gateway through the rock. A
+dirty little place; the male inhabitants are nearly all in America; the old
+women nearly all afflicted with goitre. I was pleased to observe the Calabrian
+system of the house-doors, which life in civilized places had made me forget.
+These doors are divided into two portions, not vertically like ours, but
+horizontally. The upper portion is generally open, in order that the housewife
+sitting within may have light and air in her room, and an opportunity of
+gossiping with her neighbours across the street; the lower part is closed, to
+prevent the pigs in the daytime from entering the house (where they sleep at
+night). The system testifies to social instincts and a certain sense of
+refinement.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The sights of Terranova are soon exhausted. They had spoken to me of a house
+near the woods, about four hours distant, inhabited just now by shepherds.
+Thither we started, next day, at about 3 p.m.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The road climbs upwards through bare country till it reaches a dusky pinnacle
+of rock, a conspicuous landmark, which looks volcanic but is nothing of the
+kind. It bears the name of Pietra-Sasso&mdash;the explanation of this odd
+pleonasm being, I suppose, that here the whole mass of rock, generally decked
+with grass or shrubs, is as bare as any single stone.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus20"></a>
+<img src="images//oldc-20.jpg" width="404" height="287" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Calabrian Cows</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page149"></a>
+There followed a pleasant march through pastoral country of streamlets and lush
+grass, with noble views downwards on our right, over many-folded hills into the
+distant valley of the Sinno. To the left is the forest region. But the fir
+trees are generally mutilated&mdash;their lower branches lopped off; and the
+tree resents this treatment and often dies, remaining a melancholy stump among
+the beeches. They take these branches not for fuel, but as fodder for the cows.
+A curious kind of fodder, one thinks; but Calabrian cows will eat anything, and
+their milk tastes accordingly. No wonder the natives prefer even the greasy
+fluid of their goats to that of cows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How?&rdquo; they will ask, &ldquo;You Englishmen, with all your
+money&mdash;you drink the milk of cows?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goats are over-plentiful here, and the hollies, oaks and thorns along the path
+have been gnawed by them into quaint patterns like the topiarian work in
+old-fashioned gardens. If they find nothing to their taste on the ground, they
+actually climb trees; I have seen them browsing thus, at six feet above the
+ground. These miserable beasts are the ruin of south Italy, as they are of the
+whole Mediterranean basin. What malaria and the Barbary pirates have done to
+the sea-board, the goats have accomplished for the regions further inland; and
+it is really time that sterner legislation were introduced to limit their
+grazing-places and incidentally reduce their numbers, as has been done in parts
+of the Abruzzi, to the great credit of the authorities. But the subject is a
+well-worn one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The solitary little house which now appeared before us is called
+&ldquo;Vitiello,&rdquo; presumably from its owner or builder, a proprietor of
+the village of Noepoli. It stands in a charming site, with a background of
+woodland whence rivulets trickle down&mdash;the immediate surroundings are
+covered with pasture and bracken and wild pear trees smothered in flowering
+dog-roses. I strolled about in the sunset amid tinkling herds of sheep and
+goats that were presently milked and driven into their enclosure of thorns for
+the night, guarded by four or five of those savage white dogs of the Campagna
+breed. Despite these protectors, the wolf carried off two sheep yesterday, in
+broad daylight. The flocks come to these heights in the middle of June, and
+descend again in October.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherds offered us the only fare they possessed&mdash;the much-belauded
+Pollino cheeses, the same that were made, long ago, by Polyphemus himself. You
+can get them down at a pinch, on the principle of the German proverb,
+&ldquo;When the devil is hungry, he eats flies.&rdquo; Fortunately our bags
+still contained a varied assortment, though my man had developed an appetite
+and a thirst that did credit to his Berserker ancestry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page150"></a>
+We retired early. But long after the rest of them were snoring hard I continued
+awake, shivering under my blanket and choking with the acrid smoke of a fire of
+green timber. The door had been left ajar to allow it to escape, but the only
+result of this arrangement was that a glacial blast of wind swept into the
+chamber from outside. The night was bitterly cold, and the wooden floor on
+which I was reposing seemed to be harder than the majority of its kind. I
+thought with regret of the tepid nights of Taranto and Castrovillari, and
+cursed my folly for climbing into these Arctic regions; wondering, as I have
+often done, what demon of restlessness or perversity drives one to undertake
+such insane excursions.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page151"></a><a name="chap20"></a>XX<br />
+A MOUNTAIN FESTIVAL</h2>
+
+<p>
+Leaving the hospitable shepherds in the morning, we arrived after midday, by
+devious woodland paths, at the Madonna di Pollino.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This solitary fane is perched, like an eagle&rsquo;s nest, on the edge of a
+cliff overhanging the Frida torrent. Owing to this fact, and to its great
+elevation, the views inland are wonderful; especially towards evening, when
+crude daylight tints fade away and range after range of mountains reveal
+themselves, their crests outlined against each other in tender gradations of
+mauve and grey. The prospect is closed, at last, by the lofty groups of Sirino
+and Alburno, many long leagues away. On all other sides are forests,
+interspersed with rock. But near at hand lies a spacious green meadow, at the
+foot of a precipice. This is now covered with encampments in anticipation of
+to-morrow&rsquo;s festival, and the bacchanal is already in full swing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very few foreigners, they say, have attended this annual feast, which takes
+place on the first Saturday and Sunday of July, and is worth coming a long way
+to see. Here the old types, uncon-taminated by modernism and emigration, are
+still gathered together. The whole country-side is represented; the peasants
+have climbed up with their entire households from thirty or forty villages of
+this thinly populated land, some of them marching a two days&rsquo; journey;
+the greater the distance, the greater the &ldquo;divozione&rdquo; to the Mother
+of God. <i>Piety conquers rough tracks,</i> as old Bishop Paulinus sang,
+nearly fifteen hundred years ago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a vast picnic in honour of the Virgin. Two thousand persons are encamped
+about the chapel, amid a formidable army of donkeys and mules whose braying
+mingles with the pastoral music of reeds and bagpipes&mdash;bagpipes of two
+kinds, the common Calabrian variety and that of Basilicata, much larger and
+with a resounding base key, which will soon cease to exist. A heaving ebb and
+flow of humanity fills the eye; fires are flickering before extempore shelters,
+and an ungodly amount of food is being consumed, as traditionally prescribed
+for such occasions&mdash;&ldquo;si mangia
+<a name="Page152"></a>
+per divozione.&rdquo; On all sides picturesque groups of dancers indulge in the
+old peasants&rsquo; measure, the <i>percorara,</i> to the droning of
+bagpipes&mdash;a demure kind of tarantella, the male capering about with
+faun-like attitudes of invitation and snappings of fingers, his partner evading
+the advances with downcast eyes. And the church meanwhile, is filled to
+overflowing; orations and services follow one another without interruption; the
+priests are having a busy time of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rocky pathway between this chapel and the meadow is obstructed by folk and
+lined on either side with temporary booths of green branches, whose owners
+vociferously extol the merits of their wares&mdash;cloths, woollens, umbrellas,
+hot coffee, wine, fresh meat, fruit, vegetables (the spectre of cholera is
+abroad, but no one heeds)&mdash;as well as gold watches, rings and brooches,
+many of which will be bought ere to-morrow morning, in memory of
+to-night&rsquo;s tender meetings. The most interesting shops are those which
+display ex-votos, waxen reproductions of various ailing parts of the body which
+have been miraculously cured by the Virgin&rsquo;s intercession: arms, legs,
+fingers, breasts, eyes. There are also entire infants of wax. Strangest of all
+of them is a many-tinted and puzzling waxen symbol which sums up all the
+internal organs of the abdomen in one bold effort of artistic condensation; a
+kind of heraldic, materialized stomache-ache. I would have carried one away
+with me, had there been the slightest chance of its remaining unbroken.<a href="#fn-20.1" name="fnref-20.1" id="fnref-20.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-20.1" id="fn-20.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-20.1">[1]</a>
+A good part of these, I dare say, are intended to represent the enlarged
+spleen of malaria. In old Greece, says Dr. W. H. D. Rouse, votives of the trunk
+are commonest, after the eyes&mdash;malaria, again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These are the votive offerings which catch the visitor&rsquo;s eye in southern
+churches, and were beloved not only of heathendom, but of the neolithic gentry;
+a large deposit has been excavated at Taranto; the British Museum has some of
+marble, from Athens; others were of silver, but the majority terra-cotta. The
+custom must have entered Christianity in early ages, for already Theodoret,
+who died in 427, says, &ldquo;some bring images of eyes, others of feet, others
+of hands; and sometimes they are made of gold, sometimes of silver. These
+votive gifts testify to cure of maladies.&rdquo; Nowadays, when they become too
+numerous, they are melted down for candles; so Pericles, in some speech, talks
+of selling them for the benefit of the commonwealth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One is struck with the feast of costumes here, by far the brightest being those
+of the women who have come up from the seven or eight Albanian villages that
+surround these hills. In their
+<a name="Page153"></a>
+variegated array of chocolate-brown and white, of emerald-green and gold and
+flashing violet, these dames move about the sward like animated tropical
+flowers. But the Albanian girls of Cività stand out for aristocratic
+elegance&mdash;pleated black silk gowns, discreetly trimmed with gold and white
+lace, and open at the breast. The women of Morano, too, make a brave show.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Night brings no respite; on the contrary, the din grows livelier than ever;
+fires gleam brightly on the meadow and under the trees; the dancers are
+unwearied, the bagpipers with their brazen lungs show no signs of exhaustion.
+And presently the municipal music of Castrovillari, specially hired for the
+occasion, ascends an improvised bandstand and pours brisk strains into the
+night. Then the fireworks begin, sensational fireworks, that have cost a mint
+of money; flaring wheels and fiery devices that send forth a pungent odour;
+rockets of many hues, lighting up the leafy recesses, and scaring the owls and
+wolves for miles around.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certain persons have told me that if you are of a prying disposition, now is
+the time to observe amorous couples walking hand in hand into the
+gloom&mdash;passionate young lovers from different villages, who have looked
+forward to this night of all the year on the chance of meeting, at last, in a
+fervent embrace under the friendly beeches. These same stern men (they are
+always men) declare that such nocturnal festivals are a disgrace to
+civilization; that the Greek Comedy, long ago, reprobated them as disastrous to
+the morals of females&mdash;that they were condemned by the Council of Elvira,
+by Vigilantius of Marseilles and by the great Saint Jerome, who wrote that on
+such occasions no virgin should wander a hand&rsquo;s-breadth from her mother.
+They wish you to believe that on these warm summer nights, when the pulses of
+nature are felt and senses stirred with music and wine and dance, the <i>Gran
+Madre di Dio</i> is adored in a manner less becoming Christian youths and
+maidens, than heathens celebrating mad orgies to <i>Magna Mater</i> in Daphne,
+or the Babylonian groves (where she was not worshipped at all&mdash;though she
+might have been).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In fact, they insinuate that&mdash;&mdash;-
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may well be true. What were the moralists doing there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Festivals like this are relics of paganism, and have my cordial approval. We
+English ought to have learnt by this time that the repression of pleasure is a
+dangerous error. In these days when even Italy, the grey-haired <i>cocotte,</i>
+has become tainted with Anglo-Pecksniffian principles, there is nothing like a
+little time-honoured bestiality for restoring the circulation and putting
+things to rights generally. On ethical grounds alone&mdash;as
+safety-valves&mdash;such
+<a name="Page154"></a>
+nocturnal feasts ought to be kept up in regions such as these, where the
+country-folk have not our &ldquo;facilities.&rdquo; Who would grudge them these
+primordial joys, conducted under the indulgent motherly eye of Madonna, and
+hallowed by antiquity and the starlit heavens above? Every one is so happy and
+well-behaved. No bawling, no quarrelsomeness, no staggering tipplers; a spirit
+of universal good cheer broods over the assembly. Involuntarily, one thinks of
+the drunkard-strewn field of battle at the close of our Highland games; one
+thinks of God-fearing Glasgow on a Saturday evening, and of certain other
+aspects of Glasgow life. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I accepted the kindly proffered invitation of the priests to share their
+dinner; they held out hopes of some sort of sleeping accommodation as well. It
+was a patriarchal hospitality before that fire of logs (the night had grown
+chilly), and several other guests partook of it, forestal inspectors and
+such-like notabilities&mdash;one lady among them who, true to feudal
+traditions, hardly spoke a word the whole evening. I was struck, as I have
+sometimes been, at the attainments of these country priests; they certainly
+knew our Gargantuan novelists of the Victorian epoch uncommonly well. Can it be
+that these great authors are more readable in Italian translations than in the
+original? One of them took to relating, in a strain of autumnal humour,
+experiences of his life in the wilds of Bolivia, where he had spent many years
+among the Indians; my neighbour, meanwhile, proved to be steeped in Horatian
+lore. It was his pet theory, supported by a wealth of aptly cited lines, that
+Horace was a &ldquo;typical Italian countryman,&rdquo; and great was his
+delight on discovering that I shared his view and could even add
+another&mdash;somewhat improper&mdash;utterance of the poet&rsquo;s to his
+store of illustrative quotations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They belonged to the old school, these sable philosophers; to the days when the
+priest was arbiter of life and death, and his mere word sufficient to send a
+man to the galleys; when the cleverest boys of wealthy and influential families
+were chosen for the secular career and carefully, one might say liberally,
+trained to fulfil those responsible functions. The type is becoming extinct,
+the responsibility is gone, the profession has lost its glamour; and only the
+clever sons of pauper families, or the dull ones of the rich, are now tempted
+to forsake the worldly path.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Regarding the origin of this festival, I learned that it was
+&ldquo;tradition.&rdquo; It had been suggested to me that the Virgin had
+appeared to a shepherd in some cave near at hand&mdash;the usual Virgin, in the
+usual cave; a cave which, in the present instance, no one was able to point out
+to me. <i>Est traditio, ne quaeras amplius.</i>
+<a name="Page155"></a>
+My hosts answered questions on this subject with benignant ambiguity, and did
+not trouble to defend the divine apparition on the sophistical lines laid down
+in Riccardi&rsquo;s &ldquo;Santuari.&rdquo; The truth, I imagine, is that they
+have very sensibly not concerned themselves with inventing an original legend.
+The custom of congregating here on these fixed days seems to be recent, and I
+am inclined to think that it has been called into being by the zeal of some
+local men of standing. On the other hand, a shrine may well have stood for many
+years on this spot, for it marks the half-way house in the arduous two
+days&rsquo; journey between San Severino and Castrovillari, a summer
+<i>trek</i> that must date from hoary antiquity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our bedroom contained two rough couches which were to be shared between four
+priests and myself. Despite the fact that I occupied the place of honour
+between the two oldest and wisest of my ghostly entertainers, sleep refused to
+come; the din outside had grown to a pandemonium. I lay awake till, at 2.30
+a.m., one of them arose and touched the others with a whispered and
+half-jocular <i>oremus!</i> They retired on tiptoe to the next room,
+noiselessly closing the door, to prepare themselves for early service. I could
+hear them splashing vigorously at their ablutions in the icy water, and
+wondered dreamily how many Neapolitan priests would indulge at that chill hour
+of the morning in such a lustral rite, prescribed as it is by the rules of
+decency and of their church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After that, I stretched forth at my ease and endeavoured to repose seriously.
+There were occasional lulls, now, in the carnival, but explosions of sound
+still broke the stillness, and phantoms of the restless throng began to chase
+each other through my brain. The exotic costumes of the Albanian girls in their
+green and gold wove themselves into dreams and called up colours seen in
+Northern Africa during still wilder festivals&mdash;negro festivals such as
+Fromentin loved to depict. In spectral dance there flitted before my vision
+nightmarish throngs of dusky women bedizened in that same green and gold; Arabs
+I saw, riding tumultuously hither and thither with burnous flying in the wind;
+beggars crawling about the hot sand and howling for alms; ribbons and flags
+flying&mdash;a blaze of sunshine overhead, and on earth a seething orgy of
+colour and sound; methought I heard the guttural yells of the fruit-vendors,
+musketry firing, braying of asses, the demoniacal groans of the
+camels&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it really a camel? No. It was something infinitely worse, and within a few
+feet of my ears. I sprang out of bed. There, at the very window, stood a youth
+extracting unearthly noises out of the Basilicata bagpipe. To be sure! I
+remembered expressing an
+<a name="Page156"></a>
+interest in this rare instrument to one of my hosts who, with subtle delicacy,
+must have ordered the boy to give me a taste of his quality&mdash;to perform a
+matutinal serenade, for my especial benefit. How thoughtful these people are.
+It was not quite 4 a.m. With some regret, I said farewell to sleep and stumbled
+out of doors, where my friends of yesterday evening were already up and doing.
+The eating, the dancing, the bagpipes&mdash;they were all in violent activity,
+under the sober and passionless eye of morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A gorgeous procession took place about midday. Like a many-coloured serpent it
+wound out of the chapel, writhed through the intricacies of the pathway, and
+then unrolled itself freely, in splendid convolutions, about the sunlit meadow,
+saluted by the crash of mortars, bursts of military music from the band,
+chanting priests and women, and all the bagpipers congregated in a mass, each
+playing his own favourite tune. The figure of the Madonna&mdash;a modern and
+unprepossessing image&mdash;was carried aloft, surrounded by resplendent
+ecclesiastics and followed by a picturesque string of women bearing their
+votive offerings of candles, great and small. Several hundredweight of wax must
+have been brought up on the heads of pious female pilgrims. These
+multi-coloured candles are arranged in charming designs; they are fixed upright
+in a framework of wood, to resemble baskets or bird-cages, and decked with
+bright ribbons and paper flowers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who settles the expenses of such a festival? The priests, in the first place,
+have paid a good deal to make it attractive; they have improved the chapel,
+constructed a number of permanent wooden shelters (rain sometimes spoils the
+proceedings), as well as a capacious reservoir for holding drinking water,
+which has to be transported in barrels from a considerable distance.
+Then&mdash;as to the immediate outlay for music, fireworks, and so
+forth&mdash;the Madonna-statue is &ldquo;put up to auction&rdquo;: <i>fanno
+l&rsquo;incanto della Madonna,</i> as they say; that is, the privilege of
+helping to carry the idol from the church and back in the procession is sold to
+the highest bidders. Inasmuch as She is put up for auction several times during
+this short perambulation, fresh enthusiasts coming forward gaily with
+bank-notes and shoulders&mdash;whole villages competing against each
+other&mdash;a good deal of money is realized in this way. There are also
+spontaneous gifts of money. Goats and sheep, too, decorated with coloured rags,
+are led up by peasants who have &ldquo;devoted&rdquo; them to the Mother of
+God; the butchers on the spot buy these beasts for slaughter, and their price
+goes to swell the funds.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus21"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-21.jpg" width="407" height="308" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">The Valley of Gandolino</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+This year&rsquo;s expenditure may have been a thousand francs or so, and the
+proceeds are calculated at about two-thirds of that sum.
+<a name="Page157"></a>
+No matter. If the priests do not make good the deficiency, some one else will
+be kind enough to step forward. Better luck next year! The festival, they hope,
+is to become more popular as time goes on, despite the chilling prophecy of one
+of our friends: &ldquo;It will finish, this comedy!&rdquo; The money, by the
+way, does not pass through the hands of the clerics, but of two individuals
+called &ldquo;Regolatore&rdquo; and &ldquo;Priore,&rdquo; who mutually control
+each other. They are men of reputable families, who burden themselves with the
+troublesome task for the honour of the thing, and make up any deficiencies in
+the accounts out of their own pockets. Cases of malversation are legendary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This procession marked the close of the religious gathering. Hardly was it over
+before there began a frenzied scrimmage of departure. And soon the woodlands
+echoed with the laughter and farewellings of pilgrims returning homewards by
+divergent paths; the whole way through the forest, we formed part of a jostling
+caravan along the Castrovillari-Morano track&mdash;how different from the last
+time I had traversed this route, when nothing broke the silence save a
+chaffinch piping among the branches or the distant tap of some woodpecker!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So ended the <i>festa.</i> Once in the year this mountain chapel is rudely
+disquieted in its slumbers by a boisterous riot; then it sinks again into
+tranquil oblivion, while autumn dyes the beeches to gold. And very soon the
+long winter comes; chill tempests shake the trees and leaves are scattered to
+earth; towards Yuletide some woodman of Viggianello adventuring into these
+solitudes, and mindful of their green summer revels, discovers his familiar
+sanctuary entombed up to the door-lintle under a glittering sheet of snow. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+There was a little episode in the late afternoon. We had reached the foot of
+the Gaudolino valley and begun the crossing of the plain, when there met us a
+woman with dishevelled hair, weeping bitterly and showing other signs of
+distress; one would have thought she had been robbed or badly hurt. Not at all!
+Like the rest of us, she had attended the feast and, arriving home with the
+first party, had been stopped at the entrance of the town, where they had
+insisted upon fumigating her clothes as a precaution against cholera, and those
+of her companions. That was all. But the indignity choked her&mdash;she had run
+back to warn the rest of us, all of whom were to be treated to the same
+outrage. Every approach to Morano, she declared, was watched by doctors, to
+prevent wary pilgrims from entering by unsuspected paths.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page158"></a>
+During her recital my muleteer had grown thoughtful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s to be done?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t much mind fumigation,&rdquo; I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but I do! I mind it very much. And these doctors are so dreadfully
+distrustful. How shall we cheat them? ... I have it, I have it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he elaborated the following stratagem:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I go on ahead of you, alone, leading the two mules. You follow, out of
+sight, behind. And what happens? When I reach the doctor, he asks slyly:
+&lsquo;Well, and how did you enjoy the festival this year?&rsquo; Then I say:
+&lsquo;Not this year, doctor; alas, no festival for me! I&rsquo;ve been with an
+Englishman collecting beetles in the forest, and see? here&rsquo;s his riding
+mule. He walks on behind&mdash;oh, quite harmless, doctor! a nice gentleman,
+indeed&mdash;only, he prefers walking; he really <i>likes</i> it, ha, ha,
+ha!&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why mention about my walking?&rdquo; I interrupted. The lady-mule was
+still a sore subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I mention about your not riding,&rdquo; he explained graciously,
+&ldquo;because it will seem to the doctor a sure sign that you are a
+little&rdquo;&mdash;here he touched his forehead with a significant
+gesture&mdash;&ldquo;a little like some other foreigners, you know. And that,
+in its turn, will account for your collecting beetles. And that, in its turn,
+will account for your not visiting the Madonna. You comprehend the argument:
+how it all hangs together?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see. What next?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you come up, holding one beetle in each hand, and pretend not to
+know a word of Italian&mdash;not a word! You must smile at the doctor, in
+friendly fashion; he&rsquo;ll like that. And besides, it will prove what I said
+about&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; (touching his forehead once more). &ldquo;In fact,
+the truth will be manifest. And there will be no fumigation for us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed a needlessly circuitous method of avoiding such a slight
+inconvenience. I would have put more faith in a truthful narrative by myself,
+suffused with that ingratiating amiability which I would perforce employ on
+such occasions. But the stronger mind, as usual, had its way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll smile,&rdquo; I agreed. &ldquo;But you shall carry my
+beetles; it looks more natural, somehow. Go ahead, and find them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He moved forwards with the beasts and, after destroying a considerable tract of
+stone wall, procured a few specimens of native coleoptera, which he carefully
+wrapped up in a piece of paper. I followed slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unfortunately for him, that particular doctor happened to be
+<a name="Page159"></a>
+an <i>americano</i> a snappy little fellow, lately returned from the States.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Glad to make your acquaintance, sir,&rdquo; he began, as I came up to
+where the two were arguing together. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard of your passing
+through the other day. So you don&rsquo;t talk Italian? Well, then, see here:
+this man of yours, this God-dam son of Satan, has been showing me a couple of
+bugs and telling me a couple of hundred lies about them. Better move on right
+away; lucky you struck <i>me!</i> As for this son of a &mdash;&mdash;, you bet
+I&rsquo;ll sulphur him, bugs and all, to hell!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I paid the crestfallen muleteer then and there; took down my bags, greatly
+lightened, and departed with them. Glancing round near the little bridge, I saw
+that the pair were still engaged in heated discussion, my man clinging
+despairingly, as it seemed, to the beetle-hypothesis; he looked at me with
+reproachful eyes, as though I had deserted him in his hour of need.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what could I do, not knowing Italian?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moreover, I remembered the &ldquo;lady-mule.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fifteen minutes later a light carriage took me to Castrovillari, whence, after
+a bath and dinner that compensated for past hardships, I sped down to the
+station and managed, by a miracle, to catch the night-train to Cosenza.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page160"></a><a name="chap21"></a>XXI<br />
+MILTON IN CALABRIA</h2>
+
+<p>
+you may spend pleasant days in this city of Cosenza, doing nothing whatever.
+But I go there a for set purpose, and bristling with energy. I go there to hunt
+for a book by a certain Salandra, which was printed on the spot, and which I
+have not yet been able to find, although I once discovered it in an old
+catalogue, priced at 80 <i>grani.</i> Gladly would I give 8000 for it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The author was a contemporary of that Flying Monk of whom I spoke in Chapter X,
+and he belonged to the same religious order. If, in what I then said about the
+flying monk, there appears to be some trace of light fooling in regard to this
+order and its methods, let amends be made by what I have to tell about old
+Salandra, the discovery of whose book is one of primary importance for the
+history of English letters. Thus I thought at the time; and thus I still think,
+with all due deference to certain grave and discerning gentlemen, the editors
+of various English monthlies to whom I submitted a paper on this
+subject&mdash;a paper which they promptly returned with thanks. No; that is not
+quite correct. One of them has kept it; and as six years have passed over our
+heads, I presume he has now acquired a title by &ldquo;adverse
+possession.&rdquo; Much good may it do him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had the discovery been mine, I should have endeavoured to hide my light under
+the proverbial bushel. But it is not mine, and therefore I make bold to say
+that Mr. Bliss Perry, of the &ldquo;Atlantic Monthly,&rdquo; knew better than
+his English colleagues when he published the article from which I take what
+follows.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+&ldquo;Charles Dunster (&lsquo;Considerations on Milton&rsquo;s Early
+Reading,&rsquo; etc., 1810) traces the <i>prima stamina</i> of &lsquo;Paradise
+Lost&rsquo; to Sylvester&rsquo;s &lsquo;Du Bartas.&rsquo; Masenius, Cedmon,
+Vondel, and other older writers have also been named in this connection, while
+the majority of Milton&rsquo;s English commentators&mdash;and among foreigners
+Voltaire and Tiraboschi&mdash;are inclined to regard the &lsquo;Adamus
+Exul&rsquo; of Grotius or Andreini&rsquo;s sacred drama of &lsquo;Adamo&rsquo;
+as the prototype.
+<a name="Page161"></a>
+This latter can be consulted in the third volume of Cowper&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;Milton&rsquo; (1810).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The matter is still unsettled, and in view of the number of recent scholars who
+have interested themselves in it, one is really surprised that no notice has
+yet been taken of an Italian article which goes far towards deciding this
+question and proving that the chief source of &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; is
+the &lsquo;Adamo Caduto,&rsquo; a sacred tragedy by Serafino della Salandra.
+The merit of this discovery belongs to Francesco Zicari, whose paper,
+&lsquo;Sulla scoverta dell&rsquo; originale italiano da cui Milton trasse il
+suo poema del paradiso perduto,&rsquo; is printed on pages 245 to 276 in the
+1845 volume of the Naples &lsquo;Album scientifico-artistico-letterario&rsquo;
+now lying before me. It is in the form of a letter addressed to his friend
+Francesco Ruffa, a native of Tropea in Calabria.<a href="#fn-21.1" name="fnref-21.1" id="fnref-21.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-21.1" id="fn-21.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-21.1">[1]</a>
+Zicari contemplated another paper on this subject, but I am unaware whether
+this was ever published. The Neapolitan Minieri-Riccio, who wrote his
+&lsquo;Memorie Storiche&rsquo; in 1844, speaks of this article as having been
+already printed in 1832, but does not say where. This is corroborated by N.
+Falcone (&lsquo;Biblioteca storica-topo-grafica della Calabria,&rsquo; 2nd ed.,
+Naples, 1846, pp. 152-154), who gives the same date, and adds that Zicari was
+the author of a work on the district of Fuscaldo. He was born at Paola in
+Calabria, of which he wrote a (manuscript) history, and died in 1846. In this
+Milton article, he speaks of his name being &lsquo;unknown in the republic of
+letters.&rsquo;. He is mentioned by Nicola Leoni (&lsquo;Della Magna
+Grecia,&rsquo; vol. ii, p. 153).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra, it is true, is named among the writers of sacred tragedies in
+Todd&rsquo;s &lsquo;Milton&rsquo; (1809, vol. ii, p. 244), and also by Hayley,
+but neither of them had the curiosity, or the opportunity, to examine his
+&lsquo;Adamo Caduto&rsquo;; Hayley expressly says that he has not seen it. More
+recent works, such as that of Moers (&lsquo;De fontibus Paradisi Amissi
+Miltoniani,&rsquo; Bonn, 1860), do not mention Salandra at all. Byse
+(&lsquo;Milton on the Continent,&rsquo; 1903) merely hints at some possible
+motives for the Allegro and the Penseroso.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to dates, there can be no doubt to whom the priority belongs. The
+&lsquo;Adamo&rsquo; of Salandra was printed at Cosenza in 1647. Richardson
+thinks that Milton entered upon his &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; in 1654, and
+that it was shown, as done, in 1665; D. Masson agrees with this, adding that
+&lsquo;it was not published till two years afterwards.&rsquo; The date 1665 is
+fixed, I presume, by the Quaker Elwood&rsquo;s account of his visit to Milton
+in the autumn of that year, when the poet gave him the manuscript to read; the
+two years&rsquo; delay in publication may possibly have been due to the
+confusion occasioned by the great plague and fire of London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The castigation bestowed upon Lauder by Bishop Douglas, followed, as it was, by
+a terrific &lsquo;back-hander&rsquo; from the brawny arm of Samuel Johnson,
+induces me to say that Salandra&rsquo;s &lsquo;Adamo Caduto,&rsquo; though
+extremely rare&mdash;so rare that neither the British
+<a name="Page162"></a>
+Museum nor the Paris Bibliothèque Nationale possesses a copy&mdash;is
+<i>not</i> an imaginary book; I have had it in my hands, and examined it at the
+Naples Biblioteca Nazionale; it is a small octavo of 251 pages (not including
+twenty unnumbered ones, and another one at the end for correction of
+misprints); badly printed and bearing all the marks of genuineness, with the
+author&rsquo;s name and the year and place of publication clearly set forth on
+the title-page. I have carefully compared Zicari&rsquo;s references to it, and
+quotations from it, with the original. They are correct, save for a few
+insignificant verbal discrepancies which, so far as I can judge, betray no
+indication of an attempt on his part to mislead the reader, such as using the
+word <i>tromba</i> (trumpet) instead of Salandra&rsquo;s term <i>sambuca</i>
+(sackbut). And if further proof of authenticity be required, I may note that
+the &lsquo;Adamo Caduto&rsquo; of Salandra is already cited in old
+bibliographies like Toppi&rsquo;s &lsquo;Biblioteca Napoletana&rsquo; (1678),
+or that of Joannes a S. Antonio (&lsquo;Biblioteca universa Franciscana,
+etc.,&rsquo; Madrid, 1732-1733, vol. iii, p. 88). It appears to have been the
+only literary production of its author, who was a Franciscan monk and is
+described as &lsquo;Preacher, Lector and Definitor of the Reformed Province of
+Basilicata.&rsquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+We may take it, then, that Salandra was a real person, who published a mystery
+called &lsquo;Adamo Caduto&rsquo; in 1647; and I will now, without further
+preamble, extract from Zicari&rsquo;s article as much as may be sufficient to
+show ground for his contention that Milton&rsquo;s &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo;
+is a transfusion, in general and in particular, of this same mystery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra&rsquo;s central theme is the Universe shattered by the disobedience of
+the First Man, the origin of our unhappiness and sins. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra&rsquo;s chief personages are God and His angels; the first man and
+woman; the serpent; Satan and his angels. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra, at the opening of his poem (the prologue), sets forth his argument,
+and dwells upon the Creative Omnipotence and his works. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra then describes the council of the rebel angels, their fall from heaven
+into a desert and sulphurous region, their discourses. Man is enviously spoken
+of, and his fall by means of stratagem decided upon; it is resolved to reunite
+in council in Pandemonium or the Abyss, where measures may be adopted to the
+end that man may become the enemy of God and the prey of hell. The same with
+Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page163"></a>
+Salandra personifies Sin and Death, the latter being the child of the former.
+The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra describes Omnipotence foreseeing the effects of the temptation and
+fall of man, and preparing his redemption. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra depicts the site of Paradise and the happy life there. The same with
+Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra sets forth the miraculous creation of the universe and of man, and the
+virtues of the forbidden fruit. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra reports the conversation between Eve and the Serpent; the eating of
+the forbidden fruit and the despair of our first parents. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra describes the joy of Death at the discomfiture of Eve; the rejoicings
+in hell; the grief of Adam; the flight of our first parents, their shame and
+repentance. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra anticipates the intercession of the Redeemer, and the overthrow of Sin
+and Death; he dwells upon the wonders of the Creation, the murder of Abel by
+his brother Cain, and other human ills; the vices of the Antediluvians, due to
+the fall of Adam; the infernal gift of war. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra describes the passion of Jesus Christ, and the comforts which Adam and
+Eve receive from the angel who announces the coming of the Messiah; lastly,
+their departure from the earthly paradise. The same with Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+So much for the general scheme of both poems. And now for a few particular
+points of resemblance, verbal and otherwise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The character of Milton&rsquo;s Satan, with the various facets of pride, envy,
+vindictiveness, despair, and impenitence which go to form that harmonious
+whole, are already clearly mapped out in the Lucifero of Salandra. For this
+statement, which I find correct, Zicari gives chapter and verse, but it would
+take far too long to set forth the matter in this place. The speeches of
+Lucifero, to be sure, read rather like a caricature&mdash;it must not be
+forgotten that Salandra was writing for lower-class theatrical spectators, and
+not for refined readers&mdash;but the elements which Milton has utilized are
+already there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here is a coincidence:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Here we may reign secure . . .<br />
+Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+MILTON (i, 258).
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . Qui propria voglia,<br />
+Son capo, son qui duce, son lor Prence.
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+SALANDRA (p. 49).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page164"></a>
+And another:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . Whom shall we find<br />
+Sufficient? ... This enterprise<br />
+None shall partake with me.&mdash;MILTON (ii, 403, 465).<br />
+<br />
+A chi basterà l&rsquo; anima di voi?<br />
+. . . certo che quest&rsquo; affare<br />
+A la mia man s&rsquo; aspetta.&mdash;SALANDRA (p. 64).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Milton&rsquo;s Terror is partially taken from the Megera of the Italian poet.
+The &lsquo;grisly Terror&rsquo; threatens Satan (ii, 699), and the office of
+Megera, in Salandra&rsquo;s drama, is exactly the same&mdash;that is, to
+threaten and chastise the rebellious spirit, which she does very effectually
+(pages 123-131). The identical monsters&mdash;Cerberus, Hydras, and
+Chimæras&mdash;are found in their respective abodes, but Salandra does not
+content himself with these three; his list includes such a mixed assemblage of
+creatures as owls, basilisks, dragons, tigers, bears, crocodiles, sphynxes,
+harpies, and panthers. Terror moves with dread rapidity:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . and from his seat<br />
+The monster moving onward came as fast<br />
+With horrid strides.&mdash;MILTON (ii, 675).
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+and so does Megera:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+In atterir, in spaventar son . . .<br />
+Rapido sì ch&rsquo; ogni ripar è vano.&mdash;SALANDRA (p. 59).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Both Milton and Salandra use the names of the gods of antiquity for their
+demons, but the narrative epic of the English poet naturally permitted of far
+greater prolixity and variety in this respect. A most curious parallelism
+exists between Milton&rsquo;s Belial and that of Salandra. Both are described
+as luxurious, timorous, slothful, and scoffing, and there is not the slightest
+doubt that Milton has taken over these mixed attributes from the Italian.<a href="#fn-21.2" name="fnref-21.2" id="fnref-21.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-21.2" id="fn-21.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-21.2">[2]</a>
+This is one of the occasions in which Zicari appears, at first sight, to have
+stretched a point in order to improve his case, because, in the reference he
+gives, it is Behemoth, and not Belial, who speaks of himself as cowardly
+<i>(imbelle).</i> But in another place Lucifer applies this designation to
+Belial as well,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The words of Milton&rsquo;s Beelzebub (ii, 368):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Seduce them to our party, that their god<br />
+May prove their foe . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+are copied from those of the Italian Lucifero (p. 52):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . Facciam<br />
+Acciò, che l&rsquo; huom divenga<br />
+A Dio nemico . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page165"></a>
+Regarding the creation of the world, Salandra asks (p. 11):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Qual lingua può di Dio,<br />
+Benchè da Dio formato<br />
+Lodar di Dio le meraviglie estreme?
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+which is thus echoed by Milton (vii, 112):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+... to recount almighty works<br />
+What words or tongue of Seraph can suffice?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is a considerable resemblance between the two poets in their descriptions
+of Paradise and of its joys. In both poems, too, Adam warns his spouse of her
+frailty, and in the episode of Eve&rsquo;s meeting with the serpent there are
+no less than four verbal coincidences. Thus Salandra writes (p. 68):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Ravviso gli animal, ch&rsquo; a schiera a schiera<br />
+Già fanno humil e <i>reverente</i> inclino . . .<br />
+Ravveggio il bel serpente <i>avvolto</i> in giri;<br />
+O sei bello<br />
+Con tanta varietà che certo sembri<br />
+Altro stellato ciel, <i>smaltata</i> terra.<br />
+O che sento, <i>tu parli?</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+and Milton transcribes it as follows (ix, 517-554):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . She minded not, as used<br />
+To such disport before her through the field<br />
+From every beast, more <i>duteous</i> at her call . . . <br />
+Curled many a wanton <i>wreath</i> in sight of Eve.<br />
+His turret crest and sleek <i>enamelled</i> neck . . .<br />
+What may this mean? Language of man <i>pronounced</i><br />
+By tongue of brute?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altogether, Zicari has observed that Rolli, although unacquainted with the
+&lsquo;Adamo Caduto,&rsquo; has sometimes inadvertently hit upon the same words
+in his Italian translation of Milton which Salandra had used before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eve&rsquo;s altered complexion after the eating of the forbidden fruit is noted
+by both poets:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Torbata ne la faccia? Non sei quella<br />
+Qual ti lasciai contenta . . .&mdash;SALANDRA (p. 89).<br />
+<br />
+Thus Eve with countenance blithe her story told;<br />
+But in her cheek distemper flushing glowed. &mdash;MILTON (ix, 886).
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+only with this difference, that the Italian Eve adds a half-lie by way of
+explaining the change:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . Forse cangiata (del che non mi avveggio)<br />
+Sono nel volto per la tua partenza.&mdash;(p. 89).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page166"></a>
+In both poems Sin and Death reappear on the scene after the transgression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The flight of Innocence from earth; the distempered lust which dominates over
+Adam and Eve after the Fall; the league of Sin and Death to rule henceforward
+over the world; the pathetic lament of Adam regarding his misfortune and the
+evils in store for his progeny; his noble sentiment, that none can withdraw
+himself from the all-seeing eye of God&mdash;all these are images which Milton
+has copied from Salandra.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Adam&rsquo;s state of mind, after the fall, is compared by Salandra to a boat
+tossed by impetuous winds (p. 228):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Qual agitato legno d&rsquo;Austro, e Noto,<br />
+Instabile incostante, non hai pace,<br />
+Tu vivi pur . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+which is thus paraphrased in Milton (ix, 1122):
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . High winds worse within<br />
+Began to rise . . . and shook sore<br />
+Their inward state of mind, calm region once<br />
+And full of peace, now tossed and turbulent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here is a still more palpable adaptation:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+... So God ordains:<br />
+God is thy law, thou mine.&mdash;MILTON (iv, 636)<br />
+<br />
+. . . . Un voler sia d&rsquo; entrambi,<br />
+E quel&rsquo; uno di noi, di Dio sia tutto.&mdash;SALANDRA (p. 42).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the Fall, according to Salandra, <i>vacillò la terra</i> (i), <i>geme</i>
+(2), <i>e pianse</i> (3), <i>rumoreggiano i tuoni</i> (4), <i>accompagnati da
+grandini</i> (5), <i>e dense nevi</i> (6), (pp. 138, 142, 218). Milton
+translates this as follows: Earth trembled from her entrails (1), and nature
+gave a second groan (2); sky loured and, muttering thunders (4), some sad drops
+wept (3), the winds, armed with ice and snow (6) and hail (5). (&lsquo;Paradise
+Lost,&rsquo; ix, 1000, x. 697).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here is another translation:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . inclino il cielo<br />
+Giù ne la terra, e questa al Ciel innalza.&mdash;SALANDRA (p. 242).<br />
+<br />
+And Earth be changed to Heaven, and Heaven to Earth.&mdash;MILTON (vii, 160).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is not to my purpose to do Zicari&rsquo;s work over again, as this would
+entail a complete translation of his long article (it contains nearly ten
+thousand words), to which, if the thing is to be done properly, must be
+appended Salandra&rsquo;s &lsquo;Adamo,&rsquo; in order that his
+<a name="Page167"></a>
+quotations from it can be tested. I will therefore refer to the originals those
+who wish to go into the subject more fully, warning them, <i>en passant,</i>
+that they may find the task of verification more troublesome than it seems,
+owing to a stupid mistake on Zicari&rsquo;s part. For in his references to
+Milton, he claims (p. 252) to use an 1818 Venice translation of the
+&lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; by Rolli. Now Rolli&rsquo;s &lsquo;Paradiso
+Perduto&rsquo; is a well-known work which was issued in many editions in
+London, Paris, and Italy throughout the eighteenth century. But I cannot trace
+this particular one of Venice, and application to many of the chief libraries
+of Italy has convinced me that it does not exist, and that 1818 must be a
+misprint for some other year. The error would be of no significance if Zicari
+had referred to Rolli&rsquo;s &lsquo;Paradiso&rsquo; by the usual system of
+cantos and lines, but he refers to it by pages, and the pagination differs in
+every one of the editions of Rolli which have passed through my hands. Despite
+every effort, I have not been able to hit upon the precise one which Zicari had
+in mind, and if future students are equally unfortunate, I wish them joy of
+their labours.<a href="#fn-21.3" name="fnref-21.3" id="fnref-21.3"><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-21.3" id="fn-21.3"></a> <a href="#fnref-21.3">[3]</a>
+Let me take this opportunity of expressing my best thanks to Baron E. Tortora
+Brayda, of the Naples Biblioteca Nazionale, who has taken an infinity of
+trouble in this matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These few extracts, however, will suffice to show that, without
+Salandra&rsquo;s &lsquo;Adamo,&rsquo; the &lsquo;Paradise Lost,&rsquo; as we
+know it, would not be in existence; and that Zicari&rsquo;s discovery is
+therefore one of primary importance for English letters, although it would be
+easy to point out divergencies between the two works&mdash;divergencies often
+due to the varying tastes and feelings of a republican Englishman and an
+Italian Catholic, and to the different conditions imposed by an epic and a
+dramatic poem. Thus, in regard to this last point, Zicari has already noted (p.
+270) that Salandra&rsquo;s scenic acts were necessarily reproduced in the form
+<i>of visions</i> by Milton, who could not avail himself of the mechanism of
+the drama for this purpose. Milton was a man of the world, traveller, scholar,
+and politician; but it will not do for us to insist too vehemently upon the
+probable mental inferiority of the Calabrian monk, in view of the high opinion
+which Milton seems to have had of his talents. Imitation is the sincerest form
+of flattery. The &lsquo;Adamo Caduto,&rsquo; of course, is only one of a series
+of similar works concerning which a large literature has now grown up, and it
+might not be difficult to prove that Salandra was indebted to some previous
+writer for those words and phrases which he passed on to the English poet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page168"></a>
+But where did Milton become acquainted with this tragedy? It was at Naples,
+according to Cowper (&lsquo;Milton,&rsquo; vol. iii, p. 206), that the English
+poet may first have entertained the idea of &lsquo;the loss of paradise as a
+subject peculiarly fit for poetry.&rsquo; He may well have discussed sacred
+tragedies, like those of Andreini, with the Marquis Manso. But Milton had
+returned to England long before Salandra&rsquo;s poem was printed; nor can
+Manso have sent him a copy of it, for he died in 1645&mdash;two years before
+its publication&mdash;and Zicari is thus mistaken in assuming (p. 245) that
+Milton became acquainted with it in the house of the Neapolitan nobleman.
+Unless, therefore, we take for granted that Manso was intimate with the author
+Salandra&mdash;he knew most of his literary countrymen&mdash;and sent or gave
+to Milton a copy of the manuscript of &lsquo;Adamo&rsquo; before it was
+printed, or that Milton was personally familiar with Salandra, we may conclude
+that the poem was forwarded to him from Italy by some other friend, perhaps by
+some member of the <i>Accademia, degli Oziosi</i> which Manso had founded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A chance therefore seems to have decided Milton; Salandra&rsquo;s tragedy fell
+into his hands, and was welded into the epic form which he had designed for
+Arthur the Great, even as, in later years, a chance question on the part of
+Elwood led to his writing &lsquo;Paradise Regained.&rsquo;<a href="#fn-21.4" name="fnref-21.4" id="fnref-21.4"><sup>[4]</sup></a>
+For this poem there were not so many models handy as for the other, but Milton
+has written too little to enable us to decide how far its inferiority to the
+earlier epic is due to this fact, and how far to the inherent inertia of its
+subject-matter. Little movement can be contrived in a mere dialogue such as
+&lsquo;Paradise Regained&rsquo;; it lacks the grandiose <i>mise-en-scène</i>
+and the shifting splendours of the greater epic; the stupendous figure of the
+rebellious archangel, the true hero of &lsquo;Paradise Lost,&rsquo; is here
+dwarfed into a puny, malignant sophist; nor is the final issue in the later
+poem <i>even for a moment</i> in doubt&mdash;a serious defect from an artistic
+point of view. Jortin holds its peculiar excellence to be &lsquo;artful
+sophistry, false reasoning, set off in the most specious manner, and refuted by
+the Son of God with strong unaffected eloquence&rsquo;; merits for which Milton
+needed no original of any kind, as his own lofty religious sentiments, his
+argumentative talents and long experience of political pamphleteering, stood
+him in good stead. Most of us must have wondered how it came about that Milton
+could not endure to hear &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; preferred to
+&lsquo;Paradise Regained,&rsquo; in view of the very apparent inferiority of
+the latter. If we had known what Milton knew, namely, to how
+<a name="Page169"></a>
+large an extent &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; was not the child of his own
+imagination, and therefore not so precious in his eyes as &lsquo;Paradise
+Regained,&rsquo; we might have understood his prejudice.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-21.4" id="fn-21.4"></a> <a href="#fnref-21.4">[4]</a>
+<i>Thou hast said much of Paradise Lost, but what hast thou to say of
+Paradise Found?</i> He made no answer, but sat some time in a muse. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certain parts of &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; are drawn, as we all know, from
+other Italian sources, from Sannazario, Ariosto, Guarini, Bojardo, and others.
+Zicari who, it must be said, has made the best of his case, will have it that
+the musterings and battles of the good and evil angels are copied from the
+&lsquo;Angeleide&rsquo; of Valvasone published at Milan in 1590. But G.
+Polidori, who has reprinted the &lsquo;Angeleide&rsquo; in his Italian version
+of Milton (London, 1840), has gone into this matter and thinks otherwise. These
+devil-and-angel combats were a popular theme at the time, and there is no
+reason why the English poet should copy continental writers in such
+descriptions, which necessarily have a common resemblance. The Marquis Manso
+was very friendly with the poets Tasso and Marino, and it is also to be
+remarked that entire passages in &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; are copied,
+<i>totidem verbis,</i> from the writings of these two, Manso having no doubt
+drawn Milton&rsquo;s attention to their beauties. In fact, I am inclined to
+think that Manso&rsquo;s notorious enthusiasm for the <i>warlike</i> epic of
+Tasso may first of all have diverted Milton from purely pastoral ideals and
+inflamed him with the desire of accomplishing a similar feat, whence the
+well-known lines in Milton&rsquo;s Latin verses to this friend, which contain
+the first indication of such a design on his part. Even the familiar
+invocation, &lsquo;Hail, wedded Love,&rsquo; is bodily drawn from one of
+Tasso&rsquo;s letters (see Newton&rsquo;s &lsquo;Milton,&rsquo; 1773, vol. i,
+pp. 312, 313).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It has been customary to speak of these literary appropriations as
+&lsquo;imitations&rsquo;; but whoever compares them with the originals will
+find that many of them are more correctly termed translations. The case, from a
+literary-moral point of view, is different as regards ancient writers, and it
+is surely idle to accuse Milton, as has been done, of pilferings from Aeschylus
+or Ovid. There is no such thing as robbing the classics. They are our literary
+fathers, and what they have left behind them is our common heritage; we may
+adapt, borrow, or steal from them as much as will suit our purpose; to
+acknowledge such &lsquo;thefts&rsquo; is sheer pedantry and ostentation. But
+Salandra and the rest of them were Milton&rsquo;s contemporaries. It is
+certainly an astonishing fact that no scholar of the stamp of Thyer was
+acquainted with the &lsquo;Adamo Caduto&rsquo;; and it says much for the
+isolation of England that, at a period when poems on the subject of paradise
+lost were being scattered broadcast in Italy and elsewhere&mdash;when, in
+short, all Europe was ringing with the doleful history of Adam and
+Eve&mdash;Milton could have ventured to speak of
+<a name="Page170"></a>
+his work as &lsquo;Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme&rsquo;&mdash;an
+amazing verse which, by the way, is literally transcribed out of Ariosto
+(&lsquo;Cosa, non detta in prosa mai, nè in rima&rsquo;). But even now the
+acquaintance of the British public with the productions of continental writers
+is superficial and spasmodic, and such was the ignorance of English scholars of
+this earlier period, that Birch maintained that Milton&rsquo;s drafts, to be
+referred to presently, indicated his intention of writing an <i>opera</i> (!);
+while as late as 1776 the poet Mickle, notwithstanding Voltaire&rsquo;s
+authority, questioned the very existence of Andreini, who has written thirty
+different pieces.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Some idea of the time when Salandra&rsquo;s tragedy reached Milton might be
+gained if we knew the date of his manuscript projects for &lsquo;Paradise
+Lost&rsquo; and other writings which are preserved at Cambridge. R. Garnett
+(&lsquo;Life of Milton,&rsquo; 1890, p. 129) supposes these drafts to date from
+about 1640 to 1642, and I am not sufficiently learned in Miltonian lore to
+controvert or corroborate in a general way this assertion. But the date must
+presumably be pushed further forward in the case of the skeletons for
+&lsquo;Paradise Lost,&rsquo; which are modelled to a great extent upon
+Salandra&rsquo;s &lsquo;Adamo&rsquo; of 1647, though other compositions may
+also have been present before Milton&rsquo;s mind, such as that mentioned on
+page 234 of the second volume of Todd&rsquo;s &lsquo;Milton,&rsquo; from which
+he seems to have drawn the hint of a &lsquo;prologue spoken by Moses.&rsquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without going into the matter exhaustively, I will only say that from these
+pieces it is clear that Milton&rsquo;s primary idea was to write, like
+Salandra, a sacred tragedy upon this theme, and not an epic. These drafts also
+contain a chorus, such as Salandra has placed in his drama, and a great number
+of mutes, who do not figure in the English epic, but who reappear in the
+&lsquo;Adamo Caduto&rsquo; and all similar works. Even Satan is here designated
+as Lucifer, in accordance with the Italian Lucifero; and at the end of one of
+Milton&rsquo;s drafts we read &lsquo;at last appears Mercy, comforts him,
+promises the Messiah, etc.,&rsquo; which is exactly what Salandra&rsquo;s
+Misericordia (Mercy) does in the same place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Milton no doubt kept on hand many loose passages of poetry, both original and
+borrowed, ready to be worked up into larger pieces; all poets are smothered in
+odd scraps of verse and lore which they &lsquo;fit in&rsquo; as occasion
+requires; and it is therefore quite possible that some fragments now included
+in &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; may have been complete before the &lsquo;Adamo
+Caduto&rsquo; was printed. I am referring, more especially, to Satan&rsquo;s
+address to the sun, which Philips says was written before the commencement of
+the epic.
+<a name="Page171"></a>
+Admitting Philips to be correct, I still question whether this invocation was
+composed before Milton&rsquo;s visit to Naples; and if it was, the poet may
+well have intended it for some other of the multitudinous works which these
+drafts show him to have been revolving in his mind, or for none of them in
+particular.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+De Quincey rightly says that Addison gave the initial bias in favour of
+&lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; to the English national mind, which has
+thenceforward shrunk, as Addison himself did, from a dispassionate
+contemplation of its defects; the idea being, I presume, that a &lsquo;divine
+poem&rsquo; in a manner disarmed rational criticism. And, strange to say, even
+the few faults which earlier scholars did venture to point out in
+Milton&rsquo;s poem will be found in that of Salandra. There is the same
+superabundance of allegory; the same confusion of spirit and matter among the
+supernatural persons; the same lengthy astronomical treatise; the same
+personification of Sin and Death; the same medley of Christian and pagan
+mythology; the same tedious historico-theological disquisition at the end of
+both poems.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the rest, it is to be hoped that we have outgrown our fastidiousness on
+some of these points. Theological fervour has abated, and in a work of the pure
+imagination, as &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; is now&mdash;is it
+not?&mdash;considered to be, there is nothing incongruous or offensive in an
+amiable commingling of Semitic and Hellenic deities after the approved Italian
+recipe; nor do a few long words about geography or science disquiet us any
+more. Milton was not writing for an uncivilized mob, and his occasional
+displays of erudition will represent to a cultured person only those breathing
+spaces so refreshing in all epic poetry. That Milton&rsquo;s language is
+saturated with Latinisms and Italianisms is perfectly true. His English may not
+have been good enough for his contemporaries. But it is quite good enough for
+us. That &lsquo;grand manner&rsquo; which Matthew Arnold claimed for Milton,
+that sustained pitch of kingly elaboration and fullness, is not wholly an
+affair of high moral tone; it results in part from the humbler ministrations of
+words happily chosen&mdash;from a felicitous alloy of Mediterranean grace and
+Saxon mettle. For, whether consciously or not, we cannot but be influenced by
+the <i>colour-effects</i> of mere words, that arouse in us definite but
+indefinable moods of mind. To complain of the foreign phraseology and turns of
+thought in &lsquo;Paradise Lost&rsquo; would be the blackest ingratitude
+nowadays, seeing that our language has become enriched by steady gleams of pomp
+and splendour due, in large part, to the peculiar <i>lustre</i> of
+Milton&rsquo;s comely importations.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page172"></a><a name="chap22"></a>XXII<br />
+THE &ldquo;GREEK&rdquo; SILA</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was to be the Sila in earnest, this time. I would traverse the whole
+country, from the Coscile valley to Catanzaro, at the other end. Arriving from
+Cosenza the train deposited me, once more, at the unlovely station of
+Castrovillari. I looked around the dusty square, half-dazed by the
+sunlight&mdash;it was a glittering noonday in July&mdash;but the postal waggon
+to Spezzano Albanese, my first resting-point, had not yet arrived. Then a
+withered old man, sitting on a vehicle behind the sorry skeleton of a horse,
+volunteered to take me there at once; we quickly came to terms; it was too hot,
+we both agreed, to waste breath in bargaining. With the end of his whip he
+pointed out the church of Spezzano on its hilltop; a proud structure it looked
+at this distance, though nearer acquaintance reduced it to extremely humble
+proportions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Albanian Spezzano (Spezzano Grande is another place) lies on the main road
+from Castrovillari to Cosenza, on the summit of a long-stretched tongue of
+limestone which separates the Crati river from the Esaro; this latter, after
+flowing into the Coscile, joins its waters with the Crati, and so closes the
+promontory. An odd geographical feature, this low stretch, viewed from the
+greater heights of Sila or Pollino; one feels inclined to take a broom and
+sweep it into the sea, so that the waters may mingle sooner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our road ascended the thousand feet in a sinuous ribbon of white dust, and an
+eternity seemed to pass as we crawled drowsily upwards to the music of the
+cicadas, under the simmering blue sky. There was not a soul in sight; a hush
+had fallen upon all things; great Pan was brooding over the earth. At last we
+entered the village, and here, once more, deathlike stillness reigned; it was
+the hour of post-prandial slumber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At our knocking the proprietor of the inn, situated in a side-street,
+descended. But he was in bad humour, and held out no hopes of refreshment.
