from The
Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain
ASCENT
OF VESUVIUS
I shall
remember our trip to Vesuvius for many a day - partly because of its
sight-seeing experiences, but chiefly on account of the fatigue of the
journey. Two or three of us had been resting ourselves among the tranquil
and beautiful scenery of the island of Ischia, eighteen miles out in
the harbor, for two days; we called it “resting,” but I
do not remember now what the resting consisted of, for when we got back
to Naples we had not slept for forty-eight hours. We were just about
to go to bed early in the evening, and catch up on some of the sleep
we had lost, when we heard of this Vesuvius expedition. There were to
be eight of us in the party, and we were to leave Naples at mid-night.
We laid
in some provisions for the trip, engaged carriages to take us to Annunciation,
and then moved about the city, to keep awake, till twelve. We got away
punctually, and in the course of an hour and a half arrived at the town
of Annunciation. Annunciation is the very last place under the sun.
In other towns in Italy, the people lie around quietly and wait for
you to ask them a question or do some overt act that can be charged
for - but in Annunciation they have lost even that fragment of delicacy;
they seize a lady's shawl from a chair and hand it to her and charge
a penny; they open a carriage door, and charge for it -- shut it when
you get out, and charge for it; they help you take off a duster -- two
cents; brush your clothes and make them worse than they were before
-- two cents; smile upon you -two cents; bow, with a lickspittle smirk,
hat in hand -- two cents; they volunteer all information, such as that
the mules will arrive presently -- two cents -- warm day, sir -- two
cents -- take you four hours to make the ascent -- two cents. And so
they go. They crowd you -- infest you -- swarm about you, and sweat
and smell offensively, and look sneaking and mean, and obsequious. There
is no office too degrading for them to perform, for money. I have had
no opportunity to find out anything about the upper classes by my own
observation, but from what I hear said about them I judge that what
they lack in one or two of the bad traits the canaille have, they make
up in one or two others that are worse. How the people beg! --
many of them very well dressed, too.
I said I knew nothing against the upper classes by personal observation.
I must recall it! I had forgotten. What I saw their bravest and their
fairest do last night, the lowest multitude that could be scraped up
out of the purlieus of Christendom would blush to do, I think. They
assembled by hundreds, and even thousands, in the great Theater of San
Carlo, to do -- what? Why, simply, to make fun of an old woman -- to
deride, to hiss, to jeer at an actress they once worshipped; but whose
beauty is faded now and whose voice has lost its former richness. Everybody
spoke of the rare sport there was to be. They said the theater would
be crammed, because Frezzolini was going to sing. It was said she could
not sing well, now, but then the people liked to see her, anyhow. And
we went. And every time the woman sang they hissed and laughed -- the
whole magnificent house -- and as soon as she left the stage they called
her on again with applause. Once or twice she was encored five and six
times in succession, and received with hisses and when she appeared,
and discharged with hisses and laughter when she had finished -- then
instantly encored and insulted again! And how the high-born knaves enjoyed
it! White-kidded gentlemen and ladies laughed till the tears came, and
clapped their hands in very ecstasy when that unhappy old woman would
come meekly out for the sixth time, with uncomplaining patience, to
meet a storm of hisses! It was the cruelest exhibition -- the most wanton,
the most unfeeling. The singer would have conquered an audience of American
rowdies by her brave, unflinching tranquility (for she answered encore
after encore, and smiled and bowed pleasantly, and sang the best she
possibly could, and went bowing off, through all the jeers and hisses,
without ever losing countenance or temper); and surely in any other
land than Italy her sex and her helplessness must have been an ample
protection to her --she could have needed no other. Think what a multitude
of small souls were crowded into that theater last night. If the manager
could have filled his theater with Neapolitan souls alone, without the
bodies, he could not have cleared less than ninety millions of dollars.
