ITALIAN HOURS
By
Henry James
Published 1909
CONTENTS:
PREFACE. 3
VENICE. 4
THE
GRAND CANAL. 21
VENICE:
AN EARLY IMPRESSION.. 33
CASA
ALVISI 46
FROM
CHAMBÉRY TO MILAN.. 50
THE
OLD SAINT-GOTHARD LEAVES FROM A NOTE-BOOK.. 56
ITALY
REVISITED.. 63
A
ROMAN HOLIDAY.. 79
ROMAN
RIDES. 90
ROMAN
NEIGHBOURHOODS. 99
THE
AFTER-SEASON IN ROME. 109
FROM
A ROMAN NOTE-BOOK.. 113
A
FEW OTHER ROMAN NEIGHBOURHOODS. 124
A
CHAIN OF CITIES. 131
SIENA
EARLY AND LATE. 141
THE
AUTUMN IN FLORENCE. 153
FLORENTINE
NOTES. 159
TUSCAN
CITIES. 176
OTHER
TUSCAN CITIES. 182
RAVENNA.. 191
THE
SAINT'S AFTERNOON AND OTHERS. 197
The chapters of which this volume is composed have with few
exceptions already been collected, and were then associated with others
commemorative of other impressions of (no very extensive) excursions and
wanderings. The notes on various visits to Italy are here for the first time exclusively
placed together, and as they largely refer to quite other days than these--the
date affixed to each paper sufficiently indicating this--I have introduced a
few passages that speak for a later and in some cases a frequently repeated
vision of the places and scenes in question. I have not hesitated to amend my
text, expressively, wherever it seemed urgently to ask for this, though I have
not pretended to add the element of information or the weight of curious and
critical insistence to a brief record of light inquiries and conclusions. The
fond appeal of the observer concerned is all to aspects and appearances--above
all to the interesting face of things as it mainly used to be.
H. J.
VENICE
It is a great pleasure to write the word; but I am not sure
there is not a certain impudence in pretending to add
anything to it. Venice
has been painted and described many thousands of times, and of all the cities
of the world is the easiest to visit without going there. Open the first book
and you will find a rhapsody about it; step into the first picture-dealer's and
you will find three or four high-coloured "views" of it. There is
notoriously nothing more to be said on the subject. Every one has been there,
and every one has brought back a collection of photographs. There is as little
mystery about the Grand Canal as about our
local thoroughfare, and the name of St. Mark is as familiar as the postman's
ring. It is not forbidden, however, to speak of familiar things, and I hold
that for the true Venice-lover Venice
is always in order. There is nothing new to be said about her certainly, but
the old is better than any novelty. It would be a sad day indeed when there
should be something new to say. I write these lines with the full consciousness
of having no information whatever to offer. I do not pretend to enlighten the
reader; I pretend only to give a fillip to his memory; and I hold any writer
sufficiently justified who is himself in love with his theme.
I
Mr. Ruskin has given it up, that is very true; but only
after extracting half a lifetime of pleasure and an immeasurable quantity of
fame from it. We all may do the same, after it has served our turn, which it
probably will not cease to do for many a year to come. Meantime it is Mr.
Ruskin who beyond anyone helps us to enjoy. He has indeed lately produced
several aids to depression in the shape of certain little
humorous--ill-humorous--pamphlets (the series of St. Mark's Rest) which embody
his latest reflections on the subject of our city and describe the latest
atrocities perpetrated there. These latter are numerous and deeply to be
deplored; but to admit that they have spoiled Venice would be to admit that
Venice may be spoiled--an admission pregnant, as it seems to us, with
disloyalty. Fortunately one reacts against the Ruskinian contagion, and one
hour of the lagoon is worth a hundred pages of demoralised prose. This queer
late-coming prose of Mr. Ruskin (including the revised and condensed issue of
the Stones of Venice, only one little volume of which has been published, or
perhaps ever will be) is all to be read, though much of it appears addressed to
children of tender age. It is pitched in the nursery-key, and might be supposed
to emanate from an angry governess. It is, however, all suggestive, and much of
it is delightfully just. There is an inconceivable want of form in it, though
the author has spent his life in laying down the principles of form and
scolding people for departing from them; but it throbs and flashes with the
love of his subject--a love disconcerted and abjured, but which has still much
of the force of inspiration. Among the many strange things that have befallen
Venice, she has had the good fortune to become the object of a passion to a man
of splendid genius, who has made her his own and in doing so has made her the
world's. There is no better reading at Venice
therefore, as I say, than Ruskin, for every true Venice-lover can separate the
wheat from the chaff. The narrow theological spirit, the moralism à tout
propos, the queer provincialities and pruderies, are mere wild weeds in a
mountain of flowers. One may doubtless be very happy in Venice without reading at all--without
criticising or analysing or thinking a strenuous thought. It is a city in
which, I suspect, there is very little strenuous thinking, and yet it is a city
in which there must be almost as much happiness as misery. The misery of Venice stands there for all the world to see; it is part of the spectacle--a
thoroughgoing devotee of local colour might consistently say it is part of the
pleasure. The Venetian people have little to call their own--little more than
the bare privilege of leading their lives in the most beautiful of towns. Their
habitations are decayed; their taxes heavy; their pockets light; their opportunities
few. One receives an impression, however, that life presents itself to them
with attractions not accounted for in this meagre train of advantages, and that
they are on better terms with it than many people who have made a better
bargain. They lie in the sunshine; they dabble in the sea; they wear bright
rags; they fall into attitudes and harmonies; they assist at an eternal
conversazione. It is not easy to say that one would have them other than they
are, and it certainly would make an immense difference should they be better
fed. The number of persons in Venice
who evidently never have enough to eat is painfully large; but it would be more
painful if we did not equally perceive that the rich Venetian temperament may
bloom upon a dog's allowance. Nature has been kind to it, and sunshine and
leisure and conversation and beautiful views form the greater part of its
sustenance. It takes a great deal to make a successful American, but to make a
happy Venetian takes only a handful of quick sensibility. The Italian people
have at once the good and the evil fortune to be conscious of few wants; so
that if the civilisation of a society is measured by the number of its needs,
as seems to be the common opinion to-day, it is to be feared that the children
of the lagoon would make but a poor figure in a set of comparative tables. Not
their misery, doubtless, but the way they elude their misery, is what pleases
the sentimental tourist, who is gratified by the sight of a beautiful race that
lives by the aid of its imagination. The way to enjoy Venice is to follow the example of these
people and make the most of simple pleasures. Almost all the pleasures of the
place are simple; this may be maintained even under the imputation of ingenious
paradox. There is no simpler pleasure than looking at a fine Titian, unless it
be looking at a fine Tintoret or strolling into St. Mark's,--abominable the way
one falls into the habit,--and resting one's light-wearied eyes upon the
windowless gloom; or than floating in a gondola or than hanging over a balcony
or than taking one's coffee at Florian's. It is of such superficial pastimes
that a Venetian day is composed, and the pleasure of the matter is in the
emotions to which they minister. These are fortunately of the finest--otherwise
Venice would be
insufferably dull. Reading Ruskin is good; reading the old records is perhaps
better; but the best thing of all is simply staying on. The only way to care
for Venice as
she deserves it is to give her a chance to touch you often--to linger and
remain and return.
II
The danger is that you will not linger enough--a danger of
which the author of these lines had known something. It is possible to dislike Venice, and to entertain
the sentiment in a responsible and intelligent manner. There are travellers who
think the place odious, and those who are not of this opinion often find
themselves wishing that the others were only more numerous. The sentimental
tourist's sole quarrel with his Venice
is that he has too many competitors there. He likes to be alone; to be
original; to have (to himself, at least) the air of making discoveries. The Venice of to-day is a
vast museum where the little wicket that admits you is perpetually turning and
creaking, and you march through the institution with a herd of fellow-gazers.