+Certain doctors and government officials, he said, were gathered together in
+his house, telegraphically summoned to consult about a local case of cholera.
+As to edibles, the
+<a name="Page173"></a>
+gentlemen had lunched, and nothing was left, absolutely nothing; it had been
+<i>uno sterminio</i>&mdash;an extermination&mdash;of all he possessed. The
+prospect of walking about the burning streets till evening did not appeal to
+me, and as this was the only inn at Spezzano I insisted, first gently, then
+forcibly&mdash;in vain. There was not so much as a chair to sit upon, he
+avowed; and therewith retired into his cool twilight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Despairing, I entered a small shop wherein I had observed the only signs of
+life so far&mdash;an Albanian woman spinning in patriarchal fashion. It was a
+low-ceilinged room, stocked with candles, seeds, and other commodities which a
+humble householder might desire to purchase, including certain of those
+water-gugglets of Corigliano ware in whose shapely contours something of the
+artistic dreamings of old Sybaris still seems to linger. The proprietress,
+clothed in gaudily picturesque costume, greeted me with a smile and the easy
+familiarity which I have since discovered to be natural to all these women. She
+had a room, she said, where I could rest; there was also food, such as it was,
+cheese, and wine, and&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fruit?&rdquo; I queried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, you like fruit? Well, we may not so much as speak about it just
+now&mdash;the cholera, the doctors, the policeman, the prison! I was going to
+say <i>salami.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salami? I thanked her. I know Calabrian pigs and what they feed on, though it
+would be hard to describe in the language of polite society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Despite the heat and the swarms of flies in that chamber, I felt little desire
+for repose after her simple repast; the dame was so affable and entertaining
+that we soon became great friends. I caused her some amusement by my efforts to
+understand and pronounce her language&mdash;these folk speak Albanian and
+Italian with equal facility&mdash;which seemed to my unpractised ears as
+hopeless as Finnish. Very patiently, she gave me a long lesson during which I
+thought to pick up a few words and phrases, but the upshot of it all was:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll never learn it. You have begun a hundred years too
+late.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I tried her with modern Greek, but among such fragments as remained on my
+tongue after a lapse of over twenty years, only hit upon one word that she
+could understand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite right!&rdquo; she said encouragingly. &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you
+always speak properly? And now, let me hear a little of your own
+language.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page174"></a>
+I gave utterance to a few verses of Shakespeare, which caused considerable
+merriment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean to tell me,&rdquo; she asked, &ldquo;that people really talk
+like that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course they do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And pretend to understand what it means?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, naturally.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maybe they do,&rdquo; she agreed. &ldquo;But only when they want to be
+thought funny by their friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The afternoon drew on apace, and at last the pitiless sun sank to rest. I
+perambulated Spezzano in the gathering twilight; it was now fairly alive with
+people. An unclean place; an epidemic of cholera would work wonders here. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At 9.30 p.m. the venerable coachman presented himself, by appointment; he was
+to drive me slowly (out of respect for his horse) through the cool hours of the
+night as far as Vaccarizza, on the slopes of the Greek Sila, where he expected
+to arrive early in the morning. (And so he did; at half-past five.) Not without
+more mirth was my leave-taking from the good shopwoman; something, apparently,
+was hopelessly wrong with the Albanian words of farewell which I had carefully
+memorized from our preceding lesson. She then pressed a paper parcel into my
+hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For the love of God,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;silence! Or we shall
+all be in jail to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It contained a dozen pears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Driving along, I tried to enter into conversation with the coachman who,
+judging by his face, was a mine of local lore. But I had come too late; the
+poor old man was so weakened by age and infirmities that he cared little for
+talk, his thoughts dwelling, as I charitably imagined, on his wife and
+children, all dead and buried (so he said) many long years ago. He mentioned,
+however, the <i>diluvio,</i> the deluge, which I have heard spoken of by older
+people, among whom it is a fixed article of faith. This deluge is supposed to
+have affected the whole Crati valley, submerging towns and villages. In proof,
+they say that if you dig near Tarsia below the present river-level, you will
+pass through beds of silt and ooze to traces of old walls and cultivated land.
+Tarsia used to lie by the river-side, and was a flourishing place, according to
+the descriptions of Leandro Alberti and other early writers; floods and malaria
+have now forced it to climb the hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The current of the Crati is more spasmodic and destructive than in classical
+times when the river was &ldquo;navigable&rdquo;; and to one of its inundations
+may be due this legend of the deluge; to the same
+<a name="Page175"></a>
+one, maybe, that affected the courses of this river and the Coscile, mingling
+their waters which used to flow separately into the Ionian. Or it may be a hazy
+memory of the artificial changing of the riverbed when the town of Sybaris,
+lying between these two rivers, was destroyed. Yet the streams are depicted as
+entering the sea apart in old maps such as those of Magini, Fiore, Coronelli,
+and Cluver; and the latter writes that &ldquo;near the mouth of the Crati there
+flows into the same sea a river vulgarly called Cochile.&rdquo;<a href="#fn-22.1" name="fnref-22.1" id="fnref-22.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+This is important. It remains to be seen whether this statement is the result
+of a personal visit, or whether he simply repeated the old geography. His text
+in many places indicates a personal acquaintance with southern
+Italy&mdash;<i>Italiam</i>, says Heinsius, <i>non semel
+peragravit&mdash;</i>and he may well have been tempted to investigate a site
+like that of Sybaris. If so, the change in the river courses and possibly this
+&ldquo;deluge&rdquo; has taken place since his day.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-22.1" id="fn-22.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-22.1">[1]</a>
+In the earlier part of Rathgeber&rsquo;s astonishing
+&ldquo;Grossgriechenland und Pythagoras&rdquo; (1866) will be found a good list
+of old maps of the country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deprived of converse, I relapsed into a doze, but soon woke up with a start.
+The carriage had stopped; it was nearly midnight; we were at Terranova di
+Sibari, whose houses were lit up by the silvery beams of the moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thurii&mdash;death-place of Herodotus! How one would like to see this place by
+daylight. On the ancient site, which lies at a considerable distance, they have
+excavated antiquities, a large number of which are in the possession of the
+Marchese Galli at Castrovillari. I endeavoured to see his museum, but found it
+inaccessible for &ldquo;family reasons.&rdquo; The same answer was given me in
+regard to a valuable private library at Rossano, and annoying as it may be, one
+cannot severely blame such local gentlemen for keeping their collections to
+themselves. What have they to gain from the visits of inquisitive travellers?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During these meditations on my part, the old man hobbled busily to and fro with
+a bucket, bearing water from a fountain near at hand wherewith to splash the
+carriage-wheels. He persisted in this singular occupation for an unreasonably
+long time. Water was good for the wheels, he explained; it kept them cool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last we started, and I began to slumber once more. The carriage seemed to be
+going down a steep incline; endlessly it descended, with a pleasant swaying
+motion. . . . Then an icy shiver roused me from my dreams. It was the Crati
+whose rapid waves, fraught with unhealthy chills, rippled brightly in the
+moonlight. We crossed the malarious valley, and once more touched the hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From those treeless slopes there streamed forth deliciously warm
+<a name="Page176"></a>
+emanations stored up during the scorching hours of noon; the short scrub that
+clothed them was redolent of that peculiar Calabrian odour which haunts one
+like a melody&mdash;an odour of dried cistus and other aromatic plants,
+balsamic by day, almost overpowering at this hour. To aid and diversify the
+symphony of perfume, I lit a cigar, and then gave myself up to contemplation of
+the heavenly bodies. We passed a solitary man, walking swiftly with bowed head.
+What was he doing there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lupomanaro,&rdquo; said the driver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A werewolf. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had always hoped to meet with a werewolf on his nocturnal rambles, and now my
+wish was gratified. But it was disappointing to see him in human
+garb&mdash;even werewolves, it seems, must march with the times. This
+enigmatical growth of the human mind flourishes in Calabria, but is not popular
+as a subject of conversation. The more old-fashioned werewolves cling to the
+true <i>versipellis</i> habits, and in that case only the pigs, the inane
+Calabrian pigs, are dowered with the faculty of distinguishing them in daytime,
+when they look like any other &ldquo;Christian.&rdquo; There is a record, in
+Fiore&rsquo;s book, of an epidemic of lycanthropy that attacked the boys of
+Cassano. (Why only the boys?) It began on 31 July, 1210; and the season of the
+year strikes me as significant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After that I fell asleep in good earnest, nor did I wake up again till the sun
+was peering over the eastern hills. We were climbing up a long slope; the
+Albanian settlements of Vaccarizza and San Giorgio lay before us and, looking
+back, I still saw Spezzano on its ridge; it seemed so close that a gunshot
+could have reached it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+These non-Italian villages date from the centuries that followed the death of
+Scanderbeg, when the Grand Signior consolidated his power. The refugees arrived
+in flocks from over the sea, and were granted tracts of wild land whereon to
+settle&mdash;some of them on this incline of the Sila, which was accordingly
+called &ldquo;Greek&rdquo; Sila, the native confusing these foreigners with the
+Byzantines whose dwellings, as regards Calabria, are now almost exclusively
+confined to the distant region of Aspromonte. Colonies of Albanians are
+scattered all over South Italy, chiefly in Apulia, Calabria, Basilicata, and
+Sicily; a few are in the north and centre&mdash;there is one on the Po, for
+instance, now reduced to 200 inhabitants; most of these latter have become
+absorbed into the surrounding Italian element. Angelo Masci (reprinted 1846)
+says there are 59 villages of them, containing altogether 83,000
+<a name="Page177"></a>
+inhabitants&mdash;exclusive of Sicily; Morelli (1842) gives their total
+population for Italy and Sicily as 103,466. If these figures are correct, the
+race must have multiplied latterly, for I am told there are now some 200,000
+Albanians in the kingdom, living in about 80 villages. This gives approximately
+2500 for each settlement&mdash;a likely number, if it includes those who are at
+present emigrants in America. There is a voluminous literature on the subject
+of these strangers, the authors of which are nearly all Albanians themselves.
+The fullest account of older conditions may well be that contained in the third
+volume of Rodotà&rsquo;s learned work (1758); the ponderous Francesco Tajani
+(1886) brings affairs up to date, or nearly so. If only he had provided his
+book with an index!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were troubles at first. Arriving, as they did, solely &ldquo;with their
+shirts and rhapsodies&rdquo; (so one of them described it to me)&mdash;that is,
+despoiled of everything, they indulged in robberies and depredations somewhat
+too freely even for those free days, with the result that ferocious edicts were
+issued against them, and whole clans wiped out. It was a case of necessity
+knowing no law. But in proportion as the forests were hewn down and crops sown,
+they became as respectable as their hosts. They are bilingual from birth, one
+might almost say, and numbers of the men also express themselves correctly in
+English, which they pick up in the United States.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These islands of alien culture have been hotbeds of Liberalism throughout
+history. The Bourbons persecuted them savagely on that account, exiling and
+hanging the people by scores. At this moment there is a good deal of excitement
+going on in favour of the Albanian revolt beyond the Adriatic, and it was
+proposed, among other things, to organize a demonstration in Rome, where
+certain Roman ladies were to dress themselves in Albanian costumes and thus
+work upon the sentiments of the nation; but &ldquo;the authorities&rdquo;
+forbade this and every other movement. None the less, there has been a good
+deal of clandestine recruiting, and bitter recriminations against this
+turcophile attitude on the part of Italy&mdash;this &ldquo;reactionary rigorism
+against every manifestation of sympathy for the Albanian cause.&rdquo;
+Patriotic pamphleteers ask, rightly enough, why difficulties should be placed
+in the way of recruiting for Albania, when, in the recent cases of Cuba and
+Greece, the despatch of volunteers was actually encouraged by the government?
+&ldquo;Legality has ceased to exist here; we Albanians are watched and
+suspected exactly as our compatriots now are by the Turks. . . . They
+sequestrate our manifestos, they forbid meetings and conferences, they pry into
+our postal correspondence. . . .
+<a name="Page178"></a>
+Civil and military authorities have conspired to prevent a single voice of help
+and comfort reaching our brothers, who call to us from over the sea.&rdquo; A
+hard case, indeed. But Vienna and Cettinje might be able to throw some light
+upon it.<a href="#fn-22.2" name="fnref-22.2" id="fnref-22.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-22.2" id="fn-22.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-22.2">[2]</a>
+This was written before the outbreak of the Balkan war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Albanian women, here as elsewhere, are the veriest beasts of burden; unlike
+the Italians, they carry everything (babies, and wood, and water) on their
+backs. Their crudely tinted costumes would be called more strange than
+beautiful under any but a bright sunshiny sky. The fine native dresses of the
+men have disappeared long ago; they even adopted, in days past, the high-peaked
+Calabrian hat which is now only worn by the older generation. Genuine
+Calabrians often settle in these foreign villages, in order to profit by their
+anti-feudal institutions. For even now the Italian cultivator is supposed to
+make, and actually does make, &ldquo;voluntary&rdquo; presents to his landlord
+at certain seasons; gifts which are always a source of irritation and, in bad
+years, a real hardship. The Albanians opposed themselves from the very
+beginning against these mediæval practices. &ldquo;They do not build
+houses,&rdquo; says an old writer, &ldquo;so as not to be subject to barons,
+dukes, princes, or other lords. And if the owner of the land they inhabit
+ill-treats them, they set fire to their huts and go elsewhere.&rdquo; An
+admirable system, even nowadays.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One would like to be here at Easter time to see the <i>rusalet</i>&mdash;those
+Pyrrhic dances where the young men group themselves in martial array, and pass
+through the streets with song and chorus, since, soon enough, America will have
+put an end to such customs. The old Albanian guitar of nine strings has already
+died out, and the double tibia&mdash;<i>biforem dat tibia cantum</i>&mdash;will
+presently follow suit. This instrument, familiar from classical sculpture and
+lore, and still used in Sicily and Sardinia, was once a favourite with the Sila
+shepherds, who called it &ldquo;fischietto a pariglia.&rdquo; But some years
+ago I vainly sought it in the central Sila; the answer to my enquiries was
+everywhere the same: they knew it quite well; so and so used to play it;
+certain persons in certain villages still made it&mdash;they described it
+accurately enough, but could not produce a specimen. Single pipes, yes; and
+bagpipes galore; but the <i>tibiæ pares</i> were &ldquo;out of fashion&rdquo;
+wherever I asked for them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, in the Greek Sila, I was more fortunate. A boy at the village of Macchia
+possessed a pair which he obligingly gave me, after first playing a
+song&mdash;a farewell song&mdash;a plaintive ditty that required, none the
+less, an excellent pair of lungs, on account of the two mouthpieces. Melodies
+on this double flageolet are played
+<a name="Page179"></a>
+principally at Christmas time. The two reeds are about twenty-five centimetres
+in length, and made of hollow cane; in my specimen, the left hand controls
+four, the other six holes; the Albanian name of the instrument is
+&ldquo;fiscarol.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From a gentleman at Vaccarizza I received a still more valuable
+present&mdash;two neolithic celts (aenolithic, I should be inclined to call
+them) wrought in close-grained quartzite, and found not far from that village.
+These implements must be rare in the uplands of Calabria, as I have never come
+across them before, though they have been found, to my knowledge, at Savelli in
+the central Sila. At Vaccarizza they call such relics
+&ldquo;pic&rdquo;&mdash;they are supposed, as usual, to be thunderbolts, and I
+am also told that a piece of string tied to one of them cannot be burnt in
+fire. The experiment might be worth trying.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Meanwhile, the day passed pleasantly at Vaccarizza. I became the guest of a
+prosperous resident, and was treated to genuine Albanian hospitality and
+excellent cheer. I only wish that all his compatriots might enjoy one meal of
+this kind in their lifetime. For they are poor, and their homes of miserable
+aspect. Like all too many villages in South Italy, this one is depopulated of
+its male inhabitants, and otherwise dirty and neglected. The impression one
+gains on first seeing one of these places is more than that of Oriental decay;
+they are not merely ragged at the edges. It is a deliberate and sinister chaos,
+a note of downright anarchy&mdash;a contempt for those simple forms of
+refinement which even the poorest can afford. Such persons, one thinks, cannot
+have much sense of home and its hallowed associations; they seem to be
+everlastingly ready to break with the existing state of things. How different
+from England, where the humblest cottages, the roadways, the very stones
+testify to immemorial love of order, to neighbourly feelings and usages
+sanctioned by time!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They lack the sense of home as a fixed and old-established topographical point;
+as do the Arabs and Russians, neither of whom have a word expressing our
+&ldquo;home&rdquo; or &ldquo;Heimat.&rdquo; Here, the nearest equivalent is
+<i>la famiglia.</i> We think of a particular house or village where we were
+born and where we spent our impressionable days of childhood; these others
+regard home not as a geographical but as a social centre, liable to shift from
+place to place; they are at home everywhere, so long as their clan is about
+them. That acquisitive sense which affectionately adorns our meanest dwelling,
+slowly saturating it with memories, has been crushed out of them&mdash;if it
+ever existed&mdash;by hard blows of fortune; it is safer, they think,
+<a name="Page180"></a>
+to transform the labour of their hands into gold, which can be moved from place
+to place or hidden from the tyrant&rsquo;s eye. They have none of our
+sentimentality in regard to inanimate objects. Eliza Cook&rsquo;s feelings
+towards her &ldquo;old arm-chair&rdquo; would strike them as savouring of
+childishness. Hence the unfinished look of their houses, within and without.
+Why expend thought and wealth upon that which may be abandoned to-morrow?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two churches of Vaccarizza, dark and unclean structures, stand side by
+side, and I was shown through them by their respective priests, Greek and
+Catholic, who walked arm in arm in friendly wise, and meekly smiled at a
+running fire of sarcastic observations on the part of another citizen directed
+against the &ldquo;bottega&rdquo; in general&mdash;the <i>shop,</i> as the
+church is sometimes irreverently called. The Greco-Catholic cult to which these
+Albanians belong is a compromise between the Orthodox and Roman; their priests
+may wear beards and marry wives, they use bread instead of the wafer for
+sacramental purposes, and there are one or two other little differences of
+grave import.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Six Albanian settlements lie on these northern slopes of the Sila&mdash;San
+Giorgio, Vaccarizza, San Cosimo, Macchia, San Demetrio Corone, and Santa Sofia
+d&rsquo; Epiro. San Demetrio is the largest of them, and thither, after an
+undisturbed night&rsquo;s rest at the house of my kind host&mdash;the last, I
+fear, for many days to come&mdash;I drove in the sunlit hours of next morning.
+Along the road one can see how thoroughly the Albanians have done their work;
+the land is all under cultivation, save for a dark belt of trees overhead, to
+remind one of what once it was. Perhaps they have eradicated the forest
+over-zealously, for I observe in San Demetrio that the best drinking water has
+now to be fetched from a spring at a considerable distance from the village; it
+is unlikely that this should have been the original condition of affairs;
+deforestation has probably diminished the water-supply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was exhilarating to traverse these middle heights with their aerial views
+over the Ionian and down olive-covered hill-sides towards the wide valley of
+the Crati and the lofty Pollino range, now swimming in midsummer haze. The road
+winds in and out of gullies where rivulets descend from the mountains; they are
+clothed in cork-oak, ilex, and other trees; golden orioles, jays, hoopoes and
+rollers flash among the foliage. In winter these hills are swept by boreal
+blasts from the Apennines, but at this season it is a delightful tract of land.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page181"></a><a name="chap23"></a>XXIII<br />
+ALBANIANS AND THEIR COLLEGE</h2>
+
+<p>
+San Demetrio, famous for its Italo-Albanian College, lies on a fertile incline
+sprinkled with olives and mulberries and chestnuts, fifteen hundred feet above
+sea-level. They tell me that within the memory of living man no Englishman has
+ever entered the town. This is quite possible; I have not yet encountered a
+single English traveller, during my frequent wanderings over South Italy. Gone
+are the days of Keppel Craven and Swinburne, of Eustace and Brydone and Hoare!
+You will come across sporadic Germans immersed in Hohenstaufen records, or
+searching after Roman antiquities, butterflies, minerals, or landscapes to
+paint&mdash;you will meet them in the most unexpected places; but never an
+Englishman. The adventurous type of Anglo-Saxon probably thinks the country too
+tame; scholars, too trite; ordinary tourists, too dirty. The accommodation and
+food in San Demetrio leave much to be desired; its streets are irregular lanes,
+ill-paved with cobbles of gneiss and smothered under dust and refuse. None the
+less, what noble names have been given to these alleys&mdash;names calculated
+to fire the ardent imagination of young Albanian students, and prompt them to
+valorous and patriotic deeds! Here are the streets of &ldquo;Odysseus,&rdquo;
+of &ldquo;Salamis&rdquo; and &ldquo;Marathon&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Thermopylae,&rdquo; telling of the glory that was Greece; &ldquo;Via
+Skanderbeg&rdquo; and &ldquo;Hypsilanti&rdquo; awaken memories of more
+immediate renown; &ldquo;Corso Dante Alighieri&rdquo; reminds them that their
+Italian hosts, too, have done something in their day; the &ldquo;Piazza
+Francesco Ferrer&rdquo; causes their ultra-liberal breasts to swell with
+mingled pride and indignation; while the &ldquo;Via dell&rsquo;
+Industria&rdquo; hints, not obscurely, at the great truth that genius, without
+a capacity for taking pains, is an idle phrase. Such appellations, without a
+doubt, are stimulating and glamorous. But if the streets themselves have seen a
+scavenger&rsquo;s broom within the last half-century, I am much mistaken. The
+goddess &ldquo;Hygeia&rdquo; dost not figure among their names, nor yet that
+Byzantine Monarch whose infantile exploit might be re-enacted in ripest
+maturity without attracting any attention in San Demetrio. To the pure all
+things are pure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page182"></a>
+The town is exclusively Albanian; the Roman Catholic church has fallen into
+disrepair, and is now used as a shed for timber. But at the door of the
+Albanian sanctuary I was fortunate enough to intercept a native wedding, just
+as the procession was about to enter the portal. Despite the fact that the
+bride was considered the ugliest girl in the place, she had been duly
+&ldquo;robbed&rdquo; by her bold or possibly blind lover&mdash;her features
+were providentially veiled beneath her nuptial <i>flammeum,</i> and of her
+squat figure little could be discerned under the gorgeous accoutrements of the
+occasion. She was ablaze with ornaments and embroidery of gold, on neck and
+shoulders and wrist; a wide lace collar fell over a bodice of purple silk;
+silken too, and of brightest green, was her pleated skirt. The priest seemed
+ineffably bored with his task, and mumbled through one or two pages of holy
+books in record time; there were holdings of candles, interchange of rings,
+sacraments of bread and wine and other solemn ceremonies&mdash;the most quaint
+being the <i>stephanoma,</i> or crowning, of the happy pair, and the moving of
+their respective crowns from the head of one to that of the other. It ended
+with a chanting perlustration of the church, led by the priest: this is the
+so-called &ldquo;pesatura.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I endeavoured to attune my mind to the gravity of this marriage, to the deep
+historico-ethnologico-poetical significance of its smallest detail. Such rites,
+I said to myself, must be understood to be appreciated, and had I not been
+reading certain native commentators on the subject that very morning?
+Nevertheless, my attention was diverted from the main issue&mdash;the
+bridegroom&rsquo;s face had fascinated me. The self-conscious male is always at
+a disadvantage during grotesquely splendid buffooneries of this kind; and
+never, in all my life, have I seen a man looking such a sorry fool as this
+individual, never; especially during the perambulation, when his absurd crown
+was supported on his head, from behind, by the hand of his best man.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus22"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-22.jpg" width="499" height="317" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">San Demetrio Corone</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile a handful of boys, who seemed to share my private feelings in regard
+to the performance, had entered the sacred precincts, their pockets stuffed
+with living cicadas. These Albanian youngsters, like all true connaisseurs, are
+aware of the idiosyncrasy of the classical insect which, when pinched or
+tickled on a certain spot, emits its characteristic and ear-piercing
+note&mdash;the &ldquo;lily-soft voice&rdquo; of the Greek bard. The cicadas,
+therefore, were duly pinched and then let loose; like squibs and rockets they
+careered among the congregation, dashing in our faces and clinging to our
+garments; the church resounded like an olive-copse at noon. A hot little hand
+conveyed one of these tremulously throbbing
+<a name="Page183"></a>
+creatures into my own, and obeying a whispered injunction of &ldquo;Let it fly,
+sir!&rdquo; I had the joy of seeing the beast alight with a violent buzz on the
+head of the bride&mdash;doubtless the happiest of auguries. Such conduct, on
+the part of English boys, would be deemed very naughty and almost irreverent;
+but here, one hopes, it may have its origin in some obscure but pious credence
+such as that which prompts the populace to liberate birds in churches, at
+Easter time. These escaping cicadas, it may be, are symbolical of
+matrimony&mdash;the individual man and woman freed, at last, from the
+dungeon-like horrors of celibate existence; or, if that parallel be
+far-fetched, we may conjecture that their liberation represents the afflatus of
+the human soul, aspiring upwards to merge its essence into the Divine All. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The pride of San Demetrio is its college. You may read about it in Professor
+Mazziotti&rsquo;s monograph; but whoever wishes to go to the fountain-head must
+peruse the <i>Historia Erectionis Pontifici Collegi Corsini Ullanensis,
+etc.,</i> of old Zavarroni&mdash;an all-too-solid piece of work. Founded under
+the auspices of Pope Clement XII in 1733 (or 1735) at San Benedetto Ullano, it
+was moved hither in 1794, and between that time and now has passed through
+fierce vicissitudes. Its president, Bishop Bugliari, was murdered by the
+brigands in 1806; much of its lands and revenues have been dissipated by
+maladministration; it was persecuted for its Liberalism by the Bourbons, who
+called it a &ldquo;workshop of the devil.&rdquo; It distinguished itself during
+the anti-dynastic revolts of 1799 and 1848 and, in 1860, was presented with
+twelve thousand ducats by Garibaldi, &ldquo;in consideration of the signal
+services rendered to the national cause by the brave and generous
+Albanians.&rdquo;<a href="#fn-23.1" name="fnref-23.1" id="fnref-23.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+Even now the institution is honeycombed with Freemasonry&mdash;the surest path
+to advancement in any career, in modern Italy. Times indeed have changed since
+the &ldquo;Inviolable Constitutions&rdquo; laid it down that <i>nullus omnino
+Alumnus in Collegio detineatur, cuius futuræ Christianæ pietatis
+significatio non extet.</i> But only since 1900 has it been placed on a really
+sound and prosperous footing. An agricultural school has lately been added,
+under the supervision of a trained expert. They who are qualified to judge
+speak of the college as a beacon of learning&mdash;an institution whose aims
+and results are alike deserving of high respect. And certainly it can boast of
+a fine list of prominent men who have issued from its walls.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-23.1" id="fn-23.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-23.1">[1]</a>
+There used to be regiments of these Albanians at Naples. In Pilati de
+Tassulo&rsquo;s sane study (1777) they are spoken of as highly prized.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This little island of stern mental culture contains, besides
+<a name="Page184"></a>
+twenty-five teachers and as many servants, some three hundred scholars preparing for a
+variety of secular professions. About fifty of them are Italo-Albanians, ten or
+thereabouts are genuine Albanians from over the water, the rest Italians, among
+them two dozen of those unhappy orphans from Reggio and Messina who flooded
+the country after the earthquake, and were &ldquo;dumped down&rdquo; in
+colleges and private houses all over Italy. Some of the boys come of wealthy
+families in distant parts, their parents surmising that San Demetrio offers no
+temptations to youthful folly and extravagance. In this, so far as I can judge,
+they are perfectly correct.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The heat of summer and the fact that the boys were in the throes of their
+examinations may have helped to make the majority of them seem pale and thin;
+they certainly complained of their food, and the cook was the only
+prosperous-looking person whom I could discover in the establishment&mdash;his
+percentages, one suspects, being considerable. The average yearly payment of
+each scholar for board and tuition is only twenty pounds (it used to be twenty
+ducats); how shall superfluities be included in the bill of fare for such a
+sum?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The class-rooms are modernized; the dormitories neither clean nor very dirty;
+there is a rather scanty gymnasium as well as a physical laboratory and museum
+of natural history. Among the recent acquisitions of the latter is a vulture
+<i>(Gyps fulvus)</i> which was shot here in the spring of this year. The bird,
+they told me, has never been seen in these regions before; it may have come
+over from the east, or from Sardinia, where it still breeds. I ventured to
+suggest that they should lose no time in securing a native porcupine, an
+interesting beast concerning which I never fail to enquire on my rambles. They
+used to be encountered in the Crati valley; two were shot near Corigliano a few
+years ago, and another not far from Cotronei on the Neto; they still occur in
+the forests near the &ldquo;Pagliarelle&rdquo; above Petilia Policastro; but,
+judging by all indications, I should say that this animal is rapidly
+approaching extinction not only here, but all over Italy. Another very rare
+creature, the otter, was killed lately at Vaccarizza, but unfortunately not
+preserved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fencing and music are taught, but those athletic exercises which led to the
+victories of Marathon and Salamis are not much in vogue&mdash;<i>mens sana in
+corpore sana</i> is clearly not the ideal of the place; fighting among the boys
+is reprobated as &ldquo;savagery,&rdquo; and corporal punishment forbidden.
+There is no playground or workshop, and their sole exercise consists in dull
+promenades along the high road under the supervision of one or more teachers,
+during which the
+<a name="Page185"></a>
+youngsters indulge in attempts at games by the wayside which are truly
+pathetic. So the old &ldquo;Inviolable Constitutions&rdquo; ordain that
+&ldquo;the scholars must not play outside the college, and if they meet any
+one, they should lower their voices.&rdquo; A rule of recent introduction is
+that in this warm weather they must all lie down to sleep for two hours after
+the midday meal; it may suit the managers, but the boys consider it a great
+hardship and would prefer being allowed to play. Altogether, whatever the
+intellectual results may be, the moral tendency of such an upbringing is
+damaging to the spirit of youth and must make for precocious frivolity and
+brutality. But the pedagogues of Italy are like her legislators: theorists.
+They close their eyes to the cardinal principles of all education&mdash;that
+the waste products and toxins of the imagination are best eliminated by motor
+activities, and that the immature stage of human development, far from being
+artificially shortened, should be prolonged by every possible means.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If the internal arrangement of this institution is not all it might be as
+regards the healthy development of youth, the situation of the college
+resembles the venerable structures of Oxford in that it is too good, far too
+good, for mere youngsters. This building, in its seclusion from the world, its
+pastoral surroundings and soul-inspiring panorama, is an abode not for boys but
+for philosophers; a place to fill with a wave of deep content the sage who has
+outgrown earthly ambitions. Your eye embraces the snow-clad heights of
+Dolcedorme and the Ionian Sea, wandering over forests, and villages, and
+rivers, and long reaches of fertile country; but it is not the variety of the
+scene, nor yet the historical memories of old Sybaris which kindle the
+imagination so much as the spacious amplitude of the whole prospect. In England
+we think something of a view of ten miles. Conceive, here, a grandiose valley
+wider than from Dover to Calais, filled with an atmosphere of such impeccable
+clarity that there are moments when one thinks to see every stone and every
+bush on the mountains yonder, thirty miles distant. And the cloud-effects,
+towards sunset, are such as would inspire the brush of Turner or Claude
+Lorraine. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the college, as befits its grave academic character, stands by itself among
+fruitful fields and backed by a chestnut wood, at ten minutes&rsquo; walk from
+the crowded streets. It is an imposing edifice&mdash;the Basilean convent of
+St. Adrian, with copious modern additions; the founders may well have selected
+this particular site on account of its fountain of fresh water, which flows on
+as in days of yore. One thinks of those communities of monks in the Middle
+Ages, scattered over this wild region and holding rare converse with
+<a name="Page186"></a>
+one another by gloomy forest paths&mdash;how remote their life and ideals! In
+the days of Fiore (1691) the inmates of this convent still practised their old
+rites.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nucleus of the building is the old chapel, containing a remarkable font;
+two antique columns sawn up (apparently for purposes of transportation from
+some pagan temple by the shore)&mdash;one of them being of African marble and
+the other of grey granite; there is also a tessellated pavement with
+beast-patterns of leopards and serpents akin to those of Patir. Bertaux gives a
+reproduction of this serpent; he assimilates it, as regards technique and age,
+to that which lies before the altar of Monte Cassino and was wrought by Greek
+artisans of the abbot Desiderius. The church itself is held to be two centuries
+older than that of Patir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The library, once celebrated, contains musty folios of classics and their
+commentators, but nothing of value. It has been ransacked of its treasures like
+that of Patir, whose <i>disjecta membra</i> have been tracked down by the
+patience and acumen of Monsignor Batiffol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Batiffol, Bertaux&mdash;Charles Diehl, Jules Gay (who has also written on San
+Demetrio)&mdash;Huillard-Bréholles&mdash;Luynes&mdash;Lenor-mant. . . here are
+a few French scholars who have recently studied these regions and their
+history. What have we English done in this direction?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such thoughts occur inevitably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may be insinuated that researches of this kind are gleanings; that our
+English genius lies rather in the spade-work of pioneers like Leake or Layard.
+Granted. But a hard fact remains; the fact, namely, that could any of our
+scholars have been capable of writing in the large and profound manner of
+Bertaux or Gay, not one of our publishers would have undertaken to print his
+work. Not one. They know their business; they know that such a book would have
+been a dead loss. Therefore let us frankly confess the truth: for things of the
+mind there is a smaller market in England than in France. <i>How much
+smaller</i> only they can tell, who have familiarized themselves with other
+departments of French thought.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Here, then, I have lived for the past few days, strolling among the fields, and
+attempting to shape some picture of these Albanians from their habits and such
+of their literature as has been placed at my disposal. So far, my impression of
+them has not changed since the days when I used to rest at their villages, in
+Greece. They remind me of the Irish. Both races are scattered over the earth
+and
+<a name="Page187"></a>
+seem to prosper best outside their native country; they have the same songs and
+bards, the same hero-chieftains, the same combativeness and frank hospitality;
+both are sunk in bigotry and broils; they resemble one another in their love of
+dirt, disorder and display, in their enthusiastic and adventurous spirit, their
+versatile brilliance of mind, their incapacity for self-government and general
+(Keltic) note of inspired inefficiency. And both profess a frenzied allegiance
+to an obsolete tongue which, were it really cultivated as they wish, would put
+a barrier of triple brass between themselves and the rest of humanity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as the Irish despise the English as their worldly and effete relatives, so
+the Albanians look down upon the Greeks&mdash;even those of Pericles&mdash;with
+profoundest contempt. The Albanians, so says one of their writers, are
+&ldquo;the oldest people upon earth,&rdquo; and their language is the
+&ldquo;divine Pelasgic mother-tongue.&rdquo; I grew interested awhile in
+Stanislao Marchianò&rsquo;s plausibly entrancing study on this language, as
+well as in a pamphlet of de Rada&rsquo;s on the same subject; but my ardour has
+cooled since learning, from another native grammarian, that these writers are
+hopelessly in the wrong on nearly every point. So much is certain, that the
+Albanian language already possesses more than <i>thirty different alphabets</i>
+(each of them with nearly fifty letters). Nevertheless they have not yet, in
+these last four (or forty) thousand years, made up their minds which of them to
+adopt, or whether it would not be wisest, after all, to elaborate yet another
+one&mdash;a thirty-first. And so difficult is their language with any of these
+alphabets that even after a five days&rsquo; residence on the spot I still find
+myself puzzled by such simple passages as this:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . Zilji,<br />
+mosse vet, ce asso mbremie<br />
+te ngcriret me ilji&#950;, praa<br />
+gji&#952; e miegculem, mhi &#950;iaarr<br />
+rriij i sgjuat. Nje voogh e keljbur<br />
+&#950;orrevet te ljosta<br />
+ndjej se i o&#967;tenej<br />
+e pisseroghej. Zuu shiu<br />
+menes; ne mee se ljinaar<br />
+chish ljeen pa-shuatur<br />
+s&#954;iotta, e i ducheje per moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I will only add that the translation of such a passage&mdash;it contains
+twenty-eight accents which I have omitted&mdash;is mere child&rsquo;s play to
+its pronunciation.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page188"></a><a name="chap24"></a>XXIV<br />
+AN ALBANIAN SEER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Sometimes I find my way to the village of Macchia, distant about three miles
+from San Demetrio. It is a dilapidated but picturesque cluster of houses,
+situate on a projecting tongue of land which is terminated by a little chapel
+to Saint Elias, the old sun-god Helios, lover of peaks and promontories, whom
+in his Christian shape the rude Albanian colonists brought hither from their
+fatherland, even as, centuries before, he had accompanied the Byzantines on the
+same voyage and, fifteen centuries yet earlier, the Greeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Macchia was born, in 1814, of an old and relatively wealthy family, Girolamo
+de Rada,<a href="#fn-24.1" name="fnref-24.1" id="fnref-24.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a> a flame-like patriot in whom the tempestuous aspirations of modern
+Albania took shape. The ideal pursued during his long life was the regeneration
+of his country; and if the attention of international congresses and linguists
+and folklorists is now drawn to this little corner of the earth&mdash;if, in
+<i>1902,</i> twenty-one newspapers were devoted to the Albanian cause (eighteen
+in Italy alone, and one even in London)&mdash;it was wholly his merit.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-24.1" id="fn-24.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-24.1">[1]</a>
+Thus his friend and compatriot, Dr. Michele Marchianò, spells the name in a
+biography which I recommend to those who think there is no intellectual
+movement in South Italy. But he himself, at the very close of his life, in
+1902, signs himself Ger. de Rhada. So this village of Macchia is spelt
+indifferently by Albanians as Maki or Makji. They have a fine Elizabethan
+contempt for orthography&mdash;as well they may have, with their thirty
+alphabets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was the son of a Greco-Catholic priest. After a stern religious upbringing
+under the paternal roof at Macchia and in the college of San Demetrio, he was
+sent to Naples to complete his education. It is characteristic of the man that
+even in the heyday of youth he cared little for modern literature and
+speculations and all that makes for exact knowledge, and that he fled from his
+Latin teacher, the celebrated Puoti, on account of his somewhat exclusive love
+of grammatical rules. None the less, though con-genitally averse to the
+materialistic and subversive theories that were then seething in Naples, he
+became entangled in the anti-Bourbon movements of the late thirties, and
+narrowly avoided the
+<a name="Page189"></a>
+death-penalty which struck down some of his comrades. At other times his
+natural piety laid him open to the accusation of reactionary monarchical
+leanings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He attributed his escape from this and every other peril to the hand of God.
+Throughout life he was a zealous reader of the Bible, a firm and even ascetic
+believer, forever preoccupied, in childlike simplicity of soul, with first
+causes. His spirit moved majestically in a world of fervent platitudes. The
+whole Cosmos lay serenely distended before his mental vision; a benevolent God
+overhead, devising plans for the prosperity of Albania; a malignant, ubiquitous
+and very real devil, thwarting these His good intentions whenever possible;
+mankind on earth, sowing and reaping in the sweat of their brow, as was
+ordained of old. Like many poets, he never disabused his mind of this
+comfortable form of anthropomorphism. He was a firm believer, too, in dreams.
+But his guiding motive, his sun by day and star by night, was a belief in the
+&ldquo;mission&rdquo; of the Pelasgian race now scattered about the shores of
+the Inland Sea&mdash;in Italy, Sicily, Greece, Dalmatia, Roumania, Asia Minor,
+Egypt&mdash;a belief as ardent and irresponsible as that which animates the
+<i>Lost Tribe</i> enthusiasts of England. He considered that the world hardly
+realized how much it owed to his countryfolk; according to his views, Achilles,
+Philip of Macedon, Alexander the Great, Aristotle, Pyrrhus, Diocletian, Julian
+the Apostate&mdash;they were all Albanians. Yet even towards the end of his
+life he is obliged to confess:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But the evil demon who for over four thousand years has been hindering
+the Pelasgian race from collecting itself into one state, is still endeavouring
+by insidious means to thwart the work which would lead it to that union.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Disgusted with the clamorous and intriguing bustle of Naples, he retired, at
+the early age of 34, to his natal village of Macchia, throwing over one or two
+offers of lucrative worldly appointments. He describes himself as wholly
+disenchanted with the &ldquo;facile fatuity&rdquo; of Liberalism, the fact
+being, that he lacked what a French psychologist has called the <i>function of
+the real;</i> his temperament was not of the kind to cope with actualities.
+This retirement is an epoch in his life&mdash;it is the Grand Renunciation.
+Henceforward he loses personal touch with thinking humanity. At Macchia he
+remained, brooding on Albanian wrongs, devising remedies, corresponding with
+foreigners and writing&mdash;ever writing; consuming his patrimony in the cause
+of Albania, till the direst poverty dogged his footsteps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have read some of his Italian works. They are curiously
+<a name="Page190"></a>
+oracular, like the whisperings of those fabled Dodonian oaks of his fatherland;
+they heave with a darkly-virile mysticism. He shares Blake&rsquo;s ruggedness,
+his torrential and confused utterance, his benevolence, his flashes of luminous
+inspiration, his moral background. He resembles that visionary in another
+aspect: he was a consistent and passionate adorer of the <i>Ewig-weibliche.</i>
+Some of the female characters in his poems retain their dewy freshness, their
+exquisite originality, even after passing through the translator&rsquo;s
+crucible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the age of 19 he wrote a poem on &ldquo;Odysseus,&rdquo; which was published
+under a pseudonym. Then, three years later, there appeared a collection of
+rhapsodies entitled &ldquo;Milosao,&rdquo; which he had garnered from the lips
+of Albanian village maidens. It is his best-known work, and has been translated
+into Italian more than once. After his return to Macchia followed some years of
+apparent sterility, but later on, and especially during the last twenty years
+of his life, his literary activity became prodigious. Journalism, folklore,
+poetry, history, grammar, philology, ethnology, aesthetics, politics,
+morals&mdash;nothing came amiss to his gifted pen, and he was fruitful, say his
+admirers, even in his errors, Like other men inflamed with one single idea, he
+boldly ventured into domains of thought where specialists fear to tread. His
+biographer enumerates forty-three different works from his pen. They all throb
+with a resonant note of patriotism; they are &ldquo;fragments of a
+heart,&rdquo; and indeed, it has been said of him that he utilized even the
+grave science of grammar as a battlefield whereon to defy the enemies of
+Albania. But perhaps he worked most successfully as a journalist. His
+&ldquo;Fiamuri Arberit&rdquo; (the Banner of Albania) became the rallying cry
+of his countrymen in every corner of the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These multifarious writings&mdash;and doubtless the novelty of his central
+theme&mdash;attracted the notice of German philologers and linguists, of all
+lovers of freedom, folklore and verse. Leading Italian writers like
+Cantù praised him highly; Lamartine, in 1844, wrote to him: &ldquo;Je suis
+bien-heureux de ce signe de fraternité poétique et politique entre vous et moi.
+La poésie est venue de vos rivages et doit y retourner. . . .&rdquo; Hermann
+Buchholtz discovers scenic changes worthy of Shakespeare, and passages of
+Æschylean grandeur, in his tragedy &ldquo;Sofonisba.&rdquo; Carnet compares
+him with Dante, and the omniscient Mr. Gladstone wrote in 1880&mdash;a post
+card, presumably&mdash;belauding his disinterested efforts on behalf of his
+country. He was made the subject of many articles and pamphlets, and with
+reason. Up to his time, Albania had been a
+<a name="Page191"></a>
+myth. He it was who divined the relationship between the Albanian and Pelasgian
+tongues; who created the literary language of his country, and formulated its
+political ambitions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whereas the hazy &ldquo;Autobiologia&rdquo; records complicated political
+intrigues at Naples that are not connected with his chief strivings, the little
+&ldquo;Testamento politico,&rdquo; printed towards the end of his life, is more
+interesting. It enunciates his favourite and rather surprising theory that the
+Albanians cannot look for help and sympathy save only to their <i>brothers,</i>
+the Turks. Unlike many Albanians on either side of the Adriatic, he was a
+pronounced Turco-phile, detesting the &ldquo;stolid perfidy&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;arrogant disloyalty&rdquo; of the Greeks. Of Austria, the most insidious
+enemy of his country&rsquo;s freedom, he seems to have thought well. A year
+before his death he wrote to an Italian translator of &ldquo;Milosao&rdquo; (I
+will leave the passage in the original, to show his cloudy language):
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ed un tempo propizio la accompagna: la ricostituzione dell&rsquo; Epiro
+nei suoi quattro vilayet autonomi quale è nei propri consigli e nei propri
+desideri; ricostituzione, che pel suo Giornale, quello dell&rsquo; ottimo A.
+Lorecchio&mdash;cui precede il principe Nazionale Kastriota, Chini&mdash;si
+annuncia fatale, e quasi fulcro della stabilità dello impero Ottomano, a della
+pace Europea; preludio di quella diffusione del regno di Dio sulla terra, che
+sarà la Pace tra gli Uomini.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Truly a remarkable utterance, and one that illustrates the disadvantages of
+living at a distance from the centres of thought. Had he travelled less with
+the spirit and more with the body, his opinions might have been modified and
+corrected. But he did not even visit the Albanian colonies in Italy and Sicily.
+Hence that vast confidence in his mission&mdash;a confidence born of solitude,
+intellectual and geographical. Hence that ultra-terrestrial yearning which
+tinges his apparently practical aspirations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He remained at home, ever poor and industrious; wrapped in bland exaltation and
+oblivious to contemporary movements of the human mind. Not that his existence
+was without external activities. A chair of Albanian literature at San
+Demetrio, instituted in 1849 but suppressed after three years, was conferred on
+him in 1892 by the historian and minister Pasquale Villari; for a considerable
+time, too, he was director of the communal school at Corigliano, where, with
+characteristic energy, he set up a printing press; violent journalistic
+campaigns succeeded one another; in 1896 he arranged for the first congress of
+Albanian language in that town, which brought together delegates from every
+part of Italy and elicited a warm telegram of felicitation from the minister
+<a name="Page192"></a>
+Francesco Crispi, himself an Albanian. Again, in 1899, we find him reading a
+paper before the twelfth international congress of Orientalists at Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But best of all, he loved the seclusion of Macchia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Griefs clustered thickly about the closing years of this unworldly dreamer.
+Blow succeeded blow. One by one, his friends dropped off; his brothers, his
+beloved wife, his four sons&mdash;he survived them all; he stood alone at last,
+a stricken figure, in tragic and sublime isolation. Over eighty years old, he
+crawled thrice a week to deliver his lectures at San Demetrio; he still
+cultivated a small patch of ground with enfeebled arm, composing, for
+relaxation, poems and rhapsodies at the patriarchal age of 88! They will show
+you the trees under which he was wont to rest, the sunny views he loved, the
+very stones on which he sat; they will tell you anecdotes of his
+poverty&mdash;of an indigence such as we can scarcely credit. During the last
+months he was often thankful for a crust of bread, in exchange for which he
+would bring a sack of acorns, self-collected, to feed the giver&rsquo;s pigs.
+Destitution of this kind, brought about by unswerving loyalty to an ideal,
+ceases to exist in its sordid manifestations: it exalts the sufferer. And his
+life&rsquo;s work is there. Hitherto there had been no &ldquo;Albanian
+Question&rdquo; to perplex the chanceries of Europe. He applied the match to
+the tinder; he conjured up that phantom which refuses to be laid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He died, in 1903, at San Demetrio; and there lies entombed in the cemetery on
+the hill-side, among the oaks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But you will not easily find his grave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His biographer indulges a poetic fancy in sketching the fair monument which a
+grateful country will presently rear to his memory on the snowy Acroceraunian
+heights. It might be well, meanwhile, if some simple commemorative stone were
+placed on the spot where he lies buried. Had he succumbed at his natal Macchia,
+this would have been done; but death overtook him in the alien parish of San
+Demetrio, and his remains were mingled with those of its poorest citizens. A
+microcosmic illustration of that clannish spirit of Albania which he had spent
+a lifetime in endeavouring to direct to nobler ends!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was the Mazzini of his nation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Garibaldi, when the crisis comes, may possibly emerge from that tumultuous
+horde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where is the Cavour?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page193"></a><a name="chap25"></a>XXV<br />
+SCRAMBLING TO LONGOBUCCO</h2>
+
+<p>
+A driving road to connect San Demetrio with Acri whither I was now bound was
+begun, they say, about twenty years ago; one can follow it for a considerable
+distance beyond the Albanian College. Then, suddenly, it ends. Walking to Acri,
+however, by the old track, one picks up, here and there,
+conscientiously-engineered little stretches of it, already overgrown with
+weeds; these, too, break off as abruptly as they began, in the wild waste. For
+purposes of wheeled traffic these picturesque but disconnected fragments are
+quite useless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps the whole undertaking will be completed some day&mdash;<i>speriamo!</i>
+as the natives say, when speaking of something rather beyond reasonable
+expectation. But possibly not; and in that case&mdash;<i>pazienza!</i> meaning,
+that all hope may now be abandoned. There is seldom any great hurry, with
+non-governmental works of this kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It would be interesting if one could learn the inner history of these abortive
+transactions. I have often tried, in vain. It is impossible for an outsider to
+pierce the jungle of sordid mystery and intrigue which surrounds them. So much
+I gathered: that the original contract was based on the wages then current and
+that, the price of labour having more than doubled in consequence of the
+&ldquo;discovery&rdquo; of America, no one will undertake the job on the old
+terms. That is sufficiently intelligible. But why operations proceeded so
+slowly at first, and why a new contract cannot now be drawn up&mdash;who can
+tell! The persons interested blame the contractor, who blames the engineer, who
+blames the dilatory and corrupt administration of Cosenza. My private opinion
+is, that the last three parties have agreed to share the swag between them.
+Meanwhile everybody has just grounds of complaint against everybody else; the
+six or seven inevitable lawsuits have sprung up and promise to last any length
+of time, seeing that important documents have been lost or stolen and that half
+the original contracting parties have died in the interval: nobody knows what
+is going to happen in the end. It all depends upon whether some patriotic
+<a name="Page194"></a>
+person will step forward and grease the wheels in the proper quarter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And even then, if he hails from Acri, they of San Demetrio will probably work
+against the project, and vice versa. For no love is lost between neighbouring
+communities&mdash;wonderful, with what venomous feudal animosity they regard
+each other! United Italy means nothing to these people, whose conceptions of
+national and public life are those of the cock on his dung-hill. You will find
+in the smallest places intelligent and broad-minded men, tradespeople or
+professionals or landed proprietors, but they are seldom members of the
+<i>municipio;</i> the municipal career is also a money-making business, yes;
+but of another kind, and requiring other qualifications.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Foot-passengers like myself suffer no inconvenience by being obliged to follow
+the shorter and time-honoured mule-track that joins the two places. It rises
+steeply at first, then begins to wind in and out among shady vales of chestnut
+and oak, affording unexpected glimpses now towards distant Tarsia and now,
+through a glade on the right, on to the ancient citadel of Bisignano, perched
+on its rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I reached Acri after about two and a half hours&rsquo; walking. It lies in a
+theatrical situation and has a hotel; but the proprietor of that establishment
+having been described to me as &ldquo;the greatest brigand of the Sila&rdquo; I
+preferred to refresh myself at a small wineshop, whose manageress cooked me an
+uncommonly good luncheon and served some of the best wine I had tasted for
+long. Altogether, the better-class women here are far more wideawake and
+civilized than those of the Neapolitan province; a result of their stern
+patriarchal up-bringing and of their possessing more or less sensible husbands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus fortified, I strolled about the streets. One would like to spend a week or
+two in a place like this, so little known even to Italians, but the hot weather
+and bad feeding had begun to affect me disagreeably and I determined to push on
+without delay into cooler regions. It would never do to be laid up at Acri with
+heatstroke, and to have one&rsquo;s last drops of life drained away by copious
+blood-lettings, relic of Hispano-Arabic practices and the favourite remedy for
+every complaint. Acri is a large place, and its air of prosperity contrasts
+with the slumberous decay of San Demetrio; there is silk-rearing, and so much
+emigration into America that nearly every man I addressed replied in English.
+New houses are rising up in all directions, and the place is celebrated for its
+rich citizens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page195"></a>
+But these same wealthy men are in rather a dilemma. Some local authority, I
+forget who, has deduced from the fact that there are so many forges and
+smiths&rsquo; shops here that this must be the spot to which the over-sensitive
+inhabitants of Sybaris banished their workers in metal and other noisy
+professions. Now the millionaires would like to be thought Sybarites by
+descent, but it is hardly respectable to draw a pedigree from these outcasts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They need not alarm themselves. For Acri, as Forbiger has shown, is the old
+Acherontia; the river Acheron, the Mocone or Mucone of to-day, flows at its
+foot, and from one point of the town I had a fine view into its raging torrent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A wearisome climb of two hours brought me to the <i>Croce Greca,</i> the Greek
+Cross, which stands 1185 metres above sea-level. How hot it was, in that
+blazing sun! I should be sorry to repeat the trip, under the same conditions. A
+structure of stone may have stood here in olden days; at present it is a
+diminutive wooden crucifix by the roadside. It marks, none the less, an
+important geographical point: the boundary between the &ldquo;Greek&rdquo; Sila
+which I was now leaving and the Sila Grande, the central and largest region.