What traits of character must a man have to enable him to help three
thousand miscreants to hiss, and jeer, and laugh at one friendless old
woman, and shamefully ‘humiliate her? He must have all the vile,
mean traits there are. My observation persuades me (I do not like to
venture beyond my own personal observation) that the upper classes of
Naples possess those traits of character. Otherwise they may be very
good people; I cannot say.
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ASCENT OF VESUVIUS -- CONTINUED
In this
city of Naples, they believe in and support one of the wretchedest of
all the religious impostures one can find in Italy-- the miraculous
liquefaction of the blood of St. Januarius. Twice a year the priests
assemble all the people at the Cathedral, and get out this vial of clotted
blood and let them see it slowly dissolve and become liquid -- and every
day for eight days this dismal farce is repeated, while the priests
go among the crowd and collect money for the exhibition. The first day,
the blood liquefies in forty-seven minutes -- the church is crammed,
then, and time must be allowed the collectors to get around: after that
it liquefies a little quicker and a little quicker, every day, as the
houses grow smaller, till on the eighth day, with only a few dozen present
to see the miracle, it liquefies in four minutes. And here, also, they
used to have a grand procession, of priests, citizens, soldiers, sailors,
and the high dignitaries of the City Government, once a year, to shave
the head of a made up Madonna -- a stuffed and painted image, like a
milliner’s dummy -- whose hair miraculously grew and restored
itself every twelve months. They still kept up this shaving procession
as late as four or five years ago. It was a source of great profit to
the church that possessed the remarkable effigy, and the ceremony of
the public barbering of her was always carried out with the greatest
possible éclat and display -- the more the better, because the
more excitement there was about it the larger the crowds it drew and
the heavier the revenues it produced -- but at last a day came when
the Pope and his servants were unpopular in Naples, and the City Government
stopped the Madonna's annual show.
There we
have two specimens of these Neapolitans -- two of the silliest possible
frauds, which half the population religiously and faithfully believed,
and the other half either believed also or else said nothing about,
and thus lent themselves to the support of the imposture. I am very
well satisfied to think the whole population believed in those poor,
cheap, miracles -- a people who want two cents every time they bow to
you, and who abuse a woman, are capable of it, I think.
ASCENT
OF VESUVIUS -- CONTINUED
These Neapolitans
always ask four times as much money as they intend to take, but if you
give them what they first demand, they feel ashamed of themselves for
aiming so low, and immediately ask more. When money is to be paid and
received, there is always some vehement jawing and gesticulating about
it. One cannot buy and pay for two cents’ worth of clams without
trouble and a quarrel. One “course,” in a two-horse carriage,
costs a franc -- that is law -- but the hackman always demands more,
on some pretense or other, and if he gets it he makes a new demand.
It is said that a stranger took a one-horse carriage for a course --
tariff, half a franc. He gave the man five francs, by the way of experiment.
He demanded more, received another franc. Again he demanded more, and
got a franc --demanded more, and it was refused. He grew vehement -
was again refused, and became noisy. The stranger said, “Well,
give me the seven francs again, and I will see what I can do”
-- and when he got them, he handed the hackman half a franc, and he
immediately asked for two cents to buy a drink with. It may be thought
that I am prejudiced. Perhaps I am. I would be ashamed of myself if
I were not.
ASCENT
OF VESUVIUS -- CONTINUED
Well, as
I was saying, we got our mules and horses, after an hour and a half
of bargaining with the population of Annunciation, and started sleepily
up the mountain, with a vagrant at each mule’s tail who pretended
to be driving the brute along, but was really holding on and getting
himself dragged up instead. I made slow headway at first, but I began
to get dissatisfied at the idea of paying my minion five francs to hold
my mule back by the tail and keep him from going up the hill, and so
I discharged him. I got along faster then. We had one magnificent picture
of Naples from a high point on the mountain side. We saw nothing but
the gas lamps, of course - two-thirds of a circle, skirting the great
Bay - a necklace of diamonds glinting up through the darkness from the
remote distance - less brilliant than the stars overhead, but more softly,
richly beautiful -- and over all the great city the lights crossed and
recrossed each other in many and many a sparkling line and curve. And
back of the town, far around and abroad over the miles of level campagna,
were scattered rows, and circles, and clusters of lights, all glowing
like so many gems, and marking where a score of villages were sleeping.
