Friday, April 15, 2011

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Answer Key

Frascati: A small town seated in the hills outside of Rome. Fifty minutes away by train. Known for its white wine

The Vatican: The Vatican

Castel Gandolfo: A small town on a lake, which used to be a volcano. The Pope makes his summer residence here, in a modest villa over looking the steep cliffs that slope down to black sand.

Pisa: The city with that one tower. The same street vendor will try to sell the same watch to you atleast four times in ten minutes.

Florence: Bellisima. Birth place of the Renaissance which straddles the River Arno. There is sure a lot of art here.

Hemingway: Farewell to Arms, and the collected short stories.

'The Wasteland': T.S. Eliot. Inspiration.

Nastro Azzuro: "Blue Ribbon". The Italian Pabst.

Open: Bar of choice. Italian Micro brews and chips, with a good vibe.

The Eight Line: The tram that runs from Centro Historico to my Apartment. Atleast an hour and a half is spent everyday on these tracks.

'Writ in Water': Excerpt from John Keats' epitaph. Also inspiration.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Rewind

Three weeks in eleven titles/places.

Frascati
The Vatican
Castel Gandolfo
Pisa
Florence
Hemingway
'The Wasteland'
Nastro Azurro
Open
The Eight Line
'Writ in Water'

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Sunday, February 6, 2011

Jabberwocky

Bomarzo sits in the Italian hills. Another town with winding roads that offer blind turns on the edge of cliffs. Follow these curves down long enough, and you are led to a wooded valley called Sacro Bosco. In Sacro Bosco lay monolithic carvings in stone; statues of gods, dragons, nymphs, and elephants that rise covered in moss. This is Parco dei Mostri, born from the mind of a wealthy Italian hunchback. It is quiet, it is fantastic, and it is ancient. Cryptic quotes guide the walker along crooked paths. This is where the rabbit hole leads, this is wonderland.


Wednesday, January 19, 2011

She Wolves in the City of the Dead

The inexorable link between the Etruscans and the Romans is seen in the Statue of the She Wolf who took in the founding brother of Rome, Romulus and Remus and as we wound up winding hill side roads we met her. Her teets hanging down as she led us to the Necropolis. Not the original but close enough, it was a yellow lab, that had just had a litter. Down the cypress lined road she ran, craning her neck back periodically to see if we were still following intently to the city of the dead.

Here, we walked down streets past homes that housed the dead, through a town carved out of Tufa rock sitting in the between the hills of Lazio and Tuscany. This Necropolis is where the Etruscans buried their dead. Large circular mounds, called Tumuli, dot the landscape rising from volcanic rock monolithically. Dating back to the sixth century, these are the remnants of the original Italians.

Though it was not the tombs, but the Bitch that reminded of the beginnings of Rome. As always, is it not what you go to see, but what caught your eye along the way.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Here lies One Whose Name was writ in Water.

Behind the Piramide are bodies, lying in plots of Il Cimitero Accatolico Di Roma. Here there is a population of cats that move silently among the stones. These tailed wraiths keep watch over the remains while Cypress trees rise conically above the surrounding Roman walls. Since 1730, this cemetery has been in use as the burial ground for non-catholics living in Papal Rome. Here lies John Keats and Percy Shelley. They rest under headstones, modest in comparison to their neighbors. Their epitaphs, the epitaphs of Romantics.


Shelley:

Percy Bysshe Shelley

Cor Cor Dium

Natus IV Aug MDCCXCII

OBIT VIII Jul MDCCCXXII

Nothing of him that doth fade
But doth suffer a sea=change
Into something rich and strange


Keats:

This Grave
contains all that was Mortal,
of a
YOUNG ENGLISH POET
Who
on his death bed
in the bitterness of his heart
at the malicious power of his enemies
desired
these words to be engraven on his tomb stone

"Here lies One Whose Name was writ in Water"

Feb 23rd 1821







Io sono senza parole come loro sono.

Monday, January 10, 2011

North of Prati is a long way from home.

Always remember the Tiber flows south, the Vatican is on the west bank, and the Colosseum is to the east. These cardinal directions will help you avoid traveling the opposite way of home. When forgotten or neglected, you may end up an hour and a half walk from your desired destination. At this point when you ask for directions in your broken Italian, the hotel manager, the garbage man, the diner cashier, and the policeman, will point the opposite direction you have been traveling and say 'Get a taxi, you are a long way from there.' Seeing as you have oriented yourself wisely to this point, it would only make sense that you have money for a taxi. Unbelievably, you do not. Here you begin to power-walk. Here your quads, hamstrings, calves, and other muscles located in the lower extremities begin to ache. Here you know it will be a rough morning. You drank, you got lost, you fell asleep on the living room floor, and that Italian girl gave you her number somewhere along the way.

In the morning, you'll make an egg over easy, and have a slice of toast. You'll feel better, but then again when did you ever stop feeling good. La dolce vita.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

A White Puegot

I landed. Spent a tired day, and then left.

Off to Orvieto in a white Puegot. Frank, Andy, and I switching off at the wheel. One out of three of us knowing how to drive stick.

In Sacrofano, a town with winding cobblestone roads and stray dogs, I was taught. First, driving foward shifting into first and then reversing. The gravel driveway of a truck owning Italian being too small to completely turn the car around. We spent an hour at it, burning pock marks in the gravel. After this short hour, Frank deemed it only appropriate that we move out onto the hillside roads of rural Italy. No better time to learn than the present, no better time to anger Italian women with stalling the car in front of them. Fortunately, I can't understand quite yet what they are calling me, or to how many Saints they are cursing my name. The Autostrada was smoother. No starting or stopping, except at the tollbooths. Oh the tollbooths. We decided they didn't count in our daily stall count. They would have caused too much inflation of the number.

We made it to Orvieto, the car in one piece, our hands shaking. Mine and Andy's from white-knuckled driving. Frank's probably a factor or his age.

The drive back was smoother. I guess we improved. Oh and Orvieto, the medieval town high on a hill, glowing in the night was gorgeous. But, I think I'll remember the drive.