Cat-alogue

In my youth I was never a cat lover. Dogs yes but cats never. My father was of the same ilk: whenever he saw a feline straying into our garden he would furiously shoo it away.

However, after my marriage cats became more and more important in our lives and we never got a dog.

In the first year at our house in Longoio we discovered a litter of feral kittens huddled underneath a wood-pile. We became quite devoted to them and started feeding them: always a bad idea if you don’t want cats to start taking over your life.

The queen (mummy cat) had in fact produced a litter of five kittens and, harking back to our walk along the wonderful Cinque Terre footpath we decided to call each of them by the names of the five towns:

Monterosso al Mare, Vernazza, Corniglia, Manarola, and Riomaggiore.

The queen did not last too long but the remaining five kittens accepted our residence for many years. One by one, however, they disappeared leaving behind only Cornelia. She was the most feral of the kittens and would never allow herself to be touched until one day, three years ago, when she suddenly changed her mind about humans.

Cornelia has since become a much friendlier cat.

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She loves to sleep on our bed and follow us round on our walks with our other, more recent, cats. They are:

Carlotta (2012),

Cheeky (2014),

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Nerina (2008)

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and, youngest and only tom, Archie (2019).

They are all rescue cats which we ‘saved’, apart from Nerina who just foisted herself on us.

(Many thanks to our neighbour for taking these photos).

Can you recognize Cornelia in the original photos taken fifteen years ago?

Here’s a useful cat calculator which converts the age of a cat into human years. This means that Cornelia is even older than we are!

Age of cat (years) Age in human years
1 15
2 24
3 28
4 32
5 36
6 40
7 44
8 48
9 52
10 56
11 60
12 64
13 68
14 72
15 76
16 80
17 84
18 88
19 92
20 96

I just hope we can return to our feline family as soon as possible. We miss them badly but know that they are in good hands thanks to our cat minders.

 

A Load of Hot Air?

It’s now a month ago since we were whisked back from Sri Lanka to the UK and safety. True, it was good to get home in a very difficult situation for there are  still hundreds of Brits stuck in various parts of the globe waiting to get back to their loved ones.

At the time, however, Sandra felt that Sri Lanka was the safer place to be in. I replied that it wasn’t and, besides, that if we caught the virus it would be a totally unfair weight on the local health services which, anyway, wouldn’t be half as well-equipped as our own NHS.

This morning I looked again at the world statistics illustrating those affected by the pandemic and was somewhat surprised. Sandra was indeed right!

The UK has now exceeded the 20,000 limit of deaths from the virus which it thought would contain it. Sri Lanka, instead, has just 7 dead. OK, the population of the UK is 65 million and that of Sri Lanka is about a third of that at 21 million. In this case, however, either the UK should have had 21 dead or Sri Lanka should have had a thousand times more deaths than its actual figures.

What does this mean? Clearly there are other factors involved, one of which is the point that those returning to the UK are still not being properly checked, that the first UK deaths were reported two weeks before Sri Lanka’s first victim and, most importantly, that the figures in the two countries may not accurately reflect the real situation.

Nevertheless, I cannot help feeling that, as the nation with the fifth highest number of deaths from Covid-19, there is going to be a need for unravelling loads of explanations and investigations when the pandemic terminates (if it ever really going to end entirely)….

Meanwhile our beloved leader is back in no 10 after his spell in ICU and jollifying up the nation with his unique brand of rhetorically enhanced humour, his expansive bonhomie and his unperturbed sang froid. How long further are we going to believe him?

I conclude with a further load of hot air, this time from the festival of hot air balloons held annually in the autumn at the Villa Mansi. I discovered these photographs of mine dating from 2005. Could that be really have been that many years ago!

 

Suburban Flowers

Spring has truly sprung in these islands. Remembering my past spring times in the UK I can’t recollect bird song being so vibrantly vociferous, skies so blue, air so refreshingly clear, heavens so clear of aircraft noise and flowers so profusely blossoming.

(The current blooms in our garden)

It’s clearly a lot to do with the lockdown imposed by the current health crisis but the weather has also much to do with it: we’ve had hardly any rain in this month. Perhaps a drop now would be more than welcome; today looks greyer anyway.

Maybe, it’s also a time to celebrate with a poem. So here goes with something I wrote for last month:

 

SUBURBAN GARDEN

 

Camellia petal’s on the lawn in March

while daffodils sway with a clear blue wind

and buds burst forth from lime and oak and larch

as sleeping generations wake and find.

 

Spring’ s ritual begins a thousand fold

anew, and earth anoints the rising seeds:

they part the soil and disregard the old

in lively flurry of galactic breeds.