About this time, the fellow who was hanging on to the tail of the horse
in front of me and practicing all sorts of unnecessary cruelty upon
the animal, got kicked some fourteen rods, and this incident, together
with the fairy spectacle of the lights far in the distance, made me
serenely happy, and I was glad I started to Vesuvius.
ASCENT
OF VESUVIUS --CONTINUED
This subject
will be excellent matter for a chapter, and to-morrow or next day I
will write it.
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CHAPTER
III
ASCENT OF VESUVIUS -- CONTINUED
“See
Naples and die. ” Well, I do not know that one would necessarily
die after merely seeing it, but to attempt to live there might turn
out a little differently. To see Naples as we saw it in the early dawn
from far up on the side of Vesuvius, is to see a picture of wonderful
beauty. At that distance its dingy buildings looked white - and so,
rank on rank of balconies, windows and roofs, they piled themselves
up from the blue ocean till the colossal castle of St. Elmo topped the
grand white pyramid and gave the picture symmetry, emphasis, and completeness.
And when its lilies turned to roses - when it blushed under the sun’s
first kiss -- It was beautiful beyond all description. One might well
say, then, “See Naples and die.” The frame of the picture
was charming, itself. In front, the smooth sea -- a vast mosaic of many
colors; the lofty islands swimming in a dreamy haze in the distance;
at our end of the city the stately double peak of Vesuvius, and its
strong black ribs and seams of lava stretching down to the limitless
level campagna -- a green carpet that enchants the eye and leads it
on and on, past clusters of trees and isolated houses, and snowy villages,
until it shreds out in a fringe of mist and general vagueness far away.
It is from the Hermitage, there on the side of Vesuvius, that one should
“see Naples and die.”
But do
not go within the walls and look at it in detail. That takes away some
of the romance of the thing. The people are filthy in their habits,
and this makes filthy streets and breeds disagreeable sights and smells.
There never was a community so prejudiced against the cholera as these
Neapolitans are. But they have good reason to be. The cholera generally
vanquishes a Neapolitan when it seizes him, because, you understand
before the doctor can dig through the dirt and get at the disease the
man dies. The upper classes take a sea-bath every day, and are pretty
decent.
The streets
are generally about wide enough for one wagon and how they do swarm
with people! It is Broadway repeated in every street, in every court,
in every alley! Such masses such throngs, such multitudes of hurrying,
bustling, struggling humanity! We never saw the like of it, hardly even
in New York, I think. There are seldom any sidewalks, and when there
are, they are not often wide enough to pass a man on without caroming
on him. So everybody walks in the street - and where the street is wide
enough, carriages are forever dashing along Why a thousand people are
not run over and crippled every day is a mystery that no man can solve.
But if there is an eighth wonder in the world, it must be the dwelling-houses
of Naples. I honestly believe a good majority of them are a hundred
feet high! And the solid brick walls are seven feet through. You go
up nine flights of stairs before you get to the “first”
floor. No, not nine, but there or thereabouts There is a little bird-cage
of an iron railing in front of every window clear away up, up, up, among
the eternal clouds, where the roof is, and there is always somebody
looking out of every window -- people of ordinary size looking out from
the first floor, people a shade smaller from the second, people that
look a little smaller yet from the third -- and from thence upward they
grow smaller and smaller by a regularly graduated diminution, till the
folks in the topmost windows seem more like birds in the uncommonly
tall martin-box than anything else. The perspective of one of these
narrow cracks of streets, with its rows of tall houses stretching away
till they come together in the distance like railway tracks; its clothes-lines
crossing over at all altitudes and waving their bannered raggedness
over the swarms of people below; and the white-dressed women perched
in balcony railings all the way from the pavement up to the heavens
- a perspective like that is really worth going into Neapolitan details
to see.