+Beyond this last-named lies the lesser Sila, or &ldquo;Sila Piccola&rdquo;; and
+if you draw a line from Rogliano (near Cosenza) to Cotrone you will
+approximately strike the watershed which divides the Sila Grande from this last
+and most westerly of the three Sila divisions. After that comes Catanzaro and
+the valley of the Corace, the narrowest point of the Italian continent, and
+then the heights of Serra and Aspromonte, the true &ldquo;Italy&rdquo; of old,
+that continue as far as Reggio.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though I passed through some noble groves of chestnut on the way up, the
+country here was a treeless waste. Yet it must have been forest up to a short
+time ago, for one could see the beautiful vegetable mould which has not yet had
+time to be washed down the hill-sides. A driving road passes the Croce Greca;
+it joins Acri with San Giovanni, the capital of Sila Grande, and with Cosenza.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was another long hour&rsquo;s march, always uphill, before I reached a
+spacious green meadow or upland with a few little buildings. The place is
+called Verace and lies on the watershed between the upper Crati valley and the
+Ionian; thenceforward my walk would be a descent along the Trionto river, the
+Traeis of old, as far as Longobucco which overlooks its flood. It was cool
+here at last, from the altitude and the decline of day; and hay-making was
+going on, amid the pastoral din of cow-bells and a good deal of blithe
+love-making and chattering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After some talk with these amiable folks, I passed on to where
+<a name="Page196"></a>
+the young Traeis bubbles up from the cavernous reservoirs of the earth. Of
+those chill and roguish wavelets I took a draught, mindful of the day when long
+ago, by these same waters, an irreparable catastrophe overwhelmed our European
+civilization. For it was the Traeis near whose estuary was fought the battle
+between 300,000 Sybarites (I refuse to believe these figures) and the men of
+Croton conducted by their champion Milo&mdash;a battle which led to the
+destruction of Sybaris and, incidentally, of Hellenic culture throughout the
+mainland of Italy. This was in the same fateful year 510 that witnessed the
+expulsion of the Tarquins from Rome and the Pisistratidae from Athens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pines, the characteristic tree of the Sila, now begin to appear. Passing
+through Verace I had already observed, on the left, a high mountain entirely
+decked with them. It is the ridge marked Paleparto on the map; the Trionto
+laves its foot. But the local pronunciation of this name is Palépite, and I
+cannot help thinking that here we have a genuine old Greek name perpetuated by
+the people and referring to this covering of hoary pines&mdash;a name which the
+cartographers, arbitrary and ignorant as they often are, have unconsciously
+disguised. (It occurs in some old charts, however, as Paleparto.) An
+instructive map of Italy could be drawn up, showing the sites and cities
+wrongly named from corrupt etymology or falsified inscriptions, and those
+deliberately miscalled out of principles of local patriotism. The whole country
+is full of these inventions of <i>litterati</i> which date, for the most part,
+from the enthusiastic but undisciplined Cinque-Cento.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The minute geographical triangle comprised between Cosenza, Longobucco and San
+Demetrio which I was now traversing is one of the least known corners of Italy,
+and full of dim Hellenic memories. The streamlet &ldquo;Calamo&rdquo; flows
+through the valley I ascended from Acri, and at its side, a little way out of
+the town, stands the fountain &ldquo;Pompeio&rdquo; where the brigands, not
+long ago, used to lie in wait for women and children coming to fetch water, and
+snatch them away for ransom. On the way up, I had glimpses down a thousand feet
+or more into the Mucone or Acheron, raging and foaming in its narrow valley. It
+rises among the mountains called &ldquo;Fallistro&rdquo; and &ldquo;Li
+Tartari&rdquo;&mdash;unquestionably Greek names.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On this river and somewhere above Acri stood, according to the scholarly
+researches of Lenormant, the ancient city of Pandosia. I do not know if its
+site has been determined since his day. It was &ldquo;very strong&rdquo; and
+rich and at its highest prosperity in the fourth century B.C.; after the fall
+of Sybaris it passed under the supremacy
+<a name="Page197"></a>
+of Croton. The god Pan was figured on some of its coins, and appropriately
+enough, considering its sylvan surroundings; others bear the head of the nymph
+Pandosia with her name and that of the river Crathis, under the guise of a
+young shepherd: they who wish to learn his improper legend will find it in the
+pages of Aelian, or in chapter xxxii of the twenty-fifth book of Rhodiginus,
+beginning <i>Quae sit brutorum affectio,</i> etc.<a href="#fn-25.1" name="fnref-25.1" id="fnref-25.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+We have here not the Greece of mediæval Byzantine times, much less that of the
+Albanians, but the sunny Hellas of the days when the world was young, when
+these ardent colonists sailed westwards to perpetuate their names and legends
+in the alien soil of Italy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-25.1" id="fn-25.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-25.1">[1]</a>
+<i>Brunii a brutis moribus:</i> so say certain spiteful writers, an
+accusation which Strabo and Horace extend to all Calabrians. As to the site of
+Pandosia, a good number of scholars, such as old Prosper Parisius and Luigi
+Maria Greco, locate it at the village of Mendicino on the river Merenzata,
+which was called Arconte (? Acheron) in the Middle Ages. So the Trionto is not
+unquestionably the Traeis, and in Marincola Pistoia&rsquo;s good little
+&ldquo;Cose di Sibari&rdquo; (1845) the distinction is claimed for one of four
+rivers&mdash;the Lipuda, Colognati, Trionto, or Fiuminicà.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Mucone has always been known as a ferocious and pitiless torrent, and
+maintains to this day its Tartarean reputation. Twenty persons a year, they
+tell me, are devoured by its angry waters: <i>mangia venti cristiani all&rsquo;
+anno!</i> This is as bad as the Amendolea near Reggio. But none of its victims
+have attained the celebrity of Alexander of Molossus, King of Epirus, who
+perished under the walls of Pandosia in 326 B.C. during an excursion against
+the Lucanians. He had been warned by the oracle of Dodona to avoid the waters
+of Acheron and the town of Pandosia; once in Italy, however, he paid small heed
+to these words, thinking they referred to the river and town of the same name
+in Thesprotia. But the gods willed otherwise, and you may read of his death in
+the waters, and the laceration of his body by the Lucanians, in Livy&rsquo;s
+history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a strange caprice that we should now possess what is in every probability
+the very breastplate worn by the heroic monarch on that occasion. It was found
+in 1820, and thereafter sold&mdash;some fragments of it, at least&mdash;to the
+British Museum, where under the name of &ldquo;Bronze of Siris&rdquo; it may
+still be admired: a marvellous piece of repoussée work, in the style of
+Lysippus, depicting the combat of Ajax and the Amazons. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The streamlet Trionto, my companion to Longobucco, glides along between
+stretches of flowery meadow-land&mdash;fit emblem of placid rural contentment.
+But soon this lyric mood is spent. It enters a winding gorge that shuts out the
+sunlight and the landscape abruptly assumes an epic note; the water tumbles
+wildly
+<a name="Page198"></a>
+downward, hemmed in by mountains whose slopes are shrouded in dusky pines
+wherever a particle of soil affords them foothold. The scenery in this valley
+is as romantic as any in the Sila. Affluents descend on either side, while the
+swollen rivulet writhes and screeches in its narrow bed, churning the boulders
+with hideous din. The track, meanwhile, continues to run beside the water till
+the passage becomes too difficult; it must perforce attack the hill-side. Up it
+climbs, therefore, in never-ending ascension, and then meanders at a great
+height above the valley, in and out of its tributary glens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was vastly enjoying this promenade&mdash;the shady pines, whose fragrance
+mingled with that of a legion of tall aromatic plants in full blossom&mdash;the
+views upon the river, shining far below me like the thread of silver&mdash;when
+I observed with surprise that the whole mountain-side which the track must
+manifestly cross had lately slipped down into the abyss. A cloud-burst two or
+three days ago, as I afterwards learned, had done the mischief. On arrival at
+the spot, the path was seen to be interrupted&mdash;clean gone, in fact, and
+not a shred of earth or trees left; there confronted me a bare scar, a wall of
+naked rock which not even a chamois could negotiate. Here was a dilemma. I must
+either retrace my steps along the weary road to Verace and there seek a
+night&rsquo;s shelter with the gentle hay-makers, or clamber down into the
+ravine, follow the river and&mdash;chance it! After anxious deliberation, the
+latter alternative was chosen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Trionto was now grown into a formidable torrent of surging waves and
+eddies, with a perverse inclination to dash from one side to the other of its
+prison, so as to necessitate frequent fordings on my part. These watery
+passages, which I shall long remember, were not without a certain danger. The
+stream was still swollen with the recent rains, and its bed, invisible under
+the discoloured element, sufficiently deep to inspire respect and studded,
+furthermore, with slippery boulders of every size, concealing insidious gulfs.
+Having only a short walking-stick to support me through this raging flood, I
+could not but picture to myself the surprise of the village maidens of
+Cropolati, lower down, on returning to their laundry work by the river-side
+next morning and discovering the battered anatomy of an Englishman&mdash;a rare
+fish, in these waters&mdash;stranded upon their familiar beach. Murdered, of
+course. What a galaxy of brigand legends would have clustered round my memory!
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus23"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-23.jpg" width="400" height="304" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">The Trionto Valley</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Evening was closing in, and I had traversed the stream so often and stumbled so
+long amid this chaos of roaring waters and
+<a name="Page199"></a>
+weirdly-tinted rocks, that I began to wonder whether the existence of Longobucco was
+not a myth. But suddenly, at a bend of the river, the whole town, still
+distant, was revealed, upraised on high and framed in the yawning mouth of the
+valley. After the solitary ramble of that afternoon, my eyes familiarized to
+nothing save the wild things of nature, this unexpected glimpse of complicated,
+civilized structures had all the improbability of a mirage. Longobucco, at
+that moment, arose before me like those dream-cities in the Arabian tale,
+conjured by enchantment out of the desert waste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The vision, though it swiftly vanished again, cheered me on till after a good
+deal more scrambling and wading, with boots torn to rags, lame, famished and
+drenched to the skin, I reached the bridge of the Rossano highway and limped
+upwards, in the twilight, to the far-famed &ldquo;Hotel Vittoria.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Soon enough, be sure, I was enquiring as to supper. But the manageress met my
+suggestions about eatables with a look of blank astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was there nothing in the house, then? No cheese, or meat, or maccheroni, or
+eggs&mdash;no wine to drink?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Why should you eat things at this
+hour? You must find them yourself, if you really want them. I might perhaps
+procure you some bread.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Avis aux voyageurs,</i> as the French say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Undaunted, I went forth and threw myself upon the mercy of a citizen of
+promising exterior, who listened attentively to my case. Though far too polite
+to contradict, I could see that nothing in the world would induce him to credit
+the tale of my walking from San Demetrio that day&mdash;it was tacitly
+relegated to the regions of fable. With considerable tact, so as not to wound
+my feelings, he avoided expressing any opinion on so frivolous a topic; nor did
+the reason of his reluctance to discuss my exploit dawn upon me till I
+realized, later on, that like many of the inhabitants he had never heard of the
+track over Acri, and consequently disbelieved its existence. They reach San
+Demetrio by a two or even three days&rsquo; drive over Rossano, Corigliano, and
+Vaccarizza. He became convinced, however, that for some reason or other I was
+hungry, and thereupon good-naturedly conducted me to various places where wine
+and other necessities of life were procured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlady watched me devouring this fare, more astonished than
+ever&mdash;indeed, astonishment seemed to be her chronic condition so long as I
+was under her roof. But the promised bread was
+<a name="Page200"></a>
+not forthcoming, for the simple reason that there was none in the house. She
+had said that she could procure it for me, not that she possessed it; now,
+since I had given no orders to that effect, she had not troubled about it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nobody travels south of Rome. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strengthened beyond expectation by this repast, I sallied into the night once
+more, and first of all attended an excellent performance at the local
+cinematograph. After that, I was invited to a cup of coffee by certain
+burghers, and we strolled about the piazza awhile, taking our pleasure in the
+cool air of evening (the town lies 794 metres above sea-level). Its streets are
+orderly and clean; there are no Albanians, and no costumes of any kind. Here,
+firm-planted on the square, and jutting at an angle from the body of the
+church, stands a massive bell-tower overgrown from head to foot with pendent
+weeds and grasses whose roots have found a home in the interstices of its
+masonry; a grimly venerable pile, full of character.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Weary but not yet satiated, I took leave of the citizens and perambulated the
+more ignoble quarters, all of which are decently lighted with electricity.
+Everywhere in these stiller regions was the sound of running waters, and I soon
+discerned that Longobucco is an improvement on the usual site affected by
+Calabrian hill-towns&mdash;the Y-shaped enclosure, namely, at the junction of
+two rivers&mdash;inasmuch as it has contrived to perch itself on a lofty
+platform protected by no less than three streams that rush impetuously under
+its walls: the Trionto and two of its affluents. On the flank inclined towards
+the Ionian there is a veritable chasm; the Trionto side is equally difficult of
+approach&mdash;the rear, of course, inaccessible. No wonder the brigands chose
+it for their chief citadel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am always on the look-out for modern epigraphical curiosities; regarding the
+subject as one of profound social significance (postage stamps, indeed!) I have
+assiduously formed a collection, the envy of connaisseurs, about one-third of
+whose material, they tell me, might possibly be printed at Brussels or Geneva.
+Well, here is a mural <i>graffito</i> secured in the course of this
+evening&rsquo;s walk:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Abaso [sic] questo paese sporco incivile:</i> down with this dirty savage
+country!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is food for thought in this inscription. For if some bilious
+hyper-civilized stranger were its author, the sentiments might pass. But coming
+from a native, to what depths of morbid discontent do they testify! Considering
+the recent progress of these regions that has led to a security and prosperity
+formerly undreamed of, one is driven to the conjecture that these words can
+only have been
+<a name="Page201"></a>
+penned by some cantankerous churl of an emigrant returning to his native land
+after an easeful life in New York and compelled&mdash;&ldquo;for his
+sins,&rdquo; as he would put it&mdash;to reside at the &ldquo;Hotel
+Vittoria.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Towards that delectable hostelry I now turned, somewhat regretfully, to face a
+bedroom whose appearance had already inspired me with anything but confidence.
+But hardly were the preliminary investigations begun, when a furious noise in
+the street below drew me to the window once more. Half the town was passing
+underneath in thronged procession, with lighted torches and flags, headed by
+the municipal band discoursing martial strains of music.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whither wending, at this midnight hour?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To honour a young student, native of the place, now returning up the Rossano
+road from Naples, where he had distinguished himself prominently in some
+examination. I joined the crowd, and presently we were met by a small carriage
+whence there emerged a pallid and frail adolescent with burning eyes, who was
+borne aloft in triumph and cheered with that vociferous, masculine heartiness
+which we Englishmen reserve for our popular prize-fighters. And this in the
+classic land of brigandage and bloodshed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The intellectual under-current. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was an apt commentary on my <i>graffito.</i> And another, more personally
+poignant, not to say piquant, was soon to follow: the bed. But no. I will say
+nothing about the bed, nothing whatever; nothing beyond this, that it yielded
+an entomological harvest which surpassed my wildest expectations.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page202"></a><a name="chap26"></a>XXVI<br />
+AMONG THE BRUTTIANS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Conspicuous among the wise men of Longobucco in olden days was the physician
+Bruno, who &ldquo;flourished&rdquo; about the end of the thirteenth century. He
+called himself <i>Longoburgensis Calaber,</i> and his great treatise on
+anatomical dissection, embodying much Greek and Arabic lore, was printed many
+years after his death. Another was Francesco Maria Labonia; he wrote, in 1664,
+&ldquo;De vera loci urbis Timesinae situatione, etc.,&rdquo; to prove,
+presumably, that his birthplace occupied the site whence the Homeric ore of
+Temese was derived. There are modern writers who support this view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The local silver mines were exploited in antiquity; first by Sybaris, then by
+Croton. They are now abandoned, but a good deal has been written about them. In
+the year 1200 a thousand miners were employed, and the Anjous extracted a great
+deal of precious metal thence; the goldsmiths of Longobucco were celebrated
+throughout Italy during the Middle Ages. The industrious H. W. Schulz has
+unearthed a Royal rescript of 1274 charging a certain goldsmith Johannes of
+Longobucco with researches into the metal and salt resources of the whole
+kingdom of Naples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Writing from Longobucco in 1808 during a brigand-hunt, Duret de Tavel says:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The high wooded mountains which surround this horrible place spread over
+it a sombre and savage tint which saddens the imagination. This borough
+contains a hideous population of three thousand souls, composed of nail-makers,
+of blacksmiths and charcoal-burners. The former government employed them in
+working the silver mines situated in the neighbourhood which are now
+abandoned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tells a good deal about the brigandage that was then rife here, and the
+atrocities which the repression of this pest entailed. Soon after his arrival,
+for instance, four hundred soldiers were sent to a village where the chiefs of
+the brigand &ldquo;insurrection&rdquo; were supposed to be sheltered. The
+soldiers, he says, &ldquo;poured into the streets like a torrent in flood, and
+there began a horrible massacre,
+<a name="Page203"></a>
+rendered inevitable by the obstinacy of the insurgents, who fired from all the
+houses. This unhappy village was sacked and burnt, suffering all the horrors
+inseparable from a capture by assault.&rdquo; Two hundred dead were found in
+the streets. But the brigand chiefs, the sole pretext of this bloodshed,
+managed to escape. Perhaps they were not within fifty miles of the place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Be that as it may, they were captured later on by their own compatriots, after
+the French had waited a month at Longobucco. Their heads were brought in, still
+bleeding, and &ldquo;l&rsquo;identité ayant été suffisamment constatée, la mort
+des principaux acteurs a terminé cette sanglante tragédie, et nous sommes
+sortis de ces catacombes apénnines pour revoir le plus brillant soleil.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wonderful tales are still told of the brigands in these forests. They will show
+you notches on the trees, cut by such and such a brigand for some particular
+purpose of communication with his friends; buried treasure has been found, and
+even nowadays shepherds sometimes discover rude shelters of bark and tree
+trunks built by them in the thickest part of the woods. There are legends, too,
+of caverns wherein they hived their booty&mdash;caverns with cleverly concealed
+entrances&mdash;caverns which (many of them, at least) I regard as a pure
+invention modelled after the authentic brigand caves of Salerno and Abruzzi,
+where the limestone rock is of the kind to produce them. Bourbonism fostered
+the brood, and there was a fierce recrudescence in the troubled sixties. They
+lived in bands, <i>squadrigli,</i> burning and plundering with impunity.
+Whoever refused to comply with their demands for food or money was sure to
+repent of it. All this is over, for the time being; the brigands are
+extirpated, to the intense relief of the country people, who were entirely at
+their mercy, and whose boast it is that their district is now as safe as the
+streets of Naples. Qualified praise, this. . . .<a href="#fn-26.1" name="fnref-26.1" id="fnref-26.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-26.1" id="fn-26.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-26.1">[1]</a>
+See next chapter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is an easy march of eight hours or less, through pleasing scenery and by a
+good track, from Longobucco to San Giovanni in Fiore, the capital of the Sila.
+The path leaves Longobucco at the rear of the town and, climbing upward, enters
+a valley which it follows to its head. The peasants have cultivated patches of
+ground along the stream; the slopes are covered, first with chestnuts and then
+with hoary firs&mdash;a rare growth, in these parts&mdash;from whose branches
+hangs the golden bough of the mistletoe. And now the stream is ended and a dark
+ridge blocks the way; it is overgrown with beeches, under whose shade you
+ascend in steep curves. At
+<a name="Page204"></a>
+the summit the vegetation changes once more, and you find yourself among
+magnificent stretches of pines that continue as far as the governmental domain
+of Galoppano, a forestal station, two hours&rsquo; walk from Longobucco.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This pine is a particular variety <i>(Pinus lancio,</i> var. <i>Calabra),</i>
+known as the &ldquo;Pino della Sila&rdquo;&mdash;it is found over this whole
+country, and grows to a height of forty metres with a silvery-grey trunk,
+exhaling a delicious aromatic fragrance. In youth, especially where the soil is
+deep, it shoots up prim and demure as a Nuremberg toy; but in old age grows
+monstrous. High-perched upon some lonely granite boulder, with roots writhing
+over the bare stone like the arms of an octopus, it sits firm and unmoved,
+deriding the tempest and flinging fantastic limbs into the air&mdash;emblem of
+tenacity in desolation. From these trees, which in former times must have
+covered the Sila region, was made that Bruttian pitch mentioned by Strabo and
+other ancient writers; from them the Athenians, the Syracusans, Tarentines and
+finally the Romans built their fleets. Their timber was used in the
+construction of Caserta palace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A house stands here, inhabited by government officials the whole year
+round&mdash;one may well puzzle how they pass the long winter, when snow lies
+from October to May. So early did I arrive at this establishment that the more
+civilized of its inhabitants were still asleep; by waiting, I might have learnt
+something of the management of the estate, but gross material
+preoccupations&mdash;the prospect of a passable luncheon at San Giovanni after
+the &ldquo;Hotel Vittoria&rdquo; fare&mdash;tempted me to press forwards. A
+boorish and unreliable-looking individual volunteered three pieces of
+information&mdash;that the house was built thirty years ago, that a large
+nursery for plants lies about ten kilometres distant, and that this particular
+domain covers &ldquo;two or four thousand hectares.&rdquo; A young plantation
+of larches and silver birches&mdash;aliens to this region&mdash;seemed to be
+doing well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not far from here, along my track, lies Santa Barbara, two or three huts, with
+corn still green&mdash;like Verace (above Acri) on the watershed between the
+Ionian and upper Grati. Then follows a steep climb up the slopes of Mount
+Pettinascura, whose summit lies 1708 metres above sea-level. This is the
+typical landscape of the Sila Grande. There is not a human habitation in sight;
+forests all around, with views down many-folded vales into the sea and towards
+the distant and fairy-like Apennines, a serrated edge, whose limestone
+precipices gleam like crystals of amethyst between the blue sky and the dusky
+woodlands of the foreground.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus24"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-24.jpg" width="401" height="349" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Longobucco</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page205"></a>
+Here I reposed awhile, watching the crossbills, wondrously tame, at work among
+the branches overhead, and the emerald lizard peering out of the bracken at my
+side. This <i>lucertone,</i> as they call it, is a local beast, very abundant
+in some spots (at Venosa and Patirion, for example); it is elsewhere
+conspicuous by its absence. The natives are rather afraid of it, and still more
+so of the harmless gecko, the &ldquo;salamide,&rdquo; which is reputed highly
+poisonous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then up again, through dells and over uplands, past bubbling streams, sometimes
+across sunlit meadows, but oftener in the leafy shelter of maples and
+pines&mdash;a long but delightful track, winding always high above the valleys
+of the Neto and Lese. At last, towards midday, I struck the driving road that
+connects San Giovanni with Savelli, crossed a bridge over the foaming Neto, and
+climbed into the populous and dirty streets of the town&mdash;the
+&ldquo;Siberia of Calabria,&rdquo; as it may well be, for seven months of the
+year.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this season, thanks to its elevation of 1050 metres, the temperature is all
+that could be desired, and the hotel, such as it is, compares favourably indeed
+with the den at Longobucco. Instantly I felt at home among these good people,
+who recognized me, and welcomed me with the cordiality of old friends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; they asked, &ldquo;and have you found it at last?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They remembered my looking for the double flute, the <i>tibiae pares,</i> some
+years ago.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+It will not take you long to discover that the chief objects of interest in San
+Giovanni are the women. Many Calabrian villages still possess their distinctive
+costumes&mdash;Marcellinara and Cimigliano are celebrated in this
+respect&mdash;but it would be difficult to find anywhere an equal number of
+handsome women on such a restricted space. In olden days it was dangerous to
+approach these attractive and mirthful creatures; they were jealously guarded
+by brothers and husbands. But the brothers and husbands, thank God, are now in
+America, and you may be as friendly with them as ever you please, provided you
+confine your serious attentions to not more than two or three. Secrecy in such
+matters is out of the question, as with the Arabs; there is too much gossip,
+and too little coyness about what is natural; your friendships are openly
+recognized, and tacitly approved. The priests do not interfere; their hands are
+full.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To see these women at their best one must choose a Sunday or a feast-day; one
+must go, morever, to the favourite fountain of Santa Lucia, which lies on the
+hill-side and irrigates some patches of corn and vegetables. Their natural
+charms are enhanced by
+<a name="Page206"></a>
+elaborate and tasteful golden ornaments, and by a pretty mode of dressing the
+hair, two curls of which are worn hanging down before their ears with an
+irresistibly seductive air. Their features are regular; eyes black or deep
+gentian blue; complexion pale; movements and attitudes impressed with a stamp
+of rare distinction. Even the great-grandmothers have a certain austere
+dignity&mdash;sinewy, indestructible old witches, with tawny hide and eyes that
+glow like lamps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet San Giovanni is as dirty as can well be; it has the accumulated filth
+of an Eastern town, while lacking all its glowing tints or harmonious outlines.
+We are disposed to associate squalor with certain artistic effects, but it may
+be said of this and many other Calabrian places that they have solved the
+problem how to be ineffably squalid without becoming in the least picturesque.
+Much of this sordid look is due to the smoke which issues out of all the
+windows and blackens the house walls, inside and out&mdash;the Calabrians
+persisting in a prehistoric fashion of cooking on the floor. The buildings
+themselves look crude and gaunt from their lack of plaster and their eyeless
+windows; black pigs wallowing at every doorstep contribute to this slovenly
+<i>ensemble.</i> The City Fathers have turned their backs upon civilization; I
+dare say the magnitude of the task before them has paralysed their initiative.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing is done in the way of public hygiene, and one sees women washing linen
+in water which is nothing more or less than an open drain. There is no
+street-lighting whatever; a proposal on the part of a North Italian firm to
+draw electric power from the Neto was scornfully rejected; one single tawdry
+lamp, which was bought some years ago &ldquo;as a sample&rdquo; in a moment of
+municipal recklessness, was lighted three times in as many years, and on the
+very day when it was least necessary&mdash;to wit, on midsummer eve, which
+happens to be the festival of their patron saint (St. John). &ldquo;It now
+hangs&rdquo;&mdash;so I wrote some years ago&mdash;&ldquo;at a dangerous angle,
+and I doubt whether it will survive till its services are requisitioned next
+June.&rdquo; Prophetic utterance! It was blown down that same winter, and has
+not yet been replaced. This in a town of 20,000 (?) inhabitants&mdash;and in
+Italy, where the evening life of the populace plays such an important role. No
+wonder North Italians, judging by such external indications, regard all
+Calabrians as savages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some trees have been planted in the piazza since my last stay here; a newspaper
+has also been started&mdash;it is called &ldquo;Co-operation: Organ of the
+Interests of San Giovanni in Fiore,&rdquo; and its first and possibly unique
+number contains a striking article on the public
+<a name="Page207"></a>
+health, as revealed in the report of two doctors who had been despatched by the
+provincial sanitary authorities to take note of local conditions of hygiene.
+&ldquo;The illustrious scientists&rdquo; (thus it runs) &ldquo;were horrified
+at the filth, mud and garbage which encumbered, and still encumbers, our
+streets, sending forth in the warm weather a pestilential odour. . . . They
+were likewise amazed at the vigorously expressed protest of our mayor, who
+said: &lsquo;<i>My people cannot live without their pigs wallowing in the
+streets. San Giovanni in Fiore is exempt from earthquakes and epidemics because
+it is under the protection of Saint John the Baptist, and because its
+provincial councillor is a saintly man.&rsquo;</i>&rdquo; Such journalistic
+plain speaking, such lack of sweet reasonableness, cannot expect to survive in
+a world governed by compromise, and if the gift of prophecy has not deserted
+me, I should say that &ldquo;Co-operation&rdquo; has by this time ended its
+useful mission upon earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This place is unhealthy; its water-supply is not what it should be, and such
+commodities as eggs and milk are rather dear, because &ldquo;the invalids eat
+everything&rdquo; of that kind. Who are the invalids? Typhoid patients and,
+above all, malarious subjects who descend to the plains as agricultural
+labourers and return infected to the hills, where they become partially cured,
+only to repeat the folly next year. It is the same at Longobucco and other Sila
+towns. Altogether, San Giovanni has grave drawbacks. The streets are too steep
+for comfort, and despite its height, the prospect towards the Ionian is
+intercepted by a ridge; in point of situation it cannot compare with Savelli or
+the neighbouring Casino, which have impressive views both inland, and southward
+down undulating slopes that descend in a stately procession of four thousand
+feet to the sea, where sparkles the gleaming horn of Cotrone. And the
+surroundings of the place are nowise representative of the Sila in a good
+sense. The land has been so ruthlessly deforested that it has become a desert
+of naked granite rocks; even now, in midsummer, the citizens are already
+collecting fuel for their long winter from enormous distances. As one crawls
+and skips among these unsavoury tenements, one cannot help regretting that
+Saint John the Baptist, or the piety of a provincial councillor, should have
+hindered the earthquakes from doing their obvious duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Were I sultan of San Giovanni, I would certainly begin by a general
+bombardment. Little in the town is worth preserving from a cataclysm save the
+women, and perhaps the old convent on the summit of the hill where the French
+lodged during their brigand-wars, and that other one, famous in the
+ecclesiastical annals of Calabria&mdash;the monastery of Floriacense, founded
+at the
+<a name="Page208"></a>
+end of the twelfth century, round which the town gradually grew up. Its
+ponderous portal is much injured, having been burnt, I was told, by the
+brigands in 1860. But the notary, who kindly looked up the archives for me, has
+come to the conclusion that the French are responsible for the damage. It
+contains, or contained, a fabulous collection of pious lumber&mdash;teeth and
+thigh-bones and other relics, the catalogue of which is one of my favourite
+sections of Father Fiore&rsquo;s work. I would make an exception, also, in
+favour of the doorway of the church, a finely proportioned structure of the
+Renaissance in black stone, which looks ill at ease among its ignoble
+environment. A priest, to whom I applied for information as to its history,
+told me with the usual Calabrian frankness that he never bothered his head
+about such things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Giovanni was practically unknown to the outside world up to a few years
+ago. I question whether Lenormant or any of them came here. Pacicchelli did,
+however, in the seventeenth century, though he has left us no description of
+the place. He crossed the whole Sila from the Ionian to the other sea. I like
+this amiable and loquacious creature, restlessly gadding about Europe,
+gloriously complacent, hopelessly absorbed in trivialities, and credulous
+beyond belief. In fact (as the reader may have observed), I like all these old
+travellers, not so much for what they actually say, as for their implicit
+outlook upon life. This Pacicchelli was a fellow of our Royal Society, and his
+accounts of England are worth reading; here, in Calabria (being a
+non-southerner) his &ldquo;Familiar Letters&rdquo; and &rdquo;Memoirs of
+Travel&rdquo; act as a wholesome corrective. Which of the local historians
+would have dared to speak of Cosenza as &ldquo;città aperta, scomposta, e
+disordinata di fabbriche&rdquo;?
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+That these inhabitants of the Sila are Bruttians may be inferred from the
+superior position occupied by their women-folk, who are quite differently
+treated to those of the lowlands. There&mdash;all along the coasts of South
+Italy&mdash;the <i>cow-woman</i> is still found, unkempt and uncivilized;
+there, the male is the exclusive bearer of culture. Such things are not seen
+among the Bruttians of the Sila, any more than among the grave Latins or
+Samnites. These non-Hellenic races are, generally speaking, honest, dignified
+and incurious; they are bigoted, not to say fanatical; and their women are not
+exclusively beasts of burden, being better dressed, better looking, and often
+as intelligent as the men. They are the fruits of a female selection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But wherever the mocking Ionic spirit has penetrated&mdash;and the Ionian women
+occupied even a lower position than those of the
+<a name="Page209"></a>
+Dorians and Aeolians&mdash;it has resulted in a glorification of masculinity.
+Hand in hand with this depreciation of the female sex go other characteristics
+which point to Hellenic influences: lack of commercial morality, of veracity,
+of seriousness in religious matters; a persistent, light-hearted
+inquisitiveness; a levity (or sprightliness, if you prefer it) of mind. The
+people are fetichistic, amulet-loving, rather than devout. We may certainly
+suspect Greek or Saracen strains wherever women are held in low estimation;
+wherever, as the god Apollo himself said, &ldquo;the mother is but the
+nurse.&rdquo; In the uplands of Calabria the mother is a good deal more than
+the nurse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the rest, it stands to reason that in proportion as the agricultural stage
+supplants that of pasturage, the superior strength and utility of boys over
+girls should become more apparent, and this in South Italy is universally
+proclaimed by the fact that everything large and fine is laughingly described
+as &ldquo;maschio&rdquo; (male), and by some odd superstitions in disparagement
+of the female sex, such as these: that in giving presents to women, uneven
+numbers should be selected, lest even ones &ldquo;do them more good than they
+deserve&rdquo;; that to touch the hump of a female hunchback brings no luck
+whatever; that if a woman be the first to drink out of a new earthenware
+pitcher, the vessel may as well be thrown away at once&mdash;it is tainted for
+ever.<a href="#fn-26.2" name="fnref-26.2" id="fnref-26.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a> Yet the birth of a daughter is no Chinese calamity; even girls are
+&ldquo;Christians&rdquo; and welcomed as such, the populace having never sunk
+to the level of our theologians, who were wont to discuss <i>an fæmina sint
+monstra.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-26.2" id="fn-26.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-26.2">[2]</a>
+In Japan, says Hearn, the first bucketful of water to be drawn out of a
+cleaned well must be drawn by a man; for if a woman first draw water, the well
+will always hereafter remain muddy. Some of these prejudices seem to be based
+on primordial misreadings of physiology. There is also a strong feeling in
+favour of dark hair. No mother would entrust her infant to a fair wet-nurse;
+the milk even of white cows is considered &ldquo;lymphatic&rdquo; and not
+strengthening; perhaps the eggs of white hens are equally devoid of the
+fortifying principle. There is something to be said for this since, in
+proportion as we go south, the risk of irritation, photophobia, and other
+complaints incidental to the xanthous complexion becomes greater.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All over the Sila there is a large preponderance of women over men, nearly the
+whole male section of the community, save the quite young and the decrepit,
+being in America. This emigration brings much money into the country and many
+new ideas; but the inhabitants have yet to learn the proper use of their
+wealth, and to acquire a modern standard of comfort. Together with the
+Sardinians, these Calabrians are the hardiest of native races, and this is what
+makes them prefer the strenuous but lucrative life in North American mines to
+the easier career in Argentina, which Neapolitans favour. There they learn
+English. They remember their
+<a name="Page210"></a>
+families and the village that gave them birth, but their patriotism towards
+Casa Savoia is of the slenderest. How could it be otherwise? I have spoken to
+numbers of them, and this is what they say:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This country has done nothing for us; why should we fight its battles?
+Not long ago we were almost devouring each other in our hunger; what did they
+do to help us? If we have emerged from misery, it is due to our own initiative
+and the work of our own hands; if we have decent clothes and decent houses, it
+is because they drove us from our old homes with their infamous misgovernment
+to seek work abroad.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perfectly true! They have redeemed themselves, though the new regime has hardly
+had a fair trial. And the drawbacks of emigration (such as a slight increase of
+tuberculosis and alcoholism) are nothing compared with the unprecedented
+material prosperity and enlightenment. There has also been&mdash;in these
+parts, at all events&mdash;a marked diminution of crime. No wonder, seeing that
+three-quarters of the most energetic and turbulent elements are at present in
+America, where they recruit the Black Hand. That the Bruttian is not yet ripe
+for town life, that his virtues are pastoral rather than civic, might have been
+expected; but the Arab domination of much of his territory, one suspects, may
+have infused fiercer strains into his character and helped to deserve for him
+that epithet of <i>sanguinario</i> by which he is proud to be known.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page211"></a><a name="chap27"></a>XXVII<br />
+CALABRIAN BRIGANDAGE</h2>
+
+<p>
+The last genuine bandit of the Sila was Gaetano Ricca. On account of some
+trivial misunderstanding with the authorities, this man was compelled in the
+early eighties to take to the woods, where he lived a wild life <i>(alla
+campagna; alla macchia}</i> for some three years. A price was set on his head,
+but his daring and knowledge of the country intimidated every one. I should be
+sorry to believe in the number of carbineers he is supposed to have killed
+during that period; no doubt the truth came out during his subsequent trial. On
+one occasion he was surrounded, and while the officer in command of his
+pursuers, who had taken refuge behind a tree, ordered him to yield, Ricca
+waited patiently till the point of his enemy&rsquo;s foot became visible, when
+he pierced his ankle-bone with his last bullet and escaped. He afterwards
+surrendered and was imprisoned for twenty years or so; then returned to the
+Sila, where up to a short time ago he was enjoying a green old age in his home
+at Parenti&mdash;Parenti, already celebrated in the annals of brigandage by the
+exploit of the perfidious Francatripa (Giacomo Pisani), who, under pretence of
+hospitality, enticed a French company into his clutches and murdered its three
+officers and all the men, save seven. The memoirs of such men might be as
+interesting as those of the Sardinian Giovanni Tolù which have been printed. I
+would certainly have paid my respects to Ricca had I been aware of his
+existence when, some years back, I passed through Parenti on my way&mdash;a
+long day&rsquo;s march!&mdash;from Rogliano to San Giovanni. He has died in the
+interval.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the case of Ricca is a sporadic one, such as may crop up anywhere and at
+any time. It is like that of Musolino&mdash;the case of an isolated outlaw, who
+finds the perplexed geographical configuration of the country convenient for
+offensive and defensive purposes. Calabrian brigandage, as a whole, has always
+worn a political character.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men who gave the French so much trouble were political brigands, allies of
+Bourbonism. They were commanded by
+<a name="Page212"></a>
+creatures like Mammone, an anthropophagous monster whose boast it was that he
+had personally killed 455 persons with the greatest refinements of cruelty, and
+who wore at his belt the skull of one of them, out of which he used to drink
+human blood at mealtime; he drank his own blood as well; indeed, he
+&ldquo;never dined without having a bleeding human heart on the table.&rdquo;
+This was the man whom King Ferdinand and his spouse loaded with gifts and
+decorations, and addressed as &ldquo;Our good Friend and General&mdash;the
+faithful Support of the Throne.&rdquo; The numbers of these savages were
+increased by shiploads of professional cut-throats sent over from Sicily by the
+English to help their Bourbon friends. Some of these actually wore the British
+uniform; one of the most ferocious was known as
+&ldquo;L&rsquo;Inglese&rdquo;&mdash;the Englishman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One must go to the fountain-head, to the archives, in order to gain some idea
+of the sanguinary anarchy that desolated South Italy in those days. The horrors
+of feudalism, aided by the earthquake of 1784 and by the effects of Cardinal
+Ruffo&rsquo;s Holy Crusade, had converted the country into a pandemonium. In a
+single year (1809) thirty-three thousand crimes were recorded against the
+brigands of the Kingdom of Naples; in a single month they are said to have
+committed 1200 murders in Calabria alone. These were the bands who were
+described by British officers as &ldquo;our chivalrous brigand-allies.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is good to bear these facts in mind when judging of the present state of
+this province, for the traces of such a reign of terror are not easily
+expunged. Good, also, to remember that this was the period of the highest
+spiritual eminence to which South Italy has ever attained. Its population of
+four million inhabitants were then consoled by the presence of no less than
+120,000 holy persons&mdash;to wit, 22 archbishops, 116 bishops, 65,500 ordained
+priests, 31,800 monks, and 23,600 nuns. Some of these ecclesiastics, like the
+Bishop of Capaccio, were notable brigand-chiefs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must be confessed that the French were sufficiently coldblooded in their
+reprisals. Colletta himself saw, at Lagonegro, a man impaled by order of a
+French colonel; and some account of their excesses may be gleaned from Duret de
+Tavel, from Rivarol (rather a disappointing author), and from the flamboyant
+epistles of P. L. Courier, a soldier-scribe of rare charm, who lost everything
+in this campaign. &ldquo;J&rsquo;ai perdu huit chevaux, mes habits, mon linge,
+mon manteau, mes pistolets, mon argent (12,247 francs). . . . Je ne regrette
+que mon Homère (a gift from the Abbé Barthélemy), et pour le ravoir, je
+donnerais la seule chemise qui me reste.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But even that did not destroy the plague. The situation called
+<a name="Page213"></a>
+for a genial and ruthless annihilator, a man like Sixtus V, who asked for
+brigands&rsquo; heads and got them so plentifully that they lay &ldquo;thick as
+melons in the market&rdquo; under the walls of Rome, while the Castel
+Sant&rsquo; Angelo was tricked out like a Christmas tree with quartered
+corpses&mdash;a man who told the authorities, when they complained of the
+insufferable stench of the dead, that the smell of living iniquity was far
+worse. Such a man was wanted. Therefore, in 1810, Murat gave <i>carte
+blanche</i> to General Manhes, the greatest brigand-catcher of modern times, to
+extirpate the ruffians, root and branch. He had just distinguished himself
+during a similar errand in the Abruzzi and, on arriving in Calabria, issued
+proclamations of such inhuman severity that the inhabitants looked upon them as
+a joke. They were quickly undeceived. The general seems to have considered that
+the end justified the means, and that the peace and happiness of a province was
+not to be disturbed year after year by the malignity of a few thousand rascals;
+his threats were carried out to the letter, and, whatever may be said against
+his methods, he certainly succeeded. At the end of a few months&rsquo;
+campaign, every single brigand, and all their friends and relations, were wiped
+off the face of the earth&mdash;together with a very considerable number of
+innocent persons. The high roads were lined with decapitated bandits, the town
+walls decked with their heads; some villages had to be abandoned, on account of
+the stench; the Crati river was swollen with corpses, and its banks whitened
+with bones. God alone knows the cruelties which were enacted; Colletta
+confesses that he &ldquo;lacks courage to relate them.&rdquo; Here is his
+account of the fate of the brigand chief Benincasa:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Betrayed and bound by his followers as he slept in the forest of
+Cassano, Benincasa was brought to Cosenza, and General Manhes ordered that both
+his hands be lopped off and that he be led, thus mutilated, to his home in San
+Giovanni, and there hanged; a cruel sentence, which the wretch received with a
+bitter smile. His right hand was first cut off and the stump bound, not out of
+compassion or regard for his life, but in order that all his blood might not
+flow out of the opened veins, seeing that he was reserved for a more miserable
+death. Not a cry escaped him, and when he saw that the first operation was
+over, he voluntarily laid his left hand upon the block and coldly watched the
+second mutilation, and saw his two amputated hands lying on the ground, which
+were then tied together by the thumbs and hung round his neck; an awful and
+piteous spectacle. This happened at Cosenza. On the same day he began his march
+to San Giovanni in Fiore, the escort resting at intervals; one of them offered
+the man food, which he accepted;
+<a name="Page214"></a>
+he ate and drank what was placed in his mouth, and not so much in order to
+sustain life, as with real pleasure. He arrived at his home, and slept through
+the following night; on the next day, as the hour of execution approached, he
+refused the comforts of religion, ascended the gallows neither swiftly nor
+slowly, and died admired for his brutal intrepidity.&rdquo;<a href="#fn-27.1" name="fnref-27.1" id="fnref-27.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-27.1" id="fn-27.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-27.1">[1]</a>
+This particular incident was flatly denied by Manhes in a letter dated 1835,
+which is quoted in the &ldquo;Notizia storica del Conte C. A. Manhes&rdquo;
+(Naples, 1846)&mdash;one of a considerable number of pro-Bourbon books that
+cropped up about this time. One is apt to have quite a wrong impression of
+Manhes, that inexorable but incorruptible scourge of evildoers. One pictures
+him a grey-haired veteran, scarred and gloomy; and learns, on the contrary,
+that he was only thirty-two years old at this time, gracious in manner and of
+surprising personal beauty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the first time since long Calabria was purged. Ever since the Bruttians,
+irreclaimable plunderers, had established themselves at Cosenza, disquieting
+their old Hellenic neighbours, the recesses of this country had been a
+favourite retreat of political malcontents. Here Spartacus drew recruits for
+his band of rebels; here &ldquo;King Marcone&rdquo; defied the oppressive
+Spanish Viceroys, and I blame neither him nor his imitators, since the career
+of bandit was one of the very few that still commended itself to decent folks,
+under that régime.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the interregnum of Bourbonism between Murat and Garibaldi the mischief
+revived&mdash;again in a political form. Brigands drew pensions from kings and
+popes, and the system gave rise to the most comical incidents; the story of the
+pensioned malefactors living together at Monticello reads like an extravaganza.
+It was the spirit of Offenbach, brooding over Europe. One of the funniest
+episodes was a visit paid in 1865 by the disconsolate Mrs. Moens to the
+ex-brigand Talarico, who was then living in grand style on a government
+pension. Her husband had been captured by the band of Manzi (another brigand),
+and expected to be murdered every day, and the lady succeeded in procuring from
+the chivalrous monster&mdash;&ldquo;an extremely handsome man, very tall, with
+the smallest and most delicate hands&rdquo;&mdash;an exquisite letter to his
+colleague, recommending him to be merciful to the Englishman and to emulate his
+own conduct in that respect. The letter had no effect, apparently; but Moens
+escaped at last, and wrote his memoirs, while Manzi was caught and executed in
+1868 after a trial occupying nearly a month, during which the jury had to
+answer 311 questions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His villainies were manifold. But they were put in the shade by those of others
+of his calling&mdash;of Caruso, for example, who was known to have massacred in
+one month (September, 1863) two
+<a name="Page215"></a>
+hundred persons with his own hands. Then, as formerly, the Church favoured the
+malefactors, and I am personally acquainted with priests who fought on the side
+of the brigands. Francis II endeavoured to retrieve his kingdom by the help of
+an army of scoundrels like those of Ruffo, but the troops shot them down.
+Brigandage, as a governmental institution, came to an end. Unquestionably the
+noblest figure in this reactionary movement was that of José Borjès, a brave
+man engaged in an unworthy cause. You can read his tragic journal in the pages
+of M. Monnier or Maffei. It has been calculated that during these last years of
+Bourbonism the brigands committed seven thousand homicides a year in the
+kingdom of Naples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Schools and emigration have now brought sounder ideas among the people, and the
+secularization of convents with the abolition of ecclesiastical right of asylum
+(Sixtus V had wisely done away with it) has broken up the prosperous old bond
+between monks and malefactors. What the government has done towards
+establishing decent communications in this once lawless and pathless country
+ranks, in its small way, beside the achievement of the French who, in Algeria,
+have built nearly ten thousand miles of road. But it is well to note that even
+as the mechanical appliance of steam destroyed the corsairs, the external
+plague, so this hoary form of internal disorder could have been permanently
+eradicated neither by humanity nor by severity. A scientific invention, the
+electric telegraph, is the guarantee of peace against the rascals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These brigand chiefs were often loaded with gold. On killing them, the first
+thing the French used to do was to strip them. &ldquo;On le dépouilla.&rdquo;
+Francatripa, for instance, possessed &ldquo;a plume of white ostrich feathers,
+clasped by a golden band and diamond Madonna&rdquo; (a gift from Queen
+Caroline)&mdash;Cerino and Manzi had &ldquo;bunches of gold chains as thick as
+an arm suspended across the breasts of their waistcoats, with gorgeous brooches
+at each fastening.&rdquo; Some of their wealth now survives in certain families
+who gave them shelter in the towns in winter time, or when they were hard
+pressed. These <i>favoreggiatori</i> or <i>manutengoli</i> (the terms are
+interconvertible, but the first is the legal one) were sometimes benevolently
+inclined. But occasionally they conceived the happy idea of being paid for
+their silence and services. The brigand, then, was hoist with his own petard
+and forced to disgorge his ill-gotten summer gains to these blood-suckers, who
+extorted heavy blackmail under menaces of disclosure to the police, thriving on
+their double infamy to such an extent that they acquired immense riches. One of
+the wealthiest men in Italy descends from this
+<a name="Page216"></a>
+class; his two hundred million (?) francs are invested, mostly, in England;
+every one knows his name, but the origin of his fortune is no longer mentioned,
+since (thanks to this money) the family has been able to acquire not only
+respectability but distinction.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page217"></a><a name="chap28"></a>XXVIII<br />
+THE GREATER SILA</h2>
+
+<p>
+A great project is afoot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I understand it, a reservoir is being created by damming up the valley of
+the Ampollina; the artificial lake thus formed will be enlarged by the
+additional waters of the Arvo, which are to be led into it by means of a
+tunnel, about three miles long, passing underneath Monte Nero. The basin, they
+tell me, will be some ten kilometres in length; the work will cost forty
+million francs, and will be completed in a couple of years; it will supply the
+Ionian lowlands with pure water and with power for electric and other
+industries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And more than that. The lake is to revolutionize the Sila; to convert these
+wildernesses into a fashionable watering-place. Enthusiasts already see towns
+growing upon its shores&mdash;there are visions of gorgeous hotels and flocks
+of summer visitors in elegant toilettes, villa-residences, funicular railways
+up all the mountains, sailing regattas, and motor-boat services. In the place
+of the desert there will arise a &ldquo;Lucerna di Calabria.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Calabrian Lucerne. H&rsquo;m. ...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It remains to be seen whether, by the time the lake is completed, there will be
+any water left to flow into it. For the catchment basins are being so
+conscientiously cleared of their timber that the two rivers cannot but suffer a
+great diminution in volume. By 1896 already, says Marincola San Fioro, the
+destruction of woodlands in the Sila had resulted in a notable lack of
+moisture. Ever since then the vandalism has been pursued with a zeal worthy of
+a better cause. One trembles to think what these regions will be like in fifty
+years; a treeless and waterless tableland&mdash;worse than the glaring
+limestone deserts of the Apennines in so far as they, at least, are diversified
+in contour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the healthfulness, beauty, and exchequer value of enormous tracts in this
+country are being systematically impaired, day by day. Italy is ready, said
+D&rsquo;Azeglio, but where are the Italians?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page218"></a>
+Let us give the government credit for any number of good ideas. It actually
+plants bare spaces; it has instituted a &ldquo;Festa degli alberi&rdquo; akin
+to the American Arbour Day, whereby it is hoped, though scarcely believed, that
+the whole of Italy will ultimately be replenished with trees; it encourages
+schools of forestry, supplies plants free of cost to all who ask for them,
+despatches commissions and prints reports. Above all, it talks prodigiously and
+very much to the purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it omits to administer its own laws with becoming severity. A few exemplary
+fines and imprisonments would have a more salutary effect than the
+commissioning of a thousand inspectors whom nobody takes seriously, and the
+printing of ten thousand reports which nobody reads.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a single stroke of the pen the municipalities could put an end to the
+worst form of forest extirpation&mdash;that on the hill-sides&mdash;by
+forbidding access to such tracts and placing them under the &ldquo;vincolo
+forestale.&rdquo; To denude slopes in the moist climate and deep soil of
+England entails no risk; in this country it is the beginning of the end. And
+herein lies the ineptitude of the Italian regulations, which entrust the
+collective wisdom of rapacious farmers with measures of this kind, taking no
+account of the destructively utilitarian character of the native mind, of that
+canniness which overlooks a distant profit in its eagerness to grasp the
+present&mdash;that beast avarice which Horace recognized as the root of all
+evil. As if provisions like this of the &ldquo;vincolo forestale&rdquo; were
+ever carried out! Peasants naturally prefer to burn the wood in their own
+chimneys or to sell it; and if a landslide then crashes down, wrecking houses
+and vineyards&mdash;let the government compensate the victims!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An ounce of fact&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In one year alone (1903), and in the sole province of Cosenza wherein San
+Giovanni lies, there were 156 landslides; they destroyed 1940 hectares of land,
+and their damage amounted to 432,738 francs. The two other Calabrian
+provinces&mdash;Reggio and Catanzaro&mdash;doubtless also had their full quota
+of these catastrophes, all due to mischievous deforestation. So the bare rock
+is exposed, and every hope of planting at an end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Vox clamantis!</i> The Normans, Anjou and Aragonese concerned themselves
+with the proper administration of woodlands. Even the Spanish Viceroys, that
+ineffable brood, issued rigorous enactments on the subject; while the Bourbons
+(to give the devil his due) actually distinguished themselves as conservators
+of forests. As to Napoleon&mdash;he was busy enough, one would think, on this
+<a name="Page219"></a>
+side of the Alps. Yet he found time to frame wise regulations concerning trees
+which the present patriotic parliament, during half a century of frenzied
+confabulation, has not yet taken to heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How a great man will leave his mark on minutiæ!
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+I passed through the basin of this future lake when, in accordance with my
+project, I left San Giovanni to cross the remaining Sila in the direction of
+Catanzaro. This getting up at 3.30 a.m., by the way, rather upsets one&rsquo;s
+daily routine; at breakfast time I already find myself enquiring anxiously for
+dinner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Ampollina valley lies high; here, in the dewy grass, I enjoyed what I well
+knew would be my last shiver for some time to come; then moved for a few miles
+on the further bank of the rivulet along that driving road which will soon be
+submerged under the waters of the lake, and struck up a wooded glen called
+Barbarano. At its head lies the upland Circilla.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is no rock scenery worth mentioning in all this Sila country; no
+waterfalls or other Alpine features. It is a venerable granitic tableland, that
+has stood here while the proud Apennines were still slumbering in the oozy bed
+of ocean<a href="#fn-28.1" name="fnref-28.1" id="fnref-28.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>&mdash;a
+region of gentle undulations, the hill-tops covered with forest-growth, the
+valleys partly arable and partly pasture. Were it not for the absence of
+heather with its peculiar mauve tints, the traveller might well imagine himself
+in Scotland. There is the same smiling alternation of woodland and meadow, the
+same huge boulders of gneiss and granite which give a distinctive tone to the
+landscape, the same exuberance of living waters. Water, indeed, is one of the
+glories of the Sila&mdash;everywhere it bubbles forth in chill rivulets among
+the stones and trickles down the hill-sides to join the larger streams that
+wend their way to the forlorn and fever-stricken coastlands of Magna Graecia.
+Often, as I refreshed myself at these icy fountains, did I thank Providence for
+making the Sila of primitive rock, and not of the thirsty Apennine limestone.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-28.1" id="fn-28.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-28.1">[1]</a>
+Nissen says that &ldquo;no landscape of Italy has lost so little of its
+original appearance in the course of history as Calabria.&rdquo; This may apply
+to the mountains; but the lowlands have suffered hideous changes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Much water in the Sila,&rdquo; an old shepherd once observed to me,
+&ldquo;much water! And little tobacco.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the largest of these rivers is the Neto, the classic Neaithos sung by
+Theocritus, which falls into the sea north of Cotrone; San Giovanni overlooks
+its raging flood, and, with the help of a little imagination here and there,
+its whole course can be traced from
+<a name="Page220"></a>
+eminences like that of Pettinascura. The very name of these streams&mdash;Neto,
+Arvo, Lese, Ampollina&mdash;are redolent of pastoral life. All of them are
+stocked with trout; they meander in their upper reaches through valleys grazed
+by far-tinkling flocks of sheep and goats and grey cattle&mdash;the experiment
+of acclimatizing Swiss cattle has proved a failure, I know not why&mdash;and
+their banks are brilliant with blossoms. Later on, in the autumn, the thistles
+begin to predominate&mdash;the finest of them being a noble ground thistle of
+pale gold, of which they eat the unopened bud; it is the counterpart of the
+silvery one of the Alps. The air in these upper regions is keen. I remember,
+some years ago, that during the last week of August a lump of snow, which a
+goat-boy produced as his contribution to our luncheon, did not melt in the
+bright sunshine on the summit of Monte Nero.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From whichever side one climbs out of the surrounding lowlands into the Sila
+plateau, the same succession of trees is encountered. To the warmest zone of
+olives, lemons and carobs succeeds that of the chestnuts, some of them of
+gigantic dimensions and yielding a sure though moderate return in fruit, others
+cut down periodically as coppice for vine-props and scaffoldings. Large tracts
+of these old chestnut groves are now doomed; a French society in Cosenza, so
+they tell me, is buying them up for the extraction out of their bark of some
+chemical or medicine. The vine still flourishes at this height, though dwarfed
+in size; soon the oaks begin to dominate, and after that we enter into the
+third and highest region of the pines and beeches. Those accustomed to the
+stony deserts of nearly all South European mountain districts will find these
+woodlands intensely refreshing. Their inaccessibility has proved their
+salvation&mdash;up to a short time ago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nearly all the cattle on the Sila, like the land itself, belongs to large
+proprietors. These gentlemen are for the most part invisible; they inhabit
+their palaces in the cities, and the very name of the Sila sends a cold shudder
+through their bones; their revenues are collected from the shepherds by agents
+who seem to do their work very conscientiously. I once observed, in a hut, a
+small fragment of the skin of a newly killed kid; the wolf had devoured the
+beast, and the shepherd was keeping this <i>corpus delicti</i> to prove to his
+superior, the agent, that he was innocent of the murder. There was something
+naive in his honesty&mdash;as if a shepherd could not eat a kid as well as any
+wolf, and keep a portion of its skin! The agent, no doubt, would hand it on to
+his lord, by way of <i>confirmation and verification.</i> Another time I saw
+the debris of a goat hanging from
+<a name="Page221"></a>
+a tree; it was the wolf again; the boy had attached these remains to the tree
+in order that all who passed that way might be his witnesses, if necessary,
+that the animal had not been sold underhand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You may still find the legendary shepherds here&mdash;curly-haired striplings,
+reclining <i>sub tegmine fagi</i> in the best Theocritean style, and piping
+wondrous melodies to their flocks. These have generally come up for the summer
+season from the Ionian lowlands. Or you may encounter yet more primitive
+creatures, forest boys, clad in leather, with wild eyes and matted locks, that
+take an elvish delight in misdirecting you. These are the Lucanians of old.
