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the complete writings-2-第41章

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in the face of the cliff; and caves and caverns; natural and artificial: for one can cut this tufa with a knife; and it would hardly seem preposterous to attempt to dig out a cool; roomy mansion in this rocky front with a spade。

As we pull away; I begin to see the depth of the plain of Sorrento; with its villages; walled roads; its groves of oranges; olives; lemons; its figs; pomegranates; almonds; mulberries; and acacias; and soon the terraces above; where the vineyards are planted; and the olives also。  These terraces must be a brave sight in the spring; when the masses of olives are white as snow with blossoms; which fill all the plain with their sweet perfume。  Above the terraces; the eye reaches the fine outline of the hill; and; to the east; the bare precipice of rock; softened by the purple light; and turning still to the left; as the boat lazily swings; I have Vesuvius; the graceful dip into the plain; and the rise to the heights of Naples; Nisida; the shining houses of Pozzuoli; Cape Misenum; Procida; and rough Ischia。  Rounding the headland; Capri is before us; so sharp and clear that we seem close to it; but it is a weary pull before we get under its rocky side。

Returning from Capri late in the afternoon; we had one of those effects which are the despair of artists。  I had been told that twilights are short here; and that; when the sun disappeared; color vanished from the sky。  There was a wonderful light on all the inner bay; as we put off from shore。  Ischia was one mass of violet color; As we got from under the island; there was the sun; a red ball of fire; just dipping into the sea。  At once the whole horizon line of water became a bright crimson; which deepened as evening advanced; glowing with more intense fire; and holding a broad band of what seemed solid color for more than three quarters of an hour。  The colors; meantime; on the level water; never were on painter's palette; and never were counterfeited by the changeable silks of eastern looms; and this gorgeous spectacle continued till the stars came out; crowding the sky with silver points。

Our boatmen; who had been reinforced at Capri; and were inspired either by the wine of the island or the beauty of the night; pulled with new vigor; and broke out again and again into the wild songs of this coast。 A favorite was the Garibaldi song; which invariably ended in a cheer and a tiger; and threw the singers into such a spurt of excitement that the oars forgot to keep time; and there was more splash than speed。  The singers all sang one part in minor: there was no harmony; the voices were not rich; and the melody was not remarkable; but there was; after all; a wild pathos in it。  Music is very much here what it is in Naples。  I have to keep saying to myself that Italy is a land of song; else I should think that people mistake noise for music。

The boatmen are an honest set of fellows; as Italians go; and; let us hope; not unworthy followers of their patron; St。 Antonino; whose chapel is on the edge of the gorge near the Villa Nardi。  A silver image of the saint; half life…size; stands upon the rich marble altar。  This valuable statue has been;; if tradition is correct; five times captured and carried away by marauders; who have at different times sacked Sorrento of its marbles; bronzes; and precious things; and each time; by some mysterious providence; has found its way back again;an instance of constancy in a solid silver image which is worthy of commendation。  The little chapel is hung all about with votive offerings in wax of arms; legs; heads; hands; effigies; and with coarse lithographs; in frames; of storms at sea and perils of ships; hung up by sailors who; having escaped the dangers of the deep; offer these tributes to their dear saint。  The skirts of the image are worn quite smooth with kissing。  Underneath it; at the back of the altar; an oil light is always burning; and below repose the bones of the holy man。


The whole shore is fascinating to one in an idle mood; and is good mousing…ground for the antiquarian。  For myself; I am content with one generalization; which I find saves a world of bother and perplexity: it is quite safe to style every excavation; cavern; circular wall; or arch by the sea; a Roman bath。  It is the final resort of the antiquarians。  This theory has kept me from entering the discussion; whether the substructions in the cliff under the Poggio Syracuse; a royal villa; are temples of the Sirens; or caves of Ulysses。  I only know that I descend to the sea there by broad interior flights of steps; which lead through galleries and corridors; and high; vaulted passages; whence extend apartments and caves far reaching into the solid rock。  At intervals are landings; where arched windows are cut out to the sea; with stone seats and protecting walls。  At the base of the cliff I find a hewn passage; as if there had once been here a way of embarkation; and enormous fragments of rocks; with steps cut in them; which have fallen from above。

Were these anything more than royal pleasure galleries; where one could sit in coolness in the heat of summer and look on the bay and its shipping; in the days when the great Roman fleet used to lie opposite; above the point of Misenum?  How many brave and gay retinues have swept down these broad interior stairways; let us say in the picturesque Middle Ages; to embark on voyages of pleasure or warlike forays!  The steps are well worn; and must have been trodden for ages; by nobles and robbers; peasants and sailors; priests of more than one religion; and traders of many seas; who have gone; and left no record。  The sun was slanting his last rays into the corridors as I musingly looked down from one of the arched openings; quite spellbound by the strangeness and dead silence of the place; broken only by the plash of waves on the sandy beach below。  I had found my way down through a wooden door half ajar; and I thought of the possibility of some one's shutting it for the night; and leaving me a prisoner to await the spectres which I have no doubt throng here when it grows dark。  Hastening up out of these chambers of the past; I escaped into the upper air; and walked rapidly home through the narrow orange lanes。




ON TOP OF THE HOUSE

The tiptop of the Villa Nardi is a flat roof; with a wall about it three feet high; and some little turreted affairs; that look very much like chimneys。  Joseph; the gray…haired servitor; has brought my chair and table up here to…day; and here I am; established to write。

I am here above most earthly annoyances; and on a level with the heavenly influences。  It has always seemed to me that the higher one gets; the easier it must be to write; and that; especially at a great elevation; one could strike into lofty themes; and launch out; without fear of shipwreck on any of the earthly headlands; in his aerial voyages。  Yet; after all; he would be likely to arrive nowhere; I suspect; or; to change the figure; to find that; in parting with the taste of the earth; he had produced a flavorless composition。  If it were not for the haze in the horizon to…day; I could distinguish the very house in Naplesthat of Manso; Marquis of Villa;where Tasso found a home; and where John Milton was entertained at a later day by that hospitable nobleman。  I wonder; if he had come to the Villa Nardi and written on the roof; if the theological features of his epic would have been softened; and if he would not have received new suggestions for the adornment of the garden。  Of course; it is well that his immortal production was not composed on this roof; and in sight of these seductive shores; or it would have been more strongly flavored with classic mythology than it is。  But; letting Milton go; it may be necessary to say that my writing to…day has nothing to do with my theory of composition in an elevated position; for this is the laziest place that I have yet found。

I am above the highest olive…trees; and; if I turned that way; should look over the tops of what seems a vast grove of them; out of which a white roof; and an old time…eaten tower here and there; appears; and the sun is flooding them with waves of light; which I think a person delicately enough organized could hear beat。  Beyond the brown roofs of the town; the terraced hills arise; in semicircular embrace of the plain; and the fine veil over them is partly the natural shimmer of the heat; and partly the silver duskiness of the olive…leaves。  I sit with my back to all this; taking the entire force of this winter sun; which is full of life and genial heat; and does not scorch one; as I remember such a full flood of it would at home。  It is putting sweetness; too; into the oranges; which; I observe; are getting redder and softer day by day。  We have here; by the way; such a habit of taking up an orange; weighing it in the hand; and guessing if it is ripe; that the test is extending to other things。  I saw a gentleman this morning; at breakfast; weighing an egg in the same manner; and some one asked him if it was ripe。

It seems to me that the Mediterranean was never bluer than it is to…day。  It has a shade or two the advantage of the sky: though I like the sky best; after all; for it is less opaque; and offers an illimitab
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