© 2007Photos by Anne Perry
Once again this is
not actually written from home, or really in June, when I know I
will be very busy and not have leisure in which to think with depth,
and try to put it in order. This morning, in Tuscany, feels like
a better idea.
I was invited a little while ago to
speak at the University of Naples, and couldn’t go because
I was ill. They were kind enough to ask me again, hence the beginning
of my trip to Italy. Then a friend asked me if I would attend this
festival in Tuscany, and since there were only a few days between
the two, I stayed in Naples rather than return home for perhaps
a day and a half, which would be unnecessarily expensive, and a
waste of time. As a result I had several extra days in Naples, which
was marvellous.
I think this whole letter should be an essay
on gratitude. At times I forget how breathtaking this world is,
not just in the sights that are almost beyond belief, but in the
endless variety, the inventiveness of man and the glory of God,
and perhaps most important, the kindness of others. When we don’t
travel, we run the risk of forgetting how generous people can be
to strangers, how open and willing to share. The differences are
superficial compared with the depth of emotions we have in common.
The first thing that struck me about Naples
was the colours of the buildings. Hardly any two are the same: peach,
terracotta, rust red, pink, rose, deep gold, soft yellow, pale sand,
muted earth shades and colours of the sunset. In the city itself
they are mostly four and five storeys high and many of the streets
are so narrow cars can barely make it through — one way, of
course, but ruler straight, built by the Romans. All I those that
I saw were cobbled in various sizes of stones, and flat shoes are
the only sensible footwear.
A Dangerous Reminder
Many streets are steep, because Naples is mostly
on hills, rising from the sea, with Vesuvius dominating it all.
It has a highly distinctive outline — beautiful and dramatic.
It is one of the most dangerous, because, unlike Etna and Stromboli,
it does not erupt regularly, in a small way (literally letting off
steam); it waits for a long time, then blows in a major catastrophe,
killing thousands of people.

Perhaps it is not a bad idea to have something
so close to remind us that life is precious, and can be altered
in a few moments. It should never be taken lightly, misused or above
all, wasted. We say casually “there’s always tomorrow”
or “what’s your hurry.” No, there is not always
tomorrow. One day there won’t be, so don’t let’s
waste today.
Don’t let us leave apologies to another
time, or thanks. Especially don’t let us leave either repentance
or forgiveness. Even if tomorrow does come, and it is not too late,
why waste another day?
There will never be enough time for all the
good things there are to do, to see, to learn, to make. Thank God
for eternity. Or perhaps I had better be more literal, and say “thank
the Saviour for eternity.” Without His life and sacrifice,
and His death, there could be no eternity for us. But perhaps we
need to demonstrate now how we will use the time He has given us?
Neapolitan Beauty
But for the moment, I want to return to the
beauty of Naples. It was founded by the Greeks, which I had not
known, and the ancient Greek walls are still there in the centre
of the city. Then, of course, added to by the Romans, and then by
succession of invaders and rulers leaving many kinds of traces in
art, architecture and from the Normans, the fair hair and blue eyes
of many of the people — Greek, Roman, Spanish, Arab, Norman
and Moorish.
There are many palaces, gorgeous to see in the
most exquisite proportions of window, arch, courtyard, balconies
and balustrades. There are vast, wooden doors, carved intricately,
and so wide one could get a coach and horses through them.
Inside are mosaics, murals, pillars with carved
capitals, and endless beautiful stairs that seem to climb into the
sky. Museums had exhibitions of statuary and glass that go back
as far as four thousand years before Christ. It seems they hardly
knew how to make a shape that was not beautiful.
All of it is cocooned in bright sky,
and sea so blue I could hardly tear my gaze from it. My hostess
has a house in Naples with a view of the bay, but also a villa on
Capri, and she took me there one free day. There cannot be a more
beautiful place on earth. We walked miles up steep steps, narrow,
winding lanes, and at every turn was the sea — either the
Bay of Naples, or the Bay of Salerno.
There were olives and vines, but so many other
flowers were out, everywhere burning colours of bougainvillea, magenta,
purple and a brilliant scarlet red I haven’t seen before,
also roses, geraniums, hibiscus, magnolia and everywhere jasmine
so sweet the perfume seemed to wrap around you. There were orange,
lemon and grapefruit trees heavy with fruit, and figs coming.