There is nothing left to discover or describe, and originality of attitude is
completely impossible. This is often very annoying; you can only turn your back
on your impertinent playfellow and curse his want of delicacy. But this is not
the fault of Venice;
it is the fault of the rest of the world. The fault of Venice is that, though she is easy to admire,
she is not so easy to live with as you count living in other places. After you
have stayed a week and the bloom of novelty has rubbed off you wonder if you
can accommodate yourself to the peculiar conditions. Your old habits become
impracticable and you find yourself obliged to form new ones of an undesirable
and unprofitable character. You are tired of your gondola (or you think you
are) and you have seen all the principal pictures and heard the names of the
palaces announced a dozen times by your gondolier, who brings them out almost
as impressively as if he were an English butler bawling titles into a
drawing-room. You have walked several hundred times round the Piazza and bought
several bushels of photographs. You have visited the antiquity mongers whose
horrible sign-boards dishonour some of the grandest vistas in the Grand Canal;
you have tried the opera and found it very bad; you have bathed at the Lido and found the water flat. You have begun to have a
shipboard-feeling--to regard the Piazza as an enormous saloon and the Riva
degli Schiavoni as a promenade-deck. You are obstructed and encaged; your
desire for space is unsatisfied; you miss your usual exercise. You try to take
a walk and you fail, and meantime, as I say, you have come to regard your
gondola as a sort of magnified baby's cradle. You have no desire to be rocked
to sleep, though you are sufficiently kept awake by the irritation produced, as
you gaze across the shallow lagoon, by the attitude of the perpetual gondolier,
with his turned-out toes, his protruded chin, his absurdly unscientific stroke.
The canals have a horrible smell, and the everlasting Piazza, where you have looked
repeatedly at every article in every shop-window and found them all rubbish,
where the young Venetians who sell bead bracelets and "panoramas" are
perpetually thrusting their wares at you, where the same tightly-buttoned
officers are for ever sucking the same black weeds, at the same empty tables,
in front of the same cafés--the Piazza, as I say, has resolved itself into a
magnificent tread-mill. This is the state of mind of those shallow inquirers
who find Venice
all very well for a week; and if in such a state of mind you take your
departure you act with fatal rashness. The loss is your own, moreover; it is
not--with all deference to your personal attractions--that of your companions
who remain behind; for though there are some disagreeable things in Venice there is nothing so disagreeable as the visitors. The conditions are
peculiar, but your intolerance of them evaporates before it has had time to
become a prejudice. When you have called for the bill to go, pay it and remain,
and you will find on the morrow that you are deeply attached to Venice. It is by living
there from day to day that you feel the fulness of her charm; that you invite
her exquisite influence to sink into your spirit. The creature varies like a
nervous woman, whom you know only when you know all the aspects of her beauty.
She has high spirits or low, she is pale or red, grey or pink, cold or warm,
fresh or wan, according to the weather or the hour. She is always interesting
and almost always sad; but she has a thousand occasional graces and is always
liable to happy accidents. You become extraordinarily fond of these things; you
count upon them; they make part of your life. Tenderly fond you become; there
is something indefinable in those depths of personal acquaintance that gradually
establish themselves. The place seems to personify itself, to become human and
sentient and conscious of your affection. You desire to embrace it, to caress
it, to possess it; and finally a soft sense of possession grows up and your
visit becomes a perpetual love-affair. It is very true that if you go, as the
author of these lines on a certain occasion went, about the middle of March, a
certain amount of disappointment is possible. He had paid no visit for several
years, and in the interval the beautiful and helpless city had suffered an
increase of injury. The barbarians are in full possession and you tremble for
what they may do. You are reminded from the moment of your arrival that Venice scarcely exists
any more as a city at all; that she exists only as a battered peep-show and
bazaar. There was a horde of savage Germans encamped in the Piazza, and they
filled the Ducal Palace and the Academy with their
uproar. The English and Americans came a little later. They came in good time,
with a great many French, who were discreet enough to make very long repasts at
the Caffè Quadri, during which they were out of the way. The months of April
and May of the year 1881 were not, as a general thing, a favourable season for
visiting the Ducal
Palace and the Academy.
The valet-de-place had marked them for his own and
held triumphant possession of them. He celebrates his triumphs in a terrible
brassy voice, which resounds all over the place, and has, whatever language he
be speaking, the accent of some other idiom. During all the spring months in Venice these gentry
abound in the great resorts, and they lead their helpless captives through
churches and galleries in dense irresponsible groups. They infest the Piazza;
they pursue you along the Riva; they hang about the bridges and the doors of
the cafés. In saying just now that I was disappointed at first, I had chiefly
in mind the impression that assails me to-day in the whole precinct of St.
Mark's. The condition of this ancient sanctuary is surely a great scandal. The
pedlars and commissioners ply their trade--often a very unclean one--at the
very door of the temple; they follow you across the threshold, into the sacred
dusk, and pull your sleeve, and hiss into your ear, scuffling with each other
for customers. There is a great deal of dishonour about St. Mark's altogether,
and if Venice,
as I say, has become a great bazaar, this exquisite edifice is now the biggest
booth.
III
It is treated as a booth in all ways, and if it had not
somehow a great spirit of solemnity within it the traveller would soon have
little warrant for regarding it as a religious affair. The restoration of the
outer walls, which has lately been so much attacked and defended, is certainly
a great shock. Of the necessity of the work only an expert is, I suppose, in a
position to judge; but there is no doubt that, if a necessity it be, it is one
that is deeply to be regretted. To no more distressing necessity have people of
taste lately had to resign themselves. Wherever the hand of the restorer has been
laid all semblance of beauty has vanished; which is a sad fact, considering
that the external loveliness of St. Mark's has been for ages less impressive
only than that of the still comparatively uninjured interior. I know not what
is the measure of necessity in such a case, and it appears indeed to be a very
delicate question. To-day, at any rate, that admirable harmony of faded mosaic
and marble which, to the eye of the traveller emerging from the narrow streets
that lead to the Piazza, filled all the further end of it with a sort of
dazzling silver presence--to-day this lovely vision is in a way to be
completely reformed and indeed well-nigh abolished. The old softness and
mellowness of colour--the work of the quiet centuries and of the breath of the salt
sea--is giving way to large crude patches of new material which have the effect
of a monstrous malady rather than of a restoration to health. They look like
blotches of red and white paint and dishonourable smears of chalk on the cheeks
of a noble matron. The face toward the Piazzetta is in especial the
newest-looking thing conceivable--as new as a new pair of boots or as the
morning's paper. We do not profess, however, to undertake a scientific quarrel
with these changes; we admit that our complaint is a purely sentimental one.