 

Upon my neck the rays caress, so warm

they’re lovers’ hands that rise beyond this sphere;

once more I am reborn before a dawn

dispelling all the darkness and the fear.

 

Can spring be really now and here and bright;

My body’s filled with this transcendent light.

 

 

The Countryside in the Suburbs

I’d always wanted to visit this expansive piece of open space in our borough of Brent. Completely surrounded by suburbia Fryent Country Park lies about ten miles north west of central London and covers 250 acres of traditional Middlesex countryside. It’s set in undulating country and once you’re walking through its attractive mixture of woodland, fields and hedgerows you’re transported miles away from urbanization and suburbia. The park truly gives an insight into what this whole part of London would have looked like before being built up from the nineteenth century onwards.

We undertook our visit a couple of days ago on the way back from shopping. It was a little late in the day and so what we managed to see was just a taster for further explorations .

We shall certainly return and explore more fully the meadows, ponds, lakes, hedges and woodland included in this area which is a designated nature reserve with over eight hundred species of wildlife including twenty one types of butterfly and eighty bird species birds. Interestingly, the agricultural past of Fryent park is revealed not only in its preserved hedgerows but in the cutting of hay every July, which is then carried to a farm. Unfortunately there are no longer sheep and cattle which once roamed freely over the green space although horses and ponies are found grazing on it as there are stables nearby.

In the meanwhile, in anticipation of our next visit here is a selection of woodland and meadows views we snapped of this quite unknown part of London.

 

Liberation Day?

Today, April 25th is liberation day in Italy and is a national holiday commemorating the end of Nazi occupation during World War II and the role played by the Resistance known as ‘I partigiani’. April 25th also happens to be Anzac Day which marks the anniversary of the first campaign that led to major casualties for Australian and New Zealand forces during the First World War, especially at Gallipoli when over 130,000 men died in action.

It’s ironic that both anniversaries occur on a day which for most of us is the antithesis of liberation.  Never since the WWII have we had liberty so curtailed throughout the world. True, it’s for an essential cause, like the last war: we are fighting against an unseen enemy and still do not yet have the correct armament in the form of a vaccine to launch an offensive against it. We can, at the very most, defend ourselves from increasing onslaughts by self-isolation, social distancing and lock-down. It still remains, however, a very odd and sad situation.

This year Italy, Australia and New Zealand celebrate the significance of April 25th has for them with low-key events because of the pandemic crisis. People will stand on their balconies or driveways in all three countries to commemorate those who died in the cause of liberty. There will be no parades or marching bands, no gun salutes, no fly-pasts – just the respectful silence of us all and the hope for better days to come.

Bagni di Lucca will have an equally low-key commemoration unlike those held in serener times as the one I describe at https://longoio3.com/2018/04/28/bagni-di-luccas-commemoration-of-national-liberation-day/

In response to some requests and to the importance of ‘il giorno della liberazione’ for Italy I’m re-posting the following story I wrote after visiting the British War cemetery just outside Florence on the road to Pontassieve near Compiobbi, while on my motorbiking tour of Tuscany on my Transalp.

In the story I’ve changed the names of some geographical locations, but the narrative I related then is absolutely true

 

THE LAST TRUMPETER

Agroponte is a town easily missed by those travellers en route to the more seductive beauties of the upper Arno valley. Deprived of a large part of its mediaeval centre in desperate fighting during the final months of the last world war and surrounded by a circle of decaying industrial suburbs, complete with derelict cement works and rusting mills, the town does not readily invite the fine arts tourist into its womb. Yet it possesses a certain charm, occupying a dramatic position just above where the river Mambro, narrowed at this point by steeply rising gneissian slopes, noisily negotiates a virtual right angle, re-setting its course towards the gentler plains of Arezzo’s region.

I had parked my V-twin motorcycle on an irregularly paved street in the centre and was waking up to an early August morning in the lower Apennines drinking a cafe corretto, (that is, corrected by a drop of grappa or eau-de-vie at a pavement bar.) En route to the higher evergreen-clad slopes of the main range of hills, I was keen to escape the suffocating heat of an Italian mid-summer noon and the even worse prospect of culture pilgrims’ coach-loads zombying into the Arabian temperatures of Florence’s renaissance squares.

True, the town of Agroponte was not wildly appealing but it had a lively atmosphere, and the farmers’ vans coming with their zucchini and aubergines into the main market square enhanced the tight-knit sociability of a provincial centre. The natives appeared most friendly towards me.

