No Jackboots Here!

Captain Mainwearing of the Walmington-on-Sea Home guard platoon was insistent that Britain should never be squashed under the tyranny of the Nazi jackboot. By the summer of 1940, however, the country very nearly was but the incredibly audacious bravery of the ‘few’ prevented Britain from falling into such a dismal fate.

Hitler’s ‘Operation Sea lion’ was poised to launch its fleet of landing craft against a beleaguered island. All that was needed was to gain mastery of air power. This is when the stately home of Bentley Priory near Harrow in London also gained its finest hour together with those ‘few’ who fought and won the Battle of Britain after the Battle of France had been lost.

The commander of RAF Fighter Command at the time of the Battle of Britain, Sir Hugh Dowding, was honoured for his efforts with a peerage, as Baron Dowding of Bentley Priory. Hauled out of retirement Dowding reorganised the RAF and turned it into a supreme fighting force. Ironically the Axis power had superior fighter planes with larger bullets, more guns and a longer firing time when compared with the Spitfire’s couple of minutes. The secret, as the UK pilots admitted, was to fire with the sun behind one and to wait until the very last moment when one was as close to the enemy as possible.

Bentley Priory has gone through various reincarnations since its founding as an Augustinian monastery in the early middle ages. It subsequently became a stately home with additions by that great architect Sir John Soane, a residence for Queen Adelaide widow of King William IV, a hotel, a girls’ school, the centre of RAF fighter command and now partly a museum celebrating its crucial role in World War II and an exclusive housing estate.

All these stages are well illustrated in the museum which is an example of how these marvellous mansions, so often close to destruction, may survive with initiative and investment.

We enjoyed the excellent and brilliantly explained exhibits including a 3-d film of Dowding’s time at the priory:

We delighted in the grand architecture which included Queen Adelaide’s accommodation:

We loved the well-kept Italian gardens with their floral displays and their background of the wilder parts of the priory park which is a site of special scientific interest.

I had normally thought that Stalingrad spelt the death-knell of the Reich that was to last a thousand years but I now realise it was the RAF’s victory in the Battle of Britain that really shattered the Hitlerian delusion. How the ex-corporal could have carried on WWII by attacking the Soviets in 1941 while knowing that the UK still remained undefeated beats me and I am no military strategist!

Thank goodness, however, for that elementary tactical mistake! Would Europe have still been dominated by totalitarian governments in the East and in the West today? Would extermination camps have been set up in the UK as well? Would we have to start driving on the right? Would German have become the first language in British schools? Who knows. The Third Reich was so near to perfecting the first atomic bomb which would have definitely sealed the world’s fate; indeed, Bentley Priory continued its defence role until 2008 when operations were finally transferred to Northolt. That Cold War bunker still remains, now filled it, and if I was luckily not brought up in the dark days of the Second World War I still had to suffer the menace of my body melting in a nuclear attack.

Will we still have to suffer further man-made menaces today? What armageddon will come first? The increasing peril of global warming or the increasing threat from terrorist groups who now, for the first time in their history, have an air force and a huge armoury of weapons and materiel virtually abandoned like free gifts by the forces they fought against for so many decades? It doesn’t quite bear thinking does it? But neither did the threats that faced Britain in 1940. Then, however, there was a man who was truly able to face the storm and prepare for it; someone who, disillusioned and embittered, ended his career as a member of the Theosophical society and as a believer in fairies, Air Chief Marshall Hugh Caswall Tremenheere Dowding GCB, GCVO, CMG.

Of Tipples and Tinctures

What’s your favourite tipple? This is quite a topical question, especially since Christmas is just round the corner. We can’t be locked down from a drink with one other person surely?

In recent years there has been a resurgence of gin drinking, especially in London where the juniper-flavoured potion started being distilled in the seventeenth century after being introduced by the Dutch. A G & T seems to be a traditional introduction to an evening’s entertainment in many circles and certainly there are some interesting brands around: Bombay Sapphire, for example, an echo of the Raj if there ever was one. For me, however, gin is unbearably connected with ‘1984’ and Winston’s last drink at the Chestnut Tree café after he has been tortured and brain-washed to love Big Brother.

“Unbidden, a waiter came and filled his glass up with Victory Gin, shaking into it a few drops from another bottle with a quill through the cork. It was saccharine flavoured with cloves, the speciality of the cafe.”

Gin also has horrendous connotations with Hogarth’s engraving of Gin Lane where one sees the effects of the drink among which can be espied  infanticide, madness, disease, starvation and suicide.  For example, there’s that syphilitic woman throwing her child down the steps at the bottom of which is a figure reduced skeletally by the effects of the beverage.