The march of industry in united Italy
must doubtless be looked at as a whole, and one must endeavour to believe that
it is through innumerable lapses of taste that this deeply interesting country
is groping her way to her place among the nations. For the present, it is not
to be denied, certain odd phases of the process are more visible than the
result, to arrive at which it seems necessary that, as she was of old a
passionate votary of the beautiful, she should to-day burn everything that she
has adored. It is doubtless too soon to judge her, and there are moments when
one is willing to forgive her even the restoration of St. Mark's. Inside as
well there has been a considerable attempt to make the place more
tidy; but the general effect, as yet, has not seriously suffered. What I
chiefly remember is the straightening out of that dark and rugged old
pavement--those deep undulations of primitive mosaic in which the fond
spectator was thought to perceive an intended resemblance to the waves of the
ocean. Whether intended or not the analogy was an image the more in a
treasure-house of images; but from a considerable portion of the church it has
now disappeared. Throughout the greater part indeed the pavement remains as
recent generations have known it--dark, rich, cracked, uneven, spotted with
porphyry and time-blackened malachite, polished by the knees of innumerable
worshippers; but in other large stretches the idea imitated by the restorers is
that of the ocean in a dead calm, and the model they have taken the floor of a
London club-house or of a New York hotel. I think no Venetian and scarcely any
Italian cares much for such differences; and when, a year ago, people in England were
writing to the Times about the whole business and holding meetings to protest
against it the dear children of the lagoon--so far as they heard or heeded the
rumour--thought them partly busy-bodies and partly asses. Busy-bodies they
doubtless were, but they took a good deal of disinterested trouble. It never occurs
to the Venetian mind of to-day that such trouble may be worth taking; the
Venetian mind vainly endeavours to conceive a state of existence in which
personal questions are so insipid that people have to look for grievances in
the wrongs of brick and marble. I must not, however, speak of St. Mark's as if
I had the pretension of giving a description of it or as if the reader desired
one. The reader has been too well served already. It is surely the
best-described building in the world. Open the Stones of Venice, open Théophile
Gautier's ltalia, and you will see. These writers take it very seriously, and
it is only because there is another way of taking it that I venture to speak of
it; the way that offers itself after you have been in Venice a couple of months,
and the light is hot in the great Square, and you pass in under the pictured
porticoes with a feeling of habit and friendliness and a desire for something
cool and dark. There are moments, after all, when the church is comparatively
quiet and empty, and when you may sit there with an easy consciousness of its
beauty. From the moment, of course, that you go into any Italian church for any
purpose but to say your prayers or look at the ladies, you rank yourself among
the trooping barbarians I just spoke of; you treat the place as an orifice in
the peep-show. Still, it is almost a spiritual function--or, at the worst, an
amorous one--to feed one's eyes on the molten colour that drops from the hollow
vaults and thickens the air with its richness. It is all so quiet and sad and
faded and yet all so brilliant and living. The strange figures in the mosaic
pictures, bending with the curve of niche and vault, stare down through the
glowing dimness; the burnished gold that stands behind them catches the light on
its little uneven cubes. St. Mark's owes nothing of its character to the beauty
of proportion or perspective; there is nothing grandly balanced or far-arching;
there are no long lines nor triumphs of the
perpendicular. The church arches indeed, but arches like a dusky cavern. Beauty
of surface, of tone, of detail, of things near enough to touch and kneel upon
and lean against--it is from this the effect proceeds. In this sort of beauty
the place is incredibly rich, and you may go there every day and find afresh
some lurking pictorial nook. It is a treasury of bits, as the painters say; and
there are usually three or four of the fraternity with their easels set up in
uncertain equilibrium on the undulating floor. It is not easy to catch the real
complexion of St. Mark's, and these laudable attempts at portraiture are apt to
look either lurid or livid. But if you cannot paint the old loose-looking
marble slabs, the great panels of basalt and jasper, the crucifixes of which
the lonely anguish looks deeper in the vertical light, the tabernacles whose
open doors disclose a dark Byzantine image spotted with dull, crooked gems--if
you cannot paint these things you can at least grow fond of them. You grow fond
even of the old benches of red marble, partly worn away by the breeches of many
generations and attached to the base of those wide pilasters of which the
precious plating, delightful in its faded brownness, with a faint grey bloom
upon it, bulges and yawns a little with honourable age.
[Illustration: FLAGS AT ST. MARK'S VENICE]
IV
Even at first, when the vexatious sense of the city of the
Doges reduced to earning its living as a curiosity-shop was in its keenness,
there was a great deal of entertainment to be got from lodging on Riva
Schiavoni and looking out at the far-shimmering lagoon. There was entertainment
indeed in simply getting into the place and observing the queer incidents of a
Venetian installation. A great many persons contribute indirectly to this
undertaking, and it is surprising how they spring out at you during your
novitiate to remind you that they are bound up in some mysterious manner with
the constitution of your little establishment. It was an interesting problem
for instance to trace the subtle connection existing between the niece of the
landlady and the occupancy of the fourth floor. Superficially it was none too
visible, as the young lady in question was a dancer at the Fenice theatre--or
when that was closed at the Rossini--and might have been supposed absorbed by
her professional duties. It proved necessary, however, that she should hover
about the premises in a velvet jacket and a pair of black kid gloves with one
little white button; as also, that she should apply a thick coating of powder
to her face, which had a charming oval and a sweet weak expression, like that
of most of the Venetian maidens, who, as a general thing--it was not a
peculiarity of the land-lady's niece--are fond of besmearing themselves with
flour. You soon recognise that it is not only the many-twinkling lagoon you
behold from a habitation on the Riva; you see a little of everything Venetian.
Straight across, before my windows, rose the great pink mass of San Giorgio
Maggiore, which has for an ugly Palladian church a success beyond all reason.
It is a success of position, of colour, of the immense detached Campanile,
tipped with a tall gold angel. I know not whether it is because San Giorgio is
so grandly conspicuous, with a great deal of worn, faded-looking brickwork; but
for many persons the whole place has a kind of suffusion of rosiness. Asked
what may be the leading colour in the Venetian concert, we should inveterately
say Pink, and yet without remembering after all that this elegant hue occurs
very often. It is a faint, shimmering, airy, watery pink; the bright sea-light
seems to flush with it and the pale whiteish-green of lagoon and canal to drink
it in. There is indeed a great deal of very evident brickwork, which is never
fresh or loud in colour, but always burnt out, as it were, always exquisitely
mild.
Certain little mental pictures rise before the collector of
memories at the simple mention, written or spoken, of the places he has loved.
When I hear, when I see, the magical name I have written above these pages, it
is not of the great Square that I think, with its strange basilica and its high
arcades, nor of the wide mouth of the Grand Canal, with the stately steps and
the well- poised dome of the Salute; it is not of the low lagoon, nor the sweet
Piazzetta, nor the dark chambers of St. Mark's. I simply see a narrow canal in
the heart of the city--a patch of green water and a surface of pink wall. The
gondola moves slowly; it gives a great smooth swerve, passes under a bridge,
and the gondolier's cry, carried over the quiet water, makes a kind of splash in
the stillness. A girl crosses the little bridge, which has an arch like a
camel's back, with an old shawl on her head, which makes her characteristic and
charming; you see her against the sky as you float beneath. The pink of the old
wall seems to fill the whole place; it sinks even into the opaque water. Behind
the wall is a garden, out of which the long arm of a white June rose--the roses
of Venice are
splendid--has flung itself by way of spontaneous ornament. On the other side of
this small water-way is a great shabby facade of Gothic windows and
balconies--balconies on which dirty clothes are hung and under which a
cavernous-looking doorway opens from a low flight of slimy water-steps. It is
very hot and still, the canal has a queer smell, and the whole place is
enchanting.
[Illustration: A NARROW
CANAL, VENICE]
It is poor work, however, talking about the colour of things
in Venice. The
fond spectator is perpetually looking at it from his window, when he is not
floating about with that delightful sense of being for the moment a part of it,
which any gentleman in a gondola is free to entertain. Venetian windows and
balconies are a dreadful lure, and while you rest your elbows on these
cushioned ledges the precious hours fly away. But in truth Venice isn't in fair weather a place for
concentration of mind. The effort required for sitting down to a writing-table
is heroic, and the brightest page of MS. looks dull beside the brilliancy of
your milieu. All nature beckons you forth and murmurs to you sophistically that
such hours should be devoted to collecting impressions. Afterwards, in ugly
places, at unprivileged times, you can convert your impressions into prose.
Fortunately for the present proser the weather wasn't always fine; the first
month was wet and windy, and it was better to judge of the matter from an open
casement than to respond to the advances of persuasive gondoliers. Even then
however there was a constant entertainment in the view. It was all cold colour, and the steel-grey floor of the lagoon was stroked
the wrong way by the wind. Then there were charming cool intervals, when the
churches, the houses, the anchored fishing-boats, the whole gently-curving line
of the Riva, seemed to be washed with a pearly white. Later it all turned
warm--warm to the eye as well as to other senses. After the middle of May the
whole place was in a glow. The sea took on a thousand shades, but they were
only infinite variations of blue, and those rosy walls I just spoke of began to
flush in the thick sunshine. Every patch of colour, every yard of
weather-stained stucco, every glimpse of nestling garden or daub of sky above a
calle, began to shine and sparkle--began, as the painters say, to
"compose." The lagoon was streaked with odd currents, which played
across it like huge smooth finger-marks. The gondolas multiplied and spotted it
allover; every gondola and gondolier looking, at a distance, precisely like
every other.