After digesting a delicious egg and cream pastry I returned to my means of transport and revved up the motor into a gentle feline purr. I began biking towards the main road, passing through a town gate with one tower remaining, just noticing by the side of my eyes a magnificent old bridge leaping over the tributary feeding into the Mambro, which because of its venerable age and uncertain structural condition, was now ignominiously consigned to pedestrian use only.

The narrow highway soon led past vine-drooped stone walls and modest houses festooned with vividly crimson geraniums. The traffic was still light and I could hear the rush of the river through the secure padding of my crash helmet.

I increased the throttle. The machine was performing well. The road was clear ahead. My body felt revived.

Suddenly, I noticed an almost English-green expanse of lawn ahead, on the right between the road and the river. Seeing the emerald grass bespeckled by little white stones I realized it was a war cemetery.

For four months after the liberation of Florence the Eighth army had made little progress through the wild northern Apennines into the industrial heartland of the Po Valley. This was partly because it had been starved of resources and ammunition now dedicated to the D-day engendered thrust through France (it had even called itself the “Forgotten army”), partly, too, because of the Fuhrer’s orders to his largely schoolboy troops to “fight to the last man and never surrender”.  Consequently, more men fell in action during those last few frantic months than in the rest of the campaign put together. I decided to stop for a visit, more out of feelings of homesickness for an English-looking turf, so welcome after all that scrubby brown-dried collection of lawns Italians in summer still insist in calling municipal parks.

The cemetery was quite small and immaculately kept. Between each simple War office regulation headstone, plainly marked with the name, age and rank of the fallen soldier, was planted an enchantingly perfumed miniature rose bush. I was stunned by how young some of them were when they fell. Elegantly topiaried hedges surrounded the expanse, in the centre of which rose a cross, which would not have been out of place in a Home Counties Parish churchyard, to the memory of those dead soldiers who had no grave and no name.

After reading some entries calligrafied in the Book of Remembrance kept in a little brick cupolaed gazebo I sat down on a wooden bench and somewhat irreverently began rolling a cigarette. As I watched the clouds of liquorice-paper perfumed smoke ascend into the air like an oblation to Arcadian Gods I was startled by the sudden appearance of an immaculately pin-stripe suited man, hatted with a well-dimpled Homburg, and carrying a brilliantly polished attaché case under his left arm, striding confidently towards the central memorial cross area.

He seemed so self-possessed and intent on his progress towards the cemetery’s axis that I had no wish to interrupt him, not even to wish “Buongiorno”. I tried, instead, to remain unnoticed on my bench near the manicured hedge. Clearly, this medium-built late-middle-aged man with a neatly cut greying moustache was not the cemetery’s gardener. He was much too smartly dressed for that. His couturiered appearance also seemed inappropriate for any administrative role in the cemetery unless it were at some official function? Who was he and what was he doing here?

I looked at him all the way down the gravelled path to the central area and was glad that he still had not noticed my presence. The man then halted before the octagonal Carrara marble pedestal and briefly stood still, as if in contemplation.

And then he unzipped his briefcase and took from it a silver trumpet, raised it to his lips and started playing in limpid and incisive tones. It was an aria from Verdi’s Don Carlos, Act three, where the Count contemplates retiring to a monastery.

I heard in silence, seduced by the clear argentine tones of the valved instrument intoning against a rushing background of the river fast flowing over the rapids and the buzzing of an occasional scooter passing by.

Other numbers followed: a sentimental Neapolitan ballad, a military march with a very jaunty polonaise-like rhythm and, wonder of wonders, the exiles’ chorus from Nabucco. The unknown trumpeter and the instrument merged into one, audience and orchestra, action and landscape, coalescing into the rising heat of the day, the obfuscating sky, and the lambent sunlight.

Then the solo concert stopped as suddenly as it had started. With equal precision the trumpeter replaced his instrument in his briefcase, and turned away from the cross to return.

As he began to walk towards the entrance I plucked up the courage to come out of my secretive arbour and approach the trumpeter.

“Good morning” I announced.

“Good morning to you,” he replied, without an eyelid of surprise, as if he had been expecting me all this time. “Are you a forestiero? Welcome to Agroponte. Perhaps you are English? Ah the great British Empire! Where has it gone?”

He said this with an infectious smile and without a hint of malice.

“Why yes, I am British.” I confirmed

“And which town in England were you born?”

“London, Lewisham SE13 to be exact.”

“London. Ah London, what a great city. My cousin has lived there and he has told me all about it: the fog and the Houses of Parliament, Her Majesty and the cricket. You know, your country has taught us democracy, and taught Mussolini!”