If it was

“Drunk for a penny

Dead drunk for two pence”

I would add “dead for threepence”

Dickens, of course saw that gin was not the primal cause why people were reduced to such wretched states. He writes:

“Gin-drinking is a great vice in England, but wretchedness and dirt are a greater; and until you improve the homes of the poor, or persuade a half-famished wretch not to seek relief in the temporary oblivion of his own misery, with the pittance that, divided among his family, would furnish a morsel of bread for each, gin-shops will increase in number and splendour”.

Plus ca change!

Compare all this with the healthy humans in Hogarth’s parallel engraving of Beer Street where commerce and good company thrive. It’s almost as if the unhealthy tinctures of the continent are contrasted with honest healthy English beers.

Of course, I agree there’s nothing to beat a pint of ‘Nelson’s Blood’ brewed in Chatham, the dockyard where HMS Victory was built. It’s one of the few things that would make me return to a post-brexit UK.

Whisky and soda is OK although I prefer to drink whisky by itself, preferably from a hip flask that anyone venturing across the Highland heathers is advised to take as an essential part of their survival equipment.

I’ve tried Vodka a few times but the way it has turned me into a psychopath is frightening. No wonder Russia has the one of the highest records of domestic violence.

No, none of these would really satisfy me except for my two favourites. Not Rum and coke (I just don’t like coke that much and its taste reminds me of some tooth eroding disinfectant) but rum with a fruit juice like pineapple and coconut.

Now that’s a really sunshine drink prompting memories of wonderful holidays passed in Antigua, Saint Lucia and Saint Maarten. And particularly, in Cuba where, naturally, it is closely associated with that other fabulous snifter the Mojito, Hemingway’s favourite tipple, made with the best rum, brown sugar, lime, soda and mint. A mojito is a cocktail no-one could possibly be without, especially during these somewhat trying times.

In Italy my favourite pick-me-up is Campari and Soda which a friend calls their ‘happy drink’. Quite right too! Obtained from the infusion of bitter herbs, aromatic plants and fruit in a mixture of alcohol and water, it has an intense aroma and a ruby red colour.

This awesome drink was developed in a small bar in Novara by Gaspare Campari in 1860 who then moved to Milan a couple of years later.  The (secret) Campari recipe has remained unchanged ever since.

Campari Soda was launched in 1932: with that famous conical bottle designed by the futurist artist Fortunato Depero.

His advert designs for the drink are equally original.

I hope that you’ll have a respectable amount of your favourite tincture this Christmas. It’ll keep us company if nothing else and is a better cure for the blues than any psychotherapeutic session and (in most cases) a lot cheaper.

Now as for Italian wines …but I’d better keep this post short before I become too thirsty!

 

 

The Year 1631

A few years ago I wrote a prose poem in Italian chronicling the main events of 1631. This poem was read to inaugurate an evening of poetry readings at our little church. I thought, for reasons that will become obvious towards the end of the poem, of translating it into English and editing it for this post.

SHORT CHRONICLE FOR THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 1631

The first day of the year 1631 was a Wednesday.

At the beginning of that year, could be heard the desperate screams of more than twenty thousand inhabitants, men, women and children,  who were massacred by the sword in the German city of Magdeburg, which had already been sacked by an imperial army.

It was the year when, in Massachusetts in the New World, John Winthrop was elected the first governor, when “La Gazzette”, the first French newspaper, was founded, when the Treaty of Cherasco ended the war of the Mantuan succession, and when Algerian pirates sacked the port of Cork in Ireland.

It was the year when the city of Wurzburg was captured by the king of Sweden, Gustavus Adolphus, but not before about nine hundred people were burned at the stake for the crime of witchcraft.

Woe to those who play with the forces of darkness! The witches meet each night on the Prato Fiorito, where they reside in a deep ditch near the ruins of an ancient monastery. Hear their gloomy moans during stormy twilights, do not enter the fantastic castles they build on mountain tops, be afraid and keep away from the forces of necromancy and the flattery of the Devil!

It was another year in the most merciless war of all time – the Thirty Years’ War. The elector of Saxony – until now neutral – sided with the king of Sweden to drive the imperial army out of Saxony. The Spanish fleet was intercepted and almost entirely destroyed by a Dutch fleet in the Battle of the Slaak. Blood dripped endlessly, and in the autumn of the same year, at the battle of Breitenfeld, the imperial army was defeated by the king of Sweden, marking the first victory for the Protestants in the infamous war.

It was the year when, in the orient, in the city of Agra, part of the Mughal Empire, the architects Ustad Ahmad Lahauri, Indian, and Geronimo Veroneo, Italian, began to build the Taj Mahal, supreme sign of a man’s love for a woman, and one of the new Seven Wonders of the World.