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Naples,
with its immediate suburbs, contains six hundred and twenty-five thousand
inhabitants, but I am satisfied it covers no more ground than an American
city of one hundred and fifty thousand. It reaches up into the air infinitely
higher than three American cities, though, and there is where the secret
of it lies. I will observe here, in passing, that the contrasts between
opulence and poverty, and magnificence and misery, are more frequent
and more striking in Naples than in Paris even. One must go to the Bois
de Boulogne to see fashionable dressing, splendid equipages, and stunning
liveries, and to the Faubourg St. An-toine to see vice, misery, hunger,
rags, dirt -- but in the thoroughfares of Naples these things are all
mixed together. Naked boys of nine years and the fancy-dressed children
of luxury; shreds and tatters, and brilliant uniforms; jackass carts
and state carriages; beggars, princes, and bishops, jostle each other
in every street.
At six
o’clock every evening, all Naples turns out to drive on the Riviera
di Chiaja (whatever that may mean); and for two hours one may stand
there and see the motliest and the worst-mixed procession go by that
ever eyes beheld. Princes (there are more princes than policemen in
Naples - the city is infested with them) - princes who live up seven
flights of stairs and don’t own any principalities, will keep
a carriage and go hungry; and clerks, mechanics, milliners, and strumpets
will go without their dinners and squander the money on a hack-ride
in the Chiaja; the rag-tag and rubbish of the city stack themselves
up, to the number of twenty or thirty, on a rickety little go-cart hauled
by a donkey not much bigger than a cat, and they drive in the Chiaja;
dukes and bankers, in sumptuous carriages and with gorgeous drivers
and footmen, turn out, also, and so the furious procession goes. For
two hours rank and wealth, and obscurity and poverty, clatter along
side by side in the wild procession, and then go home serene, happy,
covered with glory!
I was looking
at a magnificent marble staircase in the King’s palace, the other
day, which, it was said, cost five million francs, and I suppose it
did cost half a million, may be. I felt as if it must be a fine thing
to live in a country where there was such comfort and such luxury as
this. And then I stepped out musing, and almost walked over a vagabond
who was eating his dinner on the curbstone -- a piece of bread and a
bunch of grapes. When I found that this mustang was clerking in a fruit
establishment (he had the establishment along with him in a basket),
at two cents a day, and that he had no palace at home where he lived,
I lost some of my enthusiasm concerning the happiness of living in Italy.
This naturally
suggests to me a thought about wages there. Lieutenants in the army
get about a dollar a day, and common soldiers a couple of cents. I only
know one clerk -- he gets four dollars a month. Printers get six dollars
and a half a month, but I have heard of a foreman who gets thirteen.
To be growing suddenly and violently rich, as this man is, naturally
makes him a bloated aristocrat. The airs he puts on are insufferable.
And, speaking of wages, reminds me of prices of merchandise. In Paris
you pay twelve dollars a dozen for Jouvin’s best kid gloves; gloves
of about as good quality sell here at three or dollars a dozen. You
pay five and six dollars apiece for fine four linen shirts in Paris;
here and in Leghorn you pay two and a half. In Marseilles you pay forty
dollars for a first-class dress coat made by a good tailor, but in Leghorn
you can get a full dress suit for the same money. Here you get handsome
business suits at from ten to twenty dollars, and in Leghorn you can
get an overcoat for fifteen dollars that would cost you seventy in New
York. Fine kid boots are worth eight dollars in Marseilles and four
dollars here. Lyons velvets rank higher in America than those of Genoa.