We walked in silence for a while. The gravel crunched dryly under our feet.

“What a fine place to play the trumpet; it’s so peaceful here, so quiet” I commented. “Is that why you have chosen this place?”

“Partly, yes; I do not disturb the neighbours, that are true. But I really come here to play to the soldiers.”

“To play to the soldiers?”  I tried not to sound too surprised.

“Yes, to play to the soldiers.”

“That’s fine, that’s a really fine thing to do.” I said, trying, in my mind to justify his action. “And how often do you come here to play?”

“I try to come here to play every morning around 10 o’clock. But, unfortunately, it is not always possible and the soldiers have to do without me. You know how it is: there are commissions to do in the town, then there’s shopping with the wife, and sometimes I catch a cold and then my lungs refuse to produce enough air for the trumpet. I don’t like to give of my second best. It would be disappointing for the soldiers.”

“You play remarkably well. Was that last piece from Rigoletto?”

“Yes, bravo. It’s from Act Two, you know when the Duke tries to find where Rigoletto has hidden the daughter he is in so much love with. But, you should know I have been playing with the Agroponte Municipal Town Band for over forty years now. Not always the trumpet, mind you. I’ve had to play on the ophicleide (what an instrument!) or stand in for the cornettist if they were indisposed or otherwise not available. After all these years I would expect to be proficient, although, sadly, that is sometimes not the case with some of my colleagues.”

The principal aim of traditional Italian town bands is to make a festive sound. They always, in my experience manage to produce the second and sometimes even succeed in the first. Clearly, with a trumpeter like this man the Agroponte Municipal band must be a cut above average.

“Do you just play to English soldiers?” I asked.

“Well,” he answered, “the Germans kicked me and many like me about very badly. It was a rough time with them around I tell you. And the Italians didn’t do so badly at kicking me. And, between you and me, the British sometimes kicked me around too. But it doesn’t matter anymore now does it?”

I heard him in silence as he went on. “Of course, I like to play to the British soldiers most of all. But I do find the time to play to the Italian soldiers too and once a month, if I can, I go to the biggest war cemetery there is this side of the Apennines – the German one they were only permitted to build five years ago – and even play a little to them. But not Wagner!”

We talked a little more about the heat of the summer weather and the lack of rain, of course, and then how well I found myself in the country and how long I intended to stay. We were just about to step through the cemetery gates when I felt impelled to ask my trumpeter the question that had bugged me all the time I had been in his sight and his company.

“Do you really believe the soldiers can hear your trumpet?”

“But of course they can hear it, of course they can.”

The day was now warming up fast. With cordial promises of another meeting, perhaps an invitation to the bar for a cappuccino we parted. I ignited the V-twin and began my sinuous escape from the growing heat of the plains on the twisting B road up above the foaming river, the serenaded soldiers lying in their beautiful green and the industrious market, towards the resin-scented pine forests of the upper Emilian Apennines.

 

 

 

A Plague upon One’s Reading List

The valley of the lepers in the epic 1959 version of ‘Ben Hur’ starring Charlton Heston has to be one of the most poignant scenes in the film. Judah Ben Hur’s sister Tirzah and mother Miriam hide themselves in a cave in the company of other afflicted beings and are not allowed to meet Ben Hur though he can see a little of what the disease has done to disfigure their faces. Such was the custom at the time (and still is): social distancing and isolation.

This scene sticks in my mind today when we are in the midst of one of the greatest pandemics the world has known. However, the difference between leprosy and Covid-19 is that leprosy is caused by a bacteria and Covid-19, instead, by a virus. Both diseases, nevertheless, can be spread by mucosal secretions, both private parts, coughs and sneezes (which traditionally spread diseases) and both affect the respiratory tract. But Covid-19 is far more contagious than leprosy and that’s the really frightening thing about it.

During the time I’ve spent in the East I have come across sad leper beggars, especially in Calcutta and it’s a never to be forgotten sight to see these ragged disfigured living ghosts.

We are all potential lepers today. Indeed, we are living in our own private lepers’ valley and when we walk down the high street we try to avoid each other ‘social distancing’ ourselves. Are we sidestepping each other because we fear infection or because we do not wish to infect others? It’s for both reasons, in fact.

Like leprosy in former times there is as yet no known cure for Covid-19. This ignorance of the pandemic’s causes, the reason why it afflicts different people in different ways – from a slight infection to a horror-inducing respiratory trauma where patients have pleaded to their doctor to let them die instead and attempt to rip off their life-support oxygen masks from their faces – is truly disturbing…more atrocious than any horror movie Hollywood could have made. Even more disturbing are the claims made by the orange one, the first citizen of a country that now has the highest casualties from the disease (at 50,243 over a quarter of the planet’s deaths) that injection of disinfectant into one’s lungs could improve matters!