(My photo of the Taj, taken a long time ago)

In this year, among many others who are either remembered or forgotten, were born:

  • The Welsh poet, Katherine Philips
  • The English poet, John Dryden
  • Salem Witchcraft Judge William Stoughton
  • The English philosopher, Lady Anne Finch Conway.

Those who died this year included:

  • Michelagnolo Galilei, composer and luthier, Galileo Galilei’s younger brother
  • The English poet and prelate, John Donne.
  • Mumtaz Mahal, the exquisite wife of Shah Jahan, creator of the Taj Mahal
  • Cesare Cremonini, Italian philosopher.
  • Guillén de Castro y Bellvis, the Spanish playwright
  • The Queen of Denmark, Sophie of Mecklenburg-Güstrow,
  • Michael Drayton, the English poet, friend of Shakespeare

In the year 1631, as we read on the cornerstone, unknown architects and forgotten masons built, between the forest and the mule track that leads to the fortress tower, in the Controneria of the Lima valley, by the village of Longoio, our own little church or Chiesina ‘della Margine’ dedicated to the Madonna dei Sette Dolori (Madonna of the Seven Dolours*)

Our chiesina was built to honour the Virgin who saved the inhabitants of our village from the great Pandemic sweeping throughout Italy and beyond.

Here is our chiesina’s corner stone bearing the date 1631.

*The Seven Dolours, (or sorrows), of the Virgin are:

  1. The prophecy of Simeon that he would live to see the Redeemer of Mankind
  2. The flight of the Holy family into Egypt
  3. The loss of the Child Jesus in the Temple of Jerusalem
  4. Mary’s meeting Jesus on the Via Dolorosa
  5. The Crucifixion of Jesuson Mount Calvary
  6. The Piercing of the Side of Jesus with a spear, and his descent from the Cross
  7. The burial of Jesus by Joseph of Arimathea

PPS My most critical reader and the one who puts her first like on my post:

Where’s My Flight?

I wonder how many people know why there’s a small jet plane on the ‘rotonda’ of the gyratory system accessing the autostrada from Lucca’s Viale Europa? The aircraft, a Piaggio-Douglas PD-808 multi-purpose jet was donated to Lucca by the Italian air force.

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If one manages to reach the central island displaying the PD-808 without getting run over by the busy traffic there’s a plaque which states “To the pilot Carlo del Prete and the aviators from Lucca”.

 

Who was Del Prete? Born in Lucca in 1897, he became a cadet at Livorno’s naval accademy and joined Italy’s Royal Navy serving on submarines during World War One. He took part in Gabriele d’Annunzio’s daring incursion against the Austrian navy at Buccari where his submarine escorted the poet’s legendary MAS 62 torpedo boat preserved at the ‘Vittoriale’ by lake Garda.

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After the war Del Prete got interested in aviation and qualified as a pilot in 1922. Transferring to the newly created Italian Royal Air force he became a navigator. In this role Del Prete organised and took part in various pioneering long-distance flights. The most important among these was the 1927 ‘Four Continents’ flight from Italy to Africa, across the Atlantic to Brazil and other South American countries, the Caribbean, the United States and back to Rome.

In 1928 Del Prete and his colleague Arturo Ferrarin undertook fifty one laps on a Savoia-Marchetti S64 between Ladispoli and Anzio breaking three world records. In the same year they flew the South Atlantic to Brazil where they were fêted in Rio de Janeiro and where there is a monument commemorating the flight. Unfortunately Del Prete crashed on a demonstration flight in the same year and was badly injured. Despite having a leg amputated to avoid infection the pioneering aviator died a few days later; he was posthumously awarded Italy’s highest honour for those serving its air force, the Gold Medal to Aeronautic Valour.

Lucca has not only remembered Carlo Del Prete with the Piaggio-Douglas jet but also by naming a street after him. It’s the one which runs externally along the walls from Porta San Donato to Porta Santa Maria. Furthermore, if any of you are curious about a giant eagle in Piazza San Pietro Somaldi it nests on the house where Del Prete lived.

del prete eagle

Bagni di Lucca has its aviation hero too. In 2017 I attended the unveiling of a memorial plaque to Mario Calderara, Italy’s first licensed pilot, on the façade of the Villa Gamba.

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A private invitation from Pietro, the highly personable descendant of the Gamba-Calderara family, enabled us to visit the gardens and the piano nobile of the villa, otherwise strictly closed to the general public. Pietro showed us some valuable blueprints of his ancestor’s airplane designs.