+&ldquo;They bring them up from childhood in the woods among the
+shepherds,&rdquo; says Justinus, &ldquo;without servants, and even without any
+clothes to cover them, or to lie upon, that from their early years they may
+become inured to hardiness and frugality, and have no intercourse with the
+city. They live upon game, and drink nothing but water or milk.&rdquo; But the
+majority of modern Sila shepherds are shrewd fellows of middle age (many of
+them have been to America), who keep strict business accounts for their masters
+of every ounce of cheese and butter produced. The local cheese, which
+Cassiodorus praises in one of his letters, is the <i>cacciacavallo</i> common
+all over South Italy; the butter is of the kind which has been humorously, but
+quite wrongly, described by various travellers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although the old wolves are shot and killed by spring guns and dynamite while
+the young ones are caught alive in steel traps and other appliances, their
+numbers are still formidable enough to perturb the pastoral folks. One is
+therefore surprised to see what a poor breed of dogs they keep; scraggy
+mongrels that run for their lives at the mere sight of a wolf who can, and
+often does, bite them into two pieces with one snap of his jaws. They tell me
+that there is a government reward for every wolf killed, but it is seldom paid;
+whoever has the good fortune to slay one of these beasts, carries the skin as
+proof of his prowess from door to door, and receives a small present
+everywhere&mdash;half a franc, or a cheese, or a glass of wine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The goats show fight, and therefore the wolf prefers sheep. Shepherds have told
+me that he comes up to them <i>delicatamente,</i> and then, fixing his teeth in
+the wool of their necks, pulls them onward, caressing their sides with his
+tail. The sheep are fascinated with his gentle manners, and generally allow
+themselves to be led up to the spot he has selected for their execution; the
+truth being that he is too lazy to carry them, if he can possibly avoid it.
+<a name="Page222"></a>
+He will promptly kill his quarry and carry its carcase downhill on the rare
+occasions when the flocks are grazing above his haunt; but if it is an uphill
+walk, they must be good enough to use their own legs. Incredible stories of his
+destructiveness are related.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortunately, human beings are seldom attacked, a dog or a pig being generally
+forthcoming when the usual prey is not to be found. Yet not long ago a sad
+affair occurred; a she-wolf attacked a small boy before the eyes of his
+parents, who pursued him, powerless to help&mdash;the head and arms had already
+been torn off before a shot from a neighbour despatched the monster. Truly,
+&ldquo;a great family displeasure,&rdquo; as my informant styled it. Milo of
+Croton, the famous athlete, is the most renowned victim of these Sila wolves.
+Tradition has it that, relying on his great strength, he tried to rend asunder
+a mighty log of wood which closed, however, and caught his arms in its grip;
+thus helpless, he was devoured alive by them.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+By keeping to the left of Circilla, I might have skirted the forest of
+Gariglione. This tract lies at about four and a half hours&rsquo; distance from
+San Giovanni; I found it, some years ago, to be a region of real
+&ldquo;Urwald&rdquo; or primary jungle; there was nothing like it, to my
+knowledge, on this side of the Alps, nor yet in the Alps themselves; nothing of
+the kind nearer than Russia. But the Russian jungles, apart from their monotony
+of timber, foster feelings of sadness and gloom, whereas these southern ones,
+as Hehn has well observed, are full of a luminous beauty&mdash;their darkest
+recesses being enlivened by a sense of benignant mystery. Gariglione was at
+that time a virgin forest, untouched by the hand of man; a dusky ridge, visible
+from afar; an impenetrable tangle of forest trees, chiefest among them being
+the &ldquo;garigli&rdquo; <i>(Quercus cerris)</i> whence it derives its name,
+as well as thousands of pines and bearded firs and all that hoary indigenous
+vegetation struggling out of the moist soil wherein their progenitors had lain
+decaying time out of mind. In these solitudes, if anywhere, one might still
+have found the absent-minded luzard (lynx) of the veracious historian; or that
+squirrel whose &ldquo;calabrere&rdquo; fur, I strongly suspect, came from
+Russia; or, at any rate, the Mushroom-stone <i>which shineth in the night</i>.<a href="#fn-28.2" name="fnref-28.2" id="fnref-28.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-28.2" id="fn-28.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-28.2">[2]</a>
+As a matter of fact, the mushroom-stone is a well-known commodity, being
+still collected and eaten, for example, at Santo Stefano in Aspramente. Older
+travellers tell us that it used to be exported to Naples and kept in the
+cellars of the best houses for the enjoyment of its fruit&mdash;sometimes in
+lumps measuring two feet in diameter which, being soaked in water, produced
+these edible fungi. A stone yielding food&mdash;a miracle! It is a porous tufa
+adapted, presumably, for sheltering and fecundating vegetable spores. A little
+pamphlet by Professor A. Trotter (&ldquo;Flora Montana della Calabria&rdquo;)
+gives some idea of the local plants and contains a useful bibliography. A
+curious feature is the relative abundance of boreal and Balkan-Oriental forms;
+another, the rapid spread of <i>Genista anglica,</i> which is probably an
+importation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page223"></a>
+Well, I am glad my path to-day did not lead me to Gariglione, and so destroy
+old memories of the place. For the domain, they tell me, has been sold for
+350,000 francs to a German company; its primeval silence is now invaded by an
+army of 260 workmen, who have been cutting down the timber as fast as they can.
+So vanishes another fair spot from earth! And what is left of the Sila, once
+these forests are gone? Not even the charm, such as it is, of Caithness. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After Circilla comes the watershed that separates the Sila Grande from the
+westerly regions of Sila Piccola. Thenceforward it was downhill walking, at
+first through forest lands, then across verdant stretches, bereft of timber and
+simmering in the sunshine. The peculiar character of this country is soon
+revealed&mdash;ferociously cloven ravines, utterly different from the Sila
+Grande.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the improvidence of the true traveller I had consumed my stock of
+provisions ere reaching the town of Taverna after a march of nine hours or
+thereabouts. A place of this size and renown, I had argued, would surely be
+able to provide a meal. But Taverna belies its name. The only tavern
+discoverable was a composite hovel, half wine-shop, half hen-house, whose
+proprietor, disturbed in his noonday nap, stoutly refused to produce anything
+eatable. And there I stood in the blazing sunshine, famished and un-befriended.
+Forthwith the strength melted out of my bones; the prospect of walking to
+Catanzaro, so alluring with a full stomach, faded out of the realm of
+possibility; and it seemed a special dispensation of Providence when, at my
+lowest ebb of vitality, a small carriage suddenly hove in sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How much to Catanzaro?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The owner eyed me critically, and then replied in English:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You can pay twenty dollars.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Twenty dollars&mdash;a hundred francs! But it is useless trying to bargain with
+an <i>americano</i> (their time is too valuable).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A dollar a mile?&rdquo; I protested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You be damned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Same to you, mister.&rdquo; And he drove off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such bold defiance of fate never goes unrewarded. A two-wheeled cart conveying
+some timber overtook me shortly afterwards on my way from the inhospitable
+Taverna. For a small
+<a name="Page224"></a>
+consideration I was enabled to pass the burning hours of the afternoon in an
+improvised couch among its load of boards, admiring the scenery and the
+engineering feats that have carried a road through such difficult country, and
+thinking out some further polite remarks to be addressed to my twenty-dollar
+friend, in the event of our meeting at Catanzaro. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One must have traversed the Sila in order to appreciate the manifold charms of
+the mountain town&mdash;I have revelled in them since my arrival. But it has
+one irremediable drawback: the sea lies at an inconvenient distance. It takes
+forty-five minutes to reach the shore by means of two railways in whose
+carriages the citizens descend after wild scrambles for places, packed tight as
+sardines in the sweltering heat. Only a genuine enthusiast will undertake the
+trip more than once. For the Marina itself&mdash;at this season, at
+least&mdash;is an unappetizing spot; a sordid agglomeration of houses, a few
+dirty fruit-stalls, ankle-deep dust, swarms of flies. I prefer to sleep through
+the warm hours of the day, and then take the air in that delightful public
+garden which, by the way, has already become too small for the increasing
+population.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At its entrance stands the civic museum, entrusted, just now, to the care of a
+quite remarkably ignorant and slatternly woman. It contains two rooms, whose
+exhibits are smothered in dust and cobwebs; as neglected, in short, as her own
+brats that sprawl about its floor. I enquired whether she possessed no
+catalogue to show where the objects, bearing no labels, had been found. A
+catalogue was unnecessary, she said; she knew everything&mdash;everything!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And everything, apparently, hailed from &ldquo;Stromboli.&rdquo; The Tiriolo
+helmet, the Greek vases, all the rest of the real and sham treasures of this
+establishment: they were all discovered at Stromboli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Those coins&mdash;whence?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stromboli!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Noticing some neolithic celts similar to those I obtained at Vaccarizza, I
+would gladly have learnt their place of origin. Promptly came the answer:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stromboli!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nonsense, my good woman. I&rsquo;ve been three times to Stromboli; it is
+an island of black stones where the devil has a house, and such things are not
+found there.&rdquo; (Of course she meant Strongoli, the ancient Petelia.)
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus25"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-25.jpg" width="369" height="483" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Gateway at Catanzaro</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+This vigorous assertion made her more circumspect. Thenceforward everything was
+declared to come from the province&mdash;<i>dalla provincia;</i> it was safer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page225"></a>
+<i>&ldquo;</i>That bad picture&mdash;whence?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dalla provincia!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you really no catalogue?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And this broken statue&mdash;whence?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dalla provincia!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But the province is large,&rdquo; I objected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it is. Large, and old.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+I have also revisited Tiriolo, once celebrated for the &ldquo;Sepulchres of the
+Giants&rdquo; (Greek tombs) that were unearthed here, and latterly for a
+certain more valuable antiquarian discovery. Not long ago it was a considerable
+undertaking to reach this little place, but nowadays a public motor-car whirls
+you up and down the ravines at an alarming pace and will deposit you, within a
+few hours, at remote Cosenza, once an enormous drive. It is the same all over
+modern Calabria. The diligence service, for instance, that used to take
+fourteen hours from San Giovanni to Cosenza has been replaced by motors that
+cover the distance in four or five. One is glad to save time, but this new
+element of mechanical hurry has produced a corresponding kind of
+traveller&mdash;a machine-made creature, devoid of the humanity of the old; it
+has done away with the personal note of conviviality that reigned in the
+post-carriages. What jocund friendships were made, what songs and tales
+applauded, during those interminable hours in the lumbering chaise!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You must choose Sunday for Tiriolo, on account of the girls, whose pretty faces
+and costumes are worth coming any distance to see. A good proportion of them
+have the fair hair which seems to have been eliminated, in other parts of the
+country, through the action of malaria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Viewed from Catanzaro, one of the hills of Tiriolo looks like a broken volcanic
+crater. It is a limestone ridge, decked with those characteristic flowers like
+<i>Campanula fragilis</i> which you will vainly seek on the Sila. Out of the
+ruins of some massive old building they have constructed, on the summit, a
+lonely weather-beaten fabric that would touch the heart of Maeterlinck. They
+call it a seismological station. I pity the people that have to depend for
+their warnings of earthquakes upon the outfit of a place like this. I could see
+no signs of life here; the windows were broken, the shutters decaying, an old
+lightning-rod dangled disconsolately from the roof; it looked as abandoned as
+any old tower in a tale. There is a noble view from this point over both seas
+and into the
+<a name="Page226"></a>
+riven complexities of Aspromonte, when the peak is not veiled in mists, as it
+frequently is. For Tiriolo lies on the watershed; there (to quote from a
+&ldquo;Person of Quality&rdquo;) &ldquo;where the Apennine is drawn into so
+narrow a point, that the rain-water which descendeth from the ridge of some one
+house, falleth on the left in the Terrene Sea, and on the right into the
+Adriatick. . . .&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+My visits to the provincial museum have become scandalously frequent during the
+last few days. I cannot keep away from the place. I go there not to study the
+specimens but to converse with their keeper, the woman who, in her quiet way,
+has cast a sort of charm over me. Our relations are the whispered talk of the
+town; I am suspected of matrimonial designs upon a poor widow with the ulterior
+object of appropriating the cream of the relics under her care. Regardless of
+the perils of the situation, I persevere; for the sake of her company I
+forswear the manifold seductions of Catanzaro. She is a noteworthy person,
+neither vicious nor vulgar, but simply the <i>dernier mot</i> of incompetence.
+Her dress, her looks, her children, her manners&mdash;they are all on an even
+plane with her spiritual accomplishments; at no point does she sink, or rise,
+beyond that level. They are not as common as they seem to be, these
+harmoniously inefficient females.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why has she got this job in a progressive town containing so many folks who
+could do it creditably? Oh, that is simple enough! She needs it. On the
+platform of the Reggio station (long before the earthquake) I once counted five
+station-masters and forty-eight other railway officials, swaggering about with
+a magnificent air of incapacity. What were they doing? Nothing whatever. They
+were like this woman: they needed a job.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus26"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-26.jpg" width="307" height="400" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">In the Cemetery of Reggio</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+We are in a patriarchal country; work is pooled; it is given not to those who
+can do it best, but to those who need it most&mdash;given, too, on pretexts
+which sometimes strike one as inadequate, not to say recondite. So the
+street-scavengering in a certain village has been entrusted to a one-armed
+cripple, utterly unfit for the business&mdash;why? Because his maternal
+grand-uncle is serving a long sentence in gaol. The poor family must be helped!
+A brawny young fellow will be removed from a landing-stage boat, and his place
+taken by some tottering old peasant who has never handled an oar&mdash;why? The
+old man&rsquo;s nephew has married again; the family must be helped. A
+secretarial appointment was specially created for an acquaintance of mine who
+could barely sign his own name, for the obvious reason that his cousin&rsquo;s
+sister was rheumatic. One must help that family.
+<a name="Page227"></a>
+A postman whom I knew delivered the letters only once every three days,
+alleging, as unanswerable argument in his defence, that his brother&rsquo;s
+wife had fifteen children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One must help that family!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Somebody seems to have thought so, at all events.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page228"></a><a name="chap29"></a>XXIX<br />
+CHAOS</h2>
+
+<p>
+I have never beheld the enchantment of the Straits of Messina, that Fata
+Morgana, when, under certain conditions of weather, phantasmagoric palaces of
+wondrous shape are cast upon the waters&mdash;not mirrored, but standing
+upright; tangible, as it were; yet diaphanous as a veil of gauze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Dominican monk and correspondent of the Naples Academy, Minasi by name,
+friend of Sir W. Hamilton, wrote a dissertation upon this atmospheric mockery.
+Many have seen and described it, among them Pilati de Tassulo; Nicola Leoni
+reproduces the narrative of an eye-witness of 1643; another account appears in
+the book of A. Fortis (&ldquo;Mineralogische Reisen, 1788&rdquo;). The
+apparition is coy. Yet there are pictures of it&mdash;in an article in
+&ldquo;La Lettura&rdquo; by Dr. Vittorio Boccara, who therein refers to a
+scientific treatise by himself on the subject, as well as in the little volume
+&ldquo;Da Reggio a Metaponto&rdquo; by Lupi-Crisafi, which was printed at
+Gerace some years ago. I mention these writers for the sake of any one who,
+luckier than myself, may be able to observe this phenomenon and become
+interested in its history and origin. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chronicles of Messina record the scarcely human feats of the diver Cola
+Pesce (Nicholas the Fish). The dim submarine landscapes of the Straits with
+their caves and tangled forests held no secrets from him; his eyes were as
+familiar with sea-mysteries as those of any fish. Some think that the legend
+dates from Frederick II, to whom he brought up from the foaming gulf that
+golden goblet which has been immortalized in Schiller&rsquo;s ballad. But
+Schneegans says there are Norman documents that speak of him. And that other
+tale, according to which he took to his watery life in pursuit of some beloved
+maiden who had been swallowed by the waves, makes one think of old Glaucus as
+his prototype.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus27"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-27.jpg" width="403" height="322" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Tiriolo</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Many are the fables connected with his name, but the most portentous is this:
+One day, during his subaqueous wanderings, he discovered the foundations of
+Messina. They were insecure! The city rested upon three columns, one of them
+intact, another
+<a name="Page229"></a>
+quite decayed away, the third partially corroded and soon to crumble into ruin.
+He peered up from, his blue depths, and in a fateful couplet of verses warned
+the townsmen of their impending doom. In this prophetic utterance ascribed to
+the fabulous Cola Pesce is echoed a popular apprehension that was only too
+justified.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+F. Muenter&mdash;one of a band of travellers who explored these regions after
+the earthquake of 1783&mdash;also gave voice to his fears that Messina had not
+yet experienced the full measure of her calamities. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I remember a night in September of 1908, a Sunday night, fragrant with the
+odours of withered rosemary and cistus and fennel that streamed in aromatic
+showers from the scorched heights overhead&mdash;a starlit night, tranquil and
+calm. Never had Messina appeared so attractive to me. Arriving there generally
+in the daytime and from larger and sprightlier centres of civilization, one is
+prone to notice only its defects. But night, especially a southern night, has a
+wizard touch. It transforms into objects of mysterious beauty all unsightly
+things, or hides them clean away; while the nobler works of man, those facades
+and cornices and full-bellied balconies of cunningly wrought iron rise up,
+under its enchantment, ethereal as the palace of fairies. And coming, as I then
+did, from the sun-baked river-beds of Calabria, this place, with its broad and
+well-paved streets, its glittering cafés and demure throng of evening idlers,
+seemed a veritable metropolis, a world-city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With deliberate slowness, <i>ritardando con molto sentimento,</i> I worked my
+way to the familiar restaurant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last! At last, after an interminable diet of hard bread, onions and
+goat&rsquo;s cheese, I was to enjoy the complicated menu mapped out weeks
+beforehand, after elaborate consideration and balancing of merits; so
+complicated, that its details have long ago lapsed from my memory. I recollect
+only the sword-fish, a local speciality, and (as crowning glory) the <i>cassata
+alla siciliana,</i> a glacial symphony, a multicoloured ice of commingling
+flavours, which requires far more time to describe than to devour. Under the
+influence of this Sybaritic fare, helped down with a crusted bottle of
+Calabrian wine&mdash;your Sicilian stuff is too strong for me, too
+straightforward, uncompromising; I prefer to be wheedled out of my faculties by
+inches, like a gentleman&mdash;under this genial stimulus my extenuated frame
+was definitely restored; I became mellow and companionable; the
+traveller&rsquo;s lot, I finally concluded, is not the worst on earth.
+Everything was as it should be. As for Messina&mdash;Messina was unquestionably
+a pleasant city. But why were all the shops shut so early in the evening?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page230"></a>
+<i>&ldquo;</i>These Sicilians,&rdquo; said the waiter, an old Neapolitan
+acquaintance, in reply to my enquiries, &ldquo;are always playing some game.
+They are pretending to be Englishmen at this moment; they have the
+Sunday-closing obsession on the brain. Their attacks generally last a
+fortnight; it&rsquo;s like the measles. Poor people.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Playing at being Englishmen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They have invented a new game now, those that are left of them. They are living
+in dolls&rsquo; houses, and the fit is likely to last for some little time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An engineer remarked to me, not long ago, among the ruins:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This <i>baracca,</i> this wooden shelter, has an interior surface area
+of less than thirty square metres. Thirty-three persons&mdash;men, women, and
+children&mdash;have been living and sleeping in it for the last five
+months.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little overcrowded?&rdquo; I suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. Some of them are beginning to talk of overcrowding. It was all very
+well in the winter months, but when August comes. . . . Well, we shall
+see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No prophetic visions of the Messina of to-day, with its minute sheds perched
+among a wilderness of ruins and haunted by scared shadows in sable vestments of
+mourning, arose in my mind that evening as I sat at the little marble table,
+sipping my coffee&mdash;over-roasted, like all Italian coffee, by exactly two
+minutes&mdash;and puffing contentedly at my cigar, while the sober crowd
+floated hither and thither before my eyes. Yes, everything was as it should be.
+And yet, what a chance!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What a chance for some God, in this age of unbelief, to establish his rule over
+mankind on the firm foundations of faith! We are always complaining, nowadays,
+of an abatement of religious feeling. How easy for such a one to send down an
+Isaiah to foretell the hour of the coming catastrophe, and thus save those of
+its victims who were disposed to hearken to the warning voice; to reanimate the
+flagging zeal of worshippers, to straighten doubts and segregate the sheep from
+the goats! Truly, He moves in a mysterious way, for no divine message came; the
+just were entombed with the unjust amid a considerable deal of telegraphing and
+heart-breaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few days after the disaster the Catholic papers explained matters by saying
+that the people of Messina had not loved their Madonna sufficiently well. But
+she loved them none the less, and sent the earthquake as an admonishment.
+Rather a robust method of conciliating their affection; not exactly the
+<i>suaviter in modo. . . .</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But if genuine prophets can only flourish among the malarious
+<a name="Page231"></a>
+willow swamps of old Babylon and such-like improbable spots, we might at least
+have expected better things of our modern spiritualists. Why should their
+apparitions content themselves with announcing the decease, at the Antipodes,
+of profoundly uninteresting relatives? Alas! I begin to perceive that spirits
+of the right kind, of the useful kind, have yet to be discovered. Our
+present-day ghosts are like seismographs; they chronicle the event after it has
+happened. Now, what we want is&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Signore smokes, and smokes, and smokes. Why not take the tram and
+listen to the municipal music in the gardens?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Music? Gardens? An excellent suggestion, Gennarino.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as a small Italian town would be incomplete without its piazza where
+streets converge and commercial pulses beat their liveliest measure, so every
+larger one contrives to possess a public garden for the evening disport of its
+citizens; night-life being the true life of the south. Charming they are, most
+of them; none more delectable than that of old Messina&mdash;a spacious
+pleasaunce, decked out with trim palms and flower-beds and labyrinthine walks
+freshly watered, and cooled, that evening, by stealthy breezes from the sea.
+The grounds were festively illuminated, and as I sat down near the bandstand
+and watched the folk meandering to and fro, I calculated that no fewer than
+thirty thousand persons were abroad, taking their pleasure under the trees, in
+the bland air of evening. An orderly, well-dressed crowd. We may smile when
+they tell us that these people will stint themselves of the necessities of life
+in order to wear fine clothes, but the effect, for an outsider, is all that it
+should be. For the rest, the very urchins, gambolling about, had an air of
+happy prosperity, different from the squalor of the north with its pinched
+white faces, its over-breeding and under-feeding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And how well the sensuous Italian strains accord with such an hour and scene!
+They were playing, if I remember rightly, the ever-popular Aida; other items
+followed later&mdash;more ambitious ones; a Hungarian rhapsody, Berlioz, a
+selection from Wagner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Musica filosofica&rdquo;</i> said my neighbour, alluding to the
+German composer. He was a spare man of about sixty; a sunburnt, military
+countenance, seamed by lines of suffering. &ldquo;<i>Non và in
+Sicilia</i>&mdash;it won&rsquo;t do in this country. Not that we fail to
+appreciate your great thinkers,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;We read and admire your
+Schopenhauer, your Spencer. They give passable representations of Wagner in
+Naples. But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The climate?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Precisely. I have travelled, sir; and knowing your Berlin, and London,
+and Boston, have been able to observe how ill our Italian
+<a name="Page232"></a>
+architecture looks under your grey skies, how ill our music sounds among the
+complex appliances of your artificial life. It has made you earnest, this
+climate of yours, and prone to take earnestly your very pastimes. Music, for
+us, has remained what it was in the Golden Age&mdash;an unburdening of the soul
+on a summer&rsquo;s night. They play well, these fellows. Palermo, too, has a
+respectable band&mdash;Oh! a little too fast, that <i>recitativo!&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Signore is a musician?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A <i>proprietario.</i> But I delight in music, and I beguiled myself
+with the fiddle as a youngster. Nowadays&mdash;look here!&rdquo; And he
+extended his hand; it was crippled. &ldquo;Rheumatism. I have it here, and
+here&rdquo;&mdash;pointing to various regions of his
+body&mdash;&ldquo;<i>and</i> here! Ah, these doctors! The baths I have taken!
+The medicines&mdash;the ointments&mdash;the embrocations: a perfect
+pharmacopcœia! I can hardly crawl now, and without the help of these two
+devoted boys even this harmless little diversion would have been denied me. My
+nephews&mdash;orphans,&rdquo; he added, observing the direction of my glance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They sat on his other side, handsome lads, who spoke neither too much nor too
+little. Every now and then they rose with one accord and strolled among the
+surging crowd to stretch their legs, returning after five minutes to their
+uncle&rsquo;s side. His eyes always followed their movements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My young brother, had he lived, would have made men of them,&rdquo; he
+once observed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The images revive, curiously pertinacious, with dim lapses and gulfs. I can see
+them still, the two boys, their grave demeanour belied by mobile lips and
+mischievous fair curls of Northern ancestry; the other, leaning forward intent
+upon the music, and caressing his moustache with bent fingers upon which
+glittered a jewel set in massive gold&mdash;some scarab or intaglio, the spoil
+of old Magna Graecia. His conversation, during the intervals, moved among the
+accepted formulas of cosmopolitanism with easy flow, quickened at times by the
+individual emphasis of a man who can forsake conventional tracks and think for
+himself. Among other things, he had contrived an original project for reviving
+the lemon industry of his country, which, though it involved a few tariff
+modifications&mdash;&ldquo;a mere detail&rdquo;&mdash;struck me as amazingly
+effective and ingenious. The local deputy, it seems, shared my view, for he had
+undertaken to bring it before the notice of Parliament.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have forgotten!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page233"></a>
+So we discussed the world, while the music played under the starlit southern
+night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must have been midnight ere a final frenzied galop on the part of the
+indefatigable band announced the close of the entertainment. I walked a few
+paces beside the lame &ldquo;proprietor&rdquo; who, supported on the arms of
+his nephews, made his way to the spot where the cabs were waiting&mdash;his
+rheumatism, he explained, obliging him to drive. How he had enjoyed walking as
+a youth, and what pleasure it would now have given him to protract, during a
+promenade to my hotel, our delightful conversation! But infirmities teach us to
+curtail our pleasures, and many things that seem natural to man&rsquo;s bodily
+configuration are found to be unattainable. He seldom left his rooms; the
+stairs&mdash;the diabolical stairs! Would I at least accept his card and rest
+assured how gladly he would receive me and do all in his power to make my stay
+agreeable?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That card has gone the way of numberless others which the traveller in Southern
+Europe gathers about him. I have also forgotten the old man&rsquo;s name. But
+the <i>palazzo</i> in which he lived bore a certain historical title which
+happened to be very familiar to me. I remember wondering how it came to reach
+Messina.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the olden days, of course, the days of splendour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will they ever return?
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+It struck me that the sufferings of the survivors would be alleviated if all
+the sheds in which they are living could be painted white or pearl-grey in
+order to protect them, as far as possible, from the burning rays of the sun. I
+mentioned the idea to an overseer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are painting as fast as we can,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;An
+expensive matter, however. The Villagio Elena alone has cost us, in this
+respect, twenty thousand francs&mdash;with the greatest economy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This will give some notion of the scale on which things have to be done. The
+settlement in question contains some two hundred sheds&mdash;two hundred out of
+over ten thousand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I was alluding not to these groups of hygienic bungalows erected by public
+munificence and supplied with schools, laboratories, orphanages, hospitals, and
+all that can make life endurable, but to the others&mdash;those which the
+refugees built for themselves&mdash;ill-contrived hovels, patched together with
+ropes, potato-sacks, petroleum cans and miscellaneous odds and ends. A coat of
+whitewash, at least, inside and out. ... I was thinking, too, of those still
+stranger dwellings, the disused railway trucks which the
+<a name="Page234"></a>
+government has placed at the disposal of homeless families. At many Stations along
+the line may be seen strings of these picturesque wigwams crowded with poor
+folk who have installed themselves within, apparently for ever. They are
+cultivating their favourite flowers and herbs in gaudy rows along the wooden
+platforms of the carriages; the little children, all dressed in black, play
+about in the shade underneath. The people will suffer in these narrow tenements
+under the fierce southern sun, after their cool courtyards and high-vaulted
+chambers! There will be diseases, too; typhoids from the disturbed drainage and
+insufficient water-supply; eye troubles, caused by the swarms of flies and tons
+of accumulated dust. The ruins are also overrun with hordes of mangy cats and
+dogs which ought to be exterminated without delay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If, as seems likely, those rudely improvised sheds are to be inhabited
+indefinitely, we may look forward to an interesting phenomenon, a reversion to
+a corresponding type of man. The lack of the most ordinary appliances of
+civilization, such as linen, washing-basins and cooking utensils, will reduce
+them to the condition of savages who view these things with indifference or
+simple curiosity; they will forget that they ever had any use for them. And
+life in these huts where human beings are herded together after the manner of
+beasts&mdash;one might almost say <i>fitted in,</i> like the fragments of a
+mosaic pavement&mdash;cannot but be harmful to the development of growing
+children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Calabrians, I was told, distinguished themselves by unearthly ferocity;
+Reggio was given over to a legion of fiends that descended from the heights
+during the week of confusion. &ldquo;They tore the rings and brooches off the
+dead,&rdquo; said a young official to me. &ldquo;They strangled the wounded and
+dying, in order to despoil them more comfortably. Here, and at Messina, the
+mutilated corpses were past computation; but the Calabrians were the
+worst.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vampires, offspring of Night and Chaos.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Dolomieu, speaking of the <i>dépravation incroyable des moeurs</i> which
+accompanied the earthquake of 1783, recounts the case of a householder of
+Polistena who was pinned down under some masonry, his legs emerging out of the
+ruins; his servant came and took the silver buckles off his shoes and then
+fled, without attempting to free him. We have seen something of this kind more
+recently at San Francisco.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;After despoiling the corpses, they ransacked the dwellings. Five
+thousand beds, sir, were carried up from Reggio into the mountains.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page235"></a>
+&ldquo;Five thousand beds! <i>Per Dìo!</i> It seems a considerable
+number.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A young fellow, one of the survivors, attached himself to me in the capacity of
+guide through the ruins of Reggio. He wore the characteristic earthquake look,
+a dazed and bewildered expression of countenance; he spoke in a singularly
+deliberate manner. Knowing the country, I was soon bending my steps in the
+direction of the cemetery, chiefly for the sake of the exquisite view from
+those windswept heights, and to breathe more freely after the dust and
+desolation of the lower parts. This burial-ground is in the same state as that
+of Messina, once the pride of its citizens; the insane frolic of nature has not
+respected the slumber of the dead or their commemorative shrines; it has made a
+mockery of the place, twisting the solemn monuments into repulsive and
+irreverential shapes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But who can recount the freaks of stone and iron during those moments&mdash;the
+hair-breadth escapes? My companion&rsquo;s case was miraculous enough. Awakened
+from sleep with the first shock, he saw, by the dim light of the lamp which
+burns in all their bedrooms, the wall at his bedside weirdly gaping asunder. He
+darted to reach the opening, but it closed again and caught his arm in a stony
+grip. Hours seemed to pass&mdash;the pain was past enduring; then the kindly
+cleft yawned once more, allowing him to jump into the garden below.
+Simultaneously he heard a crash as the inner rooms of the house fell; then
+climbed aloft, and for four days wandered among the bleak, wet hills. Thousands
+were in the same plight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I asked what he found to eat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Erba, Signore.</i> We all did. You could not touch property; a single
+orange, and they would have killed you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Grass!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He bore a name renowned in the past, but his home being turned into a dust-heap
+under which his money, papers and furniture, his two parents and brothers, are
+still lying, he now gains a livelihood by carrying vegetables and fruit from
+the harbour to the collection of sheds honoured by the name of market. Later in
+the day we happened to walk past the very mansion, which lies near the quay.
+&ldquo;Here is my house and my family,&rdquo; he remarked, indicating, with a
+gesture of antique resignation, a pile of wreckage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hard by, among the ruins, there sat a young woman with dishevelled hair,
+singing rapturously. &ldquo;Her husband was crushed to death,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;and it unhinged her wits. Strange, is it not, sir? They used to fight
+like fiends, and now&mdash;she sings to him night and day to come back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Love&mdash;so the Greeks fabled&mdash;was the child of Chaos.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page236"></a>
+In this part of the town stands the civic museum, which all readers of
+Gissing&rsquo;s &ldquo;Ionian Sea&rdquo; will remember as the closing note of
+those harmonious pages. It is shattered, like everything else that he visited
+in Reggio; like the hotel where he lodged; like the cathedral whose proud
+superscription <i>Circumlegentes devenimus Rhegium</i> impressed him so deeply;
+like that &ldquo;singular bit of advanced civilization, which gave me an odd
+sense of having strayed into the world of those romancers who forecast the
+future&mdash;a public slaughter-house of tasteful architecture, set in a grove
+of lemon trees and palms, suggesting the dreamy ideal of some reformer whose
+palate shrinks from vegetarianism.&rdquo; We went the round of all these
+places, not forgetting the house which bears the tablet commemorating the death
+of a young soldier who fell fighting against the Bourbons. From its contorted
+iron balcony there hangs a rope by which the inmates may have tried to let
+themselves down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A friend of mine, Baron C&mdash;&mdash; of Stilo, is a member of that same
+patriotic family, and gave me the following strange account. He was absent from
+Reggio at the time of the catastrophe, but three others of them were staying
+there. On the first shock they rushed together, panic-stricken, into one room;
+the floor gave way, and they suddenly found themselves sitting in their
+motor-car which happened to be placed exactly below them. They escaped with a
+few cuts and bruises.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An inscription on a neighbouring ruin runs to the effect that the <i>mansion
+having been severely damaged in the earthquake of</i> 1783, <i>its owner had
+rebuilt it on lines calculated to defy future shattering!.</i> Whether he would
+rebuild it yet again?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless, there seems to be some chance for the revival of Reggio; its
+prognosis is not utterly hopeless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Messina is in desperate case.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+That haughty sea-front, with its long line of imposing edifices&mdash;imagine a
+painted theatre decoration of cardboard through which some sportive behemoth
+has been jumping with frantic glee; there you have it. And within, all is
+desolation; the wreckage reaches to the windows; you must clamber over it as
+best you can. What an all-absorbing post-tertiary deposit for future
+generations, for the crafty antiquarian who deciphers the history of mankind
+out of kitchen-middens and deformed heaps of forgotten trash! The whole social
+life of the citizens, their arts, domestic economy, and pastimes, lies embedded
+in that rubbish. &ldquo;A musical race,&rdquo; he will conclude, observing the
+number of decayed pianofortes,
+<a name="Page237"></a>
+guitars, and mandolines. The climate of Messina, he will further argue, must
+have been a wet one, inasmuch as there are umbrellas everywhere, standing
+upright among the debris, leaning all forlorn against the ruins, or peering
+dismally from under them. It rained much during those awful days, and umbrellas
+were at a premium. Yet fifty of them would not have purchased a loaf of bread.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Goethe who, speaking of Pompeii, said that of the many catastrophes
+which have afflicted mankind few have given greater pleasure to posterity. The
+same will never be said of Messina, whose relics, for the most part, are
+squalid and mean. The German poet, by the way, visited this town shortly after
+the disaster of 1783, and describes its <i>zackige
+Ruinenwüste</i>&mdash;words whose very sound is suggestive of shatterings and
+dislocations. Nevertheless, the place revived again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what was 1783?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A mere rehearsal, an amateur performance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wandering about in this world of ghosts, I passed the old restaurant where the
+sword-fish had once tasted so good&mdash;an accumulation of stones and
+mortar&mdash;and reached the cathedral. It is laid low, all save the Gargantuan
+mosaic figures that stare down from behind the altar in futile benediction of
+Chaos; inane, terrific. This, then, is the house of that feudal lady of the
+<i>fortiter in re,</i> who sent an earthquake and called it love. Womanlike,
+she doted on gold and precious stones, and they recovered her fabulous hoard,
+together with a copy of a Latin letter she sent to the Christians of Messina by
+the hand of Saint Paul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And not long afterwards&mdash;how came it to pass?&mdash;my steps were guided
+amid that wilderness towards a narrow street containing the ruins of a
+<i>palazzo</i> that bore, on a tablet over the ample doorway, an inscription
+which arrested my attention. It was an historical title familiar to me; and
+forthwith a train of memories, slumbering in the caverns of my mind, was
+ignited. Yes; there was no doubt about it: the old &ldquo;proprietor&rdquo; and
+his nephews, he of the municipal gardens. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wondered how they had met their fate, on the chill wintry morning. For
+assuredly, in that restricted space, not a soul can have escaped alive; the
+wreckage, hitherto undisturbed, still covered their remains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, remembering the old man and his humane converse that evening under the
+trees, the true meaning of the catastrophe began to disentangle itself from
+accidental and superficial aspects. For I confess that the massacre of a myriad
+Chinamen leaves me cool and self-possessed; between such creatures and
+ourselves there is
+<a name="Page238"></a>
+hardly more than the frail bond of a common descent from the ape; they are
+altogether too remote for our narrow world-sympathies. I would as soon shed
+tears over the lost Pleiad. But these others are our spiritual cousins; we have
+deep roots in this warm soil of Italy, which brought forth a goodly tithe of
+what is best in our own lives, in our arts and aspirations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I thought of the two nephews, their decent limbs all distorted and mangled
+under a heap of foul rubbish, waiting for a brutal disinterment and a nameless
+grave. This is no legitimate death, this murderous violation of life. How
+inconceivably hateful is such a leave-taking, and all that follows after! To
+picture a fair young body, that divine instrument of joy, crushed into an
+unsightly heap; once loved, now loathed of all men, and thrust at last, with
+abhorrence, into some common festering pit of abominations. . . . The Northern
+type&mdash;a mighty bond, again; a tie of blood, this time, between our race
+and those rulers of the South, whose exploits in this land of orange and myrtle
+surpassed the dreamings of romance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strange to reflect that, without the ephemeral friendship of that evening,
+Messina of to-day might have represented to my mind a mere spectacle, the
+hecatomb of its inhabitants extorting little more than a conventional sigh. So
+it is. The human heart has been constructed on somewhat ungenerous lines.
+Moralists, if any still exist on earth, may generalize with eloquence from the
+masses, but our poets have long ago succumbed to the pathos of single
+happenings; the very angels of Heaven, they say, take more joy in one sinner
+that repenteth than in a hundred righteous, which, duly apprehended, is only an
+application of the same illiberal principle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A rope of bed-sheets knotted together dangled from one of the upper windows,
+its end swaying in mid-air at the height of the second floor. Many of them do,
+at Messina: a desperate expedient of escape. Some pots of geranium and cactus,
+sadly flowering, adorned the other windows, whose glass panes were unbroken.
+But for the ominous sunlight pouring through them from <i>within,</i> the
+building looked fairly intact on this outer side. Its ponderous gateway,
+however, through which I had hoped to enter, was choked up by internal debris,
+and I was obliged to climb, with some little trouble, to the rear of the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If a titanic blade had sheared through the <i>palazzo</i> lengthwise, the thing
+could not have been done more neatly. The whole interior had gone down, save a
+portion of the rooms abutting on the street-front; these were literally cut in
+half, so as to display an ideal section of domestic architecture. The house
+with its inmates and
+<a name="Page239"></a>
+all it contained was lying among the high-piled wreckage within, under my feet;
+masonry mostly&mdash;entire fragments of wall interspersed with crumbling
+mortar and convulsed iron girders that writhed over the surface or plunged
+sullenly into the depths; fetid rents and gullies in between, their flanks
+affording glimpses of broken vases, candelabras, hats, bottles, birdcages,
+writing-books, brass pipes, sofas, picture-frames, tablecloths, and all the
+paltry paraphernalia of everyday life. No attempt at stratification,
+horizontal, vertical, or inclined; it was as if the objects had been thrown up
+by some playful volcano and allowed to settle where they pleased. Two immense
+chiselled blocks of stone&mdash;one lying prone at the bottom of a miniature
+ravine, the other proudly erect, like a Druidical monument, in the upper
+regions&mdash;reminded me of the existence of a staircase, a <i>diabolical</i>
+staircase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Looking upwards, I endeavoured to reconstruct the habits of the inmates, but
+found it impossible, the section that remained being too shallow. Sky-blue
+seems to have been their favourite colour. The kitchen was easily discernible,
+the hearth with its store of charcoal underneath, copper vessels hanging in a
+neat row overhead, and an open cupboard full of household goods; a neighbouring
+room (the communicating doors were all gone), with lace window-curtains, a
+table, lamp, and book, and a bedstead toppling over the abyss; another one,
+carpeted and hung with pictures and a large faded mirror, below which ran a row
+of shelves that groaned under a multitudinous collection of phials and bottles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man&rsquo;s embrocations. . . .
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page240"></a><a name="chap30"></a>XXX<br />
+THE SKIRTS OF MONTALTO</h2>
+
+<p>
+After such sights of suffering humanity&mdash;back to the fields and mountains!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aspromonte, the wild region behind Reggio, was famous, not long ago, for
+Garibaldi&rsquo;s battle. But the exploits of this warrior have lately been
+eclipsed by those of the brigand Musolino, who infested the country up to a few
+years ago, defying the soldiery and police of all Italy. He would still be safe
+and unharmed had he remained in these fastnesses. But he wandered away, wishful
+to leave Italy for good and all, and was captured far from his home by some
+policemen who were looking for another man, and who nearly fainted when he
+pronounced his name. After a sensational trial, they sentenced him to thirty
+odd years&rsquo; imprisonment; he is now languishing in the fortress of Porto
+Longone on Elba. Whoever has looked into this Spanish citadel will not envy
+him. Of the lovely little bay, of the loadstone mountain, of the romantic
+pathway to the hermitage of Monserrato or the glittering beach at Rio&mdash;of
+all the charms of Porto Longone he knows nothing, despite a lengthy residence
+on the spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They say he has grown consumptive and witless during the long solitary
+confinement which preceded his present punishment&mdash;an eternal night in a
+narrow cell. No wonder. I have seen the condemned on their release from these
+boxes of masonry at the island of Santo Stefano: dazed shadows, tottering, with
+complexions the colour of parchment. These are the survivors. But no one asks
+after the many who die in these dungeons frenzied, or from battering their
+heads against the wall; no one knows their number save the doctor and the
+governor, whose lips are sealed. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I decided upon a rear attack of Aspromonte. I would go by rail as far as
+Bagnara on the Tyrrhenian, the station beyond Scylla of old renown; and thence
+afoot via Sant&rsquo; Eufemia<a href="#fn-30.1" name="fnref-30.1" id="fnref-30.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+to Sinopoli, pushing on, if day permitted, as far as Delianuova, at the foot of
+<a name="Page241"></a>
+the mountain. Early next morning I would climb the summit and descend to the
+shores of the Ionian, to Bova. It seemed a reasonable programme.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-30.1" id="fn-30.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-30.1">[1]</a>
+Not to be confounded with the railway station on the gulf of that name, near
+Maida.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this Tyrrhenian coast-line is badly shattered; far more so than the
+southern shore. But the scenery is finer. There is nothing on that side to
+compare with the views from Nicastro, or Monteleone, or Sant&rsquo; Elia near
+Palmi. It is also more smiling, more fertile, and far less malarious. Not that
+cultivation of the land implies absence of malaria&mdash;nothing is a commoner
+mistake! The Ionian shore is not malarious because it is desert&mdash;it is
+desert because malarious. The richest tracts in Greece are known to be very
+dangerous, and it is the same in Italy. Malaria and intensive agriculture go
+uncommonly well together. The miserable anopheles-mosquito loves the wells that
+are sunk for the watering of the immense orange and lemon plantations in the
+Reggio district; it displays a perverse predilection for the minute puddles
+left by the artificial irrigation of the fields that are covered with fruit and
+vegetables. This artificial watering, in fact, seems to be partly responsible
+for the spread of the disease. It is doubtful whether the custom goes back into
+remote antiquity, for the climate used to be moister and could dispense with
+these practices. Certain products, once grown in Calabria, no longer thrive
+there, on account of the increased dryness and lack of rainfall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there are some deadly regions, even along this Tyrrhenian shore. Such is
+the plain of Maida, for instance, where stood not long ago the forest of
+Sant&rsquo; Eufemia, safe retreat of Parafante and other brigand heroes. The
+level lands of Rosarno and Gioia are equally ill-reputed. A French battalion
+stationed here in the summer of 1807 lost over sixty men in fourteen days,
+besides leaving two hundred invalids in the hospital at Monteleone. Gioia is so
+malarious that in summer every one of the inhabitants who can afford the price
+of a ticket goes by the evening train to Palmi, to sleep there. You will do well,
+by the way, to see something of the oil industry of Palmi, if time permits. In
+good years, 200,000 quintals of olive oil are manufactured in the regions of
+which it is the commercial centre. Not long ago, before modern methods of
+refining were introduced, most of this oil was exported to Russia, to be burned
+in holy lamps; nowadays it goes for the most part to Lucca, to be adulterated
+for foreign markets (the celebrated Lucca oil, which the simple Englishman
+regards as pure); only the finest quality is sent elsewhere, to Nice. From
+Gioia there runs a postal diligence once a day to Delianuova of which I might
+have availed myself, had I not preferred to traverse the country on foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page242"></a>
+The journey from Reggio to Bagnara on this fair summer morning, along the
+rippling Mediterranean, was short enough, but sufficiently long to let me
+overhear the following conversation:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A.&mdash;What a lovely sea! It is good, after all, to take three or four baths
+a year. What think you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+B.&mdash;I? No. For thirteen years I have taken no baths. But they are
+considered good for children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The calamities that Bagnara has suffered in the past have been so numerous, so
+fierce and so varied that, properly speaking, the town has no right to exist
+any longer. It has enjoyed more than its full share of earthquakes, having been
+shaken to the ground over and over again. Sir William Hamilton reports that
+3017 persons were killed in that of 1783. The horrors of war, too, have not
+spared it, and a certain modern exploit of the British arms here strikes me as
+so instructive that I would gladly extract it from Grant&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Adventures of an Aide-de-Camp,&rdquo; were it not too long to
+transcribe, and far too good to abbreviate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A characteristic story, further, is told of the methods of General Manhes at
+Bagnara. It may well be an exaggeration when they say that the entire road from
+Reggio to Naples was lined with the heads of decapitated brigands; be that as
+it may, it stands to reason that Bagnara, as befits an important place, was to
+be provided with an appropriate display of these trophies. The heads were
+exhibited in baskets, with strict injunctions to the authorities that they were
+not to be touched, seeing that they served not only for decorative but also
+moral purposes&mdash;as examples. Imagine, therefore, the General&rsquo;s
+feelings on being told that one of these heads had been stolen; stolen,
+probably, by some pious relative of the deceased rascal, who wished to give the
+relic a decent Christian burial.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s rather awkward,&rdquo; he said, quietly musing. &ldquo;But
+of course the specimen must be replaced. Let me see. . . . Suppose we put the
+head of the mayor of Bagnara into the vacant basket? Shall we? Yes, we&rsquo;ll
+have the mayor. It will make him more careful in future.&rdquo; And within half
+an hour the basket was filled once more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a little hitch in starting from Bagnara. From the windings of the
+carriage-road as portrayed by the map, I guessed that there must be a number of
+short cuts into the uplands at the back of the town, undiscoverable to myself,
+which would greatly shorten the journey. Besides, there was my small bag to be
+carried. A porter familiar with the tracks was plainly required, and soon
+enough I found a number of lusty youths leaning against a wall and
+<a name="Page243"></a>
+doing nothing in particular. Yes, they would accompany me, they said, the whole
+lot of them, just for the fun of the thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And my bag?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A bag to be carried? Then we must get a woman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They unearthed a nondescript female who undertook to bear the burden as far as
+Sinopoli for a reasonable consideration. So far good. But as we proceeded, the
+boys began to drop off, till only a single one was left. And then the woman
+suddenly vanished down a side street, declaring that she must change her
+clothes. We waited for three-quarters of an hour, in the glaring dust of the
+turnpike; she never emerged again, and the remaining boy stoutly refused to
+handle her load.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;She must carry the bag. And I will keep
+you company.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The precious morning hours were wearing away, and here we stood idly by the
+side of the road. It never struck me that the time might have been profitably
+employed in paying a flying visit to one of the most sacred objects in Calabria
+and possibly in the whole world, one which Signor N. Marcone describes as
+reposing at Bagnara in a rich reliquary&mdash;the authentic Hat of the Mother
+of God. A lady tourist would not have missed this chance of studying the
+fashions of those days.<a href="#fn-30.2" name="fnref-30.2" id="fnref-30.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-30.2" id="fn-30.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-30.2">[2]</a>
+See next chapter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally, in desperation, I snatched up the wretched luggage and poured my
+griefs with unwonted eloquence into the ears of a man driving a bullock-cart
+down the road. So much was he moved, that he peremptorily ordered his son to
+conduct me then and there to Sinopoli, to carry the bag, and claim one franc by
+way of payment. The little man tumbled off the cart, rather reluctantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Away with you!&rdquo; cried the stern parent, and we began the long
+march, climbing uphill in the blazing sunshine; winding, later on, through
+shady chestnut woods and across broad tracts of cultivated land. It was plain
+that the task was beyond his powers, and when we had reached a spot where the
+strange-looking new village of Sant&rsquo; Eufemia was visible&mdash;it is
+built entirely of wooden shelters; the stone town was greatly shaken in the
+late earthquake&mdash;he was obliged to halt, and thenceforward stumbled slowly
+into the place. There he deposited the bag on the ground, and faced me
+squarely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No more of this!&rdquo; he said, concentrating every ounce of his
+virility into a look of uncompromising defiance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I shall not pay you a single farthing, my son. And,
+<a name="Page244"></a>
+moreover, I will tell your father. You know what he commanded: to Sinopoli.
+This is only Sant&rsquo; Eufemia. Unless&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will tell my father? Unless&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Unless you discover some one who will carry the bag not only to
+Sinopoli, but as far as Delianuova.&rdquo; I was not in the mood for repeating
+the experiences of the morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is difficult. But we will try.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went in search, and returned anon with a slender lad of unusual
+comeliness&mdash;an earthquake orphan. &ldquo;This big one,&rdquo; he
+explained, &ldquo;walks wherever you please and carries whatever you give him.
+And you will pay him nothing at all, unless he deserves it. Such is the
+arrangement. Are you content?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have acted like a man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The earthquake survivor set off at a swinging pace, and we soon reached
+Sinopoli&mdash;new Sinopoli; the older settlement lies at a considerable
+distance. Midday was past, and the long main street of the town&mdash;a former
+fief of the terrible Ruffo family&mdash;stood deserted in the trembling heat.
+None the less there was sufficient liveliness within the houses; the whole
+place seemed in a state of jollification. It was Sunday, the orphan explained;
+the country was duller than usual, however, because of the high price of wine.
+There had been no murders to speak of&mdash;no, not for a long time past. But
+the vintage of this year, he added, promises well, and life will soon become
+normal again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mule track from here to Delianuova traverses some pretty scenery, both wild
+and pastoral. But the personal graces of my companion made me take small heed
+of the landscape. He was aglow with animal spirits, and his conversation
+naively brilliant and of uncommon import. Understanding at a glance that he
+belonged to a type which is rather rare in Calabria, that he was a classic (of
+a kind), I made every effort to be pleasant to him; and I must have succeeded,
+for he was soon relating anecdotes which would have been neither instructive,
+nor even intelligible, to the <i>jeune fille;</i> all this, with angelic
+serenity of conscience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This radiantly-vicious child was the embodiment of the joy of life, the perfect
+immoralist. There was no cynicism in his nature, no cruelty, no obliquity, no
+remorse; nothing but sunshine with a few clouds sailing across the fathomless
+blue spaces&mdash;the sky of Hellas. <i>Nihil humani alienum;</i> and as I
+listened to those glad tales, I marvelled at the many-tinted experiences that
+could be crammed into seventeen short years; what a document the adventures
+of such a frolicsome demon would be, what a feast for the initiated, could some
+one be induced to make them known! But
+<a name="Page245"></a>
+such things are hopelessly out of the question. And that is why so many of our
+wise people go into their graves without ever learning what happens in this
+world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among minor matters, he mentioned that he had already been three times to
+prison for &ldquo;certain little affairs of blood,&rdquo; while defending
+&ldquo;certain friends.&rdquo; Was it not dull, I asked, in prison? &ldquo;The
+time passes pleasantly anywhere,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;when you are young.
+I always make friends, even in prison.&rdquo; I could well believe it. His
+affinities were with the blithe crew of the Liber Stratonis. He had a roving
+eye and the mouth of Antinous; and his morals were those of a condescending
+tiger-cub.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arriving at Delianuova after sunset, he conceived the project of accompanying
+me next morning up Montalto. I hesitated. In the first place, I was going not
+only up that mountain, but to Bova on the distant Ionian littoral&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For my part,&rdquo; he broke in, &ldquo;<i>ho pigliato confidenza.</i>
+If you mistrust me, here! take my knife,&rdquo; an ugly blade, pointed, and two
+inches in excess of the police regulation length. This act of quasi-filial
+submission touched me; but it was not his knife I feared so much as that of
+&ldquo;certain friends.&rdquo; Some little difference of opinion might arise,
+some question of money or other argument, and lo! the friends would be at hand
+(they always are), and one more stranger might disappear among the clefts and
+gullies of Montalto. Aspromonte, the roughest corner of Italy, is no place for
+misunderstandings; the knife decides promptly who is right or wrong, and only
+two weeks ago I was warned not to cross the district without a carbineer on
+either side of me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But to have clothed my thoughts in words during his gracious mood would have
+been supremely unethical. I contented myself with the trite but pregnant remark
+that things sometimes looked different in the morning, which provoked a pagan
+fit of laughter; farewelled him &ldquo;with the Madonna!&rdquo; and watched as
+he withdrew under the trees, lithe and buoyant, like a flame that is swallowed
+up in the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only then did the real business begin. I should be sorry to say into how many
+houses and wine-shops the obliging owner of the local inn conducted me, in
+search of a guide. We traversed all the lanes of this straggling and fairly
+prosperous place, and even those of its suburb Paracorio, evidently of
+Byzantine origin; the answer was everywhere the same: To Montalto, yes; to
+Bova, no! Night drew on apace and, as a last resource, he led the way to the
+dwelling of a gentleman of the old school&mdash;a retired brigand, to wit, who,
+as I afterwards learned, had some ten or twelve homicides
+<a name="Page246"></a>
+to his account. Delianuova, and indeed the whole of Aspromonte, has a bad
+reputation for crime.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was our last remaining chance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We found the patriarch sitting in a simple but tidy chamber, smoking his pipe
+and playing with a baby; his daughter-in-law rose as we entered, and discreetly
+moved into an adjoining room. The cheery cut-throat put the baby down to crawl
+on the floor, and his eyes sparkled when he heard of Bova.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, one speaks of Bova!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;A fine walk over the
+mountain!&rdquo; He much regretted that he was too old for the trip, but
+so-and-so, he thought, might know something of the country. It pained him, too,
+that he could not offer me a glass of wine. There was none in the house. In his
+day, he added, it was not thought right to drink in the modern fashion; this
+wine-bibbing was responsible for considerable mischief; it troubled the brain,
+driving men to do things they afterwards repented. He drank only milk, having
+become accustomed to it during a long life among the hills. Milk cools the
+blood, he said, and steadies the hand, and keeps a man&rsquo;s judgment
+undisturbed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The person he had named was found after some further search. He was a bronzed,
+clean-shaven type of about fifty, who began by refusing his services
+point-blank, but soon relented, on hearing the ex-brigand&rsquo;s
+recommendation of his qualities.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page247"></a><a name="chap31"></a>XXXI<br />
+SOUTHERN SAINTLINESS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Southern saints, like their worshippers, put on new faces and vestments in the
+course of ages. Old ones die away; new ones take their place. Several hundred
+of the older class of saint have clean faded from the popular memory, and are
+now so forgotten that the wisest priest can tell you nothing about them save,
+perhaps, that &ldquo;he&rsquo;s in the church&rdquo;&mdash;meaning, that some
+fragment of his holy anatomy survives as a relic amid a collection of similar
+antiques. But you can find their histories in early literature, and their names
+linger on old maps where they are given to promontories and other natural
+features which are gradually being re-christened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such saints were chiefly non-Italian: Byzantines or Africans who, by miraculous
+intervention, protected the village or district of which they were patrons from
+the manifold scourges of mediævalism; they took the place of the classic
+tutelar deities. They were men; they could fight; and in those troublous times
+that is exactly what saints were made for.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the softening of manners a new element appears. Male saints lost their
+chief <i>raison d&rsquo;être,</i> and these virile creatures were superseded
+by pacific women. So, to give only one instance, Saint Rosalia in Palermo
+displaced the former protector Saint Mark. Her sacred bones were miraculously
+discovered in a cave; and have since been identified as those of a goat. But it
+was not till the twelfth century that the cult of female saints began to assume
+imposing dimensions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the Madonna no mention occurs in the songs of Bishop Paulinus (fourth
+century); no monument exists in the Neapolitan catacombs. Thereafter her cult
+begins to dominate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She supplied the natives with what orthodox Christianity did not give them, but
+what they had possessed from early times&mdash;a female element in religion.