In these quasi-apocalyptic times it may be useful to turn to literature on the theme of plague.  There are several reading lists on the web which one may pursue; the question is does one really want to read a novel set in plague times or an academic treatise discussing the plague when one tried one’s hardest to seek refuge from such trepidations?

For me the answer is yes. I do want to know how this subject has been treated by different authors as it might truly help one to face not only the physical reality of the disease but also (and for more people even more devastatingly) its mental consequences in terms of stress, depression and psychosis).

This is my little reading list. First are the books that I’ve read.

  1. The Decameron. Giovanni Boccaccio. A young company group of seven young women and three young men shelter in a secluded villa just outside Florence to escape the Black Death and socially distance themselves from the plague that is rampaging through their city.  They amuse themselves by telling stories to each other.

2. The Plague. Albert Camus. Today’s best seller on the subject and not without reason. I read it in the excellent translation by Robin Buss, a work colleague when I was a lecturer in London. A must-read!

3. Journal of the plague year. Daniel Defoe. A racy account of London’s Great Plague of 1665 written from a doctor’s viewpoint by the author of ‘Robinson Crusoe’.

4. The Betrothed. Alessandro Manzoni. The chapters dealing with the plague in this seminal Italian historical novel set on the seventeenth century were recently referred to by Pope Francis.

The following are the novels I’ve put on my reading list:

  1. The plague tales: Ann Benson
  2. Ears of wonder: Geraldine Brooks
  3. The hot zone:  Richard Preston
  4. The stand: Stephen King
  5. The great influenza:  John Barry
  6. Station eleven: Emily St. John Mandel
  7. And the band played on.:  Randy Shilts

 

We are indeed living in post-mediaeval times and each one of us is surviving in their own sepulchral tomb. Let us be prepared to await our fate with dignity whether the scythe  be natural or unnatural.

London’s Mount Ida

Harrow bears the same sort of relationship to London’s Brent as Borgo a Mozzano to Bagni di Lucca; in both cases it’s the neighbouring borough. Harrow also bears a feature common to many Italian settlements: that of having an old town on a hill, the original centre, and a later ‘new’ town on the surrounding plain which, with the arrival of the railway, became the focus from the nineteenth century onwards.

Harrow, defined by writer John Betjeman as the ‘capital of metroland’ (the name affectionately given to the suburban areas built to the north-west of London in the first part of the 20th century and served by the Metropolitan line) has become a major shopping centre in recent years. We combined our visit there yesterday with a return journey through the old town.

Harrow-on-the-Hill’s high (for London!) location at 407 ft. (124 metres) and the current health crisis combined to enhance Harrow-on-the-Hill peaceful and village atmosphere. We found the high street remarkably traffic-free.

It was hard to believe that the first recorded road accident in the UK occurred here, as marked by the following plaque.

take-heed-motor-accident

Rich in historic architecture with old pubs (alas, now closed for the duration) and houses ranging from the charming to the imposing, Harrow-on-the-Hill is a great place to escape from the ‘great Wen’.

The town’s spiritual focus is the church of Saint Mary, possibly built on the site of a heathen temple. (Indeed, the word ‘Heathen’ and ‘Harrow’ are supposed to come from the same root).

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Founded in the eleventh century by Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury in 1087, the parish church of the Blessed Virgin Mary was consecrated by the archbishop’s successor Saint Anselm in 1094.

We discovered the churchyard scattered with gorgeous bluebells and the juxtaposition of these flowers growing so near to some of the tombstones gave us a vibrant sense of life through death and renewed hope for the rather difficult times we are currently living through.

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Nearby is the famous public school and the churchyard also contains what ex-pupil George Gordon, Lord Byron called his ‘favourite tombstone’: the Peachy tomb, from which wonderfully expansive views extend to Windsor Castle and beyond.

By the tomb is inscribed part of the ‘mad, bad and dangerous to know’ genius’s poem “Lines Written beneath an Elm in the Churchyard of Harrow”. Here is the complete text from that early verse:

Spot of my youth! whose hoary branches sigh,
Swept by the breeze that fans thy cloudless sky;
Where now alone I muse, who oft have trod,
With those I loved, thy soft and verdant sod;
With those who, scattered far, perchance deplore,
Like me, the happy scenes they knew before:
Oh! as I trace again thy winding hill,
Mine eyes admire, my heart adores thee still,
Thou drooping Elm! beneath whose boughs I lay,
And frequent mused the twilight hours away;
Where, as they once were wont, my limbs recline,
But ah! without the thoughts which then were mine.
How do thy branches, moaning to the blast,
Invite the bosom to recall the past,
And seem to whisper, as the gently swell,
‘Take, while thou canst, a lingering, last farewell!’