For all of this hospitality, beauty and marvellous
conversation on all manner of subjects, I gave one lecture to about
thirty or forty students — who all spoke English so well there
was no translation necessary. I was deeply impressed by that.
One of the most beautiful sights was a castle
lapped around by the sea, and said to have belonged to the Latin
poet Virgil. And of course the Emperor Tiberius had a villa on Capri.
So many people came — vastly more recently, both Oscar Wilde
and Conan Doyle, just two among thousands. I certainly intend to
be one who returns — for the beauty, but also for the friendship
and for the vivid, exciting intellectual life, the colours and vitality,
and the inspiration to both brain and spirit to treasure every day,
and do something with it to add to the glory, the life, the hope
in the world.
Travelling Alone
Of course there are lonely moments, but then
there can be plenty of those even if you never stir from home. We
are all travellers, and in a sense, far from home. To be in an unfamiliar
country with a language you understand only parts of, emphasises
that sense of being alien, but it also forces you to try to communicate,
and to reach out where at home you might not feel such a need.
And if I am alone, maybe everyone else who stops
long enough to think about it, even if only for a moment in the
night, also is aware of time and space, of travelling to a destination
we pray for, but have not yet seen, and know only by faith. I have
thought more often lately what God wishes us to be, to do, to work
at in that “home” we strive to attain. I have asked
people of other faiths, “What does your God wish for you?”,
and been amazed how many people have no clear idea.
Yet every parent would say that they wish for
their children that they grow up to maturity, learn to think and
act for themselves, and do at least as well as their parents have
done. I have never met a parent who said “I want them to remain
children, unable to think for themselves, or do anything except
what I tell them to do. I want them to be afraid of me, to tell
me I’m wonderful and wait for my orders before they move.”
The only praise really worth having is that
of imitation. “Inherit the family business” is much
more like it. And the family business is creating worlds, loving,
teaching, helping others to find and follow the same path.
Arezzo Days
I said I was writing this from Tuscany. I went
by train from Naples to Florence, a very pleasant journey of three
and a half hours. I was met at Florence, and after several hours
walking around the city in heat of approximately 92 degrees, we
drove out to Arezzo, an old and very beautiful town where I spent
two nights, and walked I don’t know how many more miles looking
at marvellous architecture and paintings by many people, but most
especially Piero della Francesca, Arezzo’s most famous artist.
To give you some idea of true scale of art here
— I was told he was “modern.” He died at a considerable
age, the same year Columbus landed in America — (1492). The
major work we looked at was painted in 1459. I suppose relatively
speaking, that is fairly recent. Old would probably be the Etruscans,
who were here before the Romans, which makes them earlier than seven
centuries before Christ.
The second afternoon I was driven by two charming
young men, an art historian and a translator, to the village of
San Sepolcro, to see one of the very famous Madonnas, and very lovely
she is. The adventure was driving in the Tuscan hills in a tiny
little car, (he called it a “mouse”) as we were struck
by the most violent thunderstorm I can recall. The roads turned
into rivers — the steepest into waterfalls — and thunder
crashed all around. Lightning seemed to be everywhere, and the poor
little “mouse’s” windscreen was struck by giant
hailstones!
In the middle of this the reporter telephoned
on the mobile for an interview with the major newspaper in Rome
— and could speak no English. We had an interesting discussion
through the young translator, well punctuated by the noise of the
rain and the crash of thunder.
Then we went to see another exquisite Madonna
who has been there for half a millennium, smiling serenely and looking
into eternity, while the angels surrounding her look out at us.
I have walked miles, eaten well, and by that I also mean wisely
— plenty of fruit and vegetables, good bread and olive oil,
and lots of water. But far more than that, I have had my mind fed
by excellent conversation, new ideas, profound discussion of many
things, and my heart fed by kindness and beauty.
Fed by Faith
It is up to me to see that my spirit is fed
by faith in where I am going, where I can go, with the Holy Spirit
to guide me, if I will make myself able to listen, and that whether
at any given moment I can see it or not, there is a purpose in all
things, wiser and more beautiful than I can imagine — if I
do my part with a whole heart.
I won’t succeed all the time, but with
the grace of God, I will enough to be able to be helped for the
pieces I cannot do.
And what is true for me, must be true for all
of us, because I am just another part of mankind, as are we all.
Good travelling to all of you, until
July.
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Meridian Magazine.
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