+Those Greek settlers had their nymphs, their Venus, and so forth; the Mother of
+God absorbed and continued their functions. There is indeed only one of these
+female pagan divinities whose role she has not endeavoured to
+<a name="Page248"></a>
+usurp&mdash;Athene. Herein she reflects the minds of her creators, the priests and common
+people, whose ideal woman contents herself with the duties of motherhood. I
+doubt whether an Athene-Madonna, an intellectual goddess, could ever have been
+evolved; their attitude towards gods in general is too childlike and positive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+South Italians, famous for abstractions in philosophy, cannot endure them in
+religion. Unlike ourselves, they do not desire to learn anything from their
+deities or to argue about them. They only wish to love and be loved in return,
+reserving to themselves the right to punish them, when they deserve it.
+Countless cases are on record where (pictures or statues of) Madonnas and
+saints have been thrown into a ditch for not doing what they were told, or for
+not keeping their share of a bargain. During the Vesuvius eruption of 1906 a
+good number were subjected to this &ldquo;punishment,&rdquo; because they
+neglected to protect their worshippers from the calamity according to contract
+(so many candles and festivals = so much protection).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the same reason the adult Jesus&mdash;the teacher, the God&mdash;is
+practically unknown. He is too remote from themselves and the ordinary
+activities of their daily lives; he is not married, like his mother; he has no
+trade, like his father (Mark calls him a carpenter); moreover, the maxims of
+the Sermon on the Mount are so repugnant to the South Italian as to be almost
+incomprehensible. In effigy, this period of Christ&rsquo;s life is portrayed
+most frequently in the primitive monuments of the catacombs, erected when
+tradition was purer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three tangibly-human aspects of Christ&rsquo;s life figure here: the
+<i>bambino-cult,</i> which not only appeals to the people&rsquo;s love of
+babyhood but also carries on the old traditions of the Lar Familiaris and of
+Horus; next, the youthful Jesus, beloved of local female mystics; and lastly
+the Crucified&mdash;that grim and gloomy image of suffering which was imported,
+or at least furiously fostered, by the Spaniards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The engulfing of the saints by the Mother of God is due also to political
+reasons. The Vatican, once centralized in its policy, began to be disquieted by
+the persistent survival of Byzantinism (Greek cults and language lingered up to
+the twelfth century); with the Tacitean <i>odium fratrum</i> she exercised more
+severity towards the sister-faith than towards actual paganism.<a href="#fn-31.1" name="fnref-31.1" id="fnref-31.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+The Madonna was a fit instrument for sweeping away the particularist tendencies
+of the
+<a name="Page249"></a>
+past; she attacked relic-worship and other outworn superstitions; like a
+benignant whirlwind she careered over the land, and these now enigmatical
+shapes and customs fell faster than leaves of Vallombrosa. No sanctuary or cave
+so remote that she did not endeavour to expel its male saint&mdash;its old
+presiding genius, whether Byzantine or Roman. But saints have tough lives, and
+do not yield without a struggle; they fought for their time-honoured privileges
+like the &ldquo;daemons&rdquo; they were, and sometimes came off victorious.
+Those sanctuaries that proved too strong to be taken by storm were sapped by an
+artful and determined siege. The combat goes on to this day. This is what is
+happening to the thrice-deposed and still triumphant Saint Januarius, who is
+hard pressed by sheer force of numbers. Like those phagocytes which congregate
+from all sides to assail some weakened cell in the body physical, even so
+Madonna-cults&mdash;in frenzied competition with each other&mdash;cluster
+thickest round some imperilled venerable of ancient lineage, bent on his
+destruction. The Madonna dell&rsquo; Arco, del Soccorso, and at least fifty
+others (not forgetting the newly-invented Madonna di Pompei)&mdash;they have
+all established themselves in the particular domain of St. Januarius; they are
+all undermining his reputation, and claiming to possess his special gifts.<a href="#fn-31.2" name="fnref-31.2" id="fnref-31.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-31.1" id="fn-31.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-31.1">[1]</a>
+Greek and Egyptian anchorites were established in south Italy by the fourth
+century. But paganism was still flourishing, locally, in the sixth. There is
+some evidence that Christians used to take part in pagan festivals.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-31.2" id="fn-31.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-31.2">[2]</a>
+He is known to have quelled an outbreak of Vesuvius in the fifth century,
+though his earliest church, I believe, only dates from the ninth. His blood,
+famous for liquefaction, is not mentioned till 1337.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Early monastic movements of the Roman Church also played their part in
+obliterating old religious landmarks. Settling down in some remote place with
+the Madonna as their leader or as their &ldquo;second Mother,&rdquo; these
+companies of holy men soon acquired such temporal and spiritual influence as
+enabled them successfully to oppose their divinity to the local saint, whose
+once bright glories began to pale before her effulgence. Their labours in
+favour of the Mother of God were part of that work of consolidating Papal power
+which was afterwards carried on by the Jesuits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps what chiefly accounts for the spread of Madonna-worship is the human
+craving for novelty. You can invent most easily where no fixed legends are
+established. Now the saints have fixed legendary attributes and histories, and
+as culture advances it becomes increasingly difficult to manufacture new saints
+with fresh and original characters and yet passable pedigrees (the experiment
+is tried, now and again); while the old saints have been exploited and are now
+inefficient&mdash;worn out, like old toys. Madonna, on the other hand, can
+subdivide with the ease of an amoeba, and yet never lose her identity or
+credibility; moreover, thanks to her divine
+<a name="Page250"></a>
+character, anything can be accredited to her&mdash;anything good, however
+wonderful; lastly, the traditions concerning her are so conveniently vague that
+they actually foster the mythopoetic faculty. Hence her success. Again: the
+man-saints were separatists; they fought for their own towns against African
+intruders, and in those frequent and bloody inter-communal battles which are a
+feature of Italian mediævalism. Nowadays it is hardly proper that neighbouring
+townsmen, aided and abetted by their respective saints, should sally forth to
+cut each others&rsquo; throats. The Madonna, as cosmopolitan Nike, is a fitter
+patroness for settled society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She also found a ready welcome in consequence of the pastoral institutions of
+the country in which the mother plays such a conspicuous role. So deeply are
+they ingrained here that if the Mother of God had not existed, the group would
+have been deemed incomplete; a family without a mother is to them like a tree
+without roots&mdash;a thing which cannot be. This accounts for the fact that
+their Trinity is not ours; it consists of the Mother, the Father (Saint
+Joseph), and the Child&mdash;with Saint Anne looming in the background (the
+grandmother is an important personage in the patriarchal family). The Creator
+of all things and the Holy Ghost have evaporated; they are too intangible and
+non-human.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But She never became a true cosmopolitan Nike, save in literature. The
+decentralizing spirit of South Italy was too strong for her. She had to conform
+to the old custom of geographical specialization. In all save in name she
+doffed her essential character of Mother of God, and became a local demi-god;
+an accessible wonder-worker attached to some particular district. An inhabitant
+of village A would stand a poor chance of his prayers being heard by the
+Madonna of village B; if you have a headache, it is no use applying to the
+<i>Madonna of the Hens,</i> who deals with diseases of women; you will find
+yourself in a pretty fix if you expect financial assistance from the Madonna of
+village C: she is a weather-specialist. In short, these hundreds of Madonnas
+have taken up the qualities of the saints they supplanted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They can often outdo them; and this is yet another reason for their success. It
+is a well-ascertained fact, for example, that many holy men have been nourished
+by the Milk of the Mother of God, &ldquo;not,&rdquo; as a Catholic writer says,
+&ldquo;in a mystic or spiritual sense, but with their actual lips&rdquo;; Saint
+Bernard &ldquo;among a hundred, a thousand, others.&rdquo; Nor is this all, for
+in the year 1690, a painted image of the Madonna, not far from the city of
+Carinola, was observed to &ldquo;diffuse abundant milk&rdquo; for the
+edification of a great concourse of spectators&mdash;a miracle which was
+recognized as such by
+<a name="Page251"></a>
+the bishop of that diocese, Monsignor Paolo Ayrola, who wrote a report on the
+subject. Some more of this authentic milk is kept in a bottle in the convent of
+Mater Domini on Vesuvius, and the chronicle of that establishment, printed in
+1834, says:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Since Mary is the Mother and Co-redeemer of the Church, may she not have
+left some drops of her precious milk as a gift to this Church, even as we still
+possess some of the blood of Christ? In various churches there exists some of
+this milk, by means of which many graces and benefits are obtained. We find
+such relics, for example, in the church of Saint Luigi in Naples, namely, two
+bottles full of the milk of the Blessed Virgin; and this milk becomes fluid on
+feast-days of the Madonna, as everybody can see. Also in this convent of Mater
+Domini the milk sometimes liquefies.&rdquo; During eruptions of Vesuvius this
+bottle is carried abroad in procession, and always dispels the danger. Saint
+Januarius must indeed look to his laurels! Meanwhile it is interesting to
+observe that the Mother of God has condescended to employ the method of holy
+relics which she once combated so strenuously, her milk competing with the
+blood of Saint John, the fat of Saint Laurence, and those other physiological
+curios which are still preserved for the edification of believers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All of which would pass if a subtle poison had not been creeping in to taint
+religious institutions. Taken by themselves, these infantile observances do not
+necessarily harm family life, the support of the state; for a man can believe a
+considerable deal of nonsense, and yet go about his daily work in a natural and
+cheerful manner. But when the body is despised and tormented the mind loses its
+equilibrium, and when that happens nonsense may assume a sinister shape. We
+have seen it in England, where, during the ascetic movement of Puritanism, more
+witches were burnt than in the whole period before and after.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The virus of asceticism entered South Italy from three principal sources. From
+early ages the country had stood in commercial relations with the valley of the
+Nile; and even as its black magic is largely tinged with Egyptian practices, so
+its magic of the white kind&mdash;its saintly legends&mdash;bear the impress of
+the self-macerations and perverted life-theories of those desert-lunatics who
+called themselves Christians.<a href="#fn-31.3" name="fnref-31.3" id="fnref-31.3"><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+But this Orientalism fell at first upon
+<a name="Page252"></a>
+unfruitful soil; the Vatican was yet wavering, and Hellenic notions of conduct
+still survived. It received a further rebuff at the hands of men like Benedict,
+who set up sounder ideals of holiness, introducing a gleam of sanity even in
+that insanest of institutions&mdash;the herding together of idle men to the
+glory of God.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-31.3" id="fn-31.3"></a> <a href="#fnref-31.3">[3]</a>
+These ascetics were here before Christianity (see Philo Judaeus); in fact,
+there is not a single element in the new faith which had not been independently
+developed by the pagans, many of whom, like Seneca, Epictetus, and Marcus
+Aurelius, were ripe for the most abject self-abasement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But things became more centralized as the Papacy gained ground. The strong
+Christian, the independent ruler or warrior or builder saint, was tolerated
+only if he conformed to its precepts; and the inauspicious rise of subservient
+ascetic orders like the Franciscans and Dominicans, who quickly invaded the
+fair regions of the south, gave an evil tone to their Christianity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There has always been a contrary tendency at work: the Ionic spirit, heritage
+of the past. Monkish ideals of chastity and poverty have never appealed to the
+hearts of people, priests or prelates of the south; they will endure much
+fondness in their religion, but not those phenomena of cruelty and pruriency
+which are inseparably connected with asceticism; their notions have ever been
+akin to those of the sage Xenocrates, who held that &ldquo;happiness consists
+not only in the possession of human virtues, but <i>in the accomplishment of
+natural acts.&rdquo;</i> Among the latter they include the acquisition of
+wealth and the satisfaction of carnal needs. At this time, too, the old
+Hellenic curiosity was not wholly dimmed; they took an intelligent interest in
+imported creeds like that of Luther, which, if not convincing, at least
+satisfied their desire for novelty. Theirs was exactly the attitude of the
+Athenians towards Paul&rsquo;s &ldquo;New God&rdquo;; and Protestantism might
+have spread far in the south, had it not been ferociously repressed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But after the brilliant humanistic period of the Aragons there followed the
+third and fiercest reaction&mdash;that of the Spanish viceroys, whose misrule
+struck at every one of the roots of national prosperity. It is that
+&ldquo;seicentismo&rdquo; which a modern writer (A. Niceforo,
+&ldquo;L&rsquo;Italia barbara,&rdquo; 1898) has recognized as the blight, the
+evil genius, of south Italy. The Ionic spirit did not help the people much at
+this time. The greatest of these viceroys, Don Pietro di Toledo, hanged 18,000
+of them in eight years, and then confessed, with a sigh, that &ldquo;he did not
+know what more he could do.&rdquo; What more <i>could</i> he do? As a pious
+Spaniard he was incapable of understanding that quarterings and breakings on
+the rack were of less avail than the education of the populace in certain
+secular notions of good conduct&mdash;notions which it was the business of his
+Church not to teach. Reading through the legislation of the viceregal period,
+one is astonished to find how little was done for the common people, who lived
+like the veriest beasts of earth.
+<a name="Page253"></a>
+Their civil rulers&mdash;scholars and gentlemen, most of them&mdash;really
+believed that the example of half a million illiterate and vicious monks was
+all the education they needed. And yet one notes with surprise that the
+Government was perpetually at loggerheads with the ecclesiastical authorities.
+True; but it is wonderful with what intuitive alacrity they joined forces when
+it was a question of repelling their common antagonist, enlightenment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From this rank soil there sprang up an exotic efflorescence of holiness. If
+south Italy swarmed with sinners, as the experiences of Don Pietro seemed to
+show, it also swarmed with saints. And hardly one of them escaped the influence
+of the period, the love of futile ornamentation. Their piety is overloaded with
+embellishing touches and needless excrescences of virtue. It was the baroque
+period of saintliness, as of architecture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have already given some account of one of them, the Flying Monk (Chapter X),
+and have perused the biographies of at least fifty others. One cannot help
+observing a great uniformity in their lives&mdash;a kind of family resemblance.
+This parallelism is due to the simple reason that there is only one right for a
+thousand wrongs. One may well look in vain, here, for those many-tinted
+perversions and aberrations which disfigure the histories of average mankind.
+These saints are all alike&mdash;monotonously alike, if one cares to say
+so&mdash;in their chastity and other official virtues. But a little
+acquaintance with the subject will soon show you that, so far as the range of
+their particular Christianity allowed of it, there is a praiseworthy and even
+astonishing diversity among them. Nearly all of them could fly, more or less;
+nearly all of them could cure diseases and cause the clouds to rain; nearly all
+of them were illiterate; and every one of them died in the odour of
+sanctity&mdash;with roseate complexion, sweetly smelling corpse, and flexible
+limbs. Yet each one has his particular gifts, his strong point. Joseph of
+Copertino specialized in flying; others were conspicuous for their heroism in
+sitting in hot baths, devouring ordure, tormenting themselves with pins, and so
+forth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, for instance, is a good representative biography&mdash;the Life of Saint
+Giangiuseppe della Croce (born 1654), reprinted for the occasion of his solemn
+sanctification.<a href="#fn-31.4" name="fnref-31.4" id="fnref-31.4"><sup>[4]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-31.4" id="fn-31.4"></a> <a href="#fnref-31.4">[4]</a>
+&ldquo;Vita di S. Giangiuseppe della Croce . . . Scritta dal P. Fr. Diodato
+dell&rsquo; Assunta per la Beatificazione ed ora ristampata dal postulatore
+della causa P. Fr. Giuseppe Rostoll in occasione della solenne
+Santificazione.&rdquo; Roma, 1839.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He resembled other saints in many points. He never allowed the &ldquo;vermin
+which generated in his bed&rdquo; to be disturbed; he wore the same clothes for
+sixty-four years on end; with women his
+<a name="Page254"></a>
+behaviour was that of an &ldquo;animated statue,&rdquo; and during his long
+life he never looked any one in the face (even his brother-monks were known to
+him only by their voices); he could raise the dead, relieve a duchess of a
+devil in the shape of a black dog, change chestnuts into apricots, and bad wine
+into good; his flesh was encrusted with sores, the result of his fierce
+scarifications; he was always half starved, and when delicate viands were
+brought to him, he used to say to his body: &ldquo;Have you seen them? Have you
+smelt them? Then let that suffice for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, too, could fly a little. So once, when he was nowhere to be found, the
+monks of the convent at last discovered him in the church, &ldquo;raised so
+high above the ground that his head touched the ceiling.&rdquo; This is not a
+bad performance for a mere lad, as he then was. And how useful this gift became
+in old age was seen when, being almost incapable of moving his legs, and with
+body half paralysed, he was nevertheless enabled to accompany a procession for
+the length of two miles on foot, walking, to the stupefaction of thousands of
+spectators, at about a cubit&rsquo;s height above the street, on air; after the
+fashion of those Hindu gods whose feet&mdash;so the pagans fable&mdash;are too
+pure to touch mortal earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His love of poverty, moreover, was so intense that even after his death a
+picture of him, which his relatives had tried to attach to the wall in loving
+remembrance, repeatedly fell down again, although nailed very securely; nor did
+it remain fixed until they realized that its costly gilt frame was
+objectionable to the saint in heaven, and accordingly removed it. No wonder the
+infant Jesus was pleased to descend from the breast of Mary and take rest for
+several hours in the arms of Saint Giangiuseppe, who, on being disturbed by
+some priestly visitor, exclaimed, &ldquo;O how I have enjoyed holding the Holy
+Babe in my arms!&rdquo; This is an old and favourite motif; it occurs, for
+example, in the Fioretti of Saint Francis; there are precedents, in fact, for
+all these divine favours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But his distinguishing feature, his &ldquo;dominating gift,&rdquo; was that of
+prophecy, especially in foretelling the deaths of children, &ldquo;which he
+almost always accompanied with jocular words <i>(scherzi)</i> on his
+lips.&rdquo; He would enter a house and genially remark: &ldquo;O, what an
+odour of Paradise&rdquo;; sooner or later one or more of the children of the
+family would perish. To a boy of twelve he said, &ldquo;Be good, Natale, for
+the angels are coming to take you.&rdquo; These playful words seem to have
+weighed considerably on the boy&rsquo;s mind and, sure enough, after a few
+years he died. But even more charming&mdash;<i>più grazioso,</i> the biographer
+calls it&mdash;was the
+<a name="Page255"></a>
+incident when he once asked a father whether he would give his son to Saint
+Pasquale. The fond parent agreed, thinking that the words referred to the
+boy&rsquo;s future career in the Church. But the saint meant something quite
+different&mdash;he meant a career in heaven! And in less than a month the child
+died. To a little girl who was crying in the street he said: &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t want to hear you any more. Go and sing in Paradise.&rdquo; And
+meeting her a short time after, he said, &ldquo;What, are you still
+here?&rdquo; In a few days she was dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The biography gives many instances of this pretty gift which would hardly have
+contributed to the saint&rsquo;s popularity in England or any other country
+save this, where&mdash;although the surviving youngsters are described as
+&ldquo;struck with terror at the mere name of the Servant of
+God&rdquo;&mdash;the parents were naturally glad to have one or two angels in
+the family, to act as <i>avvocati</i> (pleaders) for those that remained on
+earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the mention of the legal profession brings me to one really instructive
+miracle. It is usually to be observed, after a saint has been canonized, that
+heaven, by some further sign or signs, signifies approval of this solemn act of
+the Vicar of God; indeed, to judge by these biographies, such a course is not
+only customary but, to use a worldly expression, <i>de rigueur.</i> And so it
+happened after the decree relative to Saint Giangiuseppe had been pronounced in
+the Vatican basilica by His Holiness Pius VI, in the presence of the assembled
+cardinals. Innumerable celestial portents (their enumeration fills eleven pages
+of the &ldquo;Life&rdquo;) confirmed and ratified the great event, and among
+them this: the notary, who had drawn up both the ordinary and the apostolic
+<i>processi,</i> was cured of a grievous apoplexy, survived for four years, and
+finally died on the very anniversary of the death of the saint. Involuntarily
+one contrasts this heavenly largesse with the sordid guineas which would have
+contented an English lawyer. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Or glance into the biography of the Venerable Sister Orsola Benincasa. She,
+too, could fly a little and raise men from the dead. She cured diseases,
+foretold her own death and that of others, lived for a month on the sole
+nourishment of a consecrated wafer; she could speak Latin and Polish, although
+she had been taught nothing at all; wrought miracles after death, and possessed
+to a heroic degree the virtues of patience, humility, temperance, justice, etc.
+etc. So inflamed was she with divine love, that almost every day thick steam
+issued out of her mouth, which was observed to be destructive to articles of
+clothing; her heated body, when ice was applied, used to hiss like a red-hot
+iron under similar conditions.
+<a name="Page256"></a>
+As a child, she already cried for other people&rsquo;s sins; she was always
+hunting for her own and would gladly, at the end of her long and blameless
+career, have exchanged her sins for those of the youthful Duchess of Aquaro. An
+interesting phenomenon, by the way, the theory of sinfulness which crops up at
+this particular period of history. For our conception of sin is alien to the
+Latin mind. There is no &ldquo;sin&rdquo; in Italy (and this is not the least
+of her many attractions); it is an article manufactured exclusively for
+export.<a href="#fn-31.5" name="fnref-31.5" id="fnref-31.5"><sup>[5]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-31.5" id="fn-31.5"></a> <a href="#fnref-31.5">[5]</a>
+&ldquo;Vita della Venerabile Serva di Dio Suor Orsola Benincasa, Scritta da
+un cherico regolare,&rdquo; Rome, 1796. There are, of course, much earlier
+biographies of all these saints; concerning Sister Orsola we possess, for
+instance, the remarkable pamphlet by Cesare d&rsquo;Eboli (&ldquo;Caesaris
+Aevoli Neapolitani Apologia pro Ursula Neapolitana quæ ad urbem accessit
+MDLXXXIII,&rdquo; Venice, 1589), which achieves the distinction of never
+mentioning Orsola by name: she is only once referred to as &ldquo;mulier de qua
+agitur.&rdquo; But I prefer to quote from the more recent ones because they are
+authoritative, in so far as they have been written on the basis of miracles
+attested by eye-witnesses and accepted as veracious by the Vatican tribunal.
+Sister Orsola, though born in 1547, was only declared Venerable by Pontifical
+decree of 1793. Biographies prior to that date are therefore ex-parte
+statements and might conceivably contain errors of fact. This is out of the
+question here, as is clearly shown by the author on p. 178.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Orsola&rsquo;s speciality, however, were those frequent trance-like conditions
+by reason of which, during her lifetime, she was created &ldquo;Protectress of
+the City of Naples.&rdquo; I cannot tell whether she was the first woman-saint
+to obtain this honour. Certainly the &ldquo;Seven Holy Protectors&rdquo;
+concerning whom Paolo Regio writes were all musty old males. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here is quite another biography, that of Alfonso di Liguori (born 1696),
+the founder of the Redemptorist order and a canonized saint. He, too, could fly
+a little and raise the dead to life; he suffered devil-temptations, caused the
+clouds to rain, calmed an eruption of Vesuvius, multiplied food, and so forth.
+Such was his bashfulness, that even as an aged bishop he refused to be unrobed
+by his attendants; such his instinct for moral cleanliness that once, when a
+messenger had alighted at his convent accompanied by a soldier, he instantly
+detected, under the military disguise, the lineaments of a young woman-friend.
+Despite these divine gifts, he always needed a confessor. An enormous batch of
+miracles accompanied his sanctification.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he only employed these divine graces by the way; he was by profession not a
+<i>taumaturgo,</i> but a clerical instructor, organizer, and writer. The
+Vatican has conferred on him the rare title of &ldquo;Doctor Ecclesiæ,&rdquo;
+which he shares with Saint Augustine and some others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The biography from which I have drawn these details was
+<a name="Page257"></a>
+printed in Rome in 1839. It is valuable because it is modern and so far
+authentic; and for two other reasons. In the first place, curiously enough, it
+barely mentions the saint&rsquo;s life-work&mdash;his writings. Secondly, it is
+a good example of what I call the pious palimpsest. It is over-scored with
+contradictory matter. The author, for example, while accidentally informing us
+that Alfonso kept a carriage, imputes to him a degrading, Oriental love of dirt
+and tattered garments, in order (I presume) to make his character conform to
+the grosser ideals of the mendicant friars. I do not believe in these
+traits&mdash;in his hatred of soap and clean apparel. From his works I deduce a
+different original. He was refined and urbane; of a casuistical and prying
+disposition; like many sensitive men, unduly preoccupied with the sexual life
+of youth; like a true feudal aristocrat, ever ready to apply force where verbal
+admonition proved unavailing. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In wonder-working capacities these saints were all put in the shade by the
+Calabrian Francesco di Paola, who raised fifteen persons from the dead in his
+boyhood. He used to perform a hundred miracles a day, and &ldquo;it was a
+miracle, when a day passed without a miracle.&rdquo; The index alone of any one
+of his numerous biographies is enough to make one&rsquo;s head swim.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The vast majority of saints of this period do not belong to that third sex
+after which, according to some, the human race has ever striven&mdash;the
+constructive and purposeful third sex. They are wholly sexless, unsocial and
+futile beings, the negation of every masculine or feminine virtue. Their
+independence fettered by the iron rules of the Vatican and of their particular
+order, these creatures had <i>nothing to do;</i> and like the rest of us under
+such conditions, became vacuously introspective. Those honourable saintly
+combats of the past with external enemies and plagues and stormy seasons were
+transplanted from without into the microcosm within, taking the shape of
+hallucinations and demon-temptations. They were no longer actors, but
+sufferers; automata, who attained a degree of inanity which would have made
+their old Byzantine prototypes burst with envy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet they vary in their gifts; each one, as I have said, has his or her strong
+point. Why? The reason of this diversity lies in the furious competition
+between the various monastic orders of the time&mdash;in those unedifying
+squabbles which led to never-ending litigation and complaints to head-quarters
+in Rome. Every one of these saints, from the first dawning of his divine
+talents, was surrounded by an atmosphere of jealous hatred on the part of his
+<a name="Page258"></a>
+co-religionists. If one order came out with a flying wonder, another, in frantic
+emulation, would introduce some new speciality to eclipse his
+fame&mdash;something in the fasting line, it may be; or a female mystic whose
+palpitating letters to Jesus Christ would melt all readers to pity. The
+Franciscans, for instance, dissected the body of a certain holy Margaret and
+discovered in her heart the symbols of the Trinity and of the Passion. This
+bold and original idea would have gained them much credit, but for the rival
+Dominicans, who promptly discovered, and dissected, another saintly Margaret,
+whose heart contained three stones on which were engraven portraits of the
+Virgin Mary.<a href="#fn-31.6" name="fnref-31.6" id="fnref-31.6"><sup>[6]</sup></a>
+So they ceaselessly unearthed fresh saints with a view to disparaging each
+other&mdash;all of them waiting for a favourable moment when the Vatican could
+be successfully approached to consider their particular claims. For it stands
+to reason that a Carmelite Pope would prefer a Carmelite saint to one of the
+Jesuits, and so forth.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-31.6" id="fn-31.6"></a> <a href="#fnref-31.6">[6]</a>
+These and other details will be found in the four volumes &ldquo;Das
+Heidentum in der romischen Kirche&rdquo; (Gotha, 1889-91), by Theodor Trede, a
+late Protestant parson in Naples, strongly tinged with anti-Catholicism, but
+whose facts may be relied upon. Indeed, he gives chapter and verse for them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And over all throned the Inquisition in Rome, alert, ever-suspicious; testing
+the &ldquo;irregularities&rdquo; of the various orders and harassing their
+respective saints with Olympic impartiality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I know that mystics such as Orsola Benincasa are supposed to have another side
+to their character, an eminently practical side. It is perfectly true&mdash;and
+we need not go out of England to learn it&mdash;that piety is not necessarily
+inconsistent with nimbleness in worldly affairs. But the mundane achievements,
+the monasteries and churches, of nine-tenths of these southern ecstatics are
+the work of the confessor and not of the saint. Trainers of performing animals
+are aware how these differ in plasticity of disposition and amenability to
+discipline; the spiritual adviser, who knows his business, must be quick to
+detect these various qualities in the minds of his penitents and to utilize
+them to the best advantage. It is inconceivable, for instance, that the
+convent-foundress Orsola was other than a neuropathic nonentity&mdash;a blind
+instrument in the hands of what we should call her backers, chiefest of whom
+(in Naples) were two Spanish priests, Borli and Navarro, whose local efforts
+were supported, at head-quarters, by the saintly Filippo Neri and the learned
+Cardinal Baronius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is noticeable. The earlier of these godly biographies are written in
+Latin, and these are more restrained in their language; they were composed, one
+imagines, for the priests and
+<a name="Page259"></a>
+educated classes who could dispense to a certain degree with prodigies. But the
+later ones, from the viceregal period onwards, are in the vernacular and
+display a marked deterioration; one must suppose that they were printed for
+such of the common people as could still read (up to a few years ago,
+sixty-five per cent of the populace were analphabetic). They are pervaded by
+the characteristic of all contemporary literature and art: that deliberate
+intention to <i>astound</i> which originated with the poet Marino, who
+declared such to have been his object and ideal. The miracles certainly do
+astound; they are as <i>strepitosi</i> (clamour-arousing) as the writers claim
+them to be; how they ever came to occur must be left to the consciences of
+those who swore on oath to the truth of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During this period the Mother of God as a local saint increased in popularity.
+There was a ceaseless flow of monographs dealing with particular Madonnas, as
+well as a small library on what the Germans would doubtless call the
+&ldquo;Madonna as a Whole.&rdquo; Here is Serafino Montorio&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Zodiaco di Maria,&rdquo; printed in 1715 on the lines of that monster of
+a book by Gumppenberg. It treats of over two hundred subspecies of Madonna
+worshipped in different parts of south Italy which is divided, for these
+celestial purposes, into twelve regions, according to the signs of the Zodiac.
+The book is dedicated by the author to his &ldquo;Sovereign Lady the <i>Gran
+Madre di Dio&rdquo;</i> and might, in truth, have been written to the glory of
+that protean old Magna Mater by one of Juvenal&rsquo;s &ldquo;tonsured
+herd&rdquo; possessed of much industry but little discrimination.<a href="#fn-31.7" name="fnref-31.7" id="fnref-31.7"><sup>[7]</sup></a>
+Such as it is, it reflects the crude mental status of the Dominican order to
+which the author belonged. I warmly recommend this book to all Englishmen
+desirous of understanding the south. It is pure, undiluted
+paganism&mdash;paganism of a bad school; one would think it marked the lowest
+possible ebb of Christian spirituality. But this is by no means the case, as I
+shall presently show.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-31.7" id="fn-31.7"></a> <a href="#fnref-31.7">[7]</a>
+The Mater Dei was officially installed in the place of Magna Mater at the
+Synod of Ephesus in 431.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How different, from such straightforward unreason, are the etherealized,
+saccharine effusions of the &ldquo;Glories of Mary,&rdquo; by Alfonso di
+Liguori! They represent the other pole of Mariolatry&mdash;the gentlemanly
+pole. And under the influence of Mary-worship a new kind of saintly physiognomy
+was elaborated, as we can see from contemporary prints and pictures. The
+bearded men-saints were extinct; in the place of them this mawkish, sub-sexual
+love for the Virgin developed a corresponding type of
+<a name="Page260"></a>
+adorer&mdash;clean-shaven, emasculate youths, posing in ecstatic attitudes with
+a nauseous feminine smirk. Rather an unpleasant sort of saint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The unwholesome chastity-ideal, without which no holy man of the period was
+&ldquo;complete,&rdquo; naturally left its mark upon literature, notably on
+that of certain Spanish theologians. But good specimens of what I mean may also
+be found in the Theologia Moralis of Liguori; the kind of stuff, that is, which
+would be classed as &ldquo;curious&rdquo; in catalogues and kept in a locked
+cupboard by the most broad-minded paterfamilias. Reading these elucubrations of
+Alfonso&rsquo;s, one feels that the saint has pondered long and lovingly upon
+themes like <i>an et quando peccata sint oscula</i> or <i>de tactu et adspectu
+corporis;</i> he writes with all the authority of an expert whose richly-varied
+experiences in the confessional have been amplified and irradiated by divine
+inspiration. I hesitate what to call this literature, seeing that it was
+obviously written to the glory of God and His Virgin Mother. The congregation
+of the Index, which was severe in the matter of indecent publications and
+prohibited Boccaccio&rsquo;s Decameron on these grounds, hailed with approval
+the appearance of such treatises composed, as they were, for the guidance of
+young priests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cruelty (in the shape of the Inquisition) and lasciviousness (as exemplified by
+such pious filth)&mdash;these are the prime fruits of that cult of asceticism
+which for centuries the Government strove to impose upon south Italy. If the
+people were saved, it was due to that substratum of sanity, of Greek
+<i>sophrosyne,</i> which resisted the one and derided the other. Whoever has
+saturated himself with the records will marvel not so much that the inhabitants
+preserved some shreds of common sense and decent feeling, as that they survived
+at all&mdash;he will marvel that the once fair kingdom was not converted into a
+wilderness, saintly but uninhabited, like Spain itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the movement continued in a vertiginous crescendo. Spaniardism culminated
+in Bourbonism, and this, again, reached its climax in the closing years of the
+eighteenth century, when the conditions of south Italy baffled description. I
+have already (p. 212) given the formidable number of its ecclesiastics; the
+number of saints was commensurate, but&mdash;as often happens when the quantity
+is excessive&mdash;the quality declined. This lazzaroni-period was the debâcle
+of holiness. So true it is that our gods reflect the hearts that make them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Venerable Fra Egidio, a native of Taranto, is a good example of
+contemporary godliness. My biography of him was
+<a name="Page261"></a>
+printed in Naples in 1876,<a href="#fn-31.8" name="fnref-31.8" id="fnref-31.8"><sup>[8]</sup></a>
+and contains a dedicatory epistle addressed to the Blessed Virgin by her
+&ldquo;servant, subject, and most loving son Rosario Frungillo&rdquo;&mdash;a
+canon of the church and the author of the book.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-31.8" id="fn-31.8"></a> <a href="#fnref-31.8">[8]</a>
+&ldquo;Vita del Venerabile servo di Dio Fra Egidio da S. Giuseppe laico
+professo alcantarino,&rdquo; Napoli, 1876.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This &ldquo;taumaturgo&rdquo; could perform all the ordinary feats; I will not
+linger over them. What has made him popular to this day are those wonders which
+appealed to the taste of the poorer people, such as, for example, that miracle
+of the eels. A fisherman had brought fourteen hundredweight of these for sale
+in the market. Judge of his disappointment when he discovered that they had all
+died during the journey (southerners will not pay for dead eels). Fortunately,
+he saw the saint arriving in a little boat, who informed him that the eels were
+&ldquo;not dead, but only asleep,&rdquo; and who woke them up again by means of
+a relic of Saint Pasquale which he always carried about with him, after a
+quarter of an hour&rsquo;s devout praying, during which the perspiration oozed
+from his forehead. The eels, says the writer, had been dead and slimy, but now
+turned their bellies downwards once more and twisted about in their usual
+spirals; there began a general weeping among the onlookers, and the fame of the
+miracle immediately spread abroad. He could do the same with lobsters, cows,
+and human beings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus a cow belonging to Fra Egidio&rsquo;s monastery was once stolen by an
+impious butcher, and cut up into the usual joints with a view to a clandestine
+sale of the meat. The saint discovered the beast&rsquo;s remains, ordered that
+they should be laid together on the floor in the shape of a living cow, with
+the entrails, head and so forth in their natural positions; then, having made
+the sign of the cross with his cord upon the slaughtered beast, and rousing up
+all his faith, he said: &ldquo;In the name of God and of Saint Pasquale, arise,
+Catherine!&rdquo; (Catherine was the cow&rsquo;s name.) &ldquo;At these words
+the animal lowed, shook itself, and stood up on its feet alive, whole and
+strong, even as it had been before it was killed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the case of one of the dead men whom he brought to life, the undertakers
+were already about their sad task; but Fra Egidio, viewing the corpse, remarked
+in his usual manner that the man was &ldquo;not dead, but only asleep,&rdquo;
+and after a few saintly manipulations, roused him from his slumber. The most
+portentous of his wonders, however, are those which he wrought <i>after his own
+death</i> by means of his relics and otherwise; they have been sworn to by many
+persons. Nor did his hand lose its old cunning, in these posthumous
+manifestations, with the finny tribe. A certain woman,
+<a name="Page262"></a>
+Maria Scuotto, was enabled to resuscitate a number of dead eels by means of an
+image of the deceased saint which she cast among them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every one of the statements in this biography is drawn from the <i>processi</i>
+to which I will presently refer; there were 202 witnesses who deposed
+&ldquo;under the rigour and sanctity of oath&rdquo; to the truth of these
+miracles; and among those who were personally convinced of the
+Venerable&rsquo;s rare gifts was the Royal Family of Naples, the archbishop of
+that town, as well as innumerable dukes and princes. An embittered rationalist
+would note that the reading of Voltaire, at this period, was punished with
+three years&rsquo; galley-slavery and that several thousand citizens were
+hanged for expressing liberal opinions; he will suggest that belief in the
+supernatural, rejected by the thinking classes, finds an abiding shelter among
+royalty and the proletariat.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+It occurs to me, à propos of Fra Egidio, to make the obvious statement that an
+account of an occurrence is not necessarily true, because it happened long ago.
+Credibility does not improve, like violins and port wine, with lapse of years.
+This being the case, it will not be considered objectionable to say that there
+are certain deeds attributed to holy men of olden days which, to speak frankly,
+are open to doubt; or at least not susceptible of proof. Who were these men, if
+they ever existed? and who vouches for their prodigies? This makes me think
+that Pope Gelasius showed no small penetration in excluding, as early as the
+fifth century, some few <i>acta sanctorum</i> from the use of the churches;
+another step in the same direction was taken in the twelfth century when the
+power of canonizing saints, which had hitherto been claimed by all bishops,
+became vested in the Pope alone; and yet another, when Urban VIII forbade the
+nomination of local patron saints by popular vote. Pious legends are supposed
+to have their uses as an educative agency. So be it. But such relations of
+imperfectly ascertained and therefore questionable wonders suffer from one
+grave drawback: they tend to shake our faith in the evidence of
+well-authenticated ones. Thus Saint Patrick is also reported to have raised a
+cow from the dead&mdash;five cows, to be quite accurate; but who will come
+forward and vouch for the fact? No one. That is because Saint Patrick belongs
+to the legendary stage; he died, it is presumed, about 490.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, with Saint Egidio, we are on other ground; on the ground of bald
+actuality. He expired in 1812, and the contemporaries who have attested his
+miraculous deeds are not misty phantoms of the Thebais; they were creatures of
+flesh and blood, human, historical
+<a name="Page263"></a>
+personages, who were dressed and nourished and educated after the fashion of
+our own grandfathers. Yet it was meet and proper that the documentary evidence
+as to his divine graces should be conscientiously examined. And only in 1888
+was the crowning work accomplished. In that year His Holiness Leo XIII and the
+Sacred Congregation of Cardinals solemnly approved the evidence and inscribed
+the name of Egidio in the book of the Blessed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To touch upon a few minor matters&mdash;I observe that Fra Egidio, like the
+Flying Monk, was &ldquo;illiterate,&rdquo; and similarly preserved up to a
+decrepit age &ldquo;the odorous lily of purity, which made him appear in words
+and deeds as a most innocent child.&rdquo; He was accustomed to worship before
+a favourite picture of the Mother of God which he kept adorned with candles;
+and whenever the supply of these ran out, he was wont to address Her with
+infantile simplicity of heart and in the local dialect: &ldquo;Now
+there&rsquo;s no wax for You; so think about it Yourself; if not, You&rsquo;ll
+have to go without.&rdquo; The playful-saintly note. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there is this difference between him and earlier saints that whereas they,
+all too often, suffered in solitude, misunderstood and rejected of men, he
+enjoyed the highest popularity during his whole long life. Wherever he went,
+his footsteps were pursued by crowds of admirers, eager to touch his
+wonder-working body or to cut off shreds of his clothing as amulets; hardly a
+day passed that he did not return home with garments so lacerated that only
+half of them was left; every evening they had to be patched up anew, although
+they were purposely stitched full of wires and small chains of iron as a
+protection. The same passionate sympathy continued after death, for while his
+body was lying in state a certain Luigi Ascione, a surgeon, pushed through the
+crowd and endeavoured to cut off one of his toe-nails with the flesh attached
+to it; he admitted being driven to this act of pious depredation by the
+pleading request of the Spanish Ambassador and a Neapolitan princess, who held
+Fra Egidio in great veneration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is not an isolated instance. Southerners love their saints, and do not
+content themselves with chill verbal expressions of esteem. So the biographer
+of Saint Giangiuseppe records that &ldquo;one of the deceased saint&rsquo;s
+toes was bitten off with most regretable devotion by the teeth of a man in the
+crowd, who wished to preserve it as a relic. And the blood from the wound
+flowed so copiously and so freely that many pieces of cloth were saturated with
+it; nor did it cease to flow till the precious corpse was interred.&rdquo; It
+is hard to picture such proofs of fervid popularity falling to the lot of
+English deans and bishops.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page264"></a>
+He was modern, too, in this sense, that he did not torment himself with
+penitences (decay of Spanish austerity); on the contrary, he even kept
+chocolate, honey and suchlike delicacies in his cell. In short, he was an
+up-to-date saint, who despised mediæval practices and lived in a manner
+befitting the age which gave him birth. In this respect he resembles our
+English men of holiness, who exercise a laudable self-denial in resisting the
+seductions of the ascetic life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, the cult of the Mother of God continued to wax in favour, and those
+who are interested in its development should read the really remarkable book by
+Antonio Cuomó, &ldquo;Saggio apologetico della belezza celeste e divina di
+Maria S.S. Madre di Dio&rdquo; (Castellamare, 1863). It is a diatribe against
+modernism by a champion of lost causes, an exacerbated lover of the
+&ldquo;Singular Virgin and fecund Mother of the Verb.&rdquo; His argument, as I
+understand it, is the <i>consensus gentium</i> theory applied to the Virgin
+Mary. In defence of this thesis, the book has been made to bristle with
+quotations; they stand out like quills upon the porcupine, ready to impale the
+adventurous sceptic. Pliny and Virgil and the Druids and Balaam&rsquo;s Ass are
+invoked as foretelling Her birth; the Old Testament&mdash;that venerable
+sufferer, as Huxley called it&mdash;is twisted into dire convulsions for the
+same purpose; much evidence is also drawn from Hebrew observances and from the
+Church Fathers. But the New Testamentary record is seldom invoked; the Saviour,
+on the rare occasions when He is mentioned, being dismissed as &ldquo;G.
+C.&rdquo; The volume ends with a pyrotechnical display of invective against
+non-Catholic heretics; a medley of threats and abuse worthy of those breezy
+days of Erasmus, when theologians really said what they thought of each other.
+The frank polytheism of Montorio is more to my taste. This outpouring of
+papistical rhetoric gives me unwarrantable sensations&mdash;it makes me feel
+positively Protestant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another sign of increasing popularity is that the sacred bacchanals connected
+with the &ldquo;crowning&rdquo; of various Madonnas were twice as numerous, in
+Naples, in the nineteenth as in the eighteenth century. Why an image of the
+Mother of God should be decked with this worldly symbol, as a reward for
+services rendered, will be obscure only to those who fail to appreciate the
+earthly-tangible complexion of southern religion. Puerility is its key-note.
+The Italian is either puerile or adult; the Englishman remains everlastingly
+adolescent. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now of course it is open to any one to say that the pious records from which I
+have quoted are a desolation of the spirit; that they
+<a name="Page265"></a>
+possess all the improbability of the &ldquo;Arabian Nights,&rdquo; and none of
+their charm; that all the distempered dreamings to which our poor humanity is
+subject have given themselves a rendezvous in their pages. I am not for
+disputing the point, and I can understand how one man may be saddened by their
+perusal, while another extracts therefrom some gleams of mirth. For my part, I
+merely verify this fact: the native has been fed with this stuff for centuries,
+and if we desire to enter into his feelings, we must feed ourselves
+likewise&mdash;up to a point. The past is the key to the present. That is why I
+have dwelt at such length on the subject&mdash;in the hope of clearing up the
+enigma in the national character: the unpassable gulf, I mean, between the
+believing and the unbelieving sections of the community.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An Anglo-Saxon arriving at Bagnara and witnessing a procession in honour of
+that Sacred Hat of the Mother of God which has led me into this disquisition,
+would be shocked at the degree of bigotry implied. &ldquo;The Hat of the Virgin
+Mary,&rdquo; he would say&mdash;&ldquo;what next?&rdquo; Then, accosting some
+ordinary citizen not in the procession&mdash;any butcher or baker&mdash;he
+would receive a shock of another kind; he would be appalled at the man&rsquo;s
+language of contemptuous derision towards everything which he, the Anglo-Saxon,
+holds sacred in biblical tradition. There is no attempt, here, at
+&ldquo;reconciliation.&rdquo; The classes calling themselves enlightened are
+making a clean sweep of the old gods in a fashion that bewilders us who have
+accustomed ourselves to see a providential design in everything that exists
+(possibly because our acquaintance with a providentially-designed Holy Office
+is limited to an obsolete statute, the genial <i>de haeretico comburendo).</i>
+The others, the fetishists, have remained on the spiritual level of their own
+saints. And there we stand today. That section so numerous in England, the
+pseudo-pagans, crypto-Christians, or whatever obscurantists like Messrs. A. J.
+Balfour and Mallock like to call themselves (the men who, with disastrous
+effects, transport into realms of pure intelligence the spirit of compromise
+which should be restricted to practical concerns)&mdash;that section has no
+representatives hereabouts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fully to appreciate their attitude as opposed to ours, we must also remember
+that the south Italian does not trouble himself about the objective truth of
+any miracle whatever; his senses may be perverted, but his intelligence remains
+outside the sphere of infection. This is his saving grace. To the people here,
+the affair of Moses and the Burning Bush, the raising of Lazarus, and
+Egidio&rsquo;s cow-revival, are on the identical plane of authenticity; the
+Bible is one of a thousand saints&rsquo; books; its stories may be as true as
+<a name="Page266"></a>
+theirs, or just as untrue; in any case, what has that to do with his own
+worldly conduct? But the Englishman with ingenuous ardour thinks to believe in
+the Burning Bush wonder, and in so far his intelligence is infected; with equal
+ardour he excludes the cow-performance from the range of possibility; and to
+him it matters considerably which of the miracles are true and which are false,
+seeing that his conduct is supposed to take colour from such supernatural
+events. Ultra-credulous as to one set of narratives, he has no credulity left
+for other sets; he concentrates his believing energies upon a small space,
+whereas the Italian&rsquo;s are diffused, thinly, over a wide area. It is the
+old story: Gothic intensity and Latin spaciousness. So the Gothic believer
+takes his big dose of irrationalism on one fixed day; the Latin, by attending
+Mass every morning, spreads it over the whole week. And the sombre
+strenuousness of our northern character expects a remuneration for this outlay
+of faith, while the other contents himself with such sensuous enjoyment as he
+can momentarily extract from his ceremonials. That is why our English religion
+has a <i>democratic</i> tinge distasteful to the Latin who, at bottom, is
+always a philosopher; democratic because it relies for its success, like
+democratic politicians, upon promises&mdash;promises that may or may not be
+kept&mdash;promises that form no part (they are only an official appendage) of
+the childlike paganism of the south. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fifteen francs will buy you a reliable witness for a south Italian lawsuit; you
+must pay a good deal more in England. Thence one might argue that the cult of
+credulity implied by these saintly biographies is responsible for this laxness,
+for the general disregard of veracity. I doubt it. I am not inclined to blame
+the monkish saint-makers for this particular trait; I suspect that for fifteen
+francs you could have bought a first-class witness under Pericles. Southerners
+are not yet pressed for time; and when people are not pressed for time, they do
+not learn the time-saving value of honesty. Our respect for truth and fair
+dealing, such as it is, derives from modern commerce; in the Middle Ages nobody
+was concerned about honesty save a few trading companies like the Hanseatic
+League, and the poor mediæval devil (the only gentleman of his age) who was
+generally pressed for time and could be relied upon to keep his word. Even God,
+of whom they talked so much, was systematically swindled. Where time counts for
+nothing, expeditious practices between man and man are a drug in the market.
+Besides, it must be noted that this churchly misteaching was only a fraction of
+that general shattering which has disintegrated all the finer fibres of public
+life. It stands to reason that the fragile
+<a name="Page267"></a>
+tissues of culture are dislocated, and its delicate edges defaced, by such
+persistive governmental brutalization as the inhabitants have undergone. None
+but the grossest elements in a people can withstand enduring misrule; none but
+a mendacious and servile nature will survive its wear and tear. So it comes
+about that up to a few years ago the nobler qualities which we associate with
+those old Hellenic colonists&mdash;their intellectual curiosity, their candid
+outlook upon life, their passionate sense of beauty, their love of
+nature&mdash;all these things had been abraded, leaving, as residue, nothing
+save what the Greeks shared with ruder races. There are indications that this
+state of affairs is now ending.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The position is this. The records show that the common people never took their
+saints to heart in the northern fashion&mdash;as moral exemplars; from
+beginning to end, they have only utilized them as a pretext for fun and
+festivals, a means of brightening the catacombic, the essentially sunless,
+character of Christianity. So much for the popular saints, the patrons and
+heroes. The others, the ecclesiastical ones, are an artificial product of
+monkish institutions. These monkeries were established in the land by virtue of
+civil authority. Their continued existence, however, was contingent upon the
+goodwill of the Vatican. One of the surest and cheapest methods of obtaining
+this goodwill was to produce a satisfactory crop of saints whose beatification
+swelled the Vatican treasury with the millions collected from a deluded
+populace for that end. The monks paid nothing; they only furnished the saint
+and, in due course, the people&rsquo;s money. Can we wonder that they
+discovered saints galore? Can we wonder that the Popes were gratified by their
+pious zeal?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So things went on till yesterday. But now a large proportion of the ten
+thousand (?) churches and monasteries of Naples are closed or actually in
+ruins; wayside sanctuaries crumble to dust in picturesque fashion; the price of
+holy books has fallen to zero, and the godly brethren have emigrated to
+establish their saint-manufactories elsewhere. Not without hope of success; for
+they will find purchasers of their wares wherever mankind can be interested in
+that queer disrespect of the body which is taught by the metaphysical ascetics
+of the East.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Lewes, I believe, who compared metaphysics to ghosts by saying that
+there was no killing either of them; one could only dissipate them by throwing
+light into the dark places they love to inhabit&mdash;to show that nothing is
+there. Spectres, likewise, are these saintly caricatures of humanity,
+perambulating metaphysics, the application <i>in corpore vili</i> of Oriental
+fakirism.
+<a name="Page268"></a>
+Nightmare-literature is the crazy recital of their deeds and sufferings. Pathological
+phantoms! The state of mind which engenders and cherishes such illusions is a
+disease, and it has been well said that &ldquo;you cannot refute a
+disease.&rdquo; You cannot nail ghosts to the counter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a ray of light . . .
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page269"></a><a name="chap32"></a>XXXII<br />
+ASPROMONTE, THE CLOUD-GATHERER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Day was barely dawning when we left Delianuova and began the long and weary
+climb up Montalto. Chestnuts gave way to beeches, but the summit receded ever
+further from us. And even before reaching the uplands, the so-called Piano di
+Carmelia, we encountered a bank of bad weather. A glance at the map will show
+that Montalto must be a cloud-gatherer, drawing to its flanks every wreath of
+vapour that rises from Ionian and Tyrrhenian; a west wind was blowing that
+morning, and thick fogs clung to the skirts of the peak. We reached the summit
+(1956 metres) at last, drenched in an icy bath of rain and sleet, and with
+fingers so numbed that we could hardly hold our sticks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the superb view&mdash;for such it must be&mdash;nothing whatever was to be
+seen; we were wrapped in a glacial mist. On the highest point stands a figure
+of the Redeemer. It was dragged up in pieces from Delianuova some seven years
+ago, but soon injured by frosts; it has lately been refashioned. The original
+structure may be due to the same pious stimulus as that which placed the
+crosses on Monte Vulture and other peaks throughout the country&mdash;a
+counterblast to the rationalistic congress at Rome in 1904, when Giordano Bruno
+became, for a while, the hero of the country. This statue does not lack
+dignity. The Saviour&rsquo;s regard turns towards Reggio, the capital of the
+province; and one hand is upraised in calm and godlike benediction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Passing through magnificent groves of fir, we descended rapidly into anothsr
+climate, into realms of golden sunshine. Among these trees I espied what has
+become quite a rare bird in Italy&mdash;the common wood-pigeon. The few that
+remain have been driven into the most secluded recesses of the mountains; it
+was different in the days of Theocritus, who sang of this amiable fowl when the
+climate was colder and the woodlands reached as far as the now barren seashore.
+To the firs succeeded long stretches of odorous pines interspersed with
+Mediterranean heath (bruyère), which here grows to a height of twelve feet; one
+thinks of the number of briar
+<a name="Page270"></a>
+pipes that could be cut out of its knotty roots. A British Vice-Consul at
+Reggio, Mr. Kerrich, started this industry about the year 1899; he collected
+the roots, which were sawn into blocks and then sent to France and America to
+be made into pipes. This Calabrian briar was considered superior to the French
+kind, and Mr. Kerrich had large sales on both sides of the Atlantic; his chief
+difficulty was want of labour owing to emigration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We passed, by the wayside, several rude crosses marking the site of accidents
+or murders, as well as a large heap of stones, where-under lie the bones of a
+man who attempted to traverse these mountains in winter-time and was frozen to
+death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They found him,&rdquo; the guide told me, &ldquo;in spring, when the
+snow melted from off his body. There he lay, all fresh and comely! It looked as
+if he would presently wake up and continue his march; but he neither spoke nor
+stirred. Then they knew he was dead. And they piled all these stones over him,
+to prevent the wolves, you understand&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aspromonte deserves its name. It is an incredibly harsh agglomeration of hill
+and dale, and the geology of the district, as I learned long ago from my friend
+Professor Cortese, reveals a perfect chaos of rocks of every age, torn into
+gullies by earthquakes and other cataclysms of the past&mdash;at one place,
+near Scido, is an old stream of lava. Once the higher ground, the nucleus of
+the group, is left behind, the wanderer finds himself lost in a maze of
+contorted ravines, winding about without any apparent system of watershed. Does
+the liquid flow north or south? Who can tell! The track crawls in and out of
+valleys, mounts upwards to heights of sun-scorched bracken and cistus, descends
+once more into dewy glades hemmed in by precipices and overhung by drooping
+fernery. It crosses streams of crystal clearness, rises afresh in endless
+gyrations under the pines only to vanish, yet again, into the twilight of
+deeper abysses, where it skirts the rivulet along precarious ledges, until some
+new obstruction blocks the way&mdash;so it writhes about for long, long hours.
+. . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, on the spot, one can understand how an outlaw like Musolino was enabled
+to defy justice, helped, as he was, by the fact that the vast majority of the
+inhabitants were favourable to him, and that the officer in charge of his
+pursuers was paid a fixed sum for every day he spent in the chase and
+presumably found it convenient not to discover his whereabouts.<a href="#fn-32.1" name="fnref-32.1" id="fnref-32.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-32.1" id="fn-32.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-32.1">[1]</a>
+See next chapter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We rested awhile, during these interminable meanderings, under the shadow of a
+group of pines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page271"></a>
+&ldquo;Do you see that square patch yonder?&rdquo; said my man. &ldquo;It is a
+cornfield. There Musolino shot one of his enemies, whom he suspected of giving
+information to the police. It was well done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How many did he shoot, altogether?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only eighteen. And three of them recovered, more or less; enough to limp
+about, at all events. Ah, if you could have seen him, sir! He was young, with
+curly fair hair, and a face like a rose. God alone can tell how many poor
+people he helped in their distress. And any young girl he met in the mountains
+he would help with her load and accompany as far as her home, right into her
+father&rsquo;s house, which none of us would have risked, however much we might
+have liked it. But every one knew that he was pure as an angel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And there was a young fellow here,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;who thought
+he could profit by pretending to be Musolino. So one day he challenged a
+proprietor with his gun, and took all his money. When it came to
+Musolino&rsquo;s ears, he was furious&mdash;furious! He lay in wait for him,
+caught him, and said: &ldquo;How dare you touch fathers of children?