When fate shall chill, at length, this fevered breast,
And calm its cares and passions into rest,
Oft have I thought, ‘twould soothe my dying hour,—
If aught may soothe when life resigns her power,—
To know some humbler grave, some narrow cell,
Would hide my bosom where it loved to dwell.
With this fond dream, methinks, ’twere sweet to die—
And here it lingered, here my heart might lie;
Here might I sleep, where all my hopes arose,
Scene of my youth, and couch of my repose;
For ever stretched beneath this mantling shade,
Pressed by the turf where once my childhood played;
Wrapped by the soil that veils the spot I loved,
Mixed with the earth o’er which my footsteps moved;
Blest by the tongues that charmed my youthful ear,
Mourned by the few my soul acknowledged here;
Deplored by those in early days allied,
And unremembered by the world beside.

 Allegra, the daughter Byron had from Clair Clairmont – who is herself buried in an Italian location well-known to us. See my post at

https://longoio2.wordpress.com/2016/02/29/claire-claremont-the-epilogue/

is buried in an unmarked grave outside, near to the south porch. It’s sad to recall that the hypocritical church authorities originally refused to bury the poor child here as, indeed, they refused to bury her dad. (Do read more about this tragic event in my post at

https://longoio2.wordpress.com/2016/02/28/allegra-con-spirito/

Nearby is the famous Harrow  School. It was founded in 1572 by John Lyon under a Royal Charter of Elizabeth I, and is one of the UK’s original seven public schools, another of which is Dulwich College where I was a pupil from the pioneering ‘Dulwich experiment’ aimed at admission from LCC schools to these somewhat exclusive institutions. What enlightened times then!

Squash, the sport – originally called ‘Squasher’ – was invented in Harrow about 1830 and spread to other schools, eventually becoming the international sport it’s now. In the salad days of our marriage we enjoyed a game in these original squash courts. Here’s a testimony to those times:

We also reminded ourselves that we’d once had ideas to purchase a property here. I wonder how much it would be worth today if we had!

Byron termed Harrow’s hill as his ‘Mount Ida’, after the mountain in Crete where Zeus, hidden from his avenging father Chronos, was brought up with milk from the goat Amalthea. Here’s another wistful poem he wrote:

 

On a distant view of the village and school of Harrow-on-the-hill

1.

Ye scenes of my childhood, whose lov’d recollection
Embitters the present, compar’d with the past;
Where science first dawn’d on the powers of reflection,
And friendships were form’d, too romantic to last;

2.

Where fancy, yet, joys to retrace the resemblance
Of comrades, in friendship and mischief allied;
How welcome to me your ne’er fading remembrance,
Which rests in the bosom, though hope is deny’d!

3.

Again I revisit the hills where we sported,
The streams where we swam, and the fields where we fought; The school where, loud warn’d by the bell, we resorted,
To pore o’er the precepts by Pedagogues taught.

4.

Again I behold where for hours I have ponder’d,
As reclining, at eve, on yon tombstone I lay;
Or round the steep brow of the churchyard I wander’d,
To catch the last gleam of the sun’s setting ray.

5.

I once more view the room, with spectators surrounded,
Where, as Zanga, I trod on Alonzo o’erthrown;
While, to swell my young pride, such applauses resounded,
I fancied that Mossop himself was outshone.

6.

Or, as Lear, I pour’d forth the deep imprecation,
By my daughters, of kingdom and reason depriv’d;
Till, fir’d by loud plaudits and self-adulation,
I regarded myself as a  Garrick  reviv’d.

7.

Ye dreams of my boyhood, how much I regret you!
Unfaded your memory dwells in my breast;
Though sad and deserted, I ne’er can forget you:
Your pleasures may still be in fancy possest.

8.

To Ida full oft may remembrance restore me,
While Fate shall the shades of the future unroll!
Since Darkness o’ershadows the prospect before me,
More dear is the beam of the past to my soul!

9.

But if, through the course of the years which await me,
Some new scene of pleasure should open to view,
I will say, while with rapture the thought shall elate me,
“Oh! such were the days which my infancy knew.”

 

Perhaps we should now write our own regretful poem on lost and misspent youth in the manner of Byron? Here goes then!