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The full name of the villa is Gamba-Calderara and Mario Calderara (1879-1944), one of Italy’s greatest pioneer aviators, lived there. Calderara was the first Italian to get a pilot’s license in 1909 and was the builder of Italy’s first flying boat in 1911.

Mario, like his fellow Lucchese Carlo del Prete, joined Livorno’s naval academy where he graduated as midshipman in 1901. He became fascinated by the problems of flight and avidly studied the Wright brothers’ pioneering efforts. In 1907 Calderara reached a height of over 50 feet on his biplane towed by a ship. In 1909 he piloted his first unassisted heavier-than-air fight at Buc in France.

The big breakthrough occurred when Calderara invited Wilbur Wright to Rome. Wright gave Calderara some flying lessons and, consequently, Calderara’s flights increased in length.

In 1911 Calderara built a flying boat, the largest in the world and managed to fly three passengers on it in 1912. In 1917 he became one of the founders of the RAF’s Italian equivalent.

(Mario Calderara is another feather in the cap of those greats who have established Bagni di Lucca as a centre of excellence. For example, our town was the first in Italy to have electric street lighting, the first one to found a Scout troop, the first to pioneer hydro-therapy, the birthplace of Puccini’s ‘Turandot’ (as well as the place where most of the maestro’s ‘Girl of the Golden West’ was composed. It’s great that Bagni di Lucca is now also remembered as the home of one of Italy’s greatest aviation pioneers and co-founder of its air force).

Carlo del Prete and Mario Calderara make us reflect on the miracle of heavier-than-air flight and how we have become used to, indeed dependent on it, at no time more than the present when so many of us are stranded in some non-Italian part of the globe still waiting for that elusive flight to appear and return us to the ‘Bel Paese’!

Lockdown in Kandy

An increasing number of ‘Pandemic’ diaries are appearing on social media documenting personal experiences, especially regarding lockdown in Italy and other European countries. We too in our hotel in Kandy, the old capital of Sri Lanka, are being increasingly affected by the coronavirus crisis. Yesterday, Sri Lanka’s health minister confirmed a total of 77 positive cases, showing an inexorable rise since March 10th, when the first case of the virus was reported. 245 more cases remain under observation.

Police have already made many arrests on charges of violating the curfew that came into effect last Friday evening at 6 pm. It would originally have expired this Monday morning but has been extended until Tuesday.

It is our third day at this hotel in the hills encircling Kandy and we are not allowed to leave it. Luckily the hotel has extensive grounds and a swimming pool which reduces the impact of our imprisonment.

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Our room has French windows opening out into a particularly scenic panorama of exotic plants, the call of eastern bird species, and the flow of lusciously wooded hills.

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There are very few people around here. Indeed, the staff greatly outnumber the guests. An infra-red thermometer is fired at our forehead at least once a day by masked employees with recordings diligently noted down. There are hand sanitizers placed on tables. We continue to feel safe in this place, seemingly remote from the turmoil happening elsewhere.

Presumably the same feeling of safety entered the mind of Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma when he turned Kandy’s Queen’s Hotel into the Supreme Allied headquarters for fighting the Japanese during World War II.

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We visited this historic building for lunch before arriving at our present hotel. With a history of over 160 years Queen’s gives a nostalgic flavour of what it must have been like to be a traveller to this part of the world in a previous, more leisurely age. We dined in the ‘Queen of Hearts’ restaurant.

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I also visited the Royal Ballroom, now firmly under wraps. I wonder what elegant galas would have taken place here.

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There was also the colonial atmosphere of the Pub Royal, still open in these difficult times.

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However, things are not so calm in other parts of the island. Two inmates died following a clash at Anuradhapura (which we visited a few days ago) prison between the inmates and the prison guards who fired guns to contain them. This followed an argument in which prisoners complained about not being sufficiently protected against corona virus. I recollect that a protest recently occurred at Milan’s San Vittore jail over the same issue and wonder what will happen in the overcrowded UK prison and detention centres when virus peak time is reached as surely it must: a week later than Italy’s as the following figures demonstrate.

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When this whole major episode in the history of our planet is over I am sure there will be published a whole spate of diaries kept throughout the pandemic months.

For in all effects we are now living in a wartime situation. The enemy this time is the virus and not the axis forces; the danger is not from bombs damaging homes but from the virus damaging our bodies. For the majority of us let us trust it will be a lucky escape for none will be allowed a last kiss from loved ones or even a touch of their hand.

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One thing remains the same, however: more devastating than economic hardship will be the psychological damage wrought upon us. No matter how strong we keep ourselves our lives will never be quite the same again.