There is something strange and fascinating in this
mysterious impersonality of the gondola. It has an identity when you are in it,
but, thanks to their all being of the same size, shape and colour, and of the
same deportment and gait, it has none, or as little as possible, as you see it
pass before you. From my windows on the Riva there was always the same
silhouette--the long, black, slender skiff, lifting its head and throwing it
back a little, moving yet seeming not to move, with the grotesquely-graceful
figure on the poop. This figure inclines, as may be, more to the graceful or to
the grotesque--standing in the "second position" of the
dancing-master, but indulging from the waist upward in a freedom of movement
which that functionary would deprecate. One may say as a general thing that
there is something rather awkward in the movement even of the most graceful
gondolier, and something graceful in the movement of the most awkward. In the
graceful men of course the grace predominates, and nothing can be finer than
the large, firm way in which, from their point of vantage, they throw
themselves over their tremendous oar. It has the boldness of a plunging bird
and the regularity of a pendulum. Sometimes, as you see this movement in
profile, in a gondola that passes you--see, as you recline on your own low
cushions, the arching body of the gondolier lifted up against the sky--it has a
kind of nobleness which suggests an image on a Greek frieze. The gondolier at Venice is your very good
friend--if you choose him happily--and on the quality of the personage depends
a good deal that of your impressions. He is a part of your daily life, your
double, your shadow, your complement. Most people, I think, either like their
gondolier or hate him; and if they like him, like him very much. In this case
they take an interest in him after his departure; wish him to be sure of
employment, speak of him as the gem of gondoliers and tell their friends to be
certain to "secure" him. There is usually no difficulty in securing
him; there is nothing elusive or reluctant about a gondolier. Nothing would
induce me not to believe them for the most part excellent fellows, and the
sentimental tourist must always have a kindness for them. More than the rest of
the population, of course, they are the children of Venice; they are associated with its
idiosyncrasy, with its essence, with its silence, with its melancholy.
When I say they are associated with its silence I should
immediately add that they are associated also with its sound. Among themselves
they are an extraordinarily talkative company. They chatter at the traghetti,
where they always have some sharp point under discussion; they bawl across the
canals; they bespeak your commands as you approach; they defy each other from
afar. If you happen to have a traghetto under your window, you are well aware
that they are a vocal race. I should go even further than I went just now, and
say that the voice of the gondolier is in fact for audibility the dominant or
rather the only note of Venice.
There is scarcely another heard sound, and that indeed is part of the interest
of the place. There is no noise there save distinctly human noise; no rumbling,
no vague uproar, nor rattle of wheels and hoofs. It is all articulate and vocal
and personal. One may say indeed that Venice
is emphatically the city of conversation; people talk all over the place
because there is nothing to interfere with its being caught by the ear. Among
the populace it is a general family party. The still water carries the voice,
and good Venetians exchange confidences at a distance of half a mile. It saves
a world of trouble, and they don't like trouble. Their delightful garrulous
language helps them to make Venetian life a long conversazione. This language,
with its soft elisions, its odd transpositions, its kindly contempt for
consonants and other disagreeables, has in it something peculiarly human and
accommodating. If your gondolier had no other merit he would have the merit
that he speaks Venetian. This may rank as a merit even--some people perhaps
would say especially--when you don't understand what he says. But he adds to it
other graces which make him an agreeable feature in your life. The price he
sets on his services is touchingly small, and he has a happy art of being
obsequious without being, or at least without seeming, abject. For occasional
liberalities he evinces an almost lyrical gratitude. In short he has
delightfully good manners, a merit which he shares for the most part with the
Venetians at large. One grows very fond of these people, and the reason of
one's fondness is the frankness and sweetness of their address. That of the
Italian family at large has much to recommend it; but in the Venetian manner
there is something peculiarly ingratiating. One feels that the race is old,
that it has a long and rich civilisation in its blood, and that if it hasn't been
blessed by fortune it has at least been polished by time. It hasn't a genius
for stiff morality, and indeed makes few pretensions in that direction. It
scruples but scantly to represent the false as the true, and has been accused
of cultivating the occasion to grasp and to overreach, and of steering a
crooked course--not to your and my advantage--amid the sanctities of property.
It has been accused further of loving if not too well at least too often, of
being in fine as little austere as possible. I am not sure it is very brave,
nor struck with its being very industrious. But it has an unfailing sense of
the amenities of life; the poorest Venetian is a natural man of the world. He
is better company than persons of his class are apt to be among the nations of
industry and virtue--where people are also sometimes perceived to lie and steal
and otherwise misconduct themselves. He has a great desire to please and to be
pleased.
V
In that matter at least the cold-blooded stranger begins at
last to imitate him; begins to lead a life that shall be before all things
easy; unless indeed he allow himself, like Mr. Ruskin, to be put out of humour
by Titian and Tiepolo. The hours he spends among the pictures are his best
hours in Venice,
and I am ashamed to have written so much of common things when I might have
been making festoons of the names of the masters. Only, when we have covered
our page with such festoons what more is left to say? When one has said
Carpaccio and Bellini, the Tintoret and the Veronese, one has struck a note
that must be left to resound at will. Everything has been said about the mighty
painters, and it is of little importance that a pilgrim the more has found them
to his taste. "Went this morning to the Academy; was very much pleased with
Titian's 'Assumption.'" That honest phrase has doubtless been written in
many a traveller's diary, and was not indiscreet on the part of its author. But
it appeals little to the general reader, and we must moreover notoriously not
expose our deepest feelings. Since I have mentioned Titian's
"Assumption" I must say that there are some people who have been less
pleased with it than the observer we have just imagined. It is one of the
possible disappointments of Venice,
and you may if you like take advantage of your privilege of not caring for it.
It imparts a look of great richness to the side of the beautiful room of the
Academy on which it hangs; but the same room contains two or three works less
known to fame which are equally capable of inspiring a passion. "The
'Annunciation' struck me as coarse and superficial": that note was once
made in a simple-minded tourist's book. At Venice, strange to say, Titian is altogether
a disappointment; the city of his adoption is far from containing the best of
him. Madrid, Paris,
London, Florence,
Dresden, Munich
--these are the homes of his greatness.
There are other painters who have but a single home, and the
greatest of these is the Tintoret. Close beside him sit Carpaccio and Bellini,
who make with him the dazzling Venetian trio. The Veronese may be seen and
measured in other places; he is most splendid in Venice,
but he shines in Paris and in Dresden. You may walk out of the noon-day
dusk of Trafalgar Square
in November, and in one of the chambers of the National Gallery see the family
of Darius rustling and pleading and weeping at the feet of Alexander. Alexander
is a beautiful young Venetian in crimson pantaloons, and the picture sends a
glow into the cold London
twilight. You may sit before it for an hour and dream you are floating to the
water-gate of the Ducal Palace, where a certain old beggar who has one of the
handsomest heads in the world--he has sat to a hundred painters for Doges and
for personages more sacred--has a prescriptive right to pretend to pull your gondola
to the steps and to hold out a greasy immemorial cap. But you must go to Venice in very fact to
see the other masters, who form part of your life while you are there, who
illuminate your view of the universe. It is difficult to express one's relation
to them; the whole Venetian art-world is so near, so familiar, so much an
extension and adjunct of the spreading actual, that it seems almost invidious
to say one owes more to one of them than to the other. Nowhere, not even in
Holland, where the correspondence between the real aspects and the little
polished canvases is so constant and so exquisite, do art and life seem so
interfused and, as it were, so consanguineous. All the splendour of light and
colour, all the Venetian air and the Venetian history are on the walls and
ceilings of the palaces; and all the genius of the masters, all the images and
visions they have left upon canvas, seem to tremble in the sunbeams and dance
upon the waves. That is the perpetual interest of the place--that
you live in a certain sort of knowledge as in a rosy cloud. You don't go into
the churches and galleries by way of a change from the streets; you go into
them because they offer you an exquisite reproduction of the things that
surround you. All Venice
was both model and painter, and life was so pictorial that art couldn't help
becoming so. With all diminutions life is pictorial still, and this fact gives
an extraordinary freshness to one's perception of the great Venetian works. You
judge of them not as a connoisseur, but as a man of the world, and you enjoy
them because they are so social and so true. Perhaps of all works of art that
are equally great they demand least reflection on the part of the
spectator--they make least of a mystery of being enjoyed. Reflection only confirms
your admiration, yet is almost ashamed to show its head. These things speak so
frankly and benignantly to the sense that even when they arrive at the highest
style--as in the Tintoret's "Presentation of the little Virgin at the Temple"--they are still
more familiar.