+Where&rsquo;s that money you took from Don Antonio?&rdquo; Then the boy began
+to cry and tremble for his life. &ldquo;Bring it,&rdquo; said Musolino,
+&ldquo;every penny, at midday next Monday, to such and such a spot, or
+else&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Of course he brought it. Then he marched him straight
+into the proprietor&rsquo;s house. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s this wretched boy, who
+robbed you in my name. And here&rsquo;s the money: please count it. Now, what
+shall we do with him?&rdquo; So Don Antonio counted the money.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all there,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;let him off this
+time.&rdquo; Then Musolino turned to the lad: &ldquo;You have behaved like a
+mannerless puppy,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;without shame or knowledge of the
+world. Be reasonable in future, and understand clearly: I will have no
+brigandage in these mountains. Leave that to the syndics and judges in the
+towns.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We did not traverse Musolino&rsquo;s natal village, Santo Stefano; indeed, we
+passed through no villages at all. But after issuing from the labyrinth, we saw
+a few of them, perched in improbable situations&mdash;Roccaforte and Roghudi on
+our right; on the other side, Africo and Casalnuovo. Salis Marschlins says that
+the inhabitants of these regions are so wild and innocent that money is
+unknown; everything is done by barter. That comes of copying without
+discrimination. For this statement he utilized the report of a Government
+official, a certain Leoni, who was sent hither after the earthquake of 1783,
+and found the use of money not unknown, but forgotten, in consequence of this
+terrible catastrophe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page272"></a>
+These vales of Aspromonte are one of the last refuges of living Byzantinism.
+Greek is still spoken in some places, such as Roccaforte and Roghudi. Earlier
+travellers confused the natives with the Albanians; Niehbuhr, who had an
+obsession on the subject of Hellenism, imagined they were relics of old Dorian
+and Achaean colonies. Scholars are apparently not yet quite decided upon
+certain smaller matters. So Lenormant (Vol. II, p. 433) thinks they came hither
+after the Turkish conquest, as did the Albanians; Batiffol argues that they
+were chased into Calabria from Sicily by the Arabs after the second half of the
+seventh century; Morosi, who treats mostly of their Apulian settlements, says
+that they came from the East between the sixth and tenth centuries. Many
+students, such as Morelli and Comparetti, have garnered their songs, language,
+customs and lore, and whoever wants a convenient résumé of these earlier
+researches will find it in Pellegrini&rsquo;s book which was written in 1873
+(printed 1880). He gives the number of Greek inhabitants of these
+places&mdash;Roghudi, for example, had 535 in his day; he has also noted down
+these villages, like Africo and Casalnuovo, in which the Byzantine speech has
+lately been lost. Bova and Condofuri are now the head-quarters of mediæval
+Greek in these parts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From afar we had already descried a green range of hills that shut out the
+seaward view. This we now began to climb, in wearisome ascension; it is called
+<i>Piè d&rsquo;Impisa,</i> because &ldquo;your feet are all the time on a steep
+incline.&rdquo; Telegraph wires here accompany the track, a survival of the war
+between the Italian Government and Musolino. On the summit lies a lonely Alp,
+Campo di Bova, where a herd of cattle were pasturing under the care of a
+golden-haired youth who lay supine on the grass, gazing at the clouds as they
+drifted in stately procession across the firmament. Save for a dusky
+charcoal-burner crouching in a cave, this boy was the only living person we
+encountered on our march&mdash;so deserted are these mountain tracks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Campo di Bova a path branches off to Staiti; the sea is visible once more,
+and there are fine glimpses, on the left, towards Staiti (or is it Ferruzzano?)
+and, down the right, into the destructive and dangerous torrent of Amendolea.
+Far beyond it, rises the mountain peak of Pentedattilo, a most singular
+landmark which looks exactly like a molar tooth turned upside down, with fangs
+in air. The road passes through a gateway in the rock whence, suddenly, a full
+view is disclosed of Bova on its hill-top, the houses nestling among huge
+blocks of stone that make one think of some cyclopean citadel of past ages. My
+guide stoutly denied that this
+<a name="Page273"></a>
+was Bova; the town, he declared, lay in quite another direction. I imagine he
+had never been beyond the foot of the &ldquo;Piè d&rsquo;Impisa.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, once more, the late earthquake has done some damage, and there is a row
+of trim wooden shelters near the entrance of the town. I may add, as a
+picturesque detail, that about one-third of them have never been inhabited, and
+are never likely to be. They were erected in the heat of enthusiasm, and there
+they will stay, empty and abandoned, until some energetic mayor shall pull them
+down and cook his maccheroni with their timber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Evening was drawing on apace, and whether it was due to the joy of having
+accomplished an arduous journey, or to inconsiderate potations of the Bacchus
+of Bova, one of the most remarkable wines in Italy, I very soon found myself on
+excellent terms with the chief citizens of this rather sordid-looking little
+place. A good deal has been written concerning Bova and its inhabitants, but I
+should say there is still a mine of information to be exploited on the spot.
+They are bilingual, but while clinging stubbornly to their old speech, they
+have now embraced Catholicism. The town kept its Greek religious rites till the
+latter half of the sixteenth century; and Rodotà has described the
+&ldquo;vigorous resistance&rdquo; that was made to the introduction of
+Romanism, and the ceremonies which finally accompanied that event.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mine hostess obligingly sang me two or three songs in her native language; the
+priest furnished me with curious statistics of folklore and criminology; and
+the notary, with whom I conversed awhile on the tiny piazza that overlooks the
+coastlands and distant Ionian, was a most affable gentleman. Seeing that the
+Christian names of the populace are purely Italian, I enquired as to their
+surnames, and learned what I expected, namely, that a good many Greek family
+names survive among the people. His own name, he said, was unquestionably
+Greek: <i>Condemi;</i> if I liked, he would go through the local archives and
+prepare me a list of all such surnames as appeared to him to be non-Italian; we
+could thus obtain some idea of the percentage of Greek families still living
+here. My best thanks to the good Signor!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After some further liquid refreshment, a youthful native volunteered to guide
+me by short cuts to the remote railway station. We stepped blithely into the
+twilight, and during the long descent I discoursed with him, in fluent
+Byzantine Greek, of the affairs of his village.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is my theory that among a populace of this kind the words relative to
+agricultural pursuits will be those which are least likely to suffer change
+with lapse of years, or to be replaced by others.
+<a name="Page274"></a>
+Acting on this principle, I put him through a catechism on the subject as soon
+as we reached our destination, and was surprised at the relative scarcity of
+Italian terms&mdash;barely 25 per cent I should say. Needless to add, I omitted
+to note them down. Such as it is, be that my contribution to the literature of
+these sporadic islets of mediæval Hellenism, whose outstanding features are
+being gnawed away by the waves of military conscription, governmental
+schooling, and emigration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caulonia, my next halting-place, lay far off the line. I had therefore the
+choice of spending the night at Gerace (old Locri) or Rocella
+Ionica&mdash;intermediate stations. Both of them, to my knowledge, possessing
+indifferent accommodation, I chose the former as being the nearest, and slept
+there, not amiss; far better than on a previous occasion, when certain things
+occurred which need not be set down here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The trip from Delianuova over the summit of Montalto to Bova railway station is
+by no means to be recommended to young boys or persons in delicate health.
+Allowing for only forty-five minutes&rsquo; rest, it took me fourteen hours to
+walk to the town of Bova, and the railway station lies nearly three hours apart
+from that place. There is hardly a level yard of ground along the whole route,
+and though my &ldquo;guide&rdquo; twice took the wrong track and thereby
+probably lost me some little time, I question whether the best walker, provided
+(as I was) with the best maps, will be able to traverse the distance in less
+than fifteen hours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whoever he is, I wish him joy of his journey. Pleasant to recall, assuredly;
+the scenery and the mountain flowers are wondrously beautiful; but I have fully
+realized what the men of Delianuova meant, when they said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To Montalto, Yes; to Bova, No.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page275"></a><a name="chap33"></a>XXXIII<br />
+MUSOLINO AND THE LAW</h2>
+
+<p>
+Musolino will remain a hero for many long years to come. &ldquo;He did his
+duty&rdquo;: such is the popular verdict on his career. He was not a brigand,
+but an unfortunate&mdash;a martyr, a victim of the law. So he is described not
+only by his country-people, but by the writers of many hundred serious
+pamphlets in every province of Italy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At any bookstall you may buy cheap illustrated tracts and poems setting forth
+his achievements. In Cosenza I saw a play of which he was the leading figure,
+depicted as a pale, long-suffering gentleman of the &ldquo;misunderstood&rdquo;
+type&mdash;friend of the fatherless, champion of widows and orphans, rectifier
+of all wrongs; in fact, as the embodiment of those virtues which we are apt to
+associate with Prometheus or the founder of Christianity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only to those who know nothing of local conditions will it seem strange to say
+that Italian law is one of the factors that contribute to the disintegration of
+family life throughout the country, and to the production of creatures like
+Musolino. There are few villages which do not contain some notorious assassins
+who have escaped punishment under sentimental pleas, and now terrorize the
+neighbourhood. This is one of the evils which derange patriarchalism; the
+decent-minded living in fear of their lives, the others with a conspicuous
+example before their eyes of the advantages of evil-doing. And another is that
+the innocent often suffer, country-bred lads being locked up for months and
+years in prison on the flimsiest pretexts&mdash;often on the mere word of some
+malevolent local policeman&mdash;among hardened habitual offenders. If they
+survive the treatment, which is not always the case, they return home
+completely demoralized and a source of infection to others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is hardly surprising if, under such conditions, rich and poor alike are
+ready to hide a picturesque fugitive from justice. A sad state of affairs,
+but&mdash;as an unsavoury Italian proverb correctly says&mdash;<i>il pesce
+puzza dal capo.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the fault lies not only in the fundamental perversity of all Roman Law. It
+lies also in the local administration of that law,
+<a name="Page276"></a>
+which is inefficient and marked by that elaborate brutality characteristic of
+all &ldquo;philosophic&rdquo; and tender-hearted nations. One thinks of the
+Byzantines. . . . That justices should be well-salaried gentlemen, cognizant of
+their duties to society; that carbineers and other police-functionaries should
+be civilly responsible for outrages upon the public; that a so-called
+&ldquo;habeas-corpus&rdquo; Act might be as useful here as among certain
+savages of the north; that the Baghdad system of delays leads to corruption of
+underpaid officials and witnesses alike (not to speak of judges)&mdash;in a
+word, that the method pursued hereabouts is calculated to create rather than to
+repress crime: these are truths of too elementary a nature to find their way
+into the brains of the megalomaniac rhetoricians who control their
+country&rsquo;s fate. They will never endorse that saying of Stendhal&rsquo;s:
+&ldquo;In Italy, with the exception of Milan, the death-penalty is the preface
+of all civilization.&rdquo; (To this day, the proportion of murders is still 13
+per cent higher in Palermo than in Milan.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Speak to the wisest judges of the horrors of cellular confinement such as
+Musolino was enduring up to a short time ago, as opposed to capital punishment,
+and you will learn that they invoke the humanitarian Beccaria in justification
+of it. Theorists!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For less formidable criminals there exists that wondrous institution of
+<i>domicilio coatto,</i> which I have studied in the islands of Lipari and
+Ponza. These evil-doers seldom try to escape; life is far too comfortable, and
+the wine good and cheap; often, on completing their sentences, they get
+themselves condemned anew, in order to return. The hard-working man may well
+envy their lot, for they receive free lodging from the Government, a daily
+allowance of money, and two new suits of clothes a year&mdash;they are not
+asked to do a stroke of work in return, but may lie in bed all day long, if so
+disposed. The law-abiding citizen, meanwhile, pays for the upkeep of this horde
+of malefactors, as well as for the army of officials who are deputed to attend
+to their wants. This institution of <i>domicilio coatto</i> is one of those
+things which would be incredible, were it not actually in existence. It is a
+school, a State-fostered school, for the promotion of criminality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what shall be expected? Where judges sob like children, and jurors swoon
+away with emotionalism; where floods of bombast&mdash;go to the courts, and
+listen!&mdash;take the place of cross-examination and duly-sworn affidavits;
+where perjury is a humanly venial and almost praiseworthy failing&mdash;how
+shall the code, defective as it is, be administered? Rhetoric, and rhetoric
+alone, sways the decision of the courts. Scholars are only now beginning
+<a name="Page277"></a>
+to realize to what an extent the ancient sense of veracity was tainted with
+this vice&mdash;how deeply all classical history is permeated with elegant
+partisan non-truth. And this evil legacy from Greco-Roman days has been
+augmented by the more recent teachings of Jesuitry and the Catholic theory of
+&ldquo;peccato veniale.&rdquo; Rhetoric alone counts; rhetoric alone is
+&ldquo;art.&rdquo; The rest is mere facts; and your &ldquo;penalista&rdquo; has
+a constitutional horror of a bald fact, because <i>there it is,</i> and there
+is nothing to be done with it. It is too crude a thing for cultured men to
+handle. If a local barrister were forced to state in court a plain fact,
+without varnish, he would die of cerebral congestion; the judge, of boredom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In early times, these provinces had a rough-and-ready cowboy justice which
+answered simple needs, and when, in Bourbon days, things became more
+centralized, there was still a never-failing expedient: each judge having a
+fixed and publicly acknowledged tariff, the village elders, in deserving cases,
+subscribed the requisite sum and released their prisoner. But Italy is now
+paying the penalty of ambition. With one foot in the ferocity of her past, and
+the other on a quicksand of dream-nurtured idealism, she contrives to combine
+the disadvantages of both. She, who was the light o&rsquo; love of all Europe
+for long ages, and in her poverty denied nothing to her clientèle, has now laid
+aside a little money, repenting of her frivolous and mercenary deeds (they
+sometimes do), and becoming puritanically zealous of good works in her old
+age&mdash;all this, however, as might have been expected from her antecedent
+career, without much discrimination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is certainly remarkable that a race of men who have been such ardent
+opponents of many forms of tyranny in the past, should still endure a system of
+criminal procedure worthy of Torquemada. High and low cry out against it,
+but&mdash;<i>pazienza!</i> Where shall grievances be ventilated? In Parliament?
+A good joke, that! In the press? Better still! Italian newspapers nowise
+reflect the opinions of civilized Italy; they are mere cheese-wrappers; in the
+whole kingdom there are only three self-respecting dailies. The people have
+learnt to despair of their rulers&mdash;to regard them with cynical suspicion.
+Public opinion has been crushed out of the country. What goes by that name is
+the gossip of the town-concierge, or obscure village cabals and schemings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am quite aware that the law-abiding spirit is the slow growth of ages, and
+that a serious mischief like this cannot be repaired in a short generation. I
+know that even now the Italian code of criminal procedure, that tragic farce,
+is under revision. I know, moreover, that there are stipendiary magistrates in
+south Italy
+<a name="Page278"></a>
+whose discernment and integrity would do honour to our British courts.
+But&mdash;take the case out of their hands into a higher tribunal, and you may
+put your trust in God, or in your purse. Justice hereabouts is in the same
+condition as it was in Egypt at the time of Lord Dufferin&rsquo;s report: a
+mockery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may be said that it does not concern aliens to make such criticism. A
+fatuous observation! Everything concerns everybody. The foreigner in Italy, if
+he is wise, will familiarize himself not only with the cathedrals to be
+visited, but also, and primarily, with the technique of legal bribery and
+subterfuge&mdash;with the methods locally employed for escaping out of the
+meshes of the law. Otherwise he may find unpleasant surprises in store for him.
+Had Mr. Mercer made it his business to acquire some rudiments of this useful
+knowledge, he would never have undergone that outrageous official ill-treatment
+which has become a byword in the annals of international amenities. And if
+these strictures be considered too severe, let us see what Italians themselves
+have to say. In 1900 was published a book called &ldquo;La Quistione
+Meridionale&rdquo; (What&rsquo;s Wrong with the South), that throws a flood of
+light upon local conditions. It contains the views of twenty-seven of the most
+prominent men in the country as to how south Italian problems should be faced
+and solved. Nearly all of them deplore the lack of justice. Says Professor
+Colajanni: &ldquo;To heal the south, we require an honest, intelligent and
+sagacious government, <i>which we have not got.&rdquo;</i> And Lombroso:
+&ldquo;In the south it is necessary to introduce justice, <i>which does not
+exist, save in favour of certain classes.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am tempted to linger on this subject, not without reason. These people and
+their attitude towards life will remain an enigma to the traveller, until he
+has acquainted himself with the law of the land and seen with his own eyes
+something of the atrocious misery which its administration involves. A murderer
+like Musolino, crowned with an aureole of saintliness, would be an anomaly in
+England. We should think it rather paradoxical to hear a respectable old farmer
+recommending his boys to shoot a policeman, whenever they safely can. On the
+spot, things begin to wear a different aspect. Musolino is no more to be blamed
+than a child who has been systematically misguided by his parents; and if these
+people, much as they love their homes and families, are all potential
+Musolinos, they have good reasons for it&mdash;excellent reasons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No south Italian living at this present moment, be he of what social class you
+please&mdash;be he of the gentlest blood or most refined culture&mdash;is <i>a
+priori</i> on the side of the policeman. No; not <i>a priori.</i> The abuses of
+the executive are too terrific to warrant such an
+<a name="Page279"></a>
+attitude. Has not the entire police force of Naples, up to its very head, been
+lately proved to be in the pay of the camorra; to say nothing of its connection
+with what Messrs. King and Okey euphemistically call &ldquo;the unseen hand at
+Rome&rdquo;&mdash;a hand which is held out for blackmail, and not vainly, from
+the highest ministerial benches? Under such conditions, the populace becomes
+profoundly distrustful of the powers that be, and such distrust breeds bad
+citizens. But so things will remain, until the bag-and-baggage policy is
+applied to the whole code of criminal procedure, and to a good half of its
+present administrators.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The best of law-systems, no doubt, is but a compromise. Science being one
+thing, and public order another, the most enlightened of legislators may well
+tremble to engraft the fruits of modern psychological research upon the tree of
+law, lest the scion prove too vigorous for the aged vegetable. But some
+compromises are better than others; and the Italian code, which reads like a
+fairy tale and works like a Fury, is as bad a one as human ingenuity can
+devise. If a prisoner escape punishment, it is due not so much to his innocence
+as to some access of sanity or benevolence on the part of the judge, who
+courageously twists the law in his favour. Fortunately, such humane exponents
+of the code are common enough; were it otherwise, the prisons, extensive as
+they are, would have to be considerably enlarged. But that ideal judge who
+shall be paid as befits his grave calling, who shall combine the honesty and
+common sense of the north with the analytical acumen of the south, has yet to
+be evolved. What interests the student of history is that things hereabouts
+have not changed by a hair since the days of Demosthenes and those preposterous
+old Hellenic tribunals. Not by a single hair! On the one hand, we have a deluge
+of subtle disquisitions on &ldquo;jurisprudence,&rdquo; &ldquo;personal
+responsibility&rdquo; and so forth; on the other, the sinister tomfoolery known
+as <i>law&mdash;</i>that is, babble, corruption, palæolithic ideas of what
+constitutes evidence, and a court-procedure that reminds one of Gilbert and
+Sullivan at their best.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a report in the papers not long ago of the trial of an old married
+couple, on the charge of murdering a young girl. The bench dismissed the case,
+remarking that there was not a particle of evidence against them; they had
+plainly been exemplary citizens all their long lives. They had spent five years
+in prison awaiting trial. Five years, and innocent! It stands to reason that
+such abuses disorganize the family, especially in Italy, where the
+&ldquo;family&rdquo; means much more than it does in England; the land lies
+barren, and savings are wasted in paying lawyers and bribing greedy court
+<a name="Page280"></a>
+officials. What are this worthy couple to think of <i>Avanti, Savoia!</i> once
+they have issued from their dungeon?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I read, in yesterday&rsquo;s Parliamentary Proceedings, of an honourable member
+(Aprile) rising to ask the Minister of Justice (Gallini) whether the time has
+not come to proceed with the trial of &ldquo;Signori Camerano and their
+co-accused,&rdquo; who have been in prison for six years, charged with
+voluntary homicide. Whereto His Excellency sagely replies that &ldquo;la
+magistratura ha avuto i suoi motivi&rdquo;&mdash;the magistrates have had their
+reasons. Six years in confinement, and perhaps innocent! Can one wonder, under
+such circumstances, at the anarchist schools of Prato and elsewhere? Can one
+wonder if even a vindictive and corrupt rag like the socialistic
+&ldquo;Avanti&rdquo; occasionally prints frantic protests of quasi-righteous
+indignation? And not a hundredth part of such accused persons can cause a
+Minister of the Crown to be interpellated on their behalf. The others suffer
+silently and often die, forgotten, in their cells.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet&mdash;how seriously we take this nation! Almost as seriously as we take
+ourselves. The reason is that most of us come to Italy too undiscerning, too
+reverent; in the pre-critical and pre-humorous stages. We arrive here, stuffed
+with Renaissance ideals or classical lore, and viewing the present through
+coloured spectacles. We arrive here, above all things, too young; for youth
+loves to lean on tradition and to draw inspiration from what has gone before;
+youth finds nothing more difficult than to follow Goethe&rsquo;s advice about
+grasping that living life which shifts and fluctuates about us. Few writers are
+sufficiently detached to laugh at these people as they, together with
+ourselves, so often and so richly deserve. I spoke of the buffoonery of Italian
+law; I might have called it a burlesque. The trial of the ex-minister Nasi:
+here was a <i>cause célèbre</i> conducted by the highest tribunal of the land;
+and if it was not a burlesque&mdash;why, we must coin a new word for what is.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page281"></a><a name="chap34"></a>XXXIV<br />
+MALARIA</h2>
+
+<p>
+A black snake of alarming dimensions, one of the monsters that still infest the
+Calabrian lowlands, glided across the roadway while I was waiting for the post
+carriage to drive me to Caulonia from its railway-station. Auspicious omen! It
+carried my thoughts from old Æsculapius to his modern representatives&mdash;to
+that school of wise and disinterested healers who are ridding these regions of
+their curse, and with whom I was soon to have some nearer acquaintance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We started at last, in the hot hours of the morning, and the road at first
+skirts the banks of the Alaro, the Sagra of old, on whose banks was fought the
+fabled battle between the men of Croton and Locri. Then it begins to climb
+upwards. My companion was a poor peasant woman, nearly blind (from malaria,
+possibly). Full of my impressions of yesterday, I promptly led the conversation
+towards the subject of Musolino. She had never spoken to him, she said, or even
+seen him. But she got ten francs from him, all the same. In dire distress, some
+years ago, she had asked a friend in the mountains to approach the brigand on
+her behalf. The money was long in coming, she added, but of course it came in
+the end. He always helped poor people, even those outside his own country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The site of the original Caulonia is quite uncertain. Excavations now going on
+at Monasterace, some ten miles further on, may decide that the town lay there.
+Some are in favour of the miserable village of Focà, near at hand; or of other
+sites. The name of Focà seems to point, rather, to a settlement of the
+regenerator Nicephorus Phocas. Be that as it may, the present town of Caulonia
+used to be called Castelvetere, and it appropriated the Greek name in
+accordance with a custom which has been largely followed hereabouts.<a href="#fn-34.1" name="fnref-34.1" id="fnref-34.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+It contains some ten thousand inhabitants, amiable, intelligent and
+distinguished by a <i>philoxenia</i> befitting the traditions
+<a name="Page282"></a>
+of men who sheltered Pythagoras in his hour of need. As at Rossano, Catanzaro
+and many other Calabrian towns, there used to be a ghetto of Jews here; the
+district is still called &ldquo;La Giudeca&rdquo;; their synagogue was duly
+changed into a church of the Madonna.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-34.1" id="fn-34.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-34.1">[1]</a>
+It is represented with two towers in Peutinger&rsquo;s Tables. But these,
+says an editor, should have been given to the neighbouring Scilatio, for Caulon
+was in ruins at the time of Pliny, and is not even mentioned by Ptolemy.
+Servius makes another mistake; he confuses the Calabrian Caulon with a locality
+of the same name near Capua.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So much I learn from Montorio, who further informs me that the ubiquitous Saint
+Peter preached here on his way to Rome, and converted the people to
+Christianity; and that the town can boast of three authentic portraits of the
+Mother of God painted by Saint Luke (&ldquo;Lukas me pinxit&rdquo;). One is
+rather bewildered by the number of these masterpieces in Italy, until one
+realizes, as an old ecclesiastical writer has pointed out, that &ldquo;the
+Saint, being excellent in his art, could make several of them in a few days, to
+correspond to the great devotion of those early Christians, fervent in their
+love to the Great Mother of God. Whence we may believe that to satisfy their
+ardent desires he was continually applying himself to this task of so much
+glory to Mary and her blessed Son.&rdquo; But the sacristan of the church at
+Caulonia, to whom I applied for information regarding these local treasures,
+knew nothing about them, and his comments gave me the impression that he has
+relapsed into a somewhat pagan way of regarding such matters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You may obtain a fairly good view of Caulonia from the southeast; or again,
+from the neighbouring hillock of San Vito. The town lies some 300 metres above
+sea-level on a platform commanding the valleys of the Amusa and Alaro. This
+position, which was clearly chosen for its strategic value, unfortunately does
+not allow it to expand, and so the inhabitants are deprived of that public
+garden which they amply deserve. At the highest point lies a celebrated old
+castle wherein, according to tradition, Campanella was imprisoned for a while.
+In the days of Pacicchelli, it was a fine place&mdash;&ldquo;magnifico nelle
+regole di Fortezza, con cinque baloardi provveduti di cannoni di bronzo, ed una
+riccha Armeria, degna habitazione di don Carlo Maria Carrafa, Prencipe della
+Roccella, che se ne intitola Marchese.&rdquo; Mingled with the stones of its
+old walls they have recently found skeletons&mdash;victims, possibly, of the
+same macabre superstition to which the blood-drenched masonry of the Tower of
+London bears witness. Here, too, have been unearthed terra-cotta lamps and
+other antiquities. What are we to surmise from this? That it was a Roman
+foundation? Or that the malaria in older times forced Caulonia to wander
+towards healthier inland heights after the example of Sybaris-Terranova, and
+that the Romans continued to occupy this same site? Or, assuming Castelvetere
+to date only from mediæval times, that these ancient relics found their way
+into it accidentally? The low-lying
+<a name="Page283"></a>
+district of Foca, at this day, is certainly very malarious, whereas the
+death-rate up here is only about 12 per 1000.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dr. Francesco Genovese of Caulonia, to whom I am indebted for much kindness and
+who is himself a distinguished worker in the humanitarian mission of combating
+malaria, has published, among other interesting pamphlets, one which deals with
+this village of Focà, a small place of about 200 inhabitants, surrounded by
+fertile orange and vine plantations near the mouth of the Alaro. His researches
+into its vital statistics for the half-century ending 1902 reveal an appalling
+state of affairs. Briefly summarized, they amount to this, that during this
+period there were 391 births and 516 deaths. In other words, the village, which
+in 1902 ought to have contained between 600 and 800 inhabitants, not only
+failed to progress, but devoured its original population of 200; and not only
+them, but also 125 fresh immigrants who had entered the region from the healthy
+uplands, lured by the hope of gaining a little money during the vintage season.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A veritable Moloch!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had the old city of Caulonia, numbering perhaps 20,000 inhabitants, stood here
+under such conditions of hygiene, it would have been expunged off the face of
+the earth in fifty years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet&mdash;speaking of malaria in general&mdash;a good deal of evidence has been
+brought together to show that the disease has been endemic in Magna Græcia for
+two thousand years, and the customs of the Sybarites seem to prove that they
+had some acquaintance with marsh fever, and tried to guard against it.
+&ldquo;Whoever would live long,&rdquo; so ran their proverb, &ldquo;must see
+neither the rising nor the setting sun.&rdquo; A queer piece of advice,
+intelligible only if the land was infested with malaria. Many of their
+luxurious habits assume another import, on this hypothesis. Like the
+inhabitants of the malarious Etruscan region, they were adepts at draining, and
+their river is described, in one of the minor works attributed to Galen, as
+&ldquo;rendering men infertile&rdquo;&mdash;a characteristic result of malaria.
+What is still more significant is that their new town Thurii, built on the
+heights, was soon infected, and though twice repeopled, decayed away. And that
+they had chosen the heights for their relative healthfulness we can infer from
+Strabo, who says that Paestum, a colony from Sybaris, was removed further
+inland from the shore, on account of the pestilential climate of the lowlands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Ionian shores cannot have been as deadly as they now are. We calculate,
+for example, that the town walls of Croton measured eighteen kilometres in
+circumference, a figure which the modern visitor to Cotrone only brings himself
+to believe when he
+<a name="Page284"></a>
+remembers what can be actually proved of other Hellenic colonies, such as
+Syracuse. Well, the populace of so large a city requires a surrounding district
+to supply it with agricultural produce. The Marchesato, the vast tract
+bordering on Cotrone, is now practically uninhabitable; the population
+(including the town) has sunk to 45 to the square kilometre. That is malaria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Or rather, only one side of the evil. For these coastlands attract rural
+labourers who descend from the mountains during the season of hay-making or
+fruit-harvest, and then return infected to their homes. One single malarious
+patient may inoculate an entire village, hitherto immune, granted the
+anophelines are there to propagate the mischief. By means of these annual
+migrations the scourge has spread, in the past. And so it spreads to-day,
+whenever possible. Of forty labourers that left Caulonia for Cotrone in 1908
+all returned infected save two, who had made liberal use of quinine as a
+prophylactic. Fortunately, there are no anophelines at Caulonia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Greatly, indeed, must this country have changed since olden days; and gleaning
+here and there among the ancients, Dr. Genovese has garnered some interesting
+facts on this head. The coast-line, now unbroken sand, is called <i>rocky,</i>
+in several regions, by Strabo, Virgil and Persius Flaccus; of the two harbours,
+of Locri, of that of Metapontum, Caulonia and other cities, nothing remains;
+the promontory of Cocynthum (Stilo)&mdash;described as the longest promontory
+in Italy&mdash;together with other capes, has been washed away by the waves or
+submerged under silt carried down from the hills; islands, like that of Calypso
+which is described in Vincenzo Pascale&rsquo;s book (1796), and mentioned by G.
+Castaldi (1842), have clean vanished from the map.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woodlands have retired far inland; yet here at Caulonia, says Thucydides,
+was prepared the timber for the fleets of Athens. The rivers, irregular and
+spasmodic torrents, must have flowed with more equal and deeper current, since
+Pliny mentions five of them as navigable; snow, very likely, covered the
+mountain tops; the rainfall was clearly more abundant&mdash;one of the sights
+of Locri was its daily rainbow; the cicadas of the territory of Reggio are said
+to have been &ldquo;dumb,&rdquo; on account of the dampness of the climate.
+They are anything but dumb nowadays.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Earth-movements, too, have tilted the coast-line up and down, and there is
+evidence to show that while the Tyrrhenian shore has been raised by these
+oscillations, the Ionian has sunk. Not long ago four columns were found in the
+sea at Cotrone two hundred yards from the beach; old sailors remember another
+group of columns
+<a name="Page285"></a>
+visible at low tide near Caulonia. It is quite possible that the Ionian used to
+be as rocky as the other shore, and this gradual sinking of the coast must have
+retarded the rapid outflow of the rivers, as it has done in the plain of
+Paestum and in the Pontine marshes, favouring malarious conditions. Earthquakes
+have helped in the work; that of 1908 lowered certain parts of the Calabrian
+shore opposite Messina by about one metre. Indeed, though earthquakes have been
+known to raise the soil and thereby improve it, the Calabrian ones have
+generally had a contrary effect. The terrific upheavals of 1783-1787 produced
+two hundred and fifteen lakes in the country; they were drained away in a style
+most creditable to the Bourbons, but there followed an epidemic of malaria
+which carried off 18,800 people!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These Calabrian conditions are only part of a general change of climate which
+seems to have taken place all over Italy; a change to which Columella refers
+when, quoting Saserna, he says that formerly the vine and olive could not
+prosper &ldquo;by reason of the severe winter&rdquo; in certain places where
+they have since become abundant, &ldquo;thanks to a milder temperature.&rdquo;
+We never hear of the frozen Tiber nowadays, and many remarks of the ancients as
+to the moist and cold climate seem strange to us. Pliny praises the chestnuts
+of Tarentum; I question whether the tree could survive the hot climate of
+to-day. Nobody could induce &ldquo;splendid beeches&rdquo; to grow in the
+<i>lowlands</i> of Latium, yet Theophrastus, a botanist, says that they were
+drawn from this region for shipbuilding purposes. This gradual desiccation has
+probably gone on for long ages; so Signor Cavara has discovered old trunks of
+white fir in districts of the Apennines where such a plant could not possibly
+grow to-day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A change to a dry and warm atmosphere is naturally propitious to malaria,
+granted sufficient water remains to propagate the mosquito. And the mosquito
+contents itself with very little&mdash;the merest teacupful.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Returning to old Calabria, we find the woods of Locri praised by
+Proclus&mdash;woods that must have been of coniferous timber, since Virgil
+lauds their resinous pitch. Now the Aleppo pine produces pitch, and would still
+flourish there, as it does in the lowlands between Taranto and Metaponto; the
+classical Sila pitch-trees, however, could not grow at this level any more.
+Corroborative evidence can be drawn from Theocritus, who mentions heath and
+arbutus as thriving in the marine thickets near Cotrone&mdash;mountain shrubs,
+nowadays, that have taken refuge in cooler uplands,
+<a name="Page286"></a>
+together with the wood-pigeon which haunted the same jungles. It is true that he
+hints at marshes near Cotrone, and, indeed, large tracts of south Italy are
+described as marshy by the ancients; they may well have harboured the anopheles
+mosquito from time immemorial, but it does not follow that they were malarious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Much of the healthy physical conditions may have remained into the Middle Ages
+or even later; it is strange to read, for example, in Edrisius, of the pitch
+and tar that were exported to all parts from the Bradano river, or of the
+torrential Sinno that &ldquo;ships enter this river&mdash;it offers excellent
+anchorage&rdquo;; odd, too, to hear of coral fisheries as late as the
+seventeenth century at Rocella Ionica, where the waves now slumber on an even
+and sandy beach.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But malaria had made insidious strides, meanwhile. Dr. Genovese thinks that by
+the year 1691 the entire coast was malarious and abandoned like now, though
+only within the last two centuries has man actively co-operated in its
+dissemination. So long as the woodlands on the plains are cut down or grazed by
+goats, relatively little damage is done; but it spells ruin to denude, in a
+country like this, the steep slopes of their timber. Whoever wishes to know
+what mischief the goats, those picturesque but pernicious quadrupeds, can do to
+a mountainous country, should study the history of St. Helena.<a href="#fn-34.2" name="fnref-34.2" id="fnref-34.2"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+Man, with his charcoal-burning, has completed the disaster. What happens? The
+friable rock, no longer sustained by plant-life, crashes down with each
+thunderstorm, blocks up the valleys, devastating large tracts of fertile land;
+it creates swamps in the lowlands, and impedes the outflow of water to the sea.
+These ravenous <i>fiumare</i> have become a feature in Calabrian scenery;
+underneath one of the most terrible of them lies the birthplace of Praxiteles.
+Dry or half-dry during the warm months, and of formidable breadth, such
+torrent-beds&mdash;the stagnant water at their skirts&mdash;are ideal
+breeding-places for the anophelines from their mouth up to a height of 250
+metres. So it comes about that, within recent times, rivers have grown to be
+the main arteries of malaria. And there are rivers galore in Calabria. The
+patriotic Barrius enumerates 110 of them&mdash;Father Fiore, less learned, or
+more prudent, not quite so many. Deforestation and malaria have gone hand in
+hand here, as in Greece, Asia Minor, North Africa, and other countries.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-34.2" id="fn-34.2"></a> <a href="#fnref-34.2">[2]</a>
+By J. C. Melliss (London, 1875). Thanks to the goats, Maltese fever has
+lately been introduced into Calabria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus year after year, from one cause or another, the conditions have become
+more favourable for the disease to do its fatal work.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus28"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-28.jpg" width="410" height="291" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Effects of deforestation (Aspromonte)</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+That much of this harm has been done quite lately can often be
+<a name="Page287"></a>
+proved. At Caulonia, for instance, the woodlands are known to have reached the
+shore a hundred years ago, and there are bare tracts of land still bearing the
+name of &ldquo;foresta.&rdquo; In a single summer (1807) a French regiment
+stationed at Cosenza lost 800 men from fever, and when Rath visited the town in
+1871 it was described to him as a &ldquo;vast hospital&rdquo; during the hot
+months; nevertheless, says he, the disease has only been so destructive during
+the last two centuries, for up to that time the forests touched the outskirts
+of the town and regulated the Crati-bed, preventing the formation of marshes.
+The literary record of Cosenza is one of exceptional brilliance; for acute and
+original thought this town can hardly be surpassed by any other of its size on
+earth. Were statistics available, I have not the slightest doubt that fever
+could be shown to be largely responsible for the withering of its spiritual
+life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same fate&mdash;the same relapse from prosperity to decay&mdash;and for the
+same reasons, has overtaken many other riverside villages, among them that of
+Tarsia, the Caprasia of the Antonine Itinerary. &ldquo;It was described to
+us,&rdquo; says Rath, &ldquo;as the most miserable and dirty village in
+Calabria; but we found it worse.&rdquo; It remains, to-day, a highly infected
+and altogether pitiable place, concerning which I have made certain modest
+researches that would require, none the less, a chapter to themselves. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps I have already said over-much on the subject. An Englishman
+unacquainted with malaria might think so, oblivious of the fact that Sir Ronald
+Ross has called it &ldquo;perhaps the most important of human diseases.&rdquo;
+But let him go to a malarious country and see with his own eyes something of
+the degradation it involves; how it stamps its accursed imprimatur upon man and
+nature alike! It is the blight of youth&mdash;the desert-maker. A well-known
+Italian senator has declared that the story of south Italy is, was, and will be
+the story of malaria; and the greater part of Calabria will certainly remain an
+enigma to the traveller who ignores what is meant by this plague.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Malaria is the key to a correct understanding of the landscape; it explains the
+inhabitants, their mode of life, their habits, their history.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page288"></a><a name="chap35"></a>XXXV<br />
+CAULONIA TO SERRA</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How do you treat your malaria patients?&rdquo; I once enquired of a
+doctor in India.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few good stiff doses, he said, when the attack is on; that generally settles
+them. If not, they can begin again. To take quinine as a prophylactic, he
+considered folly. It might grow into a habit; you never know. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is to be hoped that such types are extinct, out there. They are extinct
+hereabouts. None but an ignorant person would now traverse malarious tracts in
+summer without previous quininization; or, if infected, deal with the disease
+otherwise than by an amply protracted treatment of cure. Yet it is only quite
+lately that we have gained our knowledge of a proper use of the drug; and this
+accounts for the great mortality long after its specific effects had been
+recognized by the profession. It was given both inefficiently and
+insufficiently. It was sold at a prohibitive price. The country people were
+distrustful; so-and-so had taken it for three or four days; he had improved,
+yes; but the fever was on him once more. Why waste money on such experiments?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I remember accosting a lad, anemic, shivering with the tertian, and marked by
+that untimely senility which is the sign-manual of malaria. I suggested
+quinine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t take doctors&rsquo; stuff,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Even if
+I wanted to, my father would not let me. And if he did, there&rsquo;s no money
+to pay for it. And if there were, it would do no good. He&rsquo;s tried it
+himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, but how are you feeling?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, all right. There&rsquo;s nothing much the matter with me. Just the
+bad air.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such types, too, are practically extinct nowadays; the people are being
+educated to recognize their peril and how to avoid it; they begin to follow
+Professor Celli&rsquo;s advice in the matter of regarding quinine as their
+&ldquo;daily bread.&rdquo; For since the discovery of the anophelic origin of
+malaria many devices have been put into execution to combat the disease, not
+the least of them being a
+<a name="Page289"></a>
+popularized teaching of its causes and consequences by means of pamphlets,
+lectures to school-children, and so forth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, you may either fight the anopheles&mdash;the vehicle, or the disease
+itself. The first entails putting the country into such a state that the
+mosquito finds it unpleasant to live there, a labour of Hercules. Yet large
+sums are being expended in draining marshy tracts, regulating river-beds and
+afforesting bare spaces; and if you are interested in such works, you will do
+well to see what is going on at Metaponto at this moment. (A considerable
+portion of the Government grant for these purposes has lately been deflected
+for use in the Tripolitan war.) Exemplary fines are also imposed for illicit
+timber-cutting and grazing,&mdash;in those towns, at least, where the
+magistrate has sufficient sense to perceive the ulterior benefits to be derived
+from what certainly entails a good deal of temporary hardship on poor people.
+Certain economic changes are helping in this work; so the wealth imported from
+America helps to break up the big properties, those latifundia which, says an
+Italian authority, &ldquo;are synonymous with malaria.&rdquo; The ideal
+condition&mdash;the extirpation of anophelines&mdash;will never be attained;
+nor is it of vital importance that it should be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Far more pressing is the protection of man against their attacks. Wonderful
+success has crowned the wire-netting of the windows&mdash;an outcome of the
+classical experiments of 1899, in the Roman Campagna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But chiefest and most urgent of all is the cure of the infected population. In
+this direction, results astonishing&mdash;results well-nigh
+incredible&mdash;have attended the recently introduced governmental sale of
+quinine. In the year 1895 there were 16,464 deaths from malaria throughout
+Italy. By 1908 the number had sunk to 3463. Eloquent figures, that require no
+comment! And, despite the fact that the drug is now sold at a merely nominal
+rate or freely given away to the needy&mdash;nay, thrust down the very throats
+of the afflicted peasantry by devoted gentlemen who scour the plains with
+ambulances during the deadly season&mdash;despite this, the yearly profits from
+its sale are amounting to about three-quarters of a million francs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So these forlorn regions are at last beginning to revive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And returning to Focà, of whose dreadful condition up to 1902 (year of the
+introduction of Government quinine) I have just spoken, we find that a
+revolution has taken place. Between that year and 1908 the birth-rate more than
+doubled the death-rate. In 1908 some two hundred poor folks frequented the
+ambulance, nearly six kilogrammes of quinine being gratuitously distributed;
+<a name="Page290"></a>
+not one of the natives of the place was attacked by the disease; and there was
+a single death&mdash;an old woman of eighty, who succumbed to senile decay.<a href="#fn-35.1" name="fnref-35.1" id="fnref-35.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-35.1" id="fn-35.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-35.1">[1]</a>
+Doctor Genovese&rsquo;s statistical investigations have brought an
+interesting little fact to light. In the debilitating pre-quinine period there
+was a surplus of female births; now, with increased healthfulness, those of the
+males preponderate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is an example of what the new quinine-policy has done for Italy, in
+briefest space of time. Well may the nation be proud of the men who conceived
+this genial and beneficial measure and carried it through Parliament, and of
+those local doctors without whose enlightened zeal such a triumph could not
+have been achieved. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sir Ronald Ross&rsquo;s discovery, by the way, has been fruitful not only in
+practical humanitarian results. For instance, it has reduced North&rsquo;s
+laborious &ldquo;Roman Fever&rdquo; to something little better than a
+curiosity. And here, on these deserted shores that were once resplendent with a
+great civilization&mdash;here is the place to peruse Mr. W. M. Jones&rsquo;s
+studies on this subject. I will not give even the shortest précis of his
+conscientious researches nor attempt to picture their effect upon a mind
+trained in the old school of thought; suffice to say, that the author would
+persuade us that malaria is implicated, to an hitherto unsuspected extent, in
+the decline of ancient Greece and Rome. And he succeeds. Yes; a man accustomed
+to weigh evidence will admit, I think, that he has made out a suggestively
+strong case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How puzzled we were to explain why the brilliant life of Magna Graecia was
+snuffed out suddenly, like a candle, without any appreciably efficient
+cause&mdash;how we listened to our preachers cackling about the inevitable
+consequences of Sybaritic luxury, and to the warnings of sage politicians
+concerning the dangers of mere town-patriotism as opposed to worthier systems
+of confederation! How we drank it all in! And how it warmed the cockles of our
+hearts to think that we were not vicious, narrow-minded heathens, such as
+these!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now a vulgar gnat is declared to be at the bottom of the whole mystery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crudely disconcerting, these scientific discoveries. Or is it not rather hard
+to be dragged to earth in this callous fashion, while soaring heavenward on the
+wings of our edifying reflections? For the rest&mdash;the old, old story; a
+simple, physical explanation of what used to be an enigma brimful of moral
+significance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That Mr. Jones&rsquo;s facts and arguments will be found applicable to
+<a name="Page291"></a>
+other decayed races in the old and new worlds is highly probable. Meanwhile, it
+takes one&rsquo;s breath away quite sufficiently to realize that they apply to
+Hellas and her old colonies on these shores.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;AUTOS. Strange! My interest waxes. Tell me then, what affliction,
+God or Devil, wiped away the fair life upon the globe, the beasts, the birds,
+the delectable plantations, and all the blithe millions of the human race? What
+calamity fell upon them?&rsquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;ESCHATA. A gnat.&rsquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;AUTOS. A gnat?&rsquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;ESCHATA. Even so.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus I wrote, while yet unaware that such pests as anophelines existed upon
+earth. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the same time, I think we must be cautious in following certain deductions
+of our author; that theory of brutality, for example, as resulting from
+malaria. Speaking of Calabria, I would almost undertake to prove, from the
+archives of law-courts, that certain of the most malarial tracts are precisely
+those in which there is least brutality of any kind. Cotrone, for instance. . .
+. The <i>delegato</i> (head of the police) of that town is so young&mdash;a
+mere boy&mdash;that I marvelled how he could possibly have obtained a position
+which is usually filled by seasoned and experienced officers. He was a
+&ldquo;son of the white hen,&rdquo; they told me; that is, a socially favoured
+individual, who was given this job for the simple reason that there was hardly
+any serious work for him to do. Cosenza, on the other hand, has a very
+different reputation nowadays. And it is perfectly easy to explain how malaria
+might have contributed to this end. For the disease&mdash;and herein lies its
+curse&mdash;lowers both the physical and social standard of a people; it breeds
+misery, poverty and ignorance&mdash;fit soil for callous rapacity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But how about his theory of &ldquo;pessimism&rdquo; infecting the outlook of
+generations of malaria-weakened sages? I find no trace of pessimism here, not
+even in its mild Buddhistic form. The most salient mental trait of cultured
+Calabrians is a subtle detachment and contempt of illusions&mdash;whence their
+time-honoured renown as abstract thinkers and speculators. This derives from a
+philosophic view of life and entails, naturally enough, the outward semblance
+of gravity&mdash;a Spanish gravity, due not so much to a strong graft of
+Spanish blood and customs during the viceregal period, as to actual affinities
+with the race of Spain. But this gravity has nothing in common with pessimism,
+antagonistic though it be to those outbursts of irresponsible optimism
+engendered under northern skies by copious food, or beer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page292"></a>
+To reach the uplands of Fabbrizia and Serra, whither I was now bound, I might
+have utilized the driving road from Gioioso, on the Reggio side of Caulonia.
+But that was everybody&rsquo;s route. Or I might have gone <i>via</i> Stilo,
+on the other side. But Stilo with its memories of Campanella&mdash;a Spanish
+type, this!&mdash;and of Otho II, its winding track into the beech-clad heights
+of Ferdinandea, was already familiar to me. I elected to penetrate straight
+inland by the shortest way; a capable muleteer at once presented himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We passed through one single village, Ragona; leaving those of S. Nicola and
+Nardo di Pace on the right. The first of them is celebrated for its annual
+miracle of the burning olive, when, armed to the teeth (for some ancient
+reason), the populace repairs to the walls of a certain convent out of which
+there grows an olive tree: at its foot is kindled a fire whose flames are
+sufficient to scorch all the leaves, but behold! next day the foliage is seen
+to glow more bravely green than ever. Perhaps the roots of the tree are near
+some cistern. These mountain villages, hidden under oaks and vines, with waters
+trickling through their lanes, a fine climate and a soil that bears everything
+needful for life, must be ideal habitations for simple folks. In some of them,
+the death-rate is as low as 7: 1000. Malaria is unknown here: they seem to
+fulfil all the conditions of a terrestrial paradise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is a note of joyous vigour in this landscape. The mule-track winds in and
+out among the heights, through flowery meadows grazed by cattle and full of
+buzzing insects and butterflies, and along hill-sides cunningly irrigated; it
+climbs up to heathery summits and down again through glades of chestnut and
+ilex with mossy trunks, whose shadow fosters strange sensations of chill and
+gloom. Then out again, into the sunshine of waving corn and poppies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a short while we stumbled along a torrent-bed, and I grew rather sad to
+think that it might be the last I should see for some time to come, my days in
+this country being now numbered. This one was narrow. But there are others,
+interminable in length and breadth. Interminable! No breeze stirs in those deep
+depressions through which the merest thread of milky water trickles
+disconsolately. The sun blazes overhead and hours pass, while you trudge
+through the fiery inferno; scintillations of heat rise from the stones and
+still you crawl onwards, breathless and footsore, till eyes are dazed and
+senses reel. One may well say bad things of these torrid deserts of pebbles
+which, up till lately, were the only highways from the lowlands into the
+mountainous parts. But they are sweet in memory. One calls to mind the wild
+savours that hang in
+<a name="Page293"></a>
+the stagnant air; the cloven hill-sides, seamed with gorgeous patches of russet
+and purple and green; the spectral tamarisks, and the glory of coral-tinted
+oleanders rising in solitary tufts of beauty, or flaming congregations, out of
+the pallid waste of boulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After exactly six hours Fabbrizia was reached&mdash;a large place whose name,
+like that of Borgia, Savelli, Carafa and other villages on these southern
+hills, calls up associations utterly non-Calabrian; Fabbrizia, with pretentious
+new church and fantastically dirty side-streets. It lies at the respectable
+elevation of 900 metres, on the summit of a monstrous landslide which has
+disfigured the country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While ascending along the flank of this deformity I was able to see how the
+authorities have attempted to cope with the mischief and arrest further
+collapses. This is what they have done. The minute channels of water, that
+might contribute to the disintegration of the soil by running into this gaping
+wound from the sides or above, have been artfully diverted from their natural
+courses; trees and shrubs are planted at its outskirts in order to uphold the
+earth at these spots by their roots&mdash;they have been protected by barbed
+wire from the grazing of cattle; furthermore, a multitude of wickerwork dykes
+are thrown across the accessible portions of the scar, to collect the
+downward-rushing material and tempt winged plant-seeds to establish themselves
+on the ledges thus formed. To bridle this runaway mountain is no mean task, for
+such <i>frane</i> are like rodent ulcers, ever enlarging at the edges. With the
+heat, with every shower of rain, with every breath of wind, the earth crumbles
+away; there is an eternal trickling, day and night, until some huge boulder is
+exposed which crashes down, loosening everything in its wild career; a single
+tempest may disrupture what the patience and ingenuity of years have contrived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three more hours or thereabouts will take you to Serra San Bruno along the
+backbone of southern Italy, through cultivated lands and pasture and lonely
+stretches of bracken, once covered by woodlands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may well be that the townlet has grown up around, or rather near, the
+far-famed Carthusian monastery. I know nothing of its history save that it has
+the reputation of being one of the most bigoted places in Calabria&mdash;a fact
+of which the sagacious General Manhes availed himself when he devised his
+original and effective plan of chastising the inhabitants for a piece of
+atrocious conduct on their part. He caused all the local priests to be arrested
+and imprisoned; the churches were closed, and the town placed under
+<a name="Page294"></a>
+what might be called an interdict. The natives took it quietly at first, but
+soon the terror of the situation dawned upon them. No religious marriages, no
+baptisms, no funerals&mdash;the comforts of heaven refused to living and dead
+alike. . . . The strain grew intolerable and, in a panic of remorse, the
+populace hunted down their own brigand-relations and handed them over to
+Manhes, who duly executed them, one and all. Then the interdict was taken off
+and the priests set at liberty; and a certain writer tells us that the people
+were so charmed with the General&rsquo;s humane and businesslike methods that
+they forthwith christened him &ldquo;Saint Manhes,&rdquo; a name which, he
+avers, has clung to him ever since.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The monastery lies about a mile distant; near at hand is a little artificial
+lake and the renowned chapel of Santa Maria. There was a time when I would have
+dilated lovingly upon this structure&mdash;a time when I probably knew as much
+about Carthusian convents as is needful for any of their inmates; when I
+studied Tromby&rsquo;s ponderous work and God knows how many more&mdash;ay, and
+spent two precious weeks of my life in deciphering certain crabbed MSS. of
+Tutini in the Brancacciana library&mdash;ay, and tested the spleenful
+Perrey&rsquo;s &ldquo;Ragioni del Regio Fisco, etc.,&rdquo; as to the alleged
+land-grabbing propensities of this order&mdash;ay, and even pilgrimaged to Rome
+to consult the present general of the Carthusians (his predecessor, more
+likely) as to some administrative detail, all-important, which has wholly
+escaped my memory. Gone are those days of studious gropings into blind alleys!
+The current of zeal has slowed down or turned aside, maybe, into other
+channels. They who wish, will find a description of the pristine splendour of
+this monastery in various books by Pacicchelli; the catastrophe of 1783 was
+described by Keppel Craven and reported upon, with illustrations, by the
+Commission of the Naples Academy; and if you are of a romantic turn of mind,
+you will find a good story of the place, as it looked during the ruinous days of
+desolation, in Misasi&rsquo;s &ldquo;Calabrian Tales.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is now rebuilt on modern lines and not much of the original structure
+remains upright. I wandered about the precincts in the company of two
+white-robed French monks, endeavouring to reconstruct not the convent as it was
+in its younger days, but <i>them.</i> That older one, especially&mdash;he had
+known the world. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meat being forbidden, the godly brethren have a contract for fish to be brought
+up every day by the post-carriage from the distant Soverato. And what happens,
+I asked, when none are caught?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eh bien, nous mangeons des macaroni!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus29"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-29.jpg" width="506" height="351" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Old Soverato</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page295"></a>
+Such a diet would never suit me. Let me retire to a monkery where carnivorous
+leanings may be indulged. Methinks I could pray more cheerfully with the
+prospect of a rational <i>déjeuner à la fourchette</i> looming ahead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the back of the monastery lies a majestic forest of white firs&mdash;nothing
+but firs; a unique region, so far as south and central Italy are concerned. I
+was there in the golden hour after sunset, and yet again in the twilight of
+dew-drenched morning; and it seemed to me that in this temple not made by hands
+there dwelt an enchantment more elemental, and more holy, than in the
+cloistered aisles hard by. This assemblage of solemn trees has survived, thanks
+to rare conditions of soil and climate. The land lies high; the ground is
+perennially moist and intersected by a horde of rills that join their waters to
+form the river Ancinale; frequent showers descend from above. Serra San Bruno
+has an uncommonly heavy rainfall. It lies in a vale occupying the site of a
+pleistocene lake, and the forest, now restricted to one side of the basin,
+encircled it entirely in olden days. At its margin they have established a
+manufactory which converts the wood into paper&mdash;blissful sight for the
+utilitarian.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Finding little else of interest in Serra, and hungering for the flesh-pots of
+Cotrone, I descended by the postal diligence to Soverato, nearly a day&rsquo;s
+journey. Old Soverato is in ruins, but the new town seems to thrive in spite of
+being surrounded by deserts of malaria. While waiting for supper and the train
+to Cotrone, I strolled along the beach, and soon found myself sitting beside
+the bleached anatomy of some stranded leviathan, and gazing at the mountains of
+Squillace that glowed in the soft lights of sunset. The shore was deserted save
+for myself and a portly dogana-official who was playing with his little
+son&mdash;trying to amuse him by elephantine gambols on the sand, regardless of
+his uniform and manly dignity. Notwithstanding his rotundity, he was an active
+and resourceful parent, and enjoyed himself vastly; the boy pretending, as
+polite children sometimes do, to enter into the fun of the game.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page296"></a><a name="chap36"></a>XXXVI<br />
+MEMORIES OF GISSING</h2>
+
+<p>
+Two new hotels have recently sprung up at Cotrone. With laudable patriotism,
+they are called after its great local champions, athletic and spiritual, in
+ancient days&mdash;Hotel Milo and Hotel Pythagoras. As such, they might be
+expected to make a strong appeal to the muscles and brains of their respective
+clients. I rather fancy that the chief customers of both are commercial
+travellers who have as little of the one as of the other, and to whom these
+fine names are Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for myself, I remain faithful to the &ldquo;Concordia&rdquo; which has twice
+already sheltered me within its walls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shade of George Gissing haunts these chambers and passages. It was in 1897
+that he lodged here with that worthy trio: Gibbon, Lenormant and Cassiodorus.