Yet the bulk of Lyons velvets you buy in the States are made in Genoa
and imported into Lyons, where they receive the Lyons stamp and are
then exported to America. You can buy enough velvet in Genoa for twenty-five
dollars to make a five hundred dollar cloak in New York -- so the ladies
tell me. Of course, these things bring me back, by a natural and easy
transition, to the
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ASCENT
OF VESUVIUS -- CONTINUED
And thus
the wonderful Blue Grotto is suggested to me. It is situated on the
island of Capri, twenty-two miles from Naples We chartered a little
steamer and went out there. Of course tie police boarded us and put
us through a health examination, and inquired into our politics,
before they would let us land. The airs these little insect governments
put on are in the last degree ridiculous. They even put a policeman
on board of our boat to keep an eye on us as long as we were in the
Capri dominions. They thought we wanted to steal the grotto, I suppose.
It was worth stealing. The entrance to the cave is four feet high and
four feet wide, and is in the face of a lofty perpendicular cliff --the
sea wall. You enter in small boats -- and a tight squeeze it. is too.
You cannot go in at all when the tide is up. Once within, you find yourself
in an arched cavern about one hundred and sixty feet long, one hundred
and twenty wide, and about seventy high. How deep it is no man knows.
It goes down to the bottom of the ocean. The waters of this placid subterranean
lake are the brightest, loveliest blue that can be imagined. They are
as transparent as plate glass, and their coloring would shame the richest
sky that ever bent over Italy, No tint could be more ravishing, no luster
more superb. Throw a stone into the water, and the myriad of tiny bubbles
that are created flash out a brilliant glare like blue theatrical fires.
Dip an oar, and its blade turns to splendid frosted silver, tinted with
blue. Let a man jump in, and instantly he is cased in an armor more
gorgeous than ever kingly Crusader wore.
Then we
went to Ischia, but I had already been to that island and tired myself
to death “resting” a couple of days and studying human villainy,
with the landlord of the Grande Sentinelle for a model. So we went to
Procida, and from thence to Pozzuoli, where St. Paul landed after he
sailed from Samos. I landed at precisely the same spot where St. Paul
landed, and so did Dan and the others. It was a remarkable coincidence.
St. Paul preached to these people seven days before he started to Rome.
Nero’s Baths, the ruins of Baiae, the Temple of Serapis; Cumae,
where the Cumaean Sibyl interpreted the oracles, the Lake Agnano, with
its ancient submerged city still visible far down in the depths - these
and a hundred other points of interest we examined with critical imbecility,
but the Grotto of the Dog claimed our chief attention, because we had
heard and read so much about it. Everybody has written about the Grotto
del Cane and its poisonous vapors, from Pliny down to Smith, and every
tourist has held a dog over its floor by the legs to test the capabilities
of the place. The dog dies in a minute and a half --a chicken instantly.
As a general thing, strangers who crawl in there to sleep do not get
up until they are called. And then they don’t, either. The stranger
that ventures to sleep there takes a permanent contract. I longed to
see this grotto. I resolved to take a dog and hold him myself; suffocate
him a little, and time him; suffocate him some more, and then finish
him. We reached the grotto about three in the afternoon, and proceeded
at once to make the experiments. But now, an important difficulty presented
itself. We had no dog.
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ASCENT
OF VESUVIUS -- CONTINUED
At the
Hermitage we were about fifteen or eighteen hundred feet above the sea,
and thus far a portion of the ascent had been pretty abrupt. For the
next two miles the road was a mixture --sometimes the ascent was abrupt
and sometimes it was not; but one characteristic it possessed all the
time, without failure -- without modification -- it was all uncompromisingly
and unspeakably infamous. It was a rough, narrow trail, and led over
an old lava-flow -- a black ocean which was tumbled into a thousand
fantastic shapes -- and barrenness -- a wild chaos of ruin, desolation,
a wilderness of billowy upheavals, of furious whirpools, of miniature
mountains rent asunder -- of gnarled and knotted, wrinkled and twisted
masses of blackness that mimicked branching roots, great vines, trunks
of trees, all interlaced and mingled together; and all these weird shapes,
all this turbulent panorama, all this stormy, far-stretching waste of
blackness, with its thrilling suggestiveness of life, of action of boiling,
surging, furious motion, was petrified! -- all stricken dead and cold
in the instant of its maddest rioting! -- fettered, paralyzed, and left
to glower at heaven in impotent rage forevermore!