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(Ekphrasis courtesy of Alexandra Pettitt)

Let us hope that, instead, we can learn something from this crisis. The cleaner air in so many cities and the clearer water in Venice’s canals, the quieter streets, the absence of non-essential journeys, the esprit de corps in our communities increasingly shown towards the more vulnerable are all very hopeful signs for humanity and our planet. Compassion and tolerance must win in the end.

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Atishoo Atishoo We all Fall Down

One of the most extensive pandemics in Italy’s past, the Great Plague of 1630 harvested its maximum number of victims in northern Italy. Milan lost over a quarter of its inhabitants to ‘la peste’. Verona was the worst affected with over half of its citizens dying in horrible agony. The pandemic started with French and Austrian soldiers marching into Italy as mercenary garrisons for the main towns of the Po valley. Another factor was the extreme poverty of the population reduced by years of austerity under governments who failed to provide basic services in food production and medical facilities. Over a million perished in the great plague: around a quarter of the population.

The pandemic spread to other parts of Europe and may have been instrumental in causing the Great Plague of London in 1665.

The ‘Peste’ was graphically written about by Italy’s great writer Alessandro Manzoni in his novel ‘I Promessi Sposi (The Betrothed).

Like many other plagues its origin was eastern and may have been related to the Mongol invasion which almost conquered the Hapsburg empire. Special wear was developed to enable improved survival rates. Here are some examples.

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The beak-like mask enabled lavender pomanders to be inserted to protect the wearer from infection and combat stench from decomposing corpses.


With the medical knowledge of the age it was impossible to halt its progress although isolation centres known as Lazzaretti (the church of the Milan lazzaretto was recently restored) were set up. A certain Doctor Giuseppe Daciano did write an interesting treatise, however, on the pandemic and the methods of not catching it or curing it:

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What is most disturbing is the fate allocated to Lucca described in the prophecies of Nostradamus. In one of his quatrains he  mentions a “great plague” and the Italian city of Lucca.

(Century III, Quatrain 19) “In Lucca it will come to rain blood and milk”.

It would be a simple matter to quarantine many of the inhabitants of Lucca since they live in a city surrounded by massive walls should the prophecy ever come to be realised.

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On the bright side the great plague of northern Italy of the seventeenth century claimed many fewer victims than the 15th century pestilence known as the Black Death. That was one of the most devastating pandemics in history and  killed off an  estimated 75 to 200 million people in Europe and Asia.

(Any similarity between 1630 and 2020 are now not purely coincidental. Indeed, all inhabitants of Lucca, as all inhabitants of Italy, are under quarantine with all non-essential journeys banned.

PS Many of you may know that the nursery rhyme quote which titles this post alludes to the Great Plague of London in 1665.)

Dis-associations of Sensibility?

It’s a truism to say that every country has its own characteristics. That’s part of the joys of travelling. I love the diversities of our planet – I certainly don’t try to find a McDonald’s in Amsterdam if I’m hungry (like someone I know) or seek out a pint of Abbott in Madagascar if I’m thirsty. Occasionally I might have longings for baked beans on toast in Tuscany, only to find that ‘fagioli a l’uccelletto’ presents a much worthier alternative. At its worst our facing of different ways other countries have of doing things leads to that indefinable phenomenon of ‘culture shock’.

When my mother came from a war-ravaged Marshall-plan-aided northern Italy to a post-war United Kingdom drizzled in unprecedented depths of austerity and greyness she was clearly culturally surprized by the diversity and characteristics she encountered in the former Roman Empire’s province.

My mother’s visit was ostensibly a study one – to learn one of the world’s supremely illogical but most widely spoken languages: English but it soon ended in her pregnancy, her marriage and….me.

The things that struck Vera about the UK were both positive and negative. The most noticeable related to children’s upbringing. In Italy ‘mammismo’, or being tied to mum’s apron strings until well into one’s thirties (and often beyond), is still the trend (although more rapidly changing now since young people have resigned themselves to travel further from the family nest to find jobs – London remains a particularly sought-after destination and Italian is regularly heard spoken by passengers on many bus routes, the 176 and the 12 in particular. My mother greatly admired the independence English parents gave to their children. Sadly the situation has changed considerably from my own childhood when I could cycle freely around London in my early teens not only going to school but swanning to locations far from South London’s Forest Hill such as Waltham Abbey and Saint Albans – only to be ticked off if I arrived home late.

Although my mother came to enjoy the gentle landscapes of the North and South Downs she greatly missed the mountains of Italy. I remember one late afternoon with her in Lewisham high street when she suddenly became very emotional, confounding the formation of clouds for alpine peaks. (My mother had been a lover of the Alps, so easily within reach of her birth town, Milan, in particular the Bernina range which she had climbed from the rifugio Marinelli, an area I myself visited when barely a teenager.)