But it is hard, as I say, to express all this, and it is
painful as well to attempt it--painful because in the memory of vanished hours
so filled with beauty the consciousness of present loss oppresses. Exquisite
hours, enveloped in light and silence, to have known them once is to have
always a terrible standard of enjoyment. Certain lovely mornings of May and
June come back with an ineffaceable fairness. Venice
isn't smothered in flowers at this season, in the manner of Florence
and Rome; but
the sea and sky themselves seem to blossom and rustle. The gondola waits at the
wave-washed steps, and if you are wise you will take your place beside a
discriminating companion. Such a companion in Venice should of course be of the sex that
discriminates most finely. An intelligent woman who knows her Venice seems doubly intelligent, and it makes
no woman's perceptions less keen to be aware that she can't help looking
graceful as she is borne over the waves. The handsome Pasquale, with uplifted
oar, awaits your command, knowing, in a general way, from observation of your habits, that your intention is to go to see a picture or
two. It perhaps doesn't immensely matter what picture you choose: the whole
affair is so charming. It is charming to wander through the light and shade of
intricate canals, with perpetual architecture above you and perpetual fluidity
beneath. It is charming to disembark at the polished steps of a little empty
campo--a sunny shabby square with an old well in the middle, an old church on
one side and tall Venetian windows looking down. Sometimes the windows are
tenantless; sometimes a lady in a faded dressing-gown leans vaguely on the
sill. There is always an old man holding out his hat for coppers; there are
always three or four small boys dodging possible umbrella-pokes while they
precede you, in the manner of custodians, to the door of the church.
VI
The churches of Venice
are rich in pictures, and many a masterpiece lurks in the unaccommodating gloom
of side-chapels and sacristies. Many a noble work is perched behind the dusty
candles and muslin roses of a scantily-visited altar; some of them indeed,
hidden behind the altar, suffer in a darkness that can never be explored. The
facilities offered you for approaching the picture in such cases are a mockery
of your irritated wish. You stand at tip-toe on a three-legged stool, you climb
a rickety ladder, you almost mount upon the shoulders
of the custode. You do everything but see the picture. You see just enough to
be sure it's beautiful. You catch a glimpse of a divine head, of a fig tree
against a mellow sky, but the rest is impenetrable mystery. You renounce all
hope, for instance, of approaching the magnificent Cima da Conegliano in San
Giovanni in Bragora; and bethinking yourself of the immaculate purity that
shines in the spirit of this master, you renounce it with chagrin and pain.
Behind the high altar in that church hangs a Baptism of Christ by Cima which I
believe has been more or less repainted. You make the thing out in spots, you see it has a fullness of perfection. But you turn
away from it with a stiff neck and promise yourself consolation in the Academy
and at the Madonna dell' Orto, where two noble works by the same hand--pictures
as clear as a summer twilight--present themselves in
better circumstances. It may be said as a general thing that you never see the
Tintoret. You admire him, you adore him, you think him the greatest of
painters, but in the great majority of cases your eyes fail to deal with him.
This is partly his own fault; so many of his works have turned to blackness and
are positively rotting in their frames. At the Scuola di San Rocco, where there
are acres of him, there is scarcely anything at all adequately visible save the
immense "Crucifixion" in the upper story. It is true that in looking
at this huge composition you look at many pictures; it has not only a multitude
of figures but a wealth of episodes; and you pass from one of these to the
other as if you were "doing" a gallery. Surely no single picture in
the world contains more of human life; there is everything in it, including the
most exquisite beauty. It is one of the greatest things of art; it is always
interesting. There are works of the artist which contain touches more
exquisite, revelations of beauty more radiant, but there is no other vision of
so intense a reality, an execution so splendid. The interest, the
impressiveness, of that whole corner of Venice,
however melancholy the effect of its gorgeous and ill-lighted chambers, gives a
strange importance to a visit to the Scuola. Nothing that all travellers go to
see appears to suffer less from the incursions of travellers. It is one of the
loneliest booths of the bazaar, and the author of these lines has always had
the good fortune, which he wishes to every other traveller, of having it to
himself. I think most visitors find the place rather alarming and
wicked-looking. They walk about a while among the fitful figures that gleam
here and there out of the great tapestry (as it were) with which the painter
has hung all the walls, and then, depressed and bewildered by the portentous
solemnity of these objects, by strange glimpses of unnatural scenes, by the
echo of their lonely footsteps on the vast stone floors, they take a hasty
departure, finding themselves again, with a sense of release from danger, a
sense that the genius loci was a sort of mad white-washer who worked with a bad
mixture, in the bright light of the campo, among the beggars, the
orange-vendors and the passing gondolas. Solemn indeed is the place, solemn and
strangely suggestive, for the simple reason that we shall scarcely find four
walls elsewhere that inclose within a like area an equal quantity of genius.
The air is thick with it and dense and difficult to breathe; for it was genius
that was not happy, inasmuch as it, lacked the art to
fix itself for ever. It is not immortality that we breathe at the Scuola di San
Rocco, but conscious, reluctant mortality.
Fortunately, however, we can turn to the Ducal Palace,
where everything is so brilliant and splendid that the poor dusky Tintoret is
lifted in spite of himself into the concert. This deeply original building is
of course the loveliest thing in Venice,
and a morning's stroll there is a wonderful illumination. Cunningly select your
hour--half the enjoyment of Venice
is a question. of dodging--and enter at about one
o'clock, when the tourists have flocked off to lunch and the echoes of the
charming chambers have gone to sleep among the sunbeams. There is no brighter
place in Venice--by
which I mean that on the whole there is none half so bright. The reflected
sunshine plays up through the great windows from the glittering lagoon and
shimmers and twinkles over gilded walls and ceilings. All the history of Venice, all its splendid
stately past, glows around you in a strong sealight. Everyone here is
magnificent, but the great Veronese is the most magnificent of all. He swims
before you in a silver cloud; he thrones in an eternal morning. The deep blue
sky burns behind him, streaked across with milky bars; the white colonnades
sustain the richest canopies, under which the first gentlemen and ladies in the
world both render homage and receive it. Their glorious garments rustle in the
air of the sea and their sun-lighted faces are the very complexion of Venice. The mixture of
pride and piety, of politics and religion, of art and patriotism, gives a
splendid dignity to every scene. Never was a painter more nobly joyous, never
did an artist take a greater delight in life, seeing it all as a kind of breezy
festival and feeling it through the medium of perpetual success. He revels in
the gold-framed ovals of the ceilings, multiplies himself there with the
fluttering movement of an embroidered banner that tosses itself into the blue.
He was the happiest of painters and produced the happiest picture in the world.
"The Rape of Europa" surely deserves this title; it is impossible to
look at it without aching with envy. Nowhere else in art is such a temperament
revealed; never did inclination and opportunity combine to express such
enjoyment. The mixture of flowers and gems and brocade, of blooming flesh and
shining sea and waving groves, of youth, health, movement, desire--all this is
the brightest vision that ever descended upon the soul of a painter. Happy the
artist who could entertain such a vision; happy the artist who could paint it
as the masterpiece I here recall is painted.
The Tintoret's visions were not so
bright as that; but he had several that were radiant enough. In the room that
contains the work just cited are several smaller canvases by the greatly more
complex genius of the Scuola di San Rocco, which are almost simple in their
loveliness, almost happy in their simplicity. They have kept their brightness
through the centuries, and they shine with their neighbours in those golden
rooms. There is a piece of painting in one of them which is one of the sweetest
things in Venice and which reminds one afresh of those wild flowers of
execution that bloom so profusely and so unheeded in the dark corners of all of
the Tintoret's work. "Pallas chasing away Mars" is, I believe, the
name that is given to the picture; and it represents in fact a young woman of
noble appearance administering a gentle push to a fine young man in armour, as
if to tell him to keep his distance. It is of the gentleness of this push that
I speak, the charming way in which she puts out her arm, with a single bracelet
on it, and rests her young hand, its rosy fingers parted, on his dark
breastplate. She bends her enchanting head with the effort--a head which has
all the strange fairness that the Tintoret always sees in women--and the soft,
living, flesh-like glow of all these members, over which the brush has scarcely
paused in its course, is as pretty an example of genius as all Venice can show.