 

A Game on the Hill

 

Yet far from the shadow of age,

in the youth of our love

we played a delightful game

mid bluebell and foxglove.

 

With little care for the morrow,

with leaping energy

we enjoyed ourselves as twin lambs:

what divine memory!

 

Such an aching sweetness

from recalls I draw:

forever past, forever gone;

terrible Eternal law!

 

 

 

 

Socially Distancing Hermits

If, during the current strange times, anyone requires some tips on social distancing then some advice may be had from hermits. These reclusive folk in the pursuit of some higher spiritual aim have found themselves beautifully lonely spots in woods, mountains, islands and, in a few cases, on the top of columns.

symeon stylite

The only problem that hermits have, however, is that when knowledge of their sanctity becomes diffused people rush to their solitary spots and, in some cases, build churches, hospices and even cities. Poor Simon Stylites, who lived atop a column in the Syrian Desert (not much peace there today, sad to say) had to contend with an increasing bevy of tourist shops and religious sightseers surrounding the holy column.

This surreal story is recounted in Luis Bunuel’s 1965 film ‘Simon of the Desert’. I wrote a poem about this theme some years ago:

 

THE STYLITE

 

I see you’ve had a guard rail placed

around your column top.

Now you no longer have concerns

of falling down that drop.

 

Fresh chicken wire protects your head

from pigeons’ aimless splash

while scarlet flashing light above

prevents an aircraft crash.

 

Around your base a town has grown

with shops and inns and parks:

cheap trinkets and mementoes sold:

capitalism’s marks.

 

They praise you not like man of god

but as a tourist sight,

like someone whose harsh penances

stemmed unemployment’s flight.

 

Before you came all this was sand,

you chose it for dusk’s peace;

but even now when midnight strikes

loud voices never cease.

 

By column’s base broad whores inscribe

their liquid thighs for sale

while camels wait, tied to bronze rings,

and ruminate their bale.

 

And so a vow to steal away

from eyes of fetid earth

has lathed one absurd turn-around

before a town’s new birth.

 

Come down to land you sold-by saint,

your mission’s consummated now.

See platinum lights advertise

the TV preacher’s show.

 

Italy abounds in places originally founded by hermits and called appropriately ‘eremo’ or ‘romitorio’ (hermitages). The most famous spot in Italy is certainly at La Verna, Tuscany, where my namesake obtained his stigmata.

There are a number of attractive ‘eremi’ or hermitages in our area of the Lucchesia: the mountains of mediavalle and Garfagnana. Here are some I’ve visited:

  1. Eremo di Calomini. (Vergemoli Comune).

See my post at:

https://longoio.wordpress.com/2014/02/07/heavenly-hermitage-2/

  1. Eremo di San Viviano. (Vagli Sotto Comune).

See my post at

https://longoio2.wordpress.com/2015/08/15/the-exquisite-alpeggio-of-campocatino/

  1. Eremo di Sant’Ansano.

See my posts at:

https://longoio3.com/2018/02/24/walk-to-a-hermitage/

https://longoio.wordpress.com/2013/07/05/heavenly-hermitage/

Who was Ansano (Ansanus)?

Born of a Roman family he was secretly brought up as a Christian but publicly declared his faith aged nineteen during the Emperor Diocletian’s persecution. Ansano then preached in Bagnoregio an amazing town which I have still to visit but has been described by blogger Debra Kolkka at

https://bagnidilucca.wordpress.com/2016/05/14/civita-de-bagnoregio/

Like all good martyrs Ansano was first tortured by scourging and being thrown into a pot of burning oil. He was then taken as a prisoner to Siena where he preached the Gospel. Ansanus was finally decapitated by order of the Emperor Diocletian.

Going through my photographs I find that I first discovered Sant’Ansano’s hermitage near the village of Lucignana in our valley of the Serchio in August 2005. It’s again a case of realizing that I’d visited some places much earlier than I supposed.

The pretty porch of the ‘Eremo’ with its expansive views over the valley has been a favourite resting spot for me on a number of walks. Let’s hope we can get back to these lovely places soon!

 

 

 

The Best Place to be in during a Pandemic?

In normal times I do a fair bit of commuting between two countries, the UK where I was born and Italy where, because of my parents’ mixed marriage and my own, I have residence, relatives and friends.

One question I ask myself is, finding myself constricted in the UK for the duration of the health crisis, would I have preferred to be in the same situation in Italy? The answer is a very difficult one. In practical terms, regarding the severity of the implementation of government Covid-19 regulations, I think it’s better for me here. In theoretical terms, however, how the government is acting in the crisis then I think Italy would have been the better option.