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(The Bernina Range a few years ago. I wonder if the summer snows are still there)

This longing for mountains, this yearning for their ecstatic profiles of empyrean heights is something I wished for and something which I re-encountered when lunching with some of my Italian ex-students from City University. On that occasion we both praised and trashed the UK: from the ‘Daily Mail’ reader to the absence of mountainous landscapes to the poor sartorial tastes of so many of the island’s denizens to inferior quality of buildings to the absence of reliably acceptable eateries.

There has always been a time of my life when I have had a need to get to the top of hills and mountains, whether they be in Italy, Switzerland, Wales or Ireland.

(The Quirang and Stac Polly)

Perhaps that’s why I’m living in the most mountainous area of Tuscany.

As a social worker for the first part of her working life in the UK (mainly in the field of mentally disturbed Italian emigrant workers) my mother naturally involved herself in the dynamics of everyday social life. I recall an instance when there was a fight in the yard of my primary school (Dalmain Road). Two boys, beating and kicking each other to the ground were surrounded by a circle of mums coming to collect their children. My mother was horrified by the fact that the parents appeared to be just gazing at the event without anyone stepping in to stop the fracas.  She reacted, angrily exclaiming ‘will no-one stop this?’ At this stage the other parents did react, the boys were separated and the fight stopped.

As someone brought up in the Roman Catholic religion my mother was not a particularly devoted practitioner but she absolutely detested what had happened to Catholics under the apostate reign of the loathsome Henry VIII. She carried sentiments akin to those wonderful lines in that Shakespeare sonnet which ruefully describes ‘bare ruined choirs where late the sweet birds sang’.

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(A family visit to Tintern Abbey)

The site of the dissolved monasteries of so many parts of Britain, in particular the abbeys of Yorkshire and Canterbury with its associations with Saint Augustine (my mum’s own middle name was ‘Agostina’) filled her with both wonder and sadness. She happily sought out religious fraternities re-established as a result of the nineteenth century Catholic emancipation act; I evoke visits to the Verona fathers (formerly at Tulse Hill) and other associations. In particular, Vera followed with the greatest interest the refounding of Aylesford friary which we saw from a derelict ruin with a handful of monks to the flourishing centre of religious devotion it has become.

Most of all was my mother’s long-term relationship with the former Italian Hospital in Queen square founded in 1884 by a prosperous Italian business man Commendatore Giovanni Battista Ortelli in and originally manned (or nunned?) by the The Sisters of St Vincent de Paul.

(Sadly the hospital closed in 1990 but happily the building is currently undergoing major remodelling and refurbishment to bring it back into clinical use and will reopen in spring 2020 as the Great Ormond Street Hospital Sight and Sound Centre, accommodating out-patient clinics for ophthalmology, audiology, ENT and related services).

I suppose these interests have continued with me. The English reformation remains an event of immense Taleban-like horror to me: its wanton destruction of magnificent gothic architecture, its burning of great polyphonic music, its obliteration of holy sites, its list of martyrs of both sides of the great divide all point to a particular malign manifestation of the disassociation of sensibility which the poet T. S. Eliot avers descended upon the UK during the succeeding century. It was then that the superb artistic flair of mediaeval Britain, the celebrated ‘opus anglicanorum’ was severed from its association with continental Europe and largely disrupted, vandalised and destroyed in the British Isles. Indeed, it’s paradoxically in places like Pisa museum and the Uffizi that some of the finest English pre-reformation art may still be admired for it was exported to all areas of Europe and therefore survived in a similar way that the great monuments of Nineveh have survived the wrath of iconoclasts by being exported to places like the British museum…

Who sensibly cannot help thinking that the present maniacal foreign policy being pursued by the United Kingdom’s government as a response to an outdated and unfair electoral system is another re-incarnation of the love-hate affair with those living on the other side of ‘La Manica’ (the ‘sleeve’ – the name Italians – and other continentals – give to what is generally known as ‘the English channel’) and particularly encapsulated in the personality of my mother and continued in my own beliefs.

 

Bagni di Lucca’s Gateway to the Death Camp

In this sombre week recalling the entry of the Red Army into the Auschwitz death camp 75 years ago I came across this article written by journalist Emanuela Ambrogi and have translated it as it also fits very aptly with the article I too have written about Bagni Di Lucca’s own concentration camp once housed in the now ruinous edifice opposite the Grande Albergo delle Terme.