But why speak of the Tintoret when I can say nothing of the great "Paradise," which unfolds its somewhat smoky
splendour and the wonder of its multitudinous circles in one of the other
chambers? If it were not one of the first pictures in the world it would be
about the biggest, and we must confess that the spectator gets from it at first
chiefly an impression of quantity. Then he sees that this quantity is really
wealth; that the dim confusion of faces is a magnificent composition, and that
some of the details of this composition are extremely beautiful. It is
impossible however in a retrospect of Venice
to specify one's happiest hours, though as one looks backward certain
ineffaceable moments start here and there into vividness. How is it possible to
forget one's visits to the sacristy of the Frari, however frequent they may
have been, and the great work of John Bellini which forms the treasure of that
apartment?
VII
Nothing in Venice
is more perfect than this, and we know of no work of art more complete. The
picture is in three compartments; the Virgin sits in the central division with
her child; two venerable saints, standing close together, occupy each of the
others. It is impossible to imagine anything more finished or more ripe. It is one of those things that sum up the genius
of a painter, the experience of a life, the teaching of a school. It seems
painted with molten gems, which have only been clarified by time, and is as
solemn as it is gorgeous and as simple as it is deep. Giovanni Bellini is more
or less everywhere in Venice,
and, wherever he is, almost certain to be first--first, I mean, in his own
line: paints little else than the Madonna and the saints; he has not
Carpaccio's care for human life at large, nor the Tintoret's nor the of the Veronese. Some of his greater pictures, however,
where several figures are clustered together, have a richness of sanctity that
is almost profane. There is one of them on the dark side of the room at the
Academy that contains Titian's "Assumption," which if we could only
see it--its position is an inconceivable scandal--would evidently be one of the
mightiest of so-called sacred pictures. So too is the Madonna of San Zaccaria,
hung in a cold, dim, dreary place, ever so much too high, but so mild and
serene, and so grandly disposed and accompanied, that the proper attitude for
even the most critical amateur, as he looks at it, strikes one as the bended
knee. There is another noble John Bellini, one of the very few in which there
is no Virgin, at San Giovanni Crisostomo--a St. Jerome, in a red dress, sitting
aloft upon the rocks and with a landscape of extraordinary purity behind him.
The absence of the peculiarly erect Madonna makes it an interesting surprise
among the works of the painter and gives it a somewhat less strenuous air. But
it has brilliant beauty and the St.
Jerome is a delightful old personage.
The same church contains another great picture for which the
haunter of these places must find a shrine apart in his memory; one of the most
interesting things he will have seen, if not the most brilliant. Nothing
appeals more to him than three figures of Venetian ladies which occupy the
foreground of a smallish canvas of Sebastian del
Piombo, placed above the high altar of San Giovanni Crisostomo. Sebastian was a
Venetian by birth, but few of his productions are to be seen in his native
place; few indeed are to be seen anywhere. The picture represents the
patron-saint of the church, accompanied by other saints and by the worldly votaries
I have mentioned. These ladies stand together on the left, holding in their
hands little white caskets; two of them are in profile, but the foremost turns
her face to the spectator. This face and figure are almost unique among the
beautiful things of Venice,
and they leave the susceptible observer with the impression of having made, or
rather having missed, a strange, a dangerous, but a most valuable,
acquaintance. The lady, who is superbly handsome, is the typical Venetian of
the sixteenth century, and she remains for the mind the perfect flower of that
society. Never was there a greater air of breeding, a deeper expression of
tranquil superiority. She walks a goddess--as if she trod without sinking the
waves of the Adriatic. It is impossible to
conceive a more perfect expression of the aristocratic spirit either in its
pride or in its benignity. This magnificent creature is so strong and secure
that she is gentle, and so quiet that in comparison all minor assumptions of
calmness suggest only a vulgar alarm. But for all this there are depths of
possible disorder in her light-coloured eye.
I had meant however to say nothing about her, for it's not
right to speak of Sebastian when one hasn't found room for Carpaccio. These
visions come to one, and one can neither hold them nor brush them aside.
Memories of Carpaccio, the magnificent, the delightful--it's not for want of
such visitations, but only for want of space, that I haven't said of him what I
would. There is little enough need of it for Carpaccio's sake, his fame being
brighter to-day--thanks to the generous lamp Mr. Ruskin has held up to it--than
it has ever been. Yet there is something ridiculous in talking of Venice without making him
almost the refrain. He and the Tintoret are the two great realists, and it is
hard to say which is the more human, the more various. The Tintoret had the
mightier temperament, but Carpaccio, who had the advantage of more newness and
more responsibility, sailed nearer to perfection. Here and there he quite
touches it, as in the enchanting picture, at the Academy, of St. Ursula asleep
in her little white bed, in her high clean room, where the angel visits her at
dawn; or in the noble St. Jerome
in his study at S. Giorgio Schiavoni. This latter work is a pearl of sentiment,
and I may add without being fantastic a ruby of colour. It unites the most
masterly finish with a kind of universal largeness of feeling, and he who has
it well in his memory will never hear the name of Carpaccio without a throb of
almost personal affection. Such indeed is the feeling that descends upon you in
that wonderful little chapel of St. George of the Slaves, where this most
personal and sociable of artists has expressed all the sweetness of his
imagination. The place is small and incommodious, the pictures are out of sight
and ill-lighted, the custodian is rapacious, the visitors are mutually
intolerable, but the shabby little chapel is a palace of art. Mr. Ruskin has
written a pamphlet about it which is a real aid to enjoyment, though I can't
but think the generous artist, with his keen senses and his just feeling, would
have suffered to hear his eulogist declare that one of his other
productions--in the Museo Civico of Palazzo Correr, a delightful portrait of
two Venetian ladies with pet animals--is the "finest picture in the
world." It has no need of that to be thought admirable; and what more can
a painter desire?
VIII
May in Venice
is better than April, but June is best of all. Then the days are hot, but not
too hot, and the nights are more beautiful than the days. Then Venice is rosier than ever in the morning and
more golden than ever as the day descends. She seems to expand and evaporate,
to multiply all her reflections and iridescences. Then the life of her people
and the strangeness of her constitution become a perpetual comedy, or at least
a perpetual drama. Then the gondola is your sole habitation, and you spend days
between sea and sky. You go to the Lido, though the Lido
has been spoiled. When I first saw it, in 1869, it was a very natural place,
and there was but a rough lane across the little island from the landing-place
to the beach. There was a bathing-place in those days, and a restaurant, which
was very bad, but where in the warm evenings your dinner didn't much matter as
you sat letting it cool on the wooden terrace that stretched out into the sea.
To-day the Lido is a part of united Italy and has been made the victim
of villainous improvements. A little cockney village has sprung up on its rural
bosom and a third-rate boulevard leads from Santa Elisabetta to the Adriatic. There are bitumen walks and gas-lamps,
lodging-houses, shops and a teatro diurno. The bathing-establishment is bigger
than before, and the restaurant as well; but it is a compensation perhaps that
the cuisine is no better. Such as it is, however, you won't scorn occasionally
to partake of it on the breezy platform under which bathers dart and splash,
and which looks out to where the fishing-boats, with sails of orange and
crimson, wander along the darkening horizon. The beach at the Lido
is still lonely and beautiful, and you can easily walk away from the cockney
village. The return to Venice
in the sunset is classical and indispensable, and those who at that glowing
hour have floated toward the towers that rise out of the lagoon will not easily
part with the impression. But you indulge in larger excursions--you go to
Burano and Torcello, to Malamocco and Chioggia.
Torcello, like the Lido, has been improved; the deeply interesting little
cathedral of the eighth century, which stood there on the edge of the sea, as
touching in its ruin, with its grassy threshold and its primitive mosaics, as
the bleached bones of a human skeleton washed ashore by the tide, has now been
restored and made cheerful, and the charm of the place, its strange and
suggestive desolation, has well-nigh departed.