+The chapters devoted to Cotrone are the most lively and characteristic in his
+&ldquo;Ionian Sea.&rdquo; Strangely does the description of his arrival in the
+town, and his reception in the &ldquo;Concordia,&rdquo; resemble that in
+Bourget&rsquo;s &ldquo;Sensations.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The establishment has vastly improved since those days. The food is good and
+varied, the charges moderate; the place is spotlessly clean in every
+part&mdash;I could only wish that the hotels in some of our English country
+towns were up to the standard of the &ldquo;Concordia&rdquo; in this respect.
+&ldquo;One cannot live without cleanliness,&rdquo; as the housemaid,
+assiduously scrubbing, remarked to me. It is also enlarged; the old
+dining-room, whose guests are so humorously described by him, is now my
+favourite bedroom, while those wretched oil-lamps sputtering on the wall have
+been replaced by a lavish use of electricity. One is hardly safe, however, in
+praising these inns over-much; they are so apt to change hands. So long as
+competition with the two others continues, the &ldquo;Concordia&rdquo; will
+presumably keep to its present level.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of freaks in the dining-room, I have so far only observed one whom Gissing
+might have added to his collection. He is a <i>director</i> of some kind, and
+his method of devouring maccheroni I unreservedly admire&mdash;it displays that
+lack of all effort which distinguishes true art from false. He does not eat
+them with
+<a name="Page297"></a>
+deliberate mastication; he does not even&mdash;like your ordinary
+amateur&mdash;drink them in separate gulps; but he contrives, by some
+swiftly-adroit process of levitation, that the whole plateful shall rise in a
+noiseless and unbroken flood from the table to his mouth, whence it glides down
+his gullet with the relentless ease of a river pouring into a cavern.
+Altogether, a series of films depicting him at work upon a meal would make the
+fortune of a picture-show company&mdash;in England. Not here, however; such
+types are too common to be remarked, the reason being that boys are seldom sent
+to boarding schools where stereotyped conventions of &ldquo;good form&rdquo;
+are held up for their imitation, but brought up at home by adoring mothers who
+care little for such externals or, if they do, have no great authority to
+enforce their views. On entering the world, these eccentricities in manner are
+proudly clung to, as a sign of manly independence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Death has made hideous gaps in the short interval. The kindly Vice-Consul at
+Catanzaro is no more; the mayor of Cotrone, whose permit enabled Gissing to
+visit that orchard by the riverside, has likewise joined the majority; the
+housemaid of the &ldquo;Concordia,&rdquo; the domestic serf with dark and
+fiercely flashing eyes&mdash;dead! And dead is mine hostess, &ldquo;the stout,
+slatternly, sleepy woman, who seemed surprised at my demand for food, but at
+length complied with it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the little waiter is alive and now married; and Doctor Sculco still resides
+in his aristocratic <i>palazzo</i> up that winding way in the old town, with
+the escutcheon of a scorpion&mdash;portentous emblem for a doctor&mdash;over
+its entrance. He is a little greyer, no doubt; but the same genial and alert
+personage as in those days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I called on this gentleman, hoping to obtain from him some reminiscences of
+Gissing, whom he attended during a serious illness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied, to my enquiries, &ldquo;I remember him quite
+well; the young English poet who was ill here. I prescribed for him.
+Yes&mdash;yes! He wore his hair long.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And that was all I could draw from him. I have noticed more than once that
+Italian physicians have a stern conception of the Hippocratic oath: the affairs
+of their patients, dead or alive, are a sacred trust in perpetuity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The town, furthermore, has undergone manifold improvements in those few years.
+Trees are being planted by the roadsides; electric light is everywhere and,
+best of all, an excellent water-supply has been led down from the cool heights
+of the Sila, bringing cleanliness, health and prosperity in its train. And a
+stately cement-bridge is being built over the Esaro, that &ldquo;all but
+stagnant
+<a name="Page298"></a>
+and wholly pestilential stream.&rdquo; The Esaro <i>glides pleasantly,</i> says
+the chronicler Nola Molisi. Perhaps it really glided, in his day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One might do worse than spend a quiet month or two at Cotrone in the spring,
+for the place grows upon one: it is so reposeful and orderly. But not in
+winter. Gissing committed the common error of visiting south Italy at that
+season when, even if the weather will pass, the country and its inhabitants are
+not true to themselves. You must not come to these parts in winter time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor yet in the autumn, for the surrounding district is highly malarious.
+Thucydides already speaks of these coastlands as depopulated (relatively
+speaking, I suppose), and under the Romans they recovered but little; they have
+only begun to revive quite lately.<a href="#fn-36.1" name="fnref-36.1" id="fnref-36.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+Yet this town must have looked well enough in the twelfth century, since it is
+described by Edrisius as &ldquo;a very old city, primitive and beautiful,
+prosperous and populated, in a smiling position, with walls of defence and an
+ample port for anchorage.&rdquo; I suspect that the history of Cotrone will be
+found to bear out Professor Celli&rsquo;s theory of the periodical
+recrudescences and abatements of malaria. However that may be, the place used
+to be in a deplorable state. Riedesel (1771) calls it &ldquo;la ville la plus
+affreuse de l&rsquo;Italie, et peut-être du monde entier&rdquo;; twenty years
+later, it is described as &ldquo;sehr ungesund ... so ärmlich als
+möglich&rdquo;; in 1808 it was &ldquo;réduite à une population de trois mille
+habitants rongés par la misère, et les maladies qu&rsquo;occasionne la
+stagnation des eaux qui autrefois fertilisaient ces belles campagnes.&rdquo; In
+1828, says Vespoli, it contained only 3932 souls.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-36.1" id="fn-36.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-36.1">[1]</a>
+Between 1815&mdash;1843, and in this single province of Catanzaro, there was
+an actual decline in the population of thirty-six towns and villages. Malaria!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rejoice to cite such figures. They show how vastly Cotrone, together with the
+rest of Calabria, has improved since the Bourbons were ousted. The sack of the
+town by their hero Cardinal Ruffo, described by Pepe and others, must have left
+long traces. &ldquo;Horrible was the carnage perpetrated by these ferocious
+bands. Neither age nor sex nor condition was spared. . . . After two days of
+pillage accompanied by a multitude of excesses and cruelties, they erected, on
+the third day, a magnificent altar in the middle of a large square&rdquo;
+&mdash;and here the Cardinal, clothed in his sacred purple, praised the good
+deeds of the past two days and then, raising his arms, displayed a crucifix,
+absolving his crew from the faults committed during the ardour of the sack, and
+blessed them.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus30"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-30.jpg" width="405" height="329" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">The modern Aesarus</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+I shall be sorry to leave these regions for the north, as leave them I must, in
+shortest time. The bathing alone would tempt me to prolong my stay, were it
+possible. Whereas Taranto, despite its
+<a name="Page299"></a>
+situation, possesses no convenient beach, there are here, on either side of the
+town, leagues of shimmering sand lapped by tepid and caressing waves; it is a
+sunlit solitude; the land is your own, the sea your own, as far as eye can
+reach. One may well become an amphibian, at Cotrone.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The inhabitants of this town are well-mannered and devoid of the
+&ldquo;ineffable&rdquo; air of the Tarentines. But they are not a handsome
+race. Gissing says, à propos of the products of a local photographer, that it
+was &ldquo;a hideous exhibition; some of the visages attained an incredible
+degree of vulgar ugliness.&rdquo; That is quite true. Old authors praise the
+beauty of the women of Cotrone, Bagnara, and other southern towns; for my part,
+I have seldom found good-looking women in the coastlands of Calabria; the
+matrons, especially, seem to favour that ideal of the Hottentot Venus which you
+may study in the Jardin des Plantes; they are decidedly centripetal. Of the
+girls and boys one notices only those who possess a peculiar trait: the
+eyebrows pencilled in a dead straight line, which gives them an almost hieratic
+aspect. I cannot guess from what race is derived this marked feature which
+fades away with age as the brows wax thicker and irregular in contour. We may
+call it Hellenic on the old-fashioned principle that everything attractive
+comes from the Greeks, while its opposite is ascribed to those unfortunate
+&ldquo;Arabs&rdquo; who, as a matter of fact, are a sufficiently fine-looking
+breed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there must be very little Greek blood left here. The town&mdash;among many
+similar vicissitudes&mdash;was peopled largely by Bruttians, after Hannibal had
+established himself here. In the Viceregal period, again, there was a great
+infusion of Spanish elements. A number of Spanish surnames still linger on the
+spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And what of Gissing&rsquo;s other friend, the amiable guardian of the cemetery?
+&ldquo;His simple good nature and intelligence greatly won upon me. I like to
+think of him as still quietly happy amid his garden walls, tending flowers that
+grow over the dead at Cotrone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dead, like those whose graves he tended; like Gissing himself. He expired in
+February 1901&mdash;the year of the publication of the &ldquo;Ionian
+Sea,&rdquo; and they showed me his tomb near the right side of the entrance; a
+poor little grave, with a wooden cross bearing a number, which will soon be
+removed to make room for another one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This cemetery by the sea is a fair green spot, enclosed in a high wall and set
+with flowering plants and comely cypresses that look well against their
+background of barren clay-hills. Wandering here, I called to mind the decent
+cemetery of Lucera, and that of
+<a name="Page300"></a>
+Manfredonia, built in a sleepy hollow at the back of the town which the monks
+in olden days had utilized as their kitchen garden (it is one of the few
+localities where deep soil can be found on that thirsty limestone plain); I
+remembered the Venosa burial-ground near the site of the Roman amphitheatre,
+among the tombs of which I had vainly endeavoured to find proofs that the name
+of Horace is as common here as that of Manfred in those other two towns; the
+Taranto cemetery, beyond the railway quarter, somewhat overloaded with
+pretentious ornaments; I thought of many cities of the dead, in places recently
+explored&mdash;that of Rossano, ill-kept within, but splendidly situated on a
+projecting spur that dominates the Ionian; of Caulonia, secluded among ravines
+at the back of the town. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They are all full of character; a note in the landscape, with their cypresses
+darkly towering amid the pale and lowly olives; one would think the populace
+had thrown its whole poetic feeling into the choice of these sites and their
+embellishments. But this is not the case; they are chosen merely for
+convenience&mdash;not too far from habitations, and yet on ground that is
+comparatively cheap. Nor are they truly venerable, like ours. They date, for
+the most part, from the time when the Government abolished the old system of
+inhumation in churches&mdash;a system which, for the rest, still survives;
+there are over six hundred of these <i>fosse carnarie</i> in use at this
+moment, most of them in churches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And a sad thought obtrudes itself in these oases of peace and verdure. The
+Italian law requires that the body shall be buried within twenty-four hours
+after decease (the French consider forty-eight hours too short a term, and are
+thinking of modifying their regulations in this respect): a doctor&rsquo;s
+certificate of death is necessary but often impossible to procure, since some
+five hundred Italian communities possess no medical man whatever. Add to this,
+the superstitions of ignorant country people towards the dead, testified to by
+extraordinary beliefs and customs which you will find in Pitré and other
+collectors of native lore&mdash;their mingled fear and hatred of a corpse,
+which prompts them to thrust it underground at the earliest possible
+opportunity. . . . Premature burial must be all too frequent here. I will not
+enlarge upon the theme of horror by relating what gravediggers have seen with
+their own eyes on disturbing old coffins; if only half what they tell me is
+true, it reveals a state of affairs not to be contemplated without shuddering
+pity, and one that calls for prompt legislation. Only last year a frightful
+case came to light in Sicily. <i>Videant Consules.</i>
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus31"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-31.jpg" width="402" height="318" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">The Cemetery of Cotrone</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Here, at the cemetery, the driving road abruptly ends;
+<a name="Page301"></a>
+thenceforward there is merely a track along the sea that leads, ultimately, to Capo
+Nau, where stands a solitary column, last relic of the great temple of Hera. I
+sometimes follow it as far as certain wells that are sunk, Arab-fashion, into
+the sand, and dedicated to Saint Anne. Goats and cows recline here after their
+meagre repast of scorched grasses, and the shepherds in charge have voices so
+soft, and manners so gentle, as to call up suggestions of the Golden Age. These
+pastoral folk are the primitives of Cotrone. From father to son, for untold
+ages before Theocritus hymned them, they have kept up their peculiar habits and
+traditions; between them and the agricultural classes is a gulf as deep as
+between these and the citizens. Conversing with them, one marvels how the same
+occupation can produce creatures so unlike as these and the goat-boys of
+Naples, the most desperate <i>camorristi.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cows may well be descendants of the sacred cattle of Hera that browsed
+under the pines which are known to have clothed the bleak promontory. You may
+encounter them every day, wandering on the way to the town which they supply
+with milk; to avoid the dusty road, they march sedately through the soft wet
+sand at the water&rsquo;s edge, their silvery bodies outlined against a
+cærulean flood of sky and sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On this promenade I yesterday observed, slow-pacing beside the waves, a
+meditative priest, who gave me some details regarding the ruined church of
+which Gissing speaks. It lies in the direction of the cemetery, outside the
+town; &ldquo;its lonely position,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;made it interesting,
+and the cupola of coloured tiles (like that of the cathedral of Amalfi)
+remained intact, a bright spot against the grey hills behind.&rdquo; This
+cupola has recently been removed, but part of the old walls serve as foundation
+for a new sanctuary, a sordid-looking structure with red-tiled roof: I am glad
+to have taken a view of it, some years ago, ere its transformation. Its
+patroness is the Madonna del Carmine&mdash;the same whose church in Naples is
+frequented by thieves and cut-throats, who make a special cult of this Virgin
+Mother and invoke Her blessing on their nefarious undertakings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old church, he told me, was built in the middle of the seventeenth century;
+this new one, he agreed, might have been constructed on more ambitious lines,
+&ldquo;but nowadays&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; and he broke off, with eloquent
+aposiopesis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the same, he went on, with the road to the cemetery; why should it not
+be continued right up to the cape of the Column as in olden days, over ground
+<i>dove ogni passo è una memoria:</i> where every footstep is a memory?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page302"></a>
+<i>&ldquo;</i>Rich Italians,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;sometimes give away money
+to benefit the public. But the very rich&mdash;never! And at Cotrone, you must
+remember, every one belongs to the latter class.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We spoke of the Sila, which he had occasionally visited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What?&rdquo; he asked incredulously, &ldquo;you have crossed the whole
+of that country, where there is nothing to eat&mdash;nothing in the purest and
+most literal sense of that word? My dear sir! You must feel like Hannibal,
+after his passage of the Alps.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Those barren clay-hills on our right of which Gissing speaks (they are like the
+<i>balze</i> of the Apennines) annoyed him considerably; they were the
+malediction of the town, he declared. At the same time, they supplied him with
+the groundwork of a theory for which there is a good deal to be said. The old
+Greek city, he conjectured, must have been largely built of bricks made from
+their clay, which is once more being utilized for this purpose. How else
+account for its utter disappearance? Much of the finer buildings were doubtless
+of stone, and these have been worked into the fort, the harbour and
+<i>palazzi</i> of new Cotrone; but this would never account for the vanishing
+of a town nearly twelve miles in circumference. Bricks, he said, would explain
+the mystery; they had crumbled into dust ere yet the Romans rebuilt, with old
+Greek stones, the city on the promontory now occupied by the new settlement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The modern palaces on the rising ground of the citadel are worthy of a visit;
+they are inhabited by some half-dozen &ldquo;millionaires&rdquo; who have given
+Cotrone the reputation of being the richest town of its size in Italy. So far
+as I can judge, the histories of some of these wealthy families would be
+curious reading.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; said the Shepherd, &ldquo;if you have designs of
+Trading, you must go another way; but if you&rsquo;re of the admired sort of
+Men, that have the thriving qualifications of Lying and Cheating, you&rsquo;re
+in the direct Path to Business; for in this City no Learning flourisheth;
+Eloquence finds no room here; nor can Temperance, Good Manners, or any Vertue
+meet with a Reward; assure yourselves of finding but two sorts of Men, and
+those are the Cheated, and those that Cheat.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If gossip at Naples and elsewhere is to be trusted, old Petronius seems to have
+had a prophetic glimpse of the <i>dessus du panier</i> of modern Cotrone.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page303"></a><a name="chap37"></a>XXXVII<br />
+COTRONE</h2>
+
+<p>
+The sun has entered the Lion. But the temperature at Cotrone is not
+excessive&mdash;five degrees lower than Taranto or Milan or London. One grows
+weary, none the less, of the deluge of implacable light that descends, day
+after day, from the aether. The glistering streets are all but deserted after
+the early hours of the morning. A few busy folks move about till midday on the
+pavements; and so do I&mdash;in the water. But the long hours following
+luncheon are consecrated to meditation and repose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A bundle of Italian newspapers has preceded me hither; upon these I browse
+dispersedly, while awaiting the soft call to slumber. Here are some provincial
+sheets&mdash;the &ldquo;Movement&rdquo; of Castrovillari&mdash;the &ldquo;New
+Rossano&rdquo;&mdash;the &ldquo;Bruttian&rdquo; of Corigliano, with strong
+literary flavour. Astonishing how decentralized Italy still is, how brimful of
+purely local patriotism: what conception have these men of Rome as their
+capital? These articles often reflect a lively turmoil of ideas,
+well-expressed. Who pays for such journalistic ventures? Typography is cheap,
+and contributors naturally content themselves with the ample remuneration of
+appearing in print before their fellow-citizens; a considerable number of
+copies are exported to America. Yet I question whether the circulation of the
+&ldquo;New Rossano,&rdquo; a fortnightly in its sixth year, can exceed five
+hundred copies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But these venial and vapid Neapolitan dailies are my pet aversion. We know
+them, <i>nous autres,</i> with their odious personalities and playful
+blackmailing tactics; many &ldquo;distinguished foreigners,&rdquo; myself
+included, could tell a tale anent that subject. Instead of descending to such
+matters, let me copy&mdash;it is too good to translate&mdash;a thrilling item
+of news from the chiefest of them, the <i>Mattino,</i> which touches,
+furthermore, upon the all-important subject of Calabrian progress.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+&ldquo;CETRARO. Per le continuate premure ed insistenze di questo egregio
+uffiziale postale Signor Rocca Francesco&mdash;che nulla lascia
+<a name="Page304"></a>
+pel bene avviamento del nostro uffizio&mdash;presso l&rsquo; on. Direzione
+delle poste di Cosenza, si è ottenuta una cassetta postale, che affissa lungo
+il Corso Carlo Pancaso, ci dà la bella commodità di imbucare le nostre
+corrispondenze per essere rilevate tre volte al giorno non solo, quanto ci
+evita persino la dolorosa e lunga via crucis che dovevamo percorrere qualvolta
+si era costretti d&rsquo; imbuccare una lettera, essendo il nostro uffizio
+situato all&rsquo; estremità del paese.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tributiamo perciò sincera lode al nostro caro uffiziale postale Sig.
+Rocca, e ci auguriamo che egli continui ancora al miglioramento dell&rsquo;
+uffizio istesso, e mercè l&rsquo; opera sua costante ed indefessa siamo sicuri
+che l&rsquo; uffizio postale di Cetraro assurgerà fra non molto ad un&rsquo;
+importanza maggiore di quella che attualmente.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The erection of a letter-box in the street of a small place of which 80 per
+cent of the readers have never so much as heard. ... I begin to understand why
+the cultured Tarentines do not read these journals.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+By far the best part of all such papers is the richly-tinted personal column,
+wherein lovers communicate with each other, or endeavour to do so. I read it
+conscientiously from beginning to end, admiring, in my physical capacity, the
+throbbing passion that prompts such public outbursts of confidence and, from a
+literary point of view, their lapidary style, model of condensation, impossible
+to render in English and conditioned by the hard fact that every word costs two
+sous. Under this painful material stress, indeed, the messages are sometimes
+crushed into a conciseness which the females concerned must have some
+difficulty in unperplexing: what on earth does the parsimonious <i>Flower</i>
+mean by his Delphic fourpenny worth, thus punctuated&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;(You have) not received. How. Safety.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One cannot help smiling at this circuitous and unromantic method of touching
+the hearts of ladies who take one&rsquo;s fancy; at the same time, it testifies
+to a resourceful vitality, striving to break through the barriers of
+Hispano-Arabic convention which surround the fair sex in this country. They are
+nothing if not poetic, these love-sick swains. <i>Arrow</i> murmurs: &ldquo;My
+soul lies on your pillow, caressing you softly&rdquo;; <i>Strawberry</i>
+laments that &ldquo;as bird outside nest, I am alone and lost. What
+sadness,&rdquo; and <i>Star</i> finds the &ldquo;Days eternal, till
+Thursday.&rdquo; And yet they often choose rather prosaic pseudonyms. Here is
+<i>Sahara</i> who &ldquo;suffers from your silence,&rdquo; while <i>Asthma</i>
+is &ldquo;anticipating one endless kiss,&rdquo; and <i>Old England</i>
+observing, more ir sorrow than in anger, that he &ldquo;waited vainly one whole
+hour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page305"></a>
+But the sagacious <i>Cooked Lobster</i> desires, before commiting himself
+further, &ldquo;a personal interview.&rdquo; He has perhaps been cooked once
+before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Letters and numbers are best, after all. So thinks F. N. 13, who is utterly
+disgusted with his flame&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your silence speaks. Useless saying anything. Ça ira.&rdquo; And
+likewise 7776&mdash;B, a designing rogue and plainly a spendthrift, who wastes
+ninepence in making it clear that he &ldquo;wishes to marry rich young lady,
+forgiving youthful errors.&rdquo; If I were the girl, I would prefer to take my
+chances with &ldquo;Cooked Lobster.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>&ldquo;Will much-admired young-lady cherries-in-black-hat indicate method
+possible correspondence</i> 10211, <i>Post-Office?&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How many of these arrows, I wonder, reach their mark?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah, here are politics and News of the World, at last. A promising article on
+the &ldquo;Direttissimo Roma-Napoli&rdquo;&mdash;the railway line that is to
+connect the two towns by way of the Pontine Marshes. . . . Dear me! This reads
+very familiarly. . . . Why, to be sure, it is the identical dissertation, with
+a few changes by the office-boy, that has cropped up periodically in these
+pages for the last half-century, or whenever the railway was first projected.
+The line, as usual, is being projected more strenuously than before, and
+certain members of the government have gone so far as to declare. . . .
+H&rsquo;m! Let me try something else: &ldquo;The Feminist Movement in
+England&rdquo; by Our London Correspondent (who lives in a little side street
+off the Toledo); that sounds stimulating. . . . The advanced English
+Feminists&mdash;so it runs&mdash;are taking the lead in encouraging their
+torpid sisters on the Continent. . . . Hardly a day passes, that some new
+manifestation of the Feminist Movement ... in fact, it may be avowed that the
+Feminist Movement in England. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The air is cooler, as I awake, and looking out of the window I perceive from
+the mellow light-effects that day is declining.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Towards this sunset hour the unbroken dome of the sky often undergoes a brief
+transformation. High-piled masses of cloud may then be seen accumulating over
+the Sila heights and gathering auxiliaries from every quarter; lightning is
+soon playing about the livid and murky vapours&mdash;you can hear the thunders
+muttering, up yonder, to some drenching downpour. But on the plain the sun
+continues to shine in vacuously benevolent fashion; nothing is felt of the
+tempest save unquiet breaths of wind that raise dust-eddies from the country
+roads and lash the sea into a mock frenzy of crisp little waves. It is the
+merest interlude. Soon the blue-black drifts have fled away from the mountains
+that stand out, clear and
+<a name="Page306"></a>
+refreshed, in the twilight. The wind has died down, the storm is over and
+Cotrone thirsts, as ever, for rain that never comes. Yet they have a
+Madonna-picture here&mdash;a celebrated <i>black</i> Madonna, painted by Saint
+Luke&mdash;who &ldquo;always procures rain, when prayed to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once indeed the tail of a shower must have passed overhead, for there fell a
+few sad drops. I hurried abroad, together with some other citizens, to observe
+the phenomenon. There was no doubt about the matter; it was genuine rain; the
+drops lay, at respectable intervals, on the white dust of the station turnpike.
+A boy, who happened to be passing in a cart, remarked that if the shower could
+have been collected into a saucer or some other small receptacle, it might have
+sufficed to quench the thirst of a puppy-dog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I usually take a final dip in the sea, at this time of the evening. After that,
+it is advisable to absorb an ice or two&mdash;they are excellent, at
+Cotrone&mdash;and a glass of Strega liqueur, to ward off the effects of
+over-work. Next, a brief promenade through the clean, well-lighted streets and
+now populous streets, or along the boulevard Margherita to view the rank and
+fashion taking the air by the murmuring waves, under the cliff-like battlements
+of Charles the Fifth&rsquo;s castle; and so to dinner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This meal marks the termination of my daily tasks; nothing serious is allowed
+to engage my attention, once that repast is ended; I call for a chair and sit
+down at one of the small marble-topped tables in the open street and watch the
+crowd as it floats around me, smoking a Neapolitan cigar and imbibing,
+alternately, ices and black coffee until, towards midnight, a final bottle of
+<i>vino di Cirò</i> is uncorked&mdash;fit seal for the labours of the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One might say much in praise of Calabrian wine. The land is full of pleasant
+surprises for the œnophilist, and one of these days I hope to embody my
+experiences in the publication of a wine-chart of the province with descriptive
+text running alongside&mdash;the purchasers of which, if few, will certainly be
+of the right kind. The good Dr. Barth&mdash;all praise to him!&mdash;has
+already done something of the kind for certain parts of Italy, but does not so
+much as mention Calabria. And yet here nearly every village has its own type of
+wine and every self-respecting family its own peculiar method of preparation,
+little known though they be outside the place of production, on account of the
+octroi laws which strangle internal trade and remove all stimulus to
+manufacture a good article for export. This wine of Cirò, for instance, is
+purest nectar, and so is that which grows still nearer at hand in the classical
+vale of the
+<a name="Page307"></a>
+Neto and was praised, long ago, by old Pliny; and so are at least two dozen
+more. For even as Gregorovius says that the smallest Italian community
+possesses its duly informed antiquarian, if you can but put your hand upon him,
+so, I may be allowed to add, every little place hereabouts can boast of at
+least one individual who will give you good wine, provided&mdash;provided you
+go properly to work to find him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now although, when young, the Calabrian Bacchus has a wild-eyed <i>beauté du
+diable</i> which appeals to one&rsquo;s expansive moods, he already begins to
+totter, at seven years of age, in sour, decrepit eld. To pounce upon him at the
+psychological moment, to discover in whose cool and cobwebby cellar he is
+dreaming out his golden summer of manhood&mdash;that is what a foreigner can
+never, never hope to achieve, without competent local aid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To this end, I generally apply to the priests; not because they are the
+greatest drunkards (far from it; they are mildly epicurean, or even abstemious)
+but by reason of their unrivalled knowledge of personalities. They know exactly
+who has been able to keep his liquor of such and such a year, and who has been
+obliged to sell or partially adulterate it; they know, from the confessional of
+the wives, the why and wherefore of all such private family affairs and share,
+with the chemist, the gift of seeing furthest into the tangled web of home
+life. They are &ldquo;gialosi,&rdquo; however, of these acquirements, and must
+be approached in the right spirit&mdash;a spirit of humility. But if you
+tactfully lead up to the subject by telling of the manifold hardships of travel
+in foreign lands, the discomfort of life in hostelries, the food that leaves so
+much to be desired and, above all, the coarse wine that is already beginning,
+you greatly fear, to injure your sensitive spleen (an important organ, in
+Calabria), inducing a hypochondriacal tendency to see all the beauties of this
+fair land in an odious and sombre light&mdash;turning your day into night, as
+it were&mdash;it must be an odd priest, indeed, who is not compassionately
+moved to impart the desired information regarding the whereabouts of the best
+<i>vino di famiglia</i> at that moment obtainable. After all, it costs him
+nothing to do a double favour&mdash;one to yourself and another to the
+proprietor of the wine, doubtless an old friend of his, who will be able to
+sell his stuff to a foreigner 20 per cent dearer than to a native.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And failing the priests, I go to an elderly individual of that tribe of
+red-nosed connaisseurs, the coachmen, ever thirsty and mercenary souls, who for
+a small consideration may be able to disclose not only this secret, but others
+far more mysterious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to your host at the inn&mdash;he raises not the least objection to
+<a name="Page308"></a>
+your importing alien liquor into his house. His own wine, he tells you, is last
+year&rsquo;s vintage and somewhat harsh (slightly watered, he might
+add)&mdash;and why not? The ordinary customers are gentlemen of commerce who
+don&rsquo;t care a fig what they eat and drink, so long as there is enough of
+it. No horrible suggestions are proffered concerning corkage; on the contrary,
+he tests your wine, smacks his lips, and thanks you for communicating a
+valuable discovery. He thinks he will buy a bottle or two for the use of
+himself and a few particular friends. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Midnight has come and gone. The street is emptying; the footsteps of passengers
+begin to ring hollow. I arise, for my customary stroll in the direction of the
+cemetery, to attune myself to repose by shaking off those restlessly trivial
+images of humanity which might otherwise haunt my slumbers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Town visions are soon left behind; it is very quiet here under the hot, starlit
+heavens; nothing speaks of man save the lighthouse flashing in ghostly
+activity&mdash;no, it is a fixed light&mdash;on the distant Cape of the Column.
+And nothing breaks the stillness save the rhythmic breathing of the waves, and
+a solitary cricket that has yet to finish his daily task of instrumental music,
+far away, in some warm crevice of the hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A suave odour rises up from the narrow patch of olives, and figs loaded with
+fruit, and ripening vines, that skirts the path by the beach. <i>The fig tree
+putteth forth her green figs, and the vines with the tender grape give a good
+smell.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so I plough my way through the sand, in the darkness, encompassed by tepid
+exhalations of earth and sea. Another spirit has fallen upon me&mdash;a spirit
+of biblical calm. Here, then, stood <i>the rejoicing city that dwelt
+carelessly, that said in her heart, I am, and there is none beside me: how is
+she become a desolation!</i> It is indeed hard to realize that a town thronged
+with citizens covered all this area. Yet so it is. Every footstep is a memory.
+Along this very track walked the sumptuous ladies of Croton on their way to
+deposit their vain jewels before the goddess Hera, at the bidding of
+Pythagoras. On this spot, maybe, stood that public hall which was specially
+built for the delivery of his lectures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No doubt the townsfolk had been sunk in apathetic luxury; the time was ripe for
+a Messiah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And lo! he appeared.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page309"></a><a name="chap38"></a>XXXVIII<br />
+THE SAGE OF CROTON</h2>
+
+<p>
+The popularity of this sage at Croton offers no problem: the inhabitants had
+become sufficiently civilized to appreciate the charm of being regenerated. We
+all do. Renunciation has always exercised an irresistible attraction for good
+society; it makes us feel so comfortable, to be told we are going to
+hell&mdash;and Pythagoras was very eloquent on the subject of Tartarus as a
+punishment. The Crotoniates discovered in repentance of sins a new and subtle
+form of pleasure; exactly as did the Florentines, when Savonarola appeared on
+the scene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next: his doctrines found a ready soil in Magna Graecia which was already
+impregnated with certain vague notions akin to those he introduced. And
+then&mdash;he permitted and even encouraged the emotional sex to participate in
+the mysteries; the same tactics that later on materially helped the triumph of
+Christianity over the more exclusive and rational cult of Mithra. Lastly, he
+came with a &ldquo;message,&rdquo; like the Apostle of the Gentiles; and in
+those times a preaching reformer was a novelty. That added a zest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We know them a little better, nowadays.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He enjoyed the specious and short-lived success that has attended, elsewhere,
+such efforts to cultivate the <i>ego</i> at the expense of its environment.
+&ldquo;A type of aspiring humanity,&rdquo; says Gissing, echoing the sentiments
+of many of us, &ldquo;a sweet and noble figure, moving as a dim radiance
+through legendary Hellas.&rdquo; I fancy that the mist of centuries of
+undiscriminating admiration has magnified this figure out of all proportion and
+contrived, furthermore, to fix an iridescent nimbus of sanctity about its head.
+Such things have been known to happen, in foggy weather.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was Greece so very legendary, in those times? Why, on the contrary, it was full
+of real personages, of true sages to whom it seemed as if no secrets of heaven
+or earth were past fathoming; far from being legendary, the country had never
+attained a higher plane of intellectual curiosity than when Pythagoras made his
+appearance. And it cannot be gainsaid that he and his disciples gave the
+<a name="Page310"></a>
+impetus away from these wise and beneficial researches into the arid regions of
+metaphysics. It is so much more gentlemanly (and so much easier) to talk bland
+balderdash about soul-migrations than to calculate an eclipse of the moon or
+bother about the circulation of the blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That a man of his speculative vigour, knowing so many extra-Hellenic races,
+should have hit upon one or two good things adventitiously is only to be
+expected. But they were mere by-products. One might as well praise John Knox
+for creating the commons of Scotland with a view to the future prosperity of
+that country&mdash;a consummation which his black fanaticism assuredly never
+foresaw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief practical doctrine of Pythagoras, that mankind are to be governed on
+the principle of a community of eastern monks, makes for the disintegration of
+rational civic life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And his chief theoretical doctrines, of metempsychosis and the reduction of
+everything to a system of numbers<a href="#fn-38.1" name="fnref-38.1" id="fnref-38.1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>&mdash;these
+are sheer lunacy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn-38.1" id="fn-38.1"></a> <a href="#fnref-38.1">[1]</a>
+Vincenzo Dorsa, an Albanian, has written two pamphlets on the survival of
+Greco-Roman traditions in Calabria. They are difficult to procure, but whoever
+is lucky enough to find them will be much helped in his understanding of the
+common people. In one place, he speaks of the charm-formula of
+<i>Otto-Nave!</i> (Eight-Nine) It is considered meet and proper, in the
+presence of a suckling infant, to spit thrice and then call out, three times,
+Otto-Nove! This brings luck; and the practice, he thinks, is an echo of the
+number-system of Pythagoras.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it not something of a relapse, after the rigorous mental discipline of old,
+to have a man gravely assuring his fellows that he is the son of Hermes and the
+divinely appointed messenger of Apollo; treating diseases, like an Eskimo
+Angekok, by incantation; recording veracious incidents of his experiences
+during a previous life in Hell, which he seems to have explored almost as
+thoroughly as Swedenborg; dabbling in magic, and consulting dreams, birds and
+the smoke of incense as oracles? And in the exotic conglomerate of his
+teachings are to be found the <i>prima stamina</i> of much that is worse: the
+theory of the pious fraud which has infected Latin countries to this day; the
+Jesuitical maxim of the end justifying the means; the insanity of preferring
+deductions to facts which has degraded philosophy up to the days of Kant;
+mysticism, demon-worship and much else of pernicious mettle&mdash;they are all
+there, embryonically embedded in Pythagoras.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We are told much of his charity; indeed, an English author has written a
+learned work to prove that Pythagoreanism has close affinities with
+Christianity. Charity has now been tried on an ample scale, and has proved a
+dismal failure. To give, they say, is more blessed than to receive. It is
+certainly far easier, for the most
+<a name="Page311"></a>
+part, to give than to refrain from giving. We are at last shaking off the form,
+of self-indulgence called charity; we realize that if mankind is to profit,
+sterner conceptions must prevail. The apotheosis of the god-favoured loafer is
+drawing to a close.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the rest, there was the inevitable admixture of quackery about our
+reforming sage; his warmest admirers cannot but admit that he savours somewhat
+strongly of the holy impostor. Those charms and amulets, those dark gnomic
+aphorisms which constitute the stock-in-trade of all religious cheap-jacks, the
+bribe of future life, the sacerdotal tinge with its complement of mendacity,
+the secrecy of doctrine, the pretentiously-mysterious self-retirement, the
+&ldquo;sacred quaternion,&rdquo; the bean-humbug . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had the true maraboutic note.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+And for me, this regenerator crowned with a saintly aureole remains a glorified
+marabout&mdash;an intellectual dissolvent; the importer of that oriental
+introspectiveness which culminated in the idly-splendid yearnings of Plato,
+paved the way for the quaint Alexandrian <i>tutti-frutti</i> known as
+Christianity, and tainted the well-springs of honest research for two thousand
+years. By their works ye shall known them. It was the Pythagoreans who, not
+content with a just victory over the Sybarites, annihilated their city amid
+anathemas worthy of those old Chaldeans (past masters in the art of pious
+cursings); a crime against their common traditions and common interests; a
+piece of savagery which wrecked Hellenic civilization in Italy. It is ever
+thus, when the soul is appointed arbiter over reason. It is ever thus, when
+gentle, god-fearing dreamers meddle with worldly affairs. Beware of the wrath
+of the lamb!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So rapidly did the virus act, that soon we find Plato declaring that all the
+useful arts are <i>degrading;</i> that &ldquo;so long as a man tries to study
+any sensible object, he can never be said to be learning anything&rdquo;; in
+other words, that the kind of person to whom one looks for common sense should
+be excluded from the management of his most refined republic. It needed courage
+of a rather droll kind to make such propositions in Greece, under the shadow of
+the Parthenon. And hand in hand with this feudalism in philosophy there began
+that unhealthy preoccupation with the morals of our fellow-creatures, that
+miasma of puritanism, which has infected life and literature up to this moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Renaissance brought many fine things to England. But the wicked fairy was
+there with her gift: Pythagoras and Plato. We were not like the Italians who,
+after the first rapture of discovery was over, soon outgrew these distracted
+dialectics; we stuck fast in
+<a name="Page312"></a>
+them. Hence our Platonic touch: our <i>demi-vierge</i> attitude in matters of
+the mind, our academic horror of clean thinking. How Plato hated a fact! He
+could find no place for it in his twilight world of abstractions. Was it not he
+who wished to burn the works of Democritus of Abdera, most exact and reasonable
+of old sages?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They are all alike, these humanitarian lovers of first causes. Always ready to
+burn something, or somebody; always ready with their cheerful Hell-fire and
+gnashing of teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Know thyself:</i> to what depths of vain, egocentric brooding has that
+dictum led! But we are discarding, now, such a mischievously narrow view of the
+Cosmos, though our upbringing is still too rhetorical and mediæval to appraise
+its authors at their true worth. Youth is prone to judge with the heart rather
+than the head; youth thrives on vaporous ideas, and there was a time when I
+would have yielded to none in my enthusiasm for these mellifluous babblers; one
+had a blind, sentimental regard for their great names. It seems to me, now,
+that we take them somewhat too seriously; that a healthy adult has nothing to
+learn from their teachings, save by way of warning example. Plato is food for
+adolescents. And a comfort, possibly, in old age, when the judicial faculties
+of the mind are breaking up and primitive man, the visionary, reasserts his
+ancient rights. For questioning moods grow burdensome with years; after a
+strain of virile doubt we are glad to acquiesce once more&mdash;to relapse into
+Platonic animism, the logic of valetudinarians. The dog to his vomit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And after Plato&mdash;the deluge. Neo-platonism. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet it was quite good sport, while it lasted. To &ldquo;make men better&rdquo;
+by choice dissertations about Utopias, to sit in marble halls and have a fair
+and fondly ardent <i>jeunesse dorée</i> reclining about your knees while you
+discourse, in rounded periods, concerning the salvation of their souls by means
+of transcendental Love&mdash;it would suit me well enough, at this present
+moment; far better than croaking, forlorn as the night-raven, among the ruins
+of their radiant lives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, and despite our Universities, new conceptions are prevailing,
+Aristotle is winning the day. A fresh kind of thinker has arisen, whose chief
+idea of &ldquo;virtue&rdquo; is to investigate patiently the facts of life; men
+of the type of Lister, any one of whom have done more to regenerate mankind,
+and to increase the sum of human happiness, than a wilderness of the
+amiably-hazy old doctrinaires who professed the same object. I call to mind
+those physicians engaged in their malaria-campaign, and wonder what Plato would
+have thought of them. Would he have recognized the
+<a name="Page313"></a>
+significance of their researches which, while allaying pain and misery, are
+furthering the prosperity of the country, causing waters to flow in dry places
+and villages to spring up in deserts&mdash;strengthening its political
+resources, improving its very appearance? Not likely. Plato&rsquo;s opinion of
+doctors was on a par with the rest of his mentality. Yet these are the men who
+are taking up the thread where it was dropped, perforce, by those veritable
+Greek sages, whelmed under turbid floods of Pythagorean irrationalism. And are
+such things purely utilitarian? Are they so grossly mundane? Is there really no
+&ldquo;philosophy&rdquo; in the choice of such a healing career, no romance in
+its studious self-denial, no beauty in its results? If so, we must revise that
+classic adage which connects vigour with beauty&mdash;not to speak of several
+others.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page314"></a><a name="chap39"></a>XXXIX<br />
+MIDDAY AT PETELIA</h2>
+
+<p>
+Day after day, I look across the six miles of sea to the Lacinian promontory
+and its column. How reach it? The boatmen are eager for the voyage: it all
+depends, they say, upon the wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Day after day&mdash;a dead calm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Two hours&mdash;three hours&mdash;four hours&mdash;according!&rdquo; And
+they point to the sky. A little breeze, they add, sometimes makes itself felt
+in the early mornings; one might fix up a sail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And for returning at midday?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Three hours&mdash;four hours&mdash;five hours&mdash;according!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The prospect of rocking about for half a day in a small boat under a blazing
+sky is not my ideal of enjoyment, the novelty of such an experience having worn
+off a good many years ago. I decide to wait; to make an attack, meanwhile, upon
+old Petelia&mdash;the &ldquo;Stromboli&rdquo; of my lady-friend at the
+Catanzaro Museum....
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is an easy day&rsquo;s excursion from Cotrone to Strongoli, which is
+supposed to lie on the site of that ancient, much-besieged town. It sits upon a
+hill-top, and the diligence which awaits the traveller at the little
+railway-station takes about two hours to reach the place, climbing up the
+olive-covered slopes in ample loops and windings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Strongoli my memories, even at this short distance of time, are confused and
+blurred. The drive up under the glowing beams of morning, the great heat of the
+last few days, and two or three nights&rsquo; sleeplessness at Cotrone had
+considerably blunted my appetite for new things. I remember seeing some Roman
+marbles in the church, and being thence conducted into a castle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Afterwards I reposed awhile in the upper regions, under an olive, and looked
+down towards the valley of the Neto, which flows not far from here into the
+Ionian. I thought upon Theocritus, trying to picture this vale of Neaithos as
+it appeared to him and his
+<a name="Page315"></a>
+shepherds. The woodlands are gone, and the rains of winter, streaming down the
+earthen slopes, have remodelled the whole face of the country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet, be nature what it may, men will always turn to one who sings so
+melodiously of eternal verities&mdash;of those human tasks and needs which no
+lapse of years can change. How modern he reads to us, who have been brought
+into contact with the true spirit by men like Johnson-Cory and Lefroy! And how
+unbelievably remote is that Bartolozzi-Hellenism which went before! What, for
+example&mdash;what of the renowned pseudo-Theocritus, Salamon Gessner, who sang
+of this same vale of Neto in his &ldquo;Daphnis&rdquo;? Alas, the good Salamon
+has gone the way of all derivative bores; he is dead&mdash;deader than King
+Psammeticus; he is now moralizing in some decorous Paradise amid flocks of
+Dresden-China sheep and sugar-watery youths and maidens. Who can read his
+much-translated masterpiece without unpleasant twinges? Dead as a doornail!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So far as I can recollect, there is an infinity of kissing in
+&ldquo;Daphnis.&rdquo; It was an age of sentimentality, and the Greek pastoral
+ideal, transfused into a Swiss environment of 1810, could not but end in
+slobber and <i>Gefühlsduselei.</i> True it is that shepherds have ample
+opportunities of sporting with Amaryllis in the shade; opportunities which, to
+my certain knowledge, they do not neglect. Theocritus knew it well enough. But,
+in a general way, he is niggardly with the precious commodity of kisses; he
+seems to have thought that in literature, if not in real life, one can have too
+much of a good thing. Also, being a southerner, he could not have trusted his
+young folks to remain eternally at the kissing-stage, after the pattern of our
+fish-like English lovers. Such behaviour would have struck him as improbable;
+possibly immoral. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+From where I sat one may trace a road that winds upwards into the Sila, past
+Pallagorio. Along its sides are certain mounded heaps and the smoke of refining
+works. These are mines of that dusky sulphur which I had observed being drawn
+in carts through the streets of Cotrone. There are some eight or ten of them,
+they tell me, discovered about thirty years ago&mdash;this is all wrong: they
+are mentioned in 1571&mdash;and employing several hundred workmen. It had been
+my intention to visit these excavations. But now, in the heat of day, I
+wavered; the distance, even to the nearest of them, seemed inordinately great;
+and just as I had decided to look for a carriage with a view of being driven
+there (that curse of
+<a name="Page316"></a>
+conscientiousness!) an amiable citizen snatched me up as his guest for
+luncheon. He led me, weakly resisting, to a vaulted chamber where, amid a
+repast of rural delicacies and the converse of his spouse, all such fond
+projects were straightway forgotten. Instead of sulphur-statistics, I learnt a
+little piece of local history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You were speaking about the emptiness of our streets of
+Strongoli,&rdquo; my host said. &ldquo;And yet, up to a short time ago, there
+was no emigration from this place. Then a change came about: I&rsquo;ll tell
+you how it was. There was a <i>guardia di finanze</i> here&mdash;a miserable
+octroi official. To keep up the name of his family, he married an heiress; not
+for the sake of having progeny, but&mdash;well! He began buying up all the land
+round about&mdash;slowly, systematically, cautiously&mdash;till, by dint of
+threats and intrigues, he absorbed nearly all the surrounding country. Inch by
+inch, he ate it up; with his wife&rsquo;s money. That was his idea of
+perpetuating his memory. All the small proprietors were driven from their
+domains and fled to America to escape starvation; immense tracts of
+well-cultivated land are now almost desert. Look at the country! But some day
+he will get his reward; under the ribs, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By this purposeful re-creation of those feudal conditions of olden, days, this
+man has become the best-hated person in the district.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon it was time to leave the friendly shelter and inspect in the glaring
+sunshine the remaining antiquities of Petelia. Never have I felt less inclined
+for such antiquarian exploits. How much better the hours would have passed in
+some cool tavern! I went forth, none the less; and was delighted to discover
+that there are practically no antiquities left&mdash;nothing save a few walls
+standing near a now ruined convent, which is largely built of Roman
+stone-blocks and bricks. Up to a few years ago, the municipality carried on
+excavations here and unearthed a few relics which were promptly dispersed.
+Perhaps some of these are what one sees in the Catanzaro Museum. The paternal
+government, hearing of this enterprise, claimed the site and sat down upon it;
+the exposed remains were once more covered up with soil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A goat-boy, a sad little fellow, sprang out of the earth as I dutifully
+wandered about here. He volunteered to show me not only Strongoli, but all
+Calabria; in fact, his heart&rsquo;s desire was soon manifest: to escape from
+home and find his way to America under my passport and protection. Here was his
+chance&mdash;a foreigner (American) returning sooner or later to his own
+country! He pressed the matter with naif forcefulness. Vainly I told him that
+there were other lands on earth; that I was not going to America. He shook his
+head and sagely remarked:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="Page317"></a>
+&ldquo;I have understood. You think my journey would cost too much. But you,
+also, must understand. Once I get work there, I will repay you every
+farthing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a consolation, I offered him some cigarettes. He accepted one; pensive,
+unresigned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The goat-herds had no such cravings&mdash;in the days of Theocritus.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="Page318"></a><a name="chap40"></a>XL<br />
+THE COLUMN</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Two hours&mdash;three hours&mdash;four hours: according!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boatmen are still eager for the voyage. It all depends, as before, upon the
+wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And day after day the Ionian lies before us&mdash;immaculate, immutable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I determined to approach the column by land. A mule was discovered, and
+starting from the &ldquo;Concordia&rdquo; rather late in the morning, reached
+the temple-ruin in two hours to the minute. I might have been tempted to linger
+by the way but for the intense sunshine and for the fact that the muleteer was
+an exceptionally dull dog&mdash;a dusky youth of the taciturn and wooden-faced
+Spanish variety, whose anti-Hellenic profile irked me, in that landscape. The
+driving road ends at the cemetery. Thence onward a pathway skirts the sea at
+the foot of the clay-hills; passes the sunken wells; climbs up and down
+steepish gradients and so attains the plateau at whose extremity stands the
+lighthouse, the column, and a few white bungalows&mdash;summer-residences of
+Cotrone citizens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A day of shimmering heat. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ground is parched. Altogether, it is a poor and thinly peopled stretch of
+land between Cotrone and Capo Rizzuto. No wonder the wolves are famished. Nine
+days ago one of them actually ventured upon the road near the cemetery, in
+daylight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet there is some plant-life, and I was pleased to see, emerging from the bleak
+sand-dunes, the tufts of the well-known and conspicuous sea lily in full
+flower. Wishful to obtain a few blossoms, I asked the boy to descend from his
+mule, but he objected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Non si toccano questi fiori,&rdquo; he said. These flowers are not to be
+touched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their odour displeased him. Like the Arab, the uncultivated Italian is
+insensitive to certain smells that revolt us; while he cannot endure, on the
+other hand, the scent of some flowers. I have seen a man professing to feel
+faint at the odour of crushed geranium
+<a name="Page319"></a>
+leaves. They are <i>fiori di morti,</i> he says: planted (sometimes) in
+graveyards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last remarkable antiquity found at this site, to my knowledge, is a stone
+vase, fished up some years ago out of the sea, into which it may have fallen
+while being carried off by pious marauders for the purpose of figuring as font
+in some church (unless, indeed, the land has sunk at this point, as there is
+some evidence to show). I saw it, shortly after its return to dry land, in a
+shed near the harbour of Cotrone; the Taranto museum has now claimed it. It is
+a basin of purple-veined pavonazzetto marble. Originally a monolith, it now
+consists of two fragments; the third and smallest is still missing. This noble
+relic stands about 85 centimetres in height and measures some 215 centimetres
+in circumference; it was never completed, as can be seen by the rim, which is
+still partially in the rough. A similar vessel is figured, I believe, in
+Tischbein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The small villa-settlement on this promontory is deserted owing to lack of
+water, every drop of which has to be brought hither by sea from Cotrone. One
+wonders why they have not thought of building a cistern to catch the winter
+rains, if there are any; for a respectable stone crops up at this end of the
+peninsula.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One often wonders at things. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The column has been underpinned and strengthened by a foundation of cement;
+rains of centuries had begun to threaten its base, and there was some risk of a
+catastrophe. Near at hand are a few ancient walls of reticulated masonry in
+strangely leaning attitudes, peopled by black goats; on the ground I picked up
+some chips of amphoræ and vases, as well as a fragment of the limb of a marble
+statue. The site of this pillar, fronting the waves, is impressively forlorn.
+And it was rather thoughtful, after all, of the despoiling Bishop Lucifero to
+leave two of the forty-eight columns standing upright on the spot, as a sample
+of the local Doric style. One has fallen to earth since his day. Nobody would
+have complained at the time, if he had stolen all of them, instead of only
+forty-six. I took a picture of the survivor; then wandered a little apart, in
+the direction of the shore, and soon found myself in a solitude of burning
+stones, a miniature Sahara.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The temple has vanished, together with the sacred grove that once embowered it;
+the island of Calypso, where Swinburne took his ease (if such it was), has sunk
+into the purple realms of Glaucus; the corals and sea-beasts that writhed among
+its crevices are engulphed under mounds of submarine sand. There was life,
+once, at this promontory. Argosies touched here, leaving priceless gifts;
+<a name="Page320"></a>
+fountains flowed, and cornfields waved in the genial sunshine. Doubtless there
+will be life again; earth and sea are only waiting for the enchanter&rsquo;s
+wand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All now lies bare, swooning in summer stagnation.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Calabria is not a land to traverse alone. It is too wistful and stricken; too
+deficient in those externals that conduce to comfort. Its charms do not appeal
+to the eye of romance, and the man who would perambulate Magna Graecia as he
+does the Alps would soon regret his choice. One needs something of that
+&ldquo;human element&rdquo; which delighted the genteel photographer of
+Morano&mdash;comrades, in short; if only those sages, like old Nola Molisi, who
+have fallen under the spell of its ancient glories. The joys of Calabria are
+not to be bought, like those of Switzerland, for gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sir Giovan Battista di Nola Molisi, the last of bis family and name, having
+no sons and being come to old age without further hope of offspring, has
+desired in the place of children to leave of himself an eternal memory to
+mankind&mdash;</i>to wit, this Chronicle of the most Ancient, Magnificent, and
+Faithful City of Cotrone. A worthier effort at self-perpetuation than that of
+Strongoli. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sturgeon, he notes, was caught in 1593 by the Spanish Castellan of the town.
+This nobleman, puzzling whom he could best honour with so rare a dainty,
+despatched it by means of a man on horseback to the Duke of Nocera. The Duke
+was no less surprised than pleased; he thought mighty well of the sturgeon and
+of the respectful consideration which prompted the gift; and then, by another
+horseman, sent it to Nola Molisi&rsquo;s own uncle, accompanied, we may
+conjecture, by some ceremonious compliment befitting the occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man of parts, therefore, our author&rsquo;s uncle, to whom his Lordship of
+Nocera sends table-delicacies by mounted messenger; and himself a mellow
+comrade whom I am loath to leave; his pages are distinguished by a pleasing
+absence of those saintly paraphernalia which hang like a fog athwart the fair
+sky of the south.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet to him and to all of them I must bid good-bye, here and now. At this hour
+to-morrow I shall be far from Cotrone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Farewell to Capialbi, inspired bookworm! And to Lenormant.
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;">
+<a name="illus32"></a>
+<img src="images/oldc-32.jpg" width="413" height="253" alt="[Illustration: ]" />
+<p class="caption">Roman Masonry at Capo Colonna</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+On a day like this, the scholar sailed at Bivona over a sea so unruffled that
+the barque seemed to be suspended in air. The water&rsquo;s surface, he tells
+us, is &ldquo;unie comme une glace.&rdquo; He sees the vitreous depths invaded
+by piercing sunbeams that light up its mysterious forests of algae, its
+rock-headlands and silvery stretches of sand; he peers down into these
+&ldquo;prairies pélagiennes&rdquo; and
+<a name="Page321"></a>
+beholds all their wondrous fauna&mdash;the urchins, the crabs, the floating
+fishes and translucent medusae &ldquo;semblables a des clochettes
+d&rsquo;opale.&rdquo; Then, realizing how this &ldquo;population pullulante des
+petits animaux marins&rdquo; must have impressed the observing ancients, he
+goes on to touch&mdash;ever so lightly!&mdash;upon those old local arts of
+ornamentation whereby sea-beasts and molluscs and aquatic plants were
+reverently copied by master-hand, not from dead specimens, but &ldquo;pris sur
+le vif et observés au milieu des eaux&rdquo;; he explains how an entire school
+grew up, which drew its inspiration from the dainty ... apes and movements of
+these frail creatures. This is <i>du meilleur Lenormant.</i> His was a
+full-blooded yet discriminating zest of knowledge. One wonders what more was
+fermenting in that restlessly curious brain, when a miserable accident ended
+his short life, after 120 days of suffering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Italy proved fatal to him, as Greece to his father. But one of his happiest
+moments must have been spent on the sea at Bivona, on that clear summer
+day&mdash;a day such as this, when every nerve tingles with joy of life.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Meanwhile it is good to rest here, immovable but alert, in the breathless hush
+of noon. Showers of benevolent heat stream down upon this desolation; not the
+faintest wisp of vapour floats upon the horizon; not a sail, not a ripple,
+disquiets the waters. The silence can be felt. Slumber is brooding over the
+things of earth:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Asleep are the peaks of the hills, and the vales,<br />
+The promontories, the clefts,<br />
+And all the creatures that move upon the black earth. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such torrid splendour, drenching a land of austerest simplicity, decomposes the
+mind into corresponding states of primal contentment and resilience. There
+arises before our phantasy a new perspective of human affairs; a suggestion of
+well-being wherein the futile complexities and disharmonies of our age shall
+have no place. To discard these wrappings, to claim kinship with some elemental
+and robust archetype, lover of earth and sun&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How fair they are, these moments of golden equipoise!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes; it is good to be merged awhile into these harshly-vibrant surroundings,
+into the meridian glow of all things. This noontide is the &ldquo;heavy&rdquo;
+hour of the Greeks, when temples are untrodden by priest or worshipper.