Daniela Pieri, witness of those dark days of 1944, tells of the departure, destination Auschwitz, of the Jews detained in the temporary camp set up at the Grande Albergo delle Terme.
Hidden in the garden of her house, at eight years of age, by the hotel, Daniela saw the Jews pass by who had been imprisoned in the camp. Escorted by soldiers from the Republic of Salò and the SS they were loaded onto the trucks that brought them to Florence, and from here to Milan to then be transferred to Auschwitz and its gas chambers. (Visited by Francis Pettitt in 2001).

The memory of that January 23, 1944 is vivid in the mind of Daniela Pieri, who witnessed the deportation with her 11-year-old sister MariaTeresa: «I remember that those poor people, a hundred people, despite the cold and snow, walked in a resigned line and practically in silence, even if someone moaned a sad lullaby that I will never forget ».

Daniela recollects the time when the Jews, especially Slavic ethnic Jews, were gathered in Bagni in its Grande Albergo delle Terme, which became the property of the Italian Youth of the Littorio: «I remember that this huge complex had quickly been transformed from a place that welcomed noble and wealthy people who arrived in luxurious carriages into a dismal barracks which couldn’t even be mentioned. There was a friend of mine, younger than me, who said she heard the cries of children, but adults told us to keep silent saying that we had dreamed everything. There was so much fear, the weather was very cold and oppressive. Just by chance, my brother Piero, 14, did not end up among the deportees. To bring something to eat at home he helped the concentration camp cook in the kitchen, but once he was surprised by a German officer and only the intervention of the cook allowed him to return home. The same cook made him get off the truck where my brother had been put together with the Jews destined for martyrdom. My mother also found it really bad: one morning she was walking with my brother in Ponte a Serraglio when she was seized by a German soldier. In the square, a bit of fuss was also created because they started throwing objects from a house onto the street. The soldier tried to kick the door and then asked for a hand grenade. In the chaos my mother and brother slipped away. Given the dangerous situation from home, we moved to Pieve di Monti di Villa where we lived as displaced people in a hut ».

«Everything was missing – Daniela recalls – even if for the kids it was almost an adventure. Herbs in the fields were collected and then cooked to try to make the pork lard edible. I really didn’t like it, but I got away with eating berries, hazelnuts, figs, chestnuts and everything that could be found walking around the fields. Almost eighty years have passed; maybe I cannot remember some recent events, but in my mind I see those sad scenes as if it were now. And that sad lullaby will never abandon me ».

I myself have written various posts on this terrible chapter of Bagni Di Lucca’s past. Only a few years ago a plaque was finally placed on a building which, once clothed in opulence and glory (Puccini was a guest, for example, and wrote act two of his opera ‘the girl of the golden west’ there), now stands in its gothick horror as a symbol of man’s inhumanity to man.

May it never be rebuilt!

Thanksgiving…

Two years ago, on the same day that friends and fellow writers met up at Paolo’s superb Cantina di Carignano for the traditional Thanksgiving lunch, organized by Lucca’s ‘Grapevine’ magazine’s indefatigable editor Norma Jean, I found myself a thousand miles away walking in a part of London which has deep resonance with the original idea of American thanksgiving.

Rotherhithe is a former area of docks which has now largely been given over to new housing. Yet the romance and hardship of sea-faring journeys, the close-knit warehouse alleys and the Thameside pubs which once served mariners and smugglers still permeate this district.

 

Nowhere is this felt more than in the vicinity of Saint Mary the Virgin’s church in whose graveyard is buried Christopher Jones, the captain of the ‘Mayflower’.

 

This iconic ship gave passage to one hundred and two of the first English puritans – the pilgrim fathers (and mothers) – in a stormy passage lasting two months to finally land them in the New World by Cape Cod, surviving the most terrible winter with few supplies and insufficient clothing.

And it was from where I stood in Rotherhithe that the eighty-foot long cargo vessel began her epic voyage from the shore of one of the oldest riverside pubs in London, aptly called ‘The Mayflower’.

 

I lingered by the old river and, in Conradian mind, pondered on the history that has flowed down this great waterway. I thought of those latter day refugees fleeing from religious persecution and realised that thanksgiving is more than just a harvest festival: it’s a thanksgiving for the freedom of thought that so much of the world, despite ever-present menaces, is able to enjoy thanks to the courage of so many of our forefathers and our contemporaries.

 

(PS. Today I am, once more, present in Italy and will gladly attend Thanksgiving at Carignano).

 

 

Of Scouting and Bagni di Lucca

It was as a Wolf Cub that my first experience with Scouting began. Aged ten, I joined the ‘Pack’ attached to the local Methodist church. Inducted by Akela into first aid, backwoodsmanship, star-gazing, map-reading among other lore described in one of the most-read books in the world, Baden-Powell’s ‘Scouting for boys’, scouting was a welcome escape from primary school’s less adventurous curriculum.
Two occasions stand out: our ‘gangshow’ featuring the song ‘I’m the only man in the island’, and a trip to ride on the Dymchurch-Hythe miniature railway.