It will still serve you as a pretext, however, for a day on
the lagoon, especially as you will disembark at Burano and admire the wonderful
fisher-folk, whose good looks--and bad manners, I am sorry to say--can scarcely
be exaggerated. Burano is celebrated for the beauty of its women and the
rapacity of its children, and it is a fact that though some of the ladies are
rather bold about it every one of them shows you a handsome face. The children
assail you for coppers, and in their desire to be satisfied pursue your gondola
into the sea. Chioggia is a larger Burano, and you carry away from either place
a half-sad, half-cynical, but altogether pictorial impression; the impression
of bright-coloured hovels, of bathing in stagnant canals, of young girls with
faces of a delicate shape and a susceptible expression, with splendid heads of
hair and complexions smeared with powder, faded yellow shawls that hang like
old Greek draperies, and little wooden shoes that click as they go up and down
the steps of the convex bridges; of brown-cheeked matrons with lustrous tresses
and high tempers, massive throats encased with gold beads, and eyes that meet
your own with a certain traditional defiance. The men throughout the islands of
Venice are
almost as handsome as the women; I have never seen so many good-looking
rascals. At Burano and Chioggia they sit mending their nets, or lounge at the
street corners, where conversation is always high-pitched, or clamour to you to
take a boat; and everywhere they decorate the scene with their splendid
colour--cheeks and throats as richly brown as the sails of their
fishing-smacks--their sea-faded tatters which are always a "costume,"
their soft Venetian jargon, and the gallantry with which they wear their hats,
an article that nowhere sits so well as on a mass of dense Venetian curls. If
you are happy you will find yourself, after a June day in Venice
(about ten o'clock), on a balcony that overhangs the Grand
Canal, with your elbows on the broad ledge, a cigarette in your
teeth and a little good company beside you. The gondolas pass beneath, the
watery surface gleams here and there from their lamps, some of which are
coloured lanterns that move mysteriously in the darkness. There are some
evenings in June when there are too many gondolas, too many lanterns, too many
serenades in front of the hotels. The serenading in particular is overdone; but
on such a balcony as I speak of you needn't suffer from it, for in the apartment
behind you--an accessible refuge--there is more good company, there are more
cigarettes. If you are wise you will step back there presently.
1882.
THE GRAND CANAL
The honour of representing the plan and the place at their
best might perhaps appear, in the City of St. Mark, properly to belong to the
splendid square which bears the patron's name and which is the centre of
Venetian life so far (this is pretty. well all the way indeed) as Venetian life
is a matter of strolling and chaffering, of gossiping and gaping, of
circulating without a purpose, and of staring--too often with a foolish
one--through the shop-windows of dealers whose hospitality makes their
doorsteps dramatic, at the very vulgarest rubbish in all the modern market. If
the Grand Canal, however, is not quite technically a "street," the
perverted Piazza is perhaps even less normal; and I hasten to add that I am
glad not to find myself studying my subject under the international arcades, or
yet (I will go the length of saying) in the solemn presence of the church. For
indeed in that case I foresee I should become still more confoundingly
conscious of the stumbling-block that inevitably, even with his first few
words, crops up in the path of the lover of Venice who rashly addresses himself
to expression. "Venetian life" is a mere literary convention, though
it be an indispensable figure. The words have played
an effective part in the literature of sensibility; they constituted thirty
years ago the title of Mr. Howells's delightful volume of impressions; but in
using them to-day one owes some frank amends to one's own lucidity. Let me
carefully premise therefore that so often as they
shall again drop from my pen, so often shall I beg to be regarded as
systematically superficial.
Venetian life, in the large old sense, has long since come
to an end, and the essential present character of the most melancholy of cities
resides simply in its being the most beautiful of tombs. Nowhere else has the
past been laid to rest with such tenderness, such a sadness of resignation and remembrance. Nowhere else is the present so alien, so
discontinuous, so like a crowd in a cemetery without garlands for the graves.
It has no flowers in its hands, but, as a compensation
perhaps--and the thing is doubtless more to the point--it has money and little
red books. The everlasting shuffle of these irresponsible visitors in the
Piazza is contemporary Venetian life. Everything else is only a reverberation
of that. The vast mausoleum has a turnstile at the door, and a functionary in a
shabby uniform lets you in, as per tariff, to see how dead it is. From this
constatation, this cold curiosity, proceed all the
industry, the prosperity, the vitality of the place. The shopkeepers and
gondoliers, the beggars and the models, depend upon it for a living; they are
the custodians and the ushers of the great museum--they are even themselves to
a certain extent the objects of exhibition. It is in the wide vestibule of the
square that the polygot pilgrims gather most densely; Piazza San Marco is the
lobby of the opera in the intervals of the performance. The present fortune of Venice, the lamentable
difference, is most easily measured there, and that is why, in the effort to
resist our pessimism, we must turn away both from the purchasers and from the
vendors of ricordi. The ricordi that we prefer are gathered best where the
gondola glides--best of all on the noble waterway that begins in its glory at
the Salute and ends in its abasement at the railway station. It is, however,
the cockneyfied Piazzetta (forgive me, shade of St. Theodore--has not a brand
new café begun to glare there, electrically, this very year?) that introduces
us most directly to the great picture by which the Grand Canal works its first
spell, and to which a thousand artists, not always with a talent apiece, have
paid their tribute. We pass into the Piazzetta to look down the great throat,
as it were, of Venice,
and the vision must console us for turning our back on St. Mark's.
We have been treated to it again and again, of course, even
if we have never stirred from home; but that is only a reason the more for
catching at any freshness that may be left in the world of photography. It is
in Venice above all that we hear the small buzz
of this vulgarising voice of the familiar; yet perhaps it is in Venice too that the
picturesque fact has best mastered the pious secret of how to wait for us. Even
the classic Salute waits like some great lady on the threshold of her saloon.
She is more ample and serene, more seated at her door, than all the copyists
have told us, with her domes and scrolls, her scolloped buttresses and statues
forming a pompous crown, and her wide steps disposed on the ground like the
train of a robe. This fine air of the woman of the world is carried out by the
well-bred assurance with which she looks in the direction of her old-fashioned
Byzantine neighbour; and the juxtaposition of two churches so distinguished and
so different, each splendid in its sort, is a sufficient mark of the scale and
range of Venice. However, we ourselves are looking away from St. Mark's--we
must blind our eyes to that dazzle; without it indeed there are brightnesses
and fascinations enough. We see them in abundance even while we look away from
the shady steps of the Salute. These steps are cool in the morning, yet I don't
know that I can justify my excessive fondness for them any better than I can
explain a hundred of the other vague infatuations with which Venice sophisticates the spirit. Under such
an influence fortunately one need n't explain--it keeps account of nothing but
perceptions and affections. It is from the Salute steps perhaps, of a summer
morning, that this view of the open mouth of the city is most brilliantly
amusing. The whole thing composes as if composition were the chief end of human
institutions. The charming architectural promontory of the Dogana stretches out
the most graceful of arms, balancing in its hand the gilded globe on which
revolves the delightful satirical figure of a little weathercock of a woman. This
Fortune, this Navigation, or whatever she is called--she surely needs no
name--catches the wind in the bit of drapery of which she has divested her
rotary bronze loveliness. On the other side of the Canal twinkles and glitters
the long row of the happy palaces which are mainly expensive hotels. There is a
little of everything everywhere, in the bright Venetian air, but to these
houses belongs especially the appearance of sitting, across the water, at the
receipt of custom, of watching in their hypocritical loveliness for the
stranger and the victim. I call them happy, because even their sordid uses and
their vulgar signs melt somehow, with their vague sea-stained pinks and drabs,
into that strange gaiety of light and colour which is made up of the reflection
of superannuated things. The atmosphere plays over them like a laugh, they are
of the essence of the sad old joke. They are almost as charming from other
places as they are from their own balconies, and share
fully in that universal privilege of Venetian objects which consists of being
both the picture and the point of view.