Finally
we stood in a level, narrow valley (a valley that had been created by
the terrific march of some old-time eruption) and on either hand towered
the two steep peaks of Vesuvius. The one we had to climb -- the one
that contains the active volcano -- seemed about eight hundred or one
thousand feet high and looked almost too straight-up-and-down for any
man to climb, and certainly no mule could climb it with a man on his
back. Four of these native pirates will carry you to the top in a sedan
chair, if you wish it, but suppose they were to slip and let you fall
-- is it likely that you would ever stop rolling? Not this side of eternity,
perhaps. We left the mules, sharpened our finger nails, and began the
ascent I have been writing about so long at twenty minutes to six in
the morning. The path led straight up a rugged sweep of loose chunks
of pumice-stone, and for about every two steps forward we took, we slid
back one. It was so excessively steep that we had to stop, every fifty
or sixty steps, and rest a moment. To see our comrades, we had to look
very nearly straight up at those above us, and very nearly straight
down at those below. We stood on the summit at last -- it had taken
an hour and fifteen minutes to make the trip.
What we
saw there was simply a circular crater -- a circular ditch, if you please
-- about two hundred feet deep, and four or five hundred feet wide,
whose inner wall was about half a mile in circumference. In the center
of the great circus-ring thus formed was a torn and ragged upheaval
a hundred feet high, all snowed over with a sulphur crust of many and
many brilliant and beautiful color, and the ditch inclosed this like
the moat of a castle or surrounded it as a little river does a little
island, if the simile is better. The sulphur coating of that island
was gaudy in the extreme -- all mingled together in the richest confusion
were red, blue, brown, black, yellow, white -- I do not know that there
was a color, or shade of a color, or combination of colors, unrepresented
-- and when the sun burst through the morning mists and fired this tinted
magnificence, it topped imperial Vesuvius like a jeweled crown!
The crater
itself -- the ditch -- was not so variegated in coloring, but yet, in
its softness, richness, and unpretentious elegance, it was more charming,
more fascinating to the eye. There was nothing “loud” about
its well-bred and well-dressed look. Beautiful? One could stand
and look down upon it for a week without getting tired of it. It had
the semblance of a pleasant meadow, whose slender grasses and whose
velvety mosses were frosted with a shining dust, and tinted with palest
green that deepened gradually to the darkest hue of the orange leaf,
and deepened yet again into gravest brown, then faded into orange, then
into brightest gold, and culminated in the delicate pink of a new-blown
rose. Where portions of the meadow had sunk and where other portions
had been broken up like an ice-floe, the cavernous openings of the one,
and the ragged upturned edges exposed by the other, were hung with a
lacework of soft-tinted crystals of sulphur that changed their deformities
into quaint shapes and figures that were full of grace and beauty.
The walls
of the ditch were brilliant with yellow banks of sulphur and with lava
and pumice-stone of many colors. No fire was visible anywhere, but gusts
of sulphurous steam issued silently and invisibly from a thousand little
cracks and fissures in the crater, and were wafted to our noses with
every breeze. But so long as we kept our nostrils buried in our handkerchiefs,
there was small danger of suffocation.
Some of
the boys thrust long slips of paper down into holes and set them on
fire, and so, achieved the glory of lighting their cigars by the flames
of Vesuvius, and others cooked eggs over fissures in the rocks and were
happy.
The view
from the summit would have been superb but for the fact that the sun
could only pierce the mists at long intervals.Thus the glimpses we had