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In my secondary school I was given a choice of either joining the CCF (Combined Cadet Force) or the Boy Scouts. I naturally joined the latter and looked forwards to our summer camps where we pitched tents in idyllic locations: Barlavington and Trotton in England’s South Downs among them.

 

 

 

The Senior Scouts provided more challenging experiences including tough trekking through the wilds of the Isle of Skye’s Cuillin hills and more amenable hikes in Austria’s Salzkammergut.

 

 

 

 

It was, therefore, a pleasant way to reminisce when, at Bagni Di Lucca I came across the plaque celebrating Sir Francis Vane, the founder of Italy’s Scouting tradition in 1910, placed in front of the town’s Emergency medical centre, half-way between Villa and Ponte.

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I have briefly mentioned Sir Francis in two of my posts. One, with reference to the local Scout troop, is at:

Sightseeing at Bagni di Lucca Station

The other, about the first Italian to hold a pilot’s license, is at:

Bagni di Lucca Takes Flight!

But who was Sir Francis Vane? One thing is sure; Sir Francis was not your conventional British army colonel; his life was punctuated by incidents showing an unorthodox attitude and odds for the times he lived in.

Francis Patrick Fletcher Vane (Dublin, 1861 – London, 1934) was born to an Irish mother and a British father. He came from an aristocratic family with Masonic, progressive, Republican and socialist sympathies.

Sir Francis chose a military career and joined the Scots Guards. At the outbreak of the Boer War in 1899 he was sent to South Africa where he was harshly criticized for being too “pro-Boer”. Vane repeatedly criticised British war tactics, especially their use of the world’s first concentration camps for the Boers. Resigning from the army he became a South Africa correspondent for the Daily News and the Manchester Guardian.

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(Sir Francis Vane)

In 1906 Vane unsuccessfully stood as Liberal candidate. He also supported the suffragette and pacifist movements. At the outbreak of the First World War Vane resumed service with the rank of major, and was sent to Ireland.

In the 1916 Easter Rising, he manned the Portobello Barracks in Dublin with about 300 men. Vane fought to have Captain Bowen-Colthurst, who was under his command, indicted and convicted for criminal acts he ordered, in Vane’s absence, against Irish citizens. Vane’s commitment to the truth created annoyance and discontent from the army and he was forcibly discharged.

In 1910 Sir Francis Vane settled in Italy, where he collaborated with Remo Molinari of the Villa Gamba (still standing between Villa and Ponte) in the birth of the Italian Scout movement. Vane financed the Scouts largely from his own pocket supplying them with uniforms, equipment and recreational facilities and, indeed, causing his own bankruptcy.

 

 

 

 

(Early Scouting In Italy – the third one from Bagni Di Lucca)

In 1927 Sir Francis left Italy for good following the authoritarian turn of Mussolini’s fascist government and the subsequent suppression of the Italian Scouting Association and its replacement with the Balilla youth movement.

(Sandra’s dad when a Balilla youth)

Vane’s association with the founder of the world Scouting movement and its first Chief Scout is interesting. He met Robert Baden-Powell in 1909, enthusiastically espoused scouting and became a commissioner. Baden-Powell sought a figure like Vane’s to counter accusations of militarist organization directed at the movement. Soon, however, Vane clashed with the other leaders of the organization, and in November he was forced to resign. He then joined the British Boy Scouts (BBS), an association formed in May 1909 when a group from Battersea separated from Baden-Powell’s scouting group. Vane became its president. In February of the following year the BBS teamed up with another youth team, the Boys Life Brigade. These two formations gave birth to the National Peace Scouts.

I think I have said enough about Sir Francis Vane to convince you that he was truly a man ahead of his time. Do remember that when you’re next passing Bagni di Lucca’s emergency post.
***
During his lifetime Francis Vane wrote several books, some of which were highly controversial because of his distinctly unorthodox views. I shall enquire at our local library to see if they have copies of these:

 

 

 

The War and One Year After (1903): Critical publication on the means used by Britain in the war with the Boers;
Pax Britannica (1904-05): Follow-up to the previous pamphlet;
Walks and Peoples in Tuscany (1908);
The Other Illusions (1914)
Principles of Military Art (1916-17);
The Easter Rising (1917) book about the Irish uprising, heavily censored;
Agin the governments: Memories and Adventures of Sir Francis Fletcher Vane (1930) autobiographical.

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(Bagni di Lucca’s Emergency and Ambulance centre where Sir Francis Vane’s commemorative plaque may be found).