The Italian government has clearly dealt much more promptly and severely with the crisis than the UK. For example, I hear from friends in Florence and Rome that every step outside one’s house has to be justified and accompanied by a self-certification form detailing one’s personal details and the reason for making the journey. They have told me of the frequent presence of surveillance helicopters (c.f. Orwell’s ‘1984’ Thought Police helicopters flying past peoples’ windows) and the use of drones. Every day one is likely to hear warnings from police car loudhailers to ‘stare a casa’ (stay at home). Moreover, the ‘necessary’ journeys have to be made within one’s own commune or borough. A friend from Bagni di Lucca on his way to a well-known discount store was stopped and warned as the store was located in the adjacent commune of Borgo a Mozzano. He was informed that the next time he tried to do the same journey he would be fined. (Sometimes these fines can approach well over a thousand Euros). Of course, one must always wear a commune-supplied sanitary mask when exiting from one’s house. Failure to wear one will attract yet another fine.

At least one of our Italian relatives has been penalized heavily for not having the required self-certification form on them and engaging in ‘unnecessary’ journeys. i.e. journeys that are not directed to the nearest food store or pharmacy. More shop categories are now, however, beginning to open up. In particular, children’s clothing (after all children do grow!) and bookshops (absolutely necessary to avoid total boredom. BTW, how are you progressing with your reading of the complete works of Dostoevsky?).

What is particularly sad about the Italian situation is that if you are a city dweller the chances are that, like the majority of those in cities, you are living in a flat with, at the most, a balcony which might catch that Mediterranean sun at odd spots during the day. It’s only the luckier people that can afford anything like a separate house and garden. However, if you live in the country, in a small town or village then you may be much better off. In Bagni di Lucca many dwellings have an accessible garden, even a small one.  If you live in one of the villages surrounding Bagni then you are even luckier and may have your house surrounded by a garden or orto (allotment) and, in many cases, an ample stretch of orchard and meadow.

Of course, having a house surrounded by land means that time can be spent gardening and, for men if there is a shed, seek refuge from the rest of the household and engage in one’s own activities and hobbies.

(Where I’m at: the British ‘semi’ provides a life-line for many of the inhabitants of these islands). 

In the UK to-date there has not been implementation of such strict rules. Here we have no helicopters snooping on people’s activities, drones have been criticized and discouraged and there are no police cars circulating the streets with vociferous warnings hailing from megaphones. Indeed, entry into parks (for daily exercise only) has been conclusively sanctioned, not that admission to all parks was prohibited previously (see my post at https://longoio3.com/2020/04/20/a-walk-along-the-brent-river/). I’m reliably informed that Regent’s park was full of sunbathers last week-end in the spate of the lovely weather the capital continues to have. We are not restricted to shopping for food and medicines in Brent but can freely access food stores in Hillingdon, Barnet or any other London borough. Bus services are certainly reduced and the part of the bus nearest to the driver is (inconsistently, it must be said) cordoned off but there is no prohibition in using public transport for any journey. It’s certainly more free and easy in the capital. The absence of police is startling. Perhaps it’s because we are all supposed to be responsible citizens and able to impose lockdown and social distancing by ourselves without a hitch or incurring an arrest.

In terms of the effectiveness of the government’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic then clearly Italy is the safer place to be in; the response of the UK government to the health crisis has been somewhat delayed. The recent article in the authoritative UK newspaper ‘Sunday Times’ gives it to us straight:

Britain was in a poor state of readiness for a pandemic. Emergency stockpiles of PPE had severely dwindled and gone out of date after becoming a low priority in the years of austerity cuts. The training to prepare key workers for a pandemic had been put on hold for two years while contingency planning was diverted to deal with a possible no-deal Brexit.

The UK has apparently sleep-walked into disaster. I cannot disagree with this view and was aware of it at least from the time of my post at

https://longoio3.com/2020/03/23/delayed-by-curfew/

Indeed, prime minister Signor Conte, who is firmly handling the crisis in Italy, did warn the UK prime minister of what would happen to the ex ‘Regina dei mari’ (queen of the seas) if strong measures did not replace dithering ‘government advice’. Our PM, meanwhile,  was too busy shaking hands with corona virus patients at the time.

So to sum up:

Practically, I’m better off in the UK where I’m staying in semi-detached, can go to any food store I like and access public parks and public transport.

Theoretically, I’m better off in Italy where a government has handled the situation with determination and strictness and has, at last, flattened the curve, something which has yet to happen in Brexitland.