This double character, which is particularly strong in the Grand Canal, adds a difficulty to any control of one's
notes. The Grand Canal may be practically, as
in impression, the cushioned balcony of a high and well-loved palace--the
memory of irresistible evenings, of the sociable elbow, of endless lingering
and looking; or it may evoke the restlessness of a fresh curiosity, of
methodical inquiry, in a gondola piled with references. There are no
references, I ought to mention, in the present remarks, which sacrifice to
accident, not to completeness. A rhapsody of Venice is always in order, but I think the
catalogues are finished. I should not attempt to write here the names of all the
palaces, even if the number of those I find myself able to remember in the
immense array were less insignificant. There are many I delight in that I don't
know, or at least don't keep, apart. Then there are the bad reasons for
preference that are better than the good, and all the sweet bribery of
association and recollection. These things, as one stands on the Salute steps,
are so many delicate fingers to pick straight out of the row a dear little
featureless house which, with its pale green shutters, looks straight across at
the great door and through the very keyhole, as it were, of the church, and
which I needn't call by a name--a pleasant American name--that every one in
Venice, these many years, has had on grateful lips. It is the very friendliest house
in all the wide world, and it has, as it deserves to
have, the most beautiful position. It is a real porto
di mare, as the gondoliers say--a port within a port; it sees everything that
comes and goes, and takes it all in with practised eyes. Not a tint or a hint
of the immense iridescence is lost upon it, and there are days of exquisite
colour on which it may fancy itself the heart of the wonderful prism. We wave
to it from the Salute steps, which we must decidedly leave if we wish to get
on, a grateful hand across the water, and turn into the big white church of
Longhena--an empty shaft beneath a perfunctory dome--where an American family
and a German party, huddled in a corner upon a pair of benches, are gazing,
with a conscientiousness worthy of a better cause, at nothing in particular.
For there is nothing particular in this cold and
conventional temple to gaze at save the great Tintoretto of the sacristy, to
which we quickly pay our respects, and which we are glad to have for ten
minutes to ourselves. The picture, though full of beauty, is not the finest of
the master's; but it serves again as
well as another to transport--there is no other word--those of his
lovers for whom, in far-away days when Venice was an early rapture, this
strange and mystifying painter was almost the supreme revelation. The plastic
arts may have less to say to us than in the hungry years of youth, and the
celebrated picture in general be more of a blank; but more than the others any
fine Tintoret still carries us back, calling up not only the rich particular
vision but the freshness of the old wonder. Many things come and go, but this
great artist remains for us in Venice
a part of the company of the mind. The others are there in their obvious glory,
but he is the only one for whom the imagination, in our expressive modern
phrase, sits up. "The Marriage in Cana,"
at the Salute, has all his characteristic and fascinating unexpectedness--the
sacrifice of the figure of our Lord, who is reduced to the mere final point of
a clever perspective, and the free, joyous presentation of all the other
elements of the feast. Why, in spite of this queer one-sidedness, does the
picture give us no impression of a lack of what the critics call reverence? For
no other reason that I can think of than because it happens to be the work of
its author, in whose very mistakes there is a singular wisdom. Mr. Ruskin has
spoken with sufficient eloquence of the serious loveliness of the row of heads
of the women on the right, who talk to each other as they sit at the
foreshortened banquet. There could be no better example of the roving
independence of the painter's vision, a real spirit of adventure for which his
subject was always a cluster of accidents; not an obvious order, but a sort of
peopled and agitated chapter of life, in which the figures are submissive
pictorial notes. These notes are all there in their beauty and heterogeneity,
and if the abundance is of a kind to make the principle of selection seem in
comparison timid, yet the sense of "composition" in the spectator--if
it happen to exist--reaches out to the painter in
peculiar sympathy. Dull must be the spirit of the worker tormented in any field
of art with that particular question who is not moved to recognise in the
eternal problem the high fellowship of Tintoretto.
If the long reach from this point to the deplorable iron
bridge which discharges the pedestrian at the Academy--or, more
comprehensively, to the painted and gilded Gothic of the noble Palazzo
Foscari--is too much of a curve to be seen at any one point as a whole, it
represents the better the arched neck, as it were, of the undulating serpent of
which the Canalazzo has the likeness. We pass a dozen historic houses, we note
in our passage a hundred component "bits," with the baffled sketcher's
sense, and with what would doubtless be, save for our intensely Venetian
fatalism, the baffled sketcher's temper. It is the early palaces, of course,
and also, to be fair, some of the late, if we could take them one by one, that
give the Canal the best of its grand air. The fairest are often cheek-by-jowl
with the foulest, and there are few, alas, so fair as to have been completely
protected by their beauty. The ages and the generations have worked their will
on them, and the wind and the weather have had much to say; but disfigured and
dishonoured as they are, with the bruises of their marbles and the patience of
their ruin, there is nothing like them in the world, and the long succession of
their faded, conscious faces makes of the quiet waterway they overhang a
promenade historique of which the lesson, however often we read it, gives, in
the depth of its interest, an incomparable dignity to Venice. We read it in the
Romanesque arches, crooked to-day in their very curves, of the early middle-age,
in the exquisite individual Gothic of the splendid time, and in the cornices
and columns of a decadence almost as proud. These
things at present are almost equally touching in their good faith; they have
each in their degree so effectually parted with their pride. They have lived on
as they could and lasted as they might, and we hold them to no account of their
infirmities, for even those of them whose blank eyes to-day meet criticism with
most submission are far less vulgar than the uses we have mainly managed to put
them to. We have botched them and patched them and covered them with sordid
signs; we have restored and improved them with a merciless taste, and the best
of them we have made over to the pedlars. Some of the most striking objects in
the finest vistas at present are the huge advertisements of the
curiosity-shops.
The antiquity-mongers in Venice have all the courage of their opinion,
and it is easy to see how well they know they can confound you with an
unanswerable question. What is the whole place but a curiosity-shop, and what
are you here for yourself but to pick up odds and ends? "We pick them up
for you," say these honest Jews, whose prices are marked in dollars,
"and who shall blame us if, the flowers being pretty well plucked, we add
an artificial rose or two to the composition of the bouquet?" They take
care, in a word, that there be plenty of relics, and their establishments are
huge and active. They administer the antidote to pedantry, and you can complain
of them only if you never cross their thresholds. If you take this step you are
lost, for you have parted with the correctness of your attitude. Venice becomes frankly
from such a moment the big depressing dazzling joke in which after all our
sense of her contradictions sinks to rest--the grimace of an over-strained
philosophy. It's rather a comfort, for the curiosity-shops are amusing. You
have bad moments indeed as you stand in their halls of humbug and, in the
intervals of haggling, hear through the high windows the soft splash of the sea
on the old water-steps, for you think with anger of the noble homes that are
laid waste in such scenes, of the delicate lives that must have been, that
might still be, led there. You reconstruct the admirable house according to
your own needs; leaning on a back balcony, you drop your eyes into one of the
little green gardens with which, for the most part, such establishments are
exasperatingly blessed, and end by feeling it a shame that you yourself are not
in possession. (I take for granted, of course, that as you go and come you are,
in imagination, perpetually lodging yourself and setting up your gods; for if
this innocent pastime, this borrowing of the mind, be not your favourite sport
there is a flaw in the appeal that Venice makes to you.) There may be happy
cases in which your envy is tempered, or perhaps I should rather say
intensified, by real participation. If you have had the good fortune to enjoy
the hospitality of an old Venetian home and to lead your life a little in the
painted chambers that still echo with one of the historic names, you have
entered by the shortest step into the inner spirit of the place. If it did n't
savour of treachery to private kindness I should like to speak frankly of one
of these delightful, even though alienated, structures, to refer to it as a
splendid example of the old palatial type. But I can only do so in passing,
with a hundred precautions, and, lifting the curtain at the edge, drop a
commemorative word on the success with which, in this particularly happy instance,
the cosmopolite habit, the modern sympathy, the intelligent, flexible attitude,
the latest fruit of time, adjust themselves to the great gilded, relinquished
shell and try to fill it out. A Venetian palace that has not too grossly
suffered and that is not overwhelming by its mass makes almost any life
graceful that may be led in it. With cultivated and generous contemporary ways
it reveals a pre-established harmony. As you live in it day after day its
beauty and its interest sink more deeply into your spirit; it has its moods and
its hours and its mystic voices and its shifting expressions. If in the absence
of its masters you have happened to have it to yourself for twenty-four hours
you will never forget the charm of its haunted stillness, late on the summer
afternoon for instance, when the call of playing children comes in behind from
the campo, nor the way the old ghosts seemed to pass on tip-toe on the marble
floors. It gives you practically the essence of the matter that we are
considering, for beneath the high balconies Venice comes and goes, and the particular
stretch you command contains all the characteristics. Everything has its turn,
from the heavy