按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
azy to stretch out their hands。 Within the gate is a large paved square; with the government offices and the tobacco…shop on one side; and the church opposite; between them; up a flight of broad stone steps; is the Hotel Tiberio。 Our donkeys walk up them and into the hotel。 The church and hotel are six hundred years old; the hotel was a villa belonging to Joanna II。 of Naples。 We climb to the roof of the quaint old building; and sit there to drink in the strange oriental scene。 The landlord says it is like Jaffa or Jerusalem。 The landlady; an Irish woman from Devonshire; says it is six francs a day。 In what friendly intercourse the neighbors can sit on these flat roofs! How sightly this is; and yet how sheltered! To the east is the height where Augustus; and after him Tiberius; built palaces。 To the west; up that vertical wall; by means of five hundred steps cut in the face of the rock; we go to reach the tableland of Anacapri; the primitive village of that name; hidden from view here; the medieval castle of Barbarossa; which hangs over a frightful precipice; and the height of Monte Solaro。 The island is everywhere strewn with Roman ruins; and with faint traces of the Greeks。
Capri turns out not to be a barren rock。 Broken and picturesque as it is; it is yet covered with vegetation。 There is not a foot; one might say a point; of soil that does not bear something; and there is not a niche in the rock; where a scrap of dirt will stay; that is not made useful。 The whole island is terraced。 The most wonderful thing about it; after all; is its masonry。 You come to think; after a time; that the island is not natural rock; but a mass of masonry。 If the labor that has been expended here; only to erect platforms for the soil to rest on; had been given to our country; it would have built half a dozen Pacific railways; and cut a canal through the Isthmus。
But the Blue Grotto? Oh; yes! Is it so blue? That depends upon the time of day; the sun; the clouds; and something upon the person who enters it。 It is frightfully blue to some。 We bend down in our rowboat; slide into the narrow opening which is three feet high; and passing into the spacious cavern; remain there for half an hour。 It is; to be sure; forty feet high; and a hundred by a hundred and fifty in extent; with an arched roof; and clear water for a floor。 The water appears to be as deep as the roof is high; and is of a light; beautiful blue; in contrast with the deep blue of the bay。 At the entrance the water is illuminated; and there is a pleasant; mild light within: one has there a novel subterranean sensation; but it did not remind me of anything I have seen in the 〃Arabian Nights。〃 I have seen pictures of it that were much finer。
As we rowed close to the precipice in returning; I saw many similar openings; not so deep; and perhaps only sham openings; and the water…line was fretted to honeycomb by the eating waves。 Beneath the water…line; and revealed here and there when the waves receded; was a line of bright red coral。
THE STORY OF FIAMMETTA
At vespers on the fete of St。 Antonino; and in his church; I saw the Signorina Fiammetta。 I stood leaning against a marble pillar near the altar…steps; during the service; when I saw the young girl kneeling on the pavement in act of prayer。 Her black lace veil had fallen a little back from her head; and there was something in her modest attitude and graceful figure that made her conspicuous among all her kneeling companions; with their gay kerchiefs and bright gowns。 When she rose and sat down; with folded hands and eyes downcast; there was something so pensive in her subdued mien that I could not take my eyes from her。 To say that she had the rich olive complexion; with the gold struggling through; large; lustrous black eyes; and harmonious features; is only to make a weak photograph; when I should paint a picture in colors and infuse it with the sweet loveliness of a maiden on the way to sainthood。 I was sure that I had seen her before; looking down from the balcony of a villa just beyond the Roman wall; for the face was not one that even the most unimpressible idler would forget。 I was sure that; young as she was; she had already a history; had lived her life; and now walked amid these groves and old streets in a dream。 The story which I heard is not long。
In the drawing…room of the Villa Nardi was shown; and offered for sale; an enormous counterpane; crocheted in white cotton。 Loop by loop; it must have been an immense labor to knit it; for it was fashioned in pretty devices; and when spread out was rich and showy enough for the royal bed of a princess。 It had been crocheted by Fiammetta for her marriage; the only portion the poor child could bring to that sacrament。 Alas! the wedding was never to be; and the rich work; into which her delicate fingers had knit so many maiden dreams and hopes and fears; was offered for sale in the resort of strangers。 It could not have been want only that induced her to put this piece of work in the market; but the feeling; also; that the time never again could return when she would have need of it。 I had no desire to purchase such a melancholy coverlet; but I could well enough fancy why she would wish to part with what must be rather a pall than a decoration in her little chamber。
Fiammetta lived with her mother in a little villa; the roof of which is in sight from my sunny terrace in the Villa Nardi; just to the left of the square old convent tower; rising there out of the silver olive…boughs;a tumble…down sort of villa; with a flat roof and odd angles and parapets; in the midst of a thrifty but small grove of lemons and oranges。 They were poor enough; or would be in any country where physical wants are greater than here; and yet did not belong to that lowest class; the young girls of which are little more than beasts of burden; accustomed to act as porters; bearing about on their heads great loads of stone; wood; water; and baskets of oranges in the shipping season。 She could not have been forced to such labor; or she never would have had the time to work that wonderful coverlet。
Giuseppe was an honest and rather handsome young fellow of Sorrento; industrious and good…natured; who did not bother his head much about learning。 He was; however; a skillful workman in the celebrated inlaid and mosaic woodwork of the place; and; it is said; had even invented some new figures for the inlaid pictures in colored woods。 He had a little fancy for the sea as well; and liked to pull an oar over to Capri on occasion; by which he could earn a few francs easier than he could saw them out of the orangewood。 For the stupid fellow; who could not read a word in his prayer…book; had an idea of thrift in his head; and already; I suspect; was laying up liras with an object。 There are one or two dandies in Sorrento who attempt to dress as they do in Naples。 Giuseppe was not one of these; but there was not a gayer or handsomer gallant than he on Sunday; or one more looked at by the Sorrento girls; when he had on his clean suit and his fresh red Phrygian cap。 At least the good Fiammetta thought so; when she met him at church; though I feel sure she did not allow even his handsome figure to come between her and the Virgin。 At any rate; there can be no doubt of her sentiments after church; when she and her mother used to walk with him along the winding Massa road above the sea; and stroll down to the shore to sit on the greensward over the Temple of Hercules; or the Roman Baths; or the remains of the villa of C。 Fulvius Cunctatus Cocles; or whatever those ruins subterranean are; there on the Capo di Sorrento。 Of course; this is mere conjecture of mine。 They may have gone on the hills behind the town instead; or they may have stood leaning over the garden…wall of her mother's little villa; looking at the passers…by in the deep lane; thinking about nothing in the world; and talking about it all the sunny afternoon; until Ischia was purple with the last light; and the olive terraces behind them began to lose their gray bloom。 All I do know is; that they were in love; blossoming out in it as the almond…trees do here in February; and that all the town knew it; and saw a wedding in the future; just as plain as you can see Capri from the heights above the town。
It was at this time that the wonderful counterpane began to grow; to the continual astonishment of Giuseppe; to whom it seemed a marvel of skill and patience; and who saw what love and sweet hope Fiammetta was knitting into it with her deft fingers。 I declare; as I think of it; the white cotton spread out on her knees; in such contrast to the rich olive of her complexion and her black shiny hair; while she knits away so merrily; glancing up occasionally with those liquid; laughing eyes to Giuseppe; who is watching her as if she were an angel right out of the blue sky; I am tempted not to tell this story further; but to leave the happy two there at the open gate of life; and to believe that they entered in。
This was about the time of the change of government; after this region had come to be a part of the Kingdom of Italy。 After the first excitement was over; and the simple people found they were not all