+<i>Controra</i> they now call it&mdash;the ominous hour. Man and beast are
+fettered in sleep, while spirits walk abroad, as at midnight. <i>Non timebis a
+timore noctuno: a sagitta</i>
+<a name="Page322"></a>
+<i>volante in die: a negotio perambulante in tenebris: ab incursu et demonio
+meridiano.</i> The midday demon&mdash;that southern Haunter of calm blue
+spaces. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So may some enchantment of kindlier intent have crept over Phædrus and his
+friend, at converse in the noontide under the whispering plane-tree. And the
+genius dwelling about this old headland of the Column is candid and benign.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+This corner of Magna Graecia is a severely parsimonious manifestation of
+nature. Rocks and waters! But these rocks and waters are actualities; the stuff
+whereof man is made. A landscape so luminous, so resolutely scornful of
+accessories, hints at brave and simple forms of expression; it brings us to the
+ground, where we belong; it medicines to the disease of introspection and
+stimulates a capacity which we are in danger of unlearning amid our morbid
+hyperborean gloom&mdash;the capacity for honest contempt: contempt of that
+scarecrow of a theory which would have us neglect what is earthly, tangible.
+What is life well lived but a blithe discarding of primordial husks, of those
+comfortable intangibilities that lurk about us, waiting for our weak moments?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sage, that perfect savage, will be the last to withdraw himself from the
+influence of these radiant realities. He will strive to knit closer the bond,
+and to devise a more durable and affectionate relationship between himself and
+them. Let him open his eyes. For a reasonable adjustment lies at his feet. From
+these brown stones that seam the tranquil Ionian, from this gracious solitude,
+he can carve out, and bear away into the cheerful din of cities, the rudiments
+of something clean and veracious and wholly terrestrial&mdash;some tonic
+philosophy that shall foster sunny mischiefs and farewell regret.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap41"></a>INDEX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Abruzzi peasants, their lives, 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Abulfeda, historian, 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Abystron, 119. See <i>Castrovillari.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aceti, T., 93.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Acheron, river. See <i>Mu.com.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Acherontia (? Acri), 195.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Acherontia&rsquo;s Nest&rdquo; (Acerenza), 32.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Achilles, his notions of gratitude, 123.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Achiropita image. See <i>Madonna.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Acinapura, near Policoro, 98.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Acri, town, 193-196, 199.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ada Sanctorum,</i> in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Adamo Caduto,</i> a sacred tragedy, inspires &ldquo;Paradise Lost,&rdquo;
+160 <i>seq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Adler, H. M., 122.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aelian, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Afforestation, at Morano, 148; governmental schemes for, 218.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Africo, village, 271, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Agropoli, Saracen stronghold, 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Akron, commentator, 45. Alaro (Sagra), river, 281-283.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albanians, their colonies, 176, 189; confused with Byzantines, 176, 272; their
+liberalism, 177, 183; wedding ceremony, 182; compared with Irish, 186; their
+training college, 183; preposterous language, 173,187. See <i>Costumes</i> and
+<i>Rada, G. de.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alberada, her tomb, 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alberti, L., 174.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alburno, mount, 151.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alexander of Molossus, his death, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alfonso the Magnificent, no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altamura, sack of, 64, 65.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altipiano di Pollino, upland, 145.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amendolea, river, 197, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+America. See <i>Emigration.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amphitheatre of Venosa, 31, 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ampollina, river, 217, 219, 220.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amusa, river, 282.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Analphabetics, percentage of, 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>Anastasius, saint, 111.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Anchoretism, its charms, 112.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ancinale, river, 295.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Angels, injured by art-notions of Renaissance, 25; frescoes at Venosa, 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Animals, utilized as drugs, 57; cruelty to, 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Anne, saint, 250; wells dedicated to, 301.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Anopheles mosquito. See <i>Malaria.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Anthology, its dog-types, 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Apennines, their terminal peak, 145. Aphrodite, 25.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Apollo, 25, 27, 28, 209.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Appulus, King of Sipontum, 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aprustum, 119. See <i>Castrovillari.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aqueduct, the Apulian, 42.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arabs, bigots because half-starved, 126. See <i>Corsairs</i> and
+<i>Saracens.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Archytas, lav.-giver, 65, 92.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aretino, P., 140.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arfaxad, fabled king, 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Argo, highest literary dog-type, 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aristotle, 100, 101, 312.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arnold, Matthew, 120, 171.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arpi, town, 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arum lily <i>(A. aracunculus),</i> 143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arvo, river, 217, 220.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asceticism, introduction into south Italy, 251 <i>seq.;</i> its pernicious
+effects, 260.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aspromonte, 195, 240; reputation for crime, 245, 246; its contorted structure,
+270; Byzantine settlements in, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Athos, mount, 113.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Augustine, saint, 256.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Augustus, professes scorn of luxury, 92.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Avanti,&rdquo; a corrupt rag, 280.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ayrola, P., bishop, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Babylonia, Sultan of, 37.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Baedeker, 105.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bagnara, town, 240, 242.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bagpipes, 151, 155.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Balfour, A. J., 265.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Balzo, Pierro del, 37.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bandusian Fount, 43-46.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bantia (Banzi), 32.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Barbarano, a glen, 219.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Barbarossa. See <i>Frederick II.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Barbarossa, pirate-brothers, 140.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Barbers, their Hellenic loquacity, 81-82.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bari, compared with Taranto, 89.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Barletta, town, II.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Baronius, cardinal, 258.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Barrius, his <i>philopatria,</i> 142; on Calabrian rivers, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bartels, J. H., 123.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Earth, Dr. H., 306.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bartholomaeus, saint, 108.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basile, A., 69.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basilean monks, their convents, in, 113; supplanted by Benedictines, 113; their
+ideals, 115; convent of St. Adrian, 185.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basilicata, province, emigration from, 49; military road through, 123; old
+boundary of, 145; its bagpipes, 151, 155.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Batiffol, P., 113, 186, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bears in Calabria, 94, 146.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beatrix, princess, 7, 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beccaria, C. de, 276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beccarini family, 13.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beeches at Pollino, 146; in old Latium, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bellerophon, a dragon-slayer, 102.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Belmonte, prince, 49.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beltrano, O., 114.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benedict XIII, no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benedict, saint, 252.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benedictines, their architecture, 39; displace Basileans, 113,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beneventana, 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benincasa, Venerable Orsola, 255-256, 258.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benincasa, brigand, 213.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benjamin of Tudela, 81, 136.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benoth (Venus), 33.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bernard, saint, 250.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bernardo da Rogliano, biography of, 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bernhardi, Prof., 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bertaux, E., 39, 78, in, 186.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Biblioteca Calabra</i> in Naples, 93.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Birds, how to diminish slaughter of, 52; eaten raw, 56.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bisignano, town, 135, 194.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bivona, town, 320.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Black colour, of Saracens, 52, 130; of water, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blaev, J., 67.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blake, W., 190.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blanc, Jos., 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blood-letting, popular treatment of disease, 194.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blue, deficient colour-sense for, 51, 52.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boccaccio, 80, 260.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boccara, V., 228.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boemund, 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boissier, G., 46.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bollandists, in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bonghi, R., statesman, 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bordeaux, royal duel at, 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Borgia, village, 293.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Borjès, J., 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Botta, C., <i>quoted,</i> 122.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Botte Donato, mount, 122.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bourbons, their treatment of prisoners, n; persecute Albanians, 177, 183;
+protectors of forests, 218; their ecclesiastics and saints, 212, 260;
+conditions of Calabria under, 97, 298. See <i>Brigandage.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bourget, P., 296.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bova, town, 241, 245, 272-273.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bovio, G., statesman, 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bradano, river, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Breakfast in Italy, dislocates moral stability, 18, 125; responsible for
+homicides, 127.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Briar (bruyère), manufacture of pipes, 269.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brigands, at Venosa, 34; Longobucco, 202; in the Sila, 211 <i>seq.;</i>
+pensioned by Bourbons, 214; their crimes, 212, 215; their wealth, 215;
+interview with one, 245.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brigandage, extent of evil, 144; fostered by the church, 144, 215; by Bourbons,
+203, 212, 214, 215; by English, 212; its political character, 211, 214;
+repression of, 212-215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bronze of Siris,&rdquo; 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bruno, Giordano, 269.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bruno, physician of Longobucco, 202.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bruttians, misrepresented, 197; their characteristics, 208; respect for women,
+209; reputation for bloodthirstiness, 210.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Buchholtz, H., 190.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Buckle, H. T., 90.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Buffaloes at Policoro, 99.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bugliari, bishop, 183.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bugs, their medicinal properties, 105.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Burial, premature, 300.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Burnous, surviving in Italy, 20.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Byzantines, at Gargano, 17; a period of revival, in; their convents, 113, 186;
+survive in Aspramente, 272-274; confused with Albanians, 176,
+272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caietanus, O., 111.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Calabrere&rdquo; fur, 222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Calabria, used to include Apulia, 89; its great men and natural attractions,
+93; wild animals, 94; its inns, 106; race-character of natives, 109; their
+hardiness, 209; their philosophical bent, 291; inhabited before the flood, 119;
+situation of inland towns, i io, 200; their squalor, 128,206; older
+descriptions of, 134, 142; English travellers in, 181; modern French
+researches, 186; changeinlandscapeandclimate, 219, 241, 284-287; its rivers,
+286; wistfulness of scenery, 320. See <i>Malaria.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Calamo, river, 196.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Calascione Scordato,</i> a poem, 131.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Calendaro, river, io, 21.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Calypso, island, 284, 319.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Camorra, 57, 125, 279.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Campanella, T., philosopher, 282, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Campanula fragilis,</i> 225.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Campo di Bova, upland, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Campo Tenese, village, 123.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cantù, C., 190.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Capaccio, bishop of, 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Capasso, B., 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Capialbi, V., 136, 320.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Capmartin de Chaupy, on Bandusian Fount, 43-45.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caprasia. See <i>Tarsia.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carafa, village, 293.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carducci, commentator, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carducci, poet, 5.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carob-tree, its cultivation neglected, 49.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caroline, Queen, 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carthusian monasteries, 293-294.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caruso, brigand, 214.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Casalnuovo, village, 271, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caserta, palace of, 139, 204.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Casimir of Poland, prince, 75.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Casino, village, 207.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cassano, town, 121, 176.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cassiodorus, 221.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Castaldi, G., 284. Castel del Monte, 11, 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Castel del Monte, 11, 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Castel Fiorentino, 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Castelvetere. See <i>Caulonia. &ldquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Castle of the Giant,&rdquo; 19.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Castrovillari, its origin, 119; old town, 121; colony of Jews, 122.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Catacomb-worship, 27; at Venosa, 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cataldiados,&rdquo; a baroque poem, 67.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cataldo, saint, his shrine and biographies, 67.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Catanzaro, 172, 223; its museum, 224, 226.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Catherine of Siena, saint, 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cats in south Italy, 119-120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caulonia, a mediæval site, 281; its castle, 282; immunity from malaria, 284.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cavalotti, F., politician, 108-109.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cavara, Signor, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cave-worship, its origins and priestly uses, 23.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Celli, Prof., 288, 298.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cellular confinement, 240, 276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cemeteries in Italy, their charm, 2, 299.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cemetery of Reggio, 235.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cenna, surviving Roman family, chronicler of Venosa, 32, 33, 43.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Cerauli,</i> snake-killers, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cerchiara, village, 147.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cerino, brigand, 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cetara, Saracen stronghold, 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cetraro, erection of postal letter-box at, 304.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Charity, a form of self-indulgence, 311.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Charles of Anjou, 7-8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Chastity-ideal, poisons literature, 260.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cheeses of Pollino, 142, 149; of Sila, 221.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Chemists, an authoritative class, 105, 307.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cherub, a decayed conception, 24.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Chestnuts, destruction of, 220; of Tarentum, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Children, as wage-earners in America, 50; massacre of illegitimate, 59; sold
+by contract, 97; kidnapped for sale to Turks, 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+China, its dragon-god, 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cholera, 26, 128, 157, 172, 173.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Christian names, degeneration in, 57-58.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Church, Sir R., 77.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cicadas, their uses, 182; of Reggio, 284.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cimigliano, village, 205.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Circilla, upland, 219, 222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ciro, priest-brigand, 77.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cirò, its wine, 306.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cività, village, 153.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cluver, Ph., 175.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Coachmen, how to manage, 17.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cocynthum promontory (Punta di Stilo), 284.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Codex of Rossano, 114.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cœnobitism develops out of eremitism, 112-113.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colajanni, Prof., 278.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cola Pesce, the diver, 228-229.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colletta, P., 64, 212; <i>quoted,,</i> 213.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colognati, river, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Colonia Elena,&rdquo; 96.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colorito, convent, 143-144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colour-sense of peasantry, 51-52.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Columella, 80, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Column, Cape and temple-ruin at Cotrone, 301, 308, 318 <i>seq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Commercial travellers, an objectionable brood, 31, 296.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Comparetti, D., 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Condofuri, village, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Confessors and penitents, 258.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conradin, 7-8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Contranome,</i> the Happy Hazards of, 54-56.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Controra,</i> the ominous hour, 321.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cook, Eliza, 180.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cookery, English contrasted with Italian, 125.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Co-operation,&rdquo; a local journal, 206.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Copertino, town, 71.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Corace, river, 195.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Coral fisheries, abandoned, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Corigliano, town, 96, 115, 173, 184, 191.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Coronelli, V., 175.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Corsairs, destroy Manfredonia, 12; contrasted with Saracens, 138; their
+destructiveness, 139; depopulate sea-board, 140; crushed by steam, 141.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Corsi, F., 91.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cortese, Prof., 270.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Coscile (Sybaris), river, 122, 172, 175.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cose di Puglie,&rdquo; a remarkable book, 89.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cosenza, Saracenism at, 134, 135; a pleasant town, 160; corrupt administration
+of, 193; described by Pacicchelli, 208; intellectual record and malaria, 287,
+291.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costanza, Queen, 7, 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costanzo, A., 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costumes, female, of Morano, 130; of Albanian colonies, 152-153, 178, 182; of
+San Giovanni, 205-206; of Tiriolo, 225.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cotrone (Croton), 135, 207; its former size, 283; marshy surroundings, 286;
+recent revival, 297; lack of rainfall, 305.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cotronei, 184.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cotton-plant, 136. .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Courier, P. L., <i>quoted,</i> 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cows, shod for threshing corn, 121; their milk disparaged, 149; in the Sila,
+220; resuscitated from death, 261; of Cotrone, 301.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crati (Crathis), river, 108, 213, 287; its &ldquo;deluge,&rdquo; 174; change of
+course, 175; legend of, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Craven, Keppel, 80, 95, 294.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crimes committed by brigands, 212, 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crispi, F., 191.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cristiano,&rdquo; origin of term, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Croce Greca, a landmark, 195.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cropolati, village, 198.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crossbills, 205.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cruelty to animals, 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cryptomerias, futile love of, I, 83.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cuma;, 119.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cuomo, A., 264.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cuomo Library, Naples, 67.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cysat, J. L., 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Date-palm, 83, 136.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+D&rsquo;Azeglio, <i>quoted,</i> 217.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Death-penalty, preface of civilization, 276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Decentralization of south Italy, 194, 250, 303.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deforestation, impairs climate and national character, 12-13; fosters malaria,
+32, 286; in Apulia, 44; at Castrovillari, 121; in Pollino region, 147-148; in
+&ldquo;Greek&rdquo; Sila, 180, 195; in Greater Sila, 207, 217, 218, 223;
+diminishes water-supply, 180, 217; in Crati-valley, 287.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deities, sullied by vulgar contact, 24; must be plastic to survive, 25.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Delianuova, town, 240, 241, 245, 274.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Delizie Tarentine,</i> 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deluge, legend of, 174.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Democritus of Abdera, 312.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Demon of Midday, 321.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Demosthenes, 27, 279.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deputy, my friend the Roman, on the need of employing employes, 20; discusses
+octroi officials, 34; how to manage the bourgeoisie, 87; disapproves of English
+methods, 117-119.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Devil, his perennial popularity, 25; his honesty, 266.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Diabetic tendency inherent in all gods, 25.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Diehl, C., 108, 186.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dieting, improper, responsible for moral delinquencies, 126-127.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Diomed, city-founder, 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dog-eyed,&rdquo; opprobrious epithet, too, 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dogs, eaten as medicine, 57; their diet and appearance, 119; Greek attitude
+towards, 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dolcedorme, mountain-range, 108, 142, 143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dolomieu, C. de, 234.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Domicilio coatto,</i> system of, 276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dominican monks, 252, 258, 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dorsa, V., 310.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Draco volans.</i> See <i>dragon.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dragonara, Dragoneria, 112.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dragone, rivulet, 100.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dragon, synonymous with serpent, 100; possible prototypes in nature, 101; an
+animistic conception, 102; dragon-attributes and shapes, 103; recent
+degeneration of, 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Duret de Tavel, on game in Calabria, 95; on brigands, 202, 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Earth-movements, 284-285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Earthquakes, injure Venosa, 31, 38; Rossano, 113; Reggio and Messina, 230-239;
+Bagnara, 242; Sant&rsquo; Eufemia, 243; Bova, 273; their effect on coast-line,
+285. Eboli, C. d&rsquo;, 256.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ecclesiastics under Bourbons, prodigious numbers of, 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Edrisius,
+<i>quoted,</i> 109, 286, 298.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Education, Italian ideas on, 185.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eels, resuscitated from death, 261.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egidio, saint, 260-264.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elba, island, 240.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elia Junior, saint, in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elia Spelaeotes, saint, 111-112.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elias, saint, displaces Helios, 188.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elvira, Council of, 153.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Emigrants to America, their wine-bibbing propensities and intelligence, 21-22;
+other characteristics, 146, 209.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Emigration, reduces population, 28, 49, 209; its effect on the race, 48, 50,
+97, 194, 210; breaks up big properties, 289.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+English government, encourages brigandage, 212,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Englishmen, considered savages, 5.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+English mentality, contrasted with Italian, 66, 91, 117, 123, 124,
+179, 248, 265, 311.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+English travellers in south Italy, 181, 280.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ennius, 79.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Envy, prevalent native vice, 126, 127, 129.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ephesus, synod of, 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Epictetus, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Erasmus, 264.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eros, degenerates into Cupid, 25.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Esaro, river (i), 172.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Esaro, river (2), 297.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Espedito, saint, 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eucalyptus trees, a scandalous growth, 97, 98.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Euprassius, protospadarius of Calabria, 111.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Evelyn, John, 136.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Exmouth, Lord, 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eye-like appearance of fountains, originates dragon-legends, 100.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fabbrizia, town, 292, 293.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fair complexion, at Venosa, 33; prejudice against, 209; eliminated by malaria,
+225.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Falcone, N., 161.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fallistro, mountain, 196.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fallow-deer, now extinct, 95, 146.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Family, south Italian sense of, 124, 179, 279.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Fare figura,</i> an Italian trait, 65.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fata Morgana, 228.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ferdinand, king, 140, 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ferdinand the Catholic, 122.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ferdinandea, upland, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Festivals, nocturnal, 153.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Feudal conditions in Calabria, 97; re-creation of, 316.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fever. See <i>Malaria.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fever, Maltese, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fiamuri Arberit,&rdquo; Albanian journal, 190.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Figs, different varieties of, 50-51.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fiore, G., 113, 142, 175, 176, 186, 208, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Firs, 146, 203, 222, 269; used as cow-fodder, 149; white firs, 285, 295.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fishermen, their antique habits, 81.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fulminicà, river, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fleas, at Spinazzola, 63.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Flora, of mountain parts, 145, 223; change in distribution, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Floriacense, monastery, 207.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Flute, the double, 178.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Flying Monk. See <i>Joseph of Copertino.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Focà, village, 281; depopulated by malaria, 283; revival of, 289.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Foggia, 7, 8, 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forbiger, A., 195.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forense (Fiorenza), 32.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forests, of Policoro, 95; Pollino, 146-148; Sila, 204, 220; Italian, contrasted
+with Russian, 222; Gariglione, 222-223; of Serra, 295.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forgeries, literary, 143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortis, A., 228.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Fosse canarie,</i> 300.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fossombrone, town, 72.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fountains, connected with dragon-legends, 101-104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Francatripa, brigand, 211, 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Francavilla, town, 147.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Francesco di Paola, saint, 257.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Francis II, king, 214.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Francis of Assisi, saint, 18, 74, 75, 254.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Franciscan monks, 75, 160, 252, 258.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Frangipani, 7, 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Frederick II (Barbarossa), fortifies Lucera, 2; his affection for Saracens, 3;
+a modern type, 6; keeps a harem, 7; his treasures at Venosa, 37; introduces
+pheasants, 96.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Freemasonry, prevalence of, 183.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+French, their repression of brigandage, 144, 202, 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Frida, river, 151.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Frogs, as mosquito-catchers, 99.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fromentin, E., 155.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Frungillo, R., 261.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Galaesus, river, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Galateus (Ferrari, A. de&rsquo;), 89.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Galen, 283.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Galoppano, forestal station, 204.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gardens, public, at Lucera, I; Manfredonia, 14; Taranto, 83; Catanzaro, 224;
+Messina, 231.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gargano, mount, 2, 7, 21, 32; Byzantine influence at, 17.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Garibaldi, 183, 214, 240.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gariglione, forest, 222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gaudolino, valley of, 144, 157.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gay, Jules, 186.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gebhardt &amp; Harnack, on Codex of Rossano, 114.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gecko, reputed poisonous, 205, Gelasius, pope, 262.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Genista anglica,</i> 223.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Genovese, Dr. F., his malaria researches, 283, 284, 286, 290.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+George, saint, his dragon, 103.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gerace (Locri), 137, 274, 284, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Germanese</i> and <i>tedesco,</i> contradistinguished, 77.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gesner, Konrad, 100.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gessner, Salamon, 315.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Giadrezze, fountain, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Giangiuseppe della Croce, saint, 253-255, 263.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Giannone, P., 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gioia, town, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gioioso, town, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Giornale d&rsquo; Italia,&rdquo; <i>quoted,</i> 115.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Giovene, G., 89.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gissing, G., on Galaesus, 80; description of Reggio, 236; at Cotrone, 296-301;
+on Pythagoras, 309.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Giudice, G. del, 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gladstone, W. E., 190.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Glasgow, its morality, 154.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Glories of Mary,&rdquo; 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goats, a baneful quadruped, 149, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goethe, 237, 280.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gothic attitude towards nature, 42; towards religion, 266.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gourmont, R. de, 91.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Graffiti,</i> their sociological import, 200.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Grandis, de, 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Grano, panegyrist of Calabria, 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Grant, J., 242.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gratitude, southern sense of, 123.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gravière, J. de la, 141.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Grazie,&rdquo; a word seldom used, 123.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Greco, L. M., 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Greek Comedy, 153.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Greeks, medieval. See <i>Byzantines.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Greeks, their treatment of animals, 120; notions of gratitude, 123-124;
+survival of traits and words, 53, 81, 196, 209, 310; close observers of natural
+history, 100.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Green colour, in nature, 52; in mankind, 129.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gregorovius, F., 17, 88, 307. Grottaglie, town, 68, 77-79. Grottole, 77.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Grotto-apparitions, 23, 154. Guiscard, Robert, 137. Gumppenberg, G., 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guiscard, Robert, 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gumppenberg, G., 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Haller, C., 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hair-cutting, æsthetics of, 81.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hamilton, Sir W., 228, 242.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hannibal, 31, 64, 299.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Harnack, A., 114.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Haseloff, H. E. G., on purple Codex, 114.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hat of the Virgin Mary, 243, 265.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Haym, N. F., 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hearn, L., 209.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hehn, V., 222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Heinsius, D., 175.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helios, survives as St. Elias, 188.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hellenic art, its originality explained, 75. See <i>Greeks.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hepidanus, chronicler, 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hera, temple of. See <i>Column.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Heraclea, 89, 97.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Herbs, lore of, 58; on Mount Pollino, 142-143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Herculaneum, its buried treasures, 115.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hercules, 23, 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hermits in Calabria, 111-112.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Herodotus, 175.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hesiod, 100.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hippocratic oath, 297.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hipponium. See <i>Montdeone,</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hohenstaufen, their fate avenged, 6-8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Home, south Italian feeling for, 179.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Homer, his colour-sense, 52; on dragons, 100, 101; his idea of gifts, 123-124;
+his &ldquo;Ore of Temese,&rdquo; 202.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Homo ibericus,</i> 109.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Horace, 80, 154, 197; on Garganian winds, 21; his house at Venosa, 31; praises
+the simple life but enjoys good food, 41; the perfect anti-sentimentalist, 42;
+on Bandusian Fount, 43 <i>seq.;</i> approves of being genially unwise, 46; his
+<i>duplex ficus,</i> 51; hatred of avarice, 218.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Huillard-Bréholles, I. L. A., 37, 186.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Humanitarians, their ferocity, 312.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Humour in south Italy, 58.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Huxley, T. H., 264.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hymenæus, 39.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ibn Alathir, 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ibn Chaldun, 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Illegitimate infants, massacre of, 58-59.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Il Saraceno,&rdquo; journal, 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Imbriani, politician, 108.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Index, Congregation of, 260.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Industrialism, Italian craze for, 48, 148.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inn-keepers, how to deal with, 106-108.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Innocent IV., 7.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inquisition, 258, 260.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Intellectual undercurrent in south Italy, 33, 89, 188, 201.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Interesse&rdquo; (self-advantage), a guiding motive, 124.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ionic spirit, traces of, 208; defies religious asceticism, 252.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Iorio, A. di, 51.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Italian government, plays at numbering houses, 20; punishes original ideas, 35.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Italian heritage from Romans, 42, 277.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Italian music, its primitive appeal, 5, 231-232.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Italy, the original district so called, 195.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jackdaws, discard their voices, 37.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Janace, forest, 146.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Januarius, saint, 249, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Japygia, land of, 68.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jerome, saint, 153.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jesuits, 97, 249.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jesus Christ, how regarded, 248.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jews, colony at Venosa, 38; at Castrovillari, 122; at Caulonia and elsewhere,
+282; change in their race-characteristics, 126.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Johannes a S. Antonio, 162.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Johannes of Longobucco, 202.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John, saint, his blood, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Johnson-Cory, W., 315.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones, W. M., on malaria, 290.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joseph, saint, 250.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joseph of Copertino, saint, his biographies, 69; feats of aviation, 71-72;
+takes a passenger, 73; his semi-cretinism, 74; why born in a stable, 75;
+beatification and penitences, 76, 78.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Justice in south Italy, 278, 279.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Justinus, <i>quoted,</i> 221.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Juvenal, 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kant, E., 310.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kerrich, Mr., his briar-industry, 270.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kestrels, fishing for, 129.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kheir-eddin, pirate, 140.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+King and Okey, <i>quoted,</i> 279.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;King Marcone,&rdquo; brigand, 214.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kircher, A., <i>quoted,</i> 105.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kissing, in life and literature, 315.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Knox, John, 310.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Konrad von Hildesheim, <i>quoted,</i> 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Labonia, F. M., 202.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;La Cattolica,&rdquo; church at Stilo, ill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lagonegro, town, 147.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lakes, construction of artificial, 217; created by earthquakes, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lamartine, A. M., 190.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lamb, Charles, 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lambton Worm, a dragon, 102.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lamenti,&rdquo; plaints in rime, 140.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Landslides, their destructive frequency, 218; how repaired, 293.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;La Quistione Meridionale,&rdquo; a book, 278.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lasor a Varea (Savonarola), 67, 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Latin points of view, opposed to Gothic, 42, 266.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Latinisms of speech, survival of, 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Latronico, village, 147.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laurentius, bishop of Sipontum, 17.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lauria, Roger de, 7, 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Law-breaking, unsuspected joys of, 36.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lear, E., 40, in, 134.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lefroy, E. C., 315.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lenormant, F., on Manfredonia, 12; on Trinità abbey, 38; on Sybaris, 115; on
+Pandosia, 196; on Byzantine colonies, 272; at Bivona, 320; his zest of
+knowledge, 321.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leone da Morano, 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leoni, N., 131, 161, 228.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leoni (government official), 271.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leo XIII, 263.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lese, river, 205, 220.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lesina, 7, 21.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewes, G. H., 267.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ligorio, P., arch-forger, 143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Liguori, A. di, saint, 256, 257, 259, 260.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;L&rsquo; Inglese,&rdquo; brigand, 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lions of Lucera, 3; of Venosa, 32.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lipari, island, 276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lipuda, river, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lister, Lord, 312.;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Li Tartari, mountain, 196.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Livy, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lizard, the emerald, 205.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+L&rsquo; Occaso, author, 134.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Locri. See <i>Gerace.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lombroso, C., 128, 278.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Longobucco, 195; its &ldquo;Hotel Vittoria,&rdquo; 199, 201; situation, 200;
+intellectual life, 201; silver mines, 202.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorenzo, G. de, 39.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorenzo (Lawrence), saint, his dragon-legend, n, 102; his fat, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Louis of France, saint, 7.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Love of noise, a local trait, 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Love-affairs, how managed, 84-86.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lucanians, 197, 221.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lucca oil, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lucera, its castle, 2, 6; museum, 3; landscape in spring, 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lucifero, a sacrilegious bishop, 319.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ludwig II, complains of Saracens, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Luke, saint, paints Madonna portraits at Sipontum, 30; at Caulonia, 282; at
+Cotrone, 306.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lupi-Crisafi, author, 228.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lupoli, M. A., 31, 39.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Luther, his creed repressed, 252.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Luynes, duc de, 186.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Luzard (lynx), an absent-minded beast, 94, 222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lycanthropy, epidemic of, 176.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maccheroni, the art of engulphing, 297.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Macchia, village, 178, 180, 188 <i>seq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Madonna, declines in artistic worth, 24; her realistic diet, 61; <i>della
+Fita,</i> 93; <i>acbiropita,</i> 108, 113, 114; <i>del Patir,</i> in; her
+friendship with St. Nilus, 114; <i>del Castello,</i> 122; <i>della Libera,</i>
+140; <i>di Constantinopoli,</i> 140; of Pollino, picnic in honour of, 151
+<i>seq.; put up to auction,</i> 156; of Messina, 230, 237; absorbs Greek
+deities, 247; <i>dell&rsquo; Arco,</i> 249; <i>del Soccorso,</i> 249; of
+Pompei, 249; <i>of the Hens,</i> 250; displaces saint-worship, 248-251; her
+Sacred Hat, 243, 265; her Milk, 250; increases in popularity, 259, 264; <i>del
+Carmine,</i> 301.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maecenas, 41.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maffei, A., 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Magic, instances of sympathetic, 57; imported from Egypt, 58, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Magini, G. A., 97, 175.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Magna Mater, 108, 153, 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mahaffy, J. P., 124.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maida, plain of, 240, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Malaria, at Manfredonia, 12; at Sipontum, 30; Venosa, 32; Policoro, 98; old
+Sybaris, 115, 282-283; on Tyrrhenian sea-board, 241; at Focà, 283, 289; at
+Cotrone, 284, 291, 298; at Cosenza, 287, 291.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Malaria, votive offerings due to, 152; eliminates fair complexion, 225;
+propagated by deforestation, 32, 286, 287; by artificial irrigation, 241; by
+migrations of labourers, 284; by recent climatic changes, 285; by earthquake
+subsidences, 285; follows river-beds, 286; endemic for two thousand years, 283;
+contributes to decline of old civilizations, 290; ravages among French troops,
+241, 287; spread and significance of the disease, 287, 291; methods of
+combating, 288; results of quinine-policy, 289.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Male selection, among Hellenic races, 209.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Malizia</i> (cleverness), 47, 124.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mallock, W. H., 265.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Malpica, C., 114.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mammon, the god of emigrants, 22.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mammone, brigand, 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Manfred, his infatuation for Saracens, 3; fate of his sons, 8 j) his name
+survives, 45.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Manfredonia, its harbour, II; burnt by Corsairs, 12; wineshops and burglaries,
+15.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Manhes, General, his methods, 213, 214; at Bagnara, 242; at Serra, 293.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Manna ash, 93, 121.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Manzi, brigand, 214, 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marafioti, G., 143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marbles, on beach at Taranto, 9!; Roman technique of cutting, 92.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marcellinara, village, 205.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marcellus, tomb of, 31.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marchesato, district, 284.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marchianò, M., 188.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marchianò, S., 187.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marcone, N., 243.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marcus Aurelius, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Margaret, saint, gratifying results of her autopsy, 258.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marino, poet, 23, 169, 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mariolatry, engenders effeminate saints, 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marincola, L., 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marincola Pistoia, D., 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mark, saint, his church at Rossano, III; displaced by St. Rosalia, 247.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mars, 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Martial, 53, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Martorana, C., 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary, Virgin. See <i>Madonna.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Masci, A., 176.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mater Domini, convent, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matera, town, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matthew Paris, <i>quoted,</i> 7.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mattino,&rdquo; a venal daily, 303.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mazzara, town, 93.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mazzella, Sc., 136.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mazziotti, Prof. G., 183.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meander, river, 100.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Medicines, compounded from animals, 57.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mele, S., 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Melfi, town, 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Melito, town, 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Melliss, J. C., 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mendicino, village, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mephitis, goddess of malaria, 32.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mercer, Mr., 278.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mercury, 26, 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merenzata, river, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Messapians, 65.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Messina, its Fata Morgana, 228; legend of Cola Pesce, 228-229; public gardens,
+231; effects of earthquake, 236-239.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Metapontum, 119, 284, 289.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Metchnikoff, E., 68.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mice, eaten as medicine, 56.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Michael, saint, pre-renaissance relief of, 14; a cave-saint on Gargano, 17;
+childish and emasculate character, 23-29; affinities with older gods, 23, 26,
+27; stripped of his higher attributes, 28; a mere ghost, 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Middle Ages, their influence upon dragon-idea, 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Milk of the Virgin Mary, 250-251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Millionaires&rdquo; of Acri, 195; of Cotrone, 302.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Milo of Croton, defeats Sybarites, 196; devoured by wolves, 222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Milosao,&rdquo; Albanian rhapsodies, 190, 191.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Milton, indebtedness to S. della Salandra, 160 <i>seq.;</i> to other Italian
+poets, 169; friendship with Marquis Manzo, 168, 169; manuscripts at Cambridge,
+170; his &ldquo;grand manner,&rdquo; 171.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Minasi, A., 228.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Minieri-Riccio, C., 160.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Misasi, N., 294.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mistletoe, on fir-trees, 203.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mithra, 27, 309.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moens, Mr., captured by brigands, 214.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moltedo, F. T., 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mommsen, T., 31.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Monasterace, village, 281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Monasteries, develop out of hermitages, 112; refuge of brigands, 144, 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Monastic orders, competition between, 258.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mondragone, mountain, 102.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Monk, the Flying. See <i>Joseph of Copertina.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Monnier, M., 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Montagna del Principe,&rdquo; 123, 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Montalto, mountain, 269, 274.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Montanari, G. I., 69, 74.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Monteleone (Hipponium), town, 119, 137, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Monte Nero, 217, 220.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Montorio, S., 114, 259, 264, 282.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Monumentomania, an Italian disease, 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moon, superstitions regarding, 59.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moore, John, 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morality, to be expressed in physiological terms, 126.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morano, its great age and greater filth, 128; Saracen memories, 130; its
+literary glories, 131, 132.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morelli, T., 177, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moritz, K. P., 140.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morone, C., 67.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morosi, G., 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moscato, author, 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Motor services, replace diligence, 123, 225.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mountains, Italian dislike of, 143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Movers, F. C., 56.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mucone (? Acheron), river, 195-197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Müller, Max, 51.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Müller, Prof., 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Münter, F., 229.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Murat, 123, 213, 214.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Muratori, L. A., 13, 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Murders, due to wine-bibbing, 244, 246.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Murge hills, 63, 64.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Museum, of Lucera, 3; Taranto, 88; British, 119, 161, 197; of Catanzaro, 224,
+226, 316; Reggio, 236.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mushroom-stone, 93, 222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Musolino, brigand, 211, 270, 272; his fate, 240; episodes of, 271, 281; a
+victim of inept legislation, 275, 278.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mussulman epitaph, 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mutilomania, an Italian disease, 83.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mythopoetic faculty, blighted by misrule, 100.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Naples, its catacombs, 25, 247; municipality and octroi-system, 34; survival of
+Hellenic traits at, 53; scandal of Foundling Hospital, 59; camorra, 125;
+corrupt police-force, 279; its daily press, 303.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Napoleon, protects trees, 218.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nardo di Pace, village, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nasi, ex-minister, his trial, 280.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nau, cape. See <i>Column.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+National monuments, neglected, 39.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neaithos, river. See <i>Neto.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neri, Filippo, saint, 258.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neto (Neaithos), river, 205, 206, 219, 220; wine of district, 307; change in
+landscape, 314.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Newspapers andpublic opinion, 277; characteristics of local,3O3-305.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;New York Times,&rdquo; on Sybaris, 116.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nicastro, town, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Niceforo, A., 252.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nicephoras Phocas, 81, 281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Niehbuhr, B. G., 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nilus, builder-saint, 114.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nilus, saint, 105, 108, no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nissen, H., 219.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Noepoli, village, 149.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nola-Molisi, G. B., 298, 320.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nordau, M., 74.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Normans, buried at Venosa, 38; their behaviour in Sicily, 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+North, W., 290.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nowairi, historian, 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nutrition, its effect upon physique and morals, 125-127.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oaks (<i>Quercus cerris</i>), 222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octroi, a mediæval abomination, 34-36, 66, 90.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Odours, susceptibility of natives to, 52, 318.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oenotrians, a useful tribe, 130.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Okey, T., 279.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olive oil, export from Palmi, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oria, town, 65.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Orsini tower, Taranto, 67.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Otter, a rare animal, 184.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Otto II., 135, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Otto-Nove!</i> charm-formula, 310.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ouida, 45, 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oysters of Taranto, 81.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pacicchelli, G. B., 12, 208, 282, 294.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paestum, 119, 137, 283, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paganism, survival of, 248.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paleparto, mountain, 196.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Palermo, behaviour of Normans in, 137; metropolis of Saracens, 138; its
+percentage of homicides, 276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pallagorio, village, 315.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Palmi, its oil-industry, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pandosia, ancient city, 196, 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paoli, Monsieur, 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paracorio, village, 245.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Paradise Lost,&rdquo; its presumable prototypes, 160; derived from
+Salandra&rsquo;s work, 161 <i>seq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Parafante, brigand, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Parenti, village, 211.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Parisio, P., 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Parrino, D. A., 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pascale, V., 284.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Patir (Patirion), monastery, in, 113-116, 186.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Patriarchalism, its break-up in South Italy, 48 <i>seq.;</i> makes for
+inefficiency, 226; shattered by judiciary abuses, 275, 279. See
+<i>Peasantry.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Patrick, saint, 262.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paul, saint, invoked against poisonous beasts, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paulinus, bishop, 151, 247.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Peasantry, oppressed by taxes, 35; their virtues and vices, 47; break-up of
+patriarchal habits, 48, 53; their anthropomorphic language, 50; defective
+colour-sense, 51-52; their system of nicknames, 54-56; degeneration in culture
+and modern revival, 57, 58, 97; their destructive avarice, 218. See
+<i>Emigration.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Pecorara,</i> a rustic dance, 152.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pelasgic language and race, 187, 189, 191.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pelicaro, district, 97.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pellegrini, A., 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Penal code of Italy, need for its revision, 276, 278, 279.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pentedattilo, mountain, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pepe, G., 298.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pericles, 152.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perrey, G., 294.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Persius Flaccus, 284.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Petelia. See <i>Strongoli.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Petelia Policastro, town, 184.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Peter, saint, baptizes natives, 29, 282; legend of, 60.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Petronius, 302.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pettinascura, mountain, 204, 220.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Peutinger&rsquo;s Tables, no, 281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Phædrus, 322.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Phallic cult at Venosa, 40.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pharmacy-club, how to secure membership, 106.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pheasants, 96.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philo Judseus, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Physical conditions affecting race-character, 90, 126.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Piano di Carmelia, upland, 269.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Piedigrotta, festival, 52.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Piè d&rsquo; Impisa, mountain, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pietra-Sasso, a landmark, 148.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pigs, in streets, 128, 206, 207; their food, 173; can detect werewolves, 176.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pilgrims, at Lucera, 4; at Sant&rsquo; Angelo, 18; their specific odour and
+capacity for mischief, 19; foul appearance, 27; a debased Christianity, 28;
+behaviour at Venosa, 40.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pines, absent in Pollino forests, 146; the Calabrian variety, 196, 204; of
+Aleppo, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pious legends, their drawback, 262.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Piracy. See <i>Corsairs</i> and <i>Saracens.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pitch, the Bruttian, 204, 285, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pitrè, G., 300.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Platitudes, Italian and English love of, 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Plato, <i>quoted,</i> 116; his cloudy philosophy, 311; food for adolescents,
+312.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pleasure, danger of repressing, 153.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pliny the Elder, 80, 281, 284, 285, 307.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pococke, R., 121.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poets, why deficient in humour, 58.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Policoro, forest, 95 <i>seq.;</i> its game, 96; eucalyptus avenue, 97;
+buffaloes, 99.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Polistena, town, 234.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pollino, mountain,, 108; derivation of the name, 142; the peak, 143-145;
+terminates Apennines, 145; its forests, 145-148.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Polybius, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pompeio, fountain, 196.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pontanus, humanist, 18.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ponza, island, 276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pope, A., prince of snobs, 127.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Porcupine, approaching extinction, 184.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Potenza, 32.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Potteries of Grottaglie, 78; of Taranto, 92; of Corigliano, 173.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pratilii, F. M., 143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Praxiteles, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Preconi, H., 78.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Prehistoric stations in South Italy, 119; weapons, 3, 119, 179, 224.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Priests, parasitic on families, 4; their attitude towards superstitions, 59;
+their acquisitiveness, 60; a decayed profession, 60, 154; fight on side of
+brigands, 215; connaisseurs of wine, 3O7-
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Privacy, lack of feeling for, 66.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Procida, John of, 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Proclus, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Procopius, 109.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Properties, large, their break-up, 96; synonymous with malaria, 289.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Propertius, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ptolemy, 281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Public opinion, non-existent, 277.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Puccini, archbishop, recommends fetishism, 26.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pythagoras, 282; explanation of his popularity, 309; a glorified marabout, 311.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quinine-policy, governmental. See <i>Malaria.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Race-characters, delusion as to their immutability, 91, 126. Rada, G. de,
+Albanian prophet, 187; his mystic tendencies, 189;
+patriotic labours, 190 <i>seq.;</i> his death, 192.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ragona, village, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Railway stations in Italy, 117, 118.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rainfall, diminution in, 217, 241, 285, 306.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rath, G. von, 287.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rathgeber, G., 175.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rationalist Congress of 1904, leads to counter-demonstration, 32, 269.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reggio, 135, 137; effects of earthquake, 234, 236; its cemetery, 235.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Regio, P., 256.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Relics, sacred, 208, 247, 251, 263.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Religion in south Italy, its intense realism, 60; contrasted with English, 265.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renaissance, injures angelic shapes, 25; produces historical panegyrists, 142;
+falsifies place-names, 196; imports Pythagoras and Plato, 311.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rhaetia, its dragons, 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rhetoric, perverts course of justice, 276, 277.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rhodiginus (Richerius, L. C.), 197.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ricca, brigand, 211.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Riccardi, A., 155.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Riedesel, J. H., 298.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rivarol, J. E. A., 212.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rivers in Calabria, their destructive floods, 99, 197, 286; their numbers, 286;
+once navigable, 174, 284; arteries of malaria, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rizzi-Zannone, G. A., 97.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rizzo, an amiable priest, 109.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rizzuto, cape, 318.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Robinias, why beloved of municipalities, 83.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rocca Bernarda, town, 117.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Roccaforte, village, 271, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rocchetta, station, 31.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rocella Ionica, town, 274, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rodotà, P. P., 177, 273.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Roghudi, village, 271, 272.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rogliano, town, 195, 211.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Romans, their lack of imagination, 32; their <i>pittas,</i> 33; pacification of
+wild nature, 42; marble-cutting technique, 92; their republican stoicism, 126.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Romanticists, their feeling for nature, 42.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Roque, saint, 39.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rosalia, saint, 247.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rosarno, town, 241.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Roscia (Rossano), no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rosis, de, no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ross, Sir R., 287, 290.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rossano, accommodation at, 105-108; character of inhabitants, 109; its
+situation, no; importance under Byzantines, 111.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rossi, D. A., 69, 71, 74, 77.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rouse, Dr. W. H. D., 152.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ruffo, cardinal, 64, 212, 215, 298.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Rusalet,</i> a dance, 178.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ruscianum (Rossano), 110.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ruskin, J., 90.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Russell, Lord Odo, 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rutilius Namatianus, 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sagra, river. See <i>Alaro.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saints, their pathological symptoms, 74; unavoidable lack of originality, 75,
+253; male type replaced by females, 247-251; their baroque period, 253-257;
+manufactured by monks and confessors, 258, 267; mutilated after death, 263;
+their Bourbon period, 260 <i>seq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salandra, S. della, his &ldquo;Adamo Caduto&rdquo; inspires &rdquo;Paradise
+Lost,&rdquo; 160 <i>seq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salis Marschlins, U. von, 67, 271.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Benedetto Ullano, town, 183.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sanchez, G., 78, 102.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Cosimo, village, 180.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Demetrio Corone, its dirty streets, 181; Albanian church, 182; college for
+boys, 183-185; convent of Sant&rsquo; Adriano, 185.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sandys, G., 121.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Floro, M., 217.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Francesco, convent, 77.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Gervasio, old church and fountain at, 43; fountains identified
+with <i>Fons Bandusiae,</i> 43-46.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Giorgio (Apulia), 65.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Giorgio (Calabria), 176, 180.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Giovanni in Fiore, 195, 203; its women, 205; unhygienic conditions, 206.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Nicola, village, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sanpaulari,</i> snake-killers, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Severo, town, 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+San Severino, village, 147, 155
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sant&rsquo; Adriano, convent, 185-186.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sant&rsquo; Angelo and its shrine, 17; modern worshippers in
+the cave, 19, 27-28.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Santa Barbara, upland, 204.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sant&rsquo; Eufemia, village, 240, 243.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Santa Sofia d&rsquo; Epiro, village, 180.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Santo Stefano, village, 222, 271.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Santo Stefano, island, 240.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sappho, 116.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saracena, village, 131.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saraceno, mountain, 20.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>&ldquo;</i>Saraceno,&rdquo; term of abuse, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saracens, at Lucera, 3; at Gargano, 20; their &ldquo;black&rdquo; colour, 52,
+130; at Morano, 130; Saracenic survivals, 134, 138; raids into south Italy,
+135, 137; their benefits, 136; excesses, 137; contradistinguished from
+Corsairs, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sarmento, river, 148.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sarnelli, P., 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saserna, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Savastano, L., 49.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Savelli, village, 179, 205, 207, 293.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Savonarola, author. See <i>Lasor a Varea.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Savonarola, monk, 309.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scanderbeg, 65, 176.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scarolla, brigand, 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Scemo&rdquo; (soft-witted), the unforgivable sin, 107, 124.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scheuchzer, J. J., 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Schneegans, A., 228.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Schulz, H. W., 39, 202.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scido, village, 270.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scilatio, 281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scirocco, south wind, its effect upon landscape, io; on character, 90.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sculco, Dr., 297.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scylla, 240.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sdrago,&rdquo; the dragon, 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sebethus, river, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Seicentismo,&rdquo; blight of south Italy, 252.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Selva Umbra, forest, 21.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Semi-starvation, demoralizing effects of, 41.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seneca, 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Serpents, assimilated with dragons, 100; our early hatred of, 105.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Serra San Bruno, 293, 295.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Servius, 281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sheep, and wolves, 221.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shem, son of Noah, 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shepherds, of Sila, 221; of Cotrone, 301; their kissing propensities, 315.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sicily, under Saracens, 136; under Normans, 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sigilgaita, 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sila, mountain plateau, its three divisions, 195; the &ldquo;Greek&rdquo; Sila,
+176; Greater Sila, its landscape, 204; Bruttian inhabitants, 208; compared with
+Scotland, 219; vegetation, 220; the Lesser Sila, 223.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silenziario, P., 91.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silver mines, of Longobucco, 202.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sin, an export-article, 256.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sinno, river, 95, 99, 149, 286.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sinopoli, 240, 243, 244.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sipontum, its famous church, 29; wholly desolate, 30.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sirens, as fountain ornaments, 45.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sirino, mountain, 151.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Siris, ancient city, 95.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sixtus V, 213, 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slavery, 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Snakes, their colour, 52; medicinal uses, 57; destroyed with spittle, 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Socialism in Italy, 96.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soria, F. A., 143.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+South Italy, its recent revival, 91, 298.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soverato, town, 295.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spanish Viceroys, blighting effects of their rule, 57, 252, 253; enactments
+against Barbary pirates, 139; conservators of forests, 218.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spano-Bolani, D., 134.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spartacus, 214.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spezzano Albanese, town, 172-174.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spinazzola, town, 62-64.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spinelli&rsquo;s chronicle, a forgery, 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spleen, importance of this organ, 152, 307.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Squillace, town, 135, 295.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stagno Salso, lake, 21.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Staiti, town, 272. Stamer, W. J. A., 50.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Statius, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stendhal, <i>quoted,</i> 125, 276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stilo, town, in, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stoics, victims of misfeeding, 126.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stomach-diseases, prevalence of, 126.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stone of Saint Michael,&rdquo; a fraudulent article, 23, 26.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strabo, 23, 80, 87, 197, 204, 283, 284.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strongoli (Petelia), 224, 314, 316.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sturgeon, caught at Cotrone, 320.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sugar-cane, formerly cultivated, 136.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suicides look manly, 84.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sulphur mines, 315.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Summonte, G. A., 140.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swammerdam, J., 105.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swedenborg, E., 310.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swinburne, A., 116.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swinburne, H., 78, 115, 319.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sybaris, 89, 108, 195; its buried wealth, 115; destruction of, 175, 196, 311;
+presumably malarious of old, 115, 282-283.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sybaris, river. See <i>Coscile.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sybarites, contrasted with Byzantine monks, 115.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Symonds, J. A., 115.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tajani, F., 177.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Talarico, brigand, 214.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tarantolla, dance, 93.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taranto, the arsenal quarter, 65-67; its octroi impositions, 66, 90; old town,
+67; inland sea, 68, 80, 90; fishermen and barbers, 81; love-making on the
+Corso, 84; its slumberous inhabitants, 87-90; museum and public library, 88,
+89; marbles on the beach, 91.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tarsia (Caprasia), village, 174, 194; its malaria, 287.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tassulo, Pilati de, 183, 228.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taverna, town, 223.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Temese, ore of, 202.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Temples, destruction of, 136, 137. .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tenore, M., 146.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Termula (Termoli), 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Terracciano, N., 145.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Terranova di Pollino, 143, 148.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Terranova di Sibari (Thurii), 175, 282, 283.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theatine monks, 113.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theocritus, 8i, 269, 285, 301, 314; his human appeal, 315.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theodoret, bishop, <i>quoted,</i> 152.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theophrastus, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Third sex, its significance, 116, 257.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thirsty Apulia,&rdquo; origin of the phrase, 15.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thucydides, 284, 298.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thurii. See <i>Terranova ài Sibari.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Timber construction replaced by stone, 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tiriolo, town, 225-226.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tischbein, J. H. W., 319.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toledo, Pietro di, 252-253.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tolù, brigand, 211.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toppi, N., 144, 162.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Torrent-beds, their charm, 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tortoises, used as medicine, 57.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tozer, H. F., 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Traeis, river. See <i>Trionto.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Treasure, buried at Lucera, 8, 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Trede, T., 258.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tree-planting, discouraged in cities, 65, 66.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tree-torturing, a southern trait, 83.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tremiti islands, n.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Trinità, abbey at Venosa, 37-40.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Trinità, column at Taranto, 67.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Trinity, southern conception of, 250.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Trionto (? Traeis), river, 195-200.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Troia, town, 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tromby, B., 294.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Trotter, Prof. A., 223.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Troubadours, their idea of nature, 42.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Truthfulness, a modern virtue, 266.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tufarelli, G. L., 128, 131, 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Turco,&rdquo; colour known as, 52.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tutini, C., 294.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ughelli, F., 43, 45, 114.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ulpian, 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ultramontain,&rdquo; author, 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Urban VIII, 72, 110, 262.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Uromastix lizard, 101.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Uruj, pirate, 140.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Utilitarianism in south Italy, 43, 57, 126, 218.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vaccarizza, village, 174, 176, 179, 180, 184, 224.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Varrò, 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vatican, authorizes cruelty to animals, 120; attitude towards
+Byzantinism, 248.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Velasquez, 140.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Venosa, survival of Roman blood and habits, 32; its rustic dirt, 33; castle,
+37; abbey of Trinità, 37-40; catacombs, 38; bad food, 41.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Venus, gives name to Venosa, 33; marble head of, 92.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Verace, watershed, 195, 196, 204.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Verde antico,</i> marble, 91.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vespoli, G. F., 298.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Viceregal period. See <i>Spanish Viceroys.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vieste, village, 7, 21.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Viggianello, village, 157.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vigilantius of Marseilles, 153.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Villa Beaumont, Taranto, 83.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Villari, P., 191.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Vincolo forestale,</i> its provisions disregarded, 218.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Virgil, 42, 46, 80, 284, 285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Virtù,&rdquo; retains antique meaning, 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vitiello, night-quarters at, 149-150.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vito, saint, struggles with Madonna, 92.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Voltaire, 76, 170, 262.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Votive offerings, 152.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vulture <i>(Gyps fulvus),</i> 184.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vulture, mountain, 2, 13, 21, 32, 41.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vulturnus wind, 41, 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wagner, J. J., 104.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Waiblinger, F. W., 141.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Waldensian colonies, 122.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Waldstein, Sir C., 115.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wantley, dragon of, 102.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wedding, an Albanian, 182.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wedding-present, a civilized, 89.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Werewolves, 176.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wine, of Sant&rsquo; Angelo, 22; Venosa, 41; Bova, 273; of Calabria, 306-307.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Witchcraft, 58.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wolves, at Pollino, 149; in Sila, 220-222; at Cotrone, 318. Women, of San
+Giovanni, 205; respected among non-Hellenic races, 208; superstitions
+regarding, 209; of coast-towns, 299.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wood-pigeon, 269.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Xenocrates, <i>quoted,</i> 252.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yoni-worship, at Venosa, 40.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Zavarroni, A., 93, 183.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Zicari, F., his literary record, 161; on &ldquo;Paradise Lost,&rdquo; 161-168.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Zodiaco di Maria,&rdquo; exemplifies Catholic paganism, 259.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Zoophilomania, an English disease, 120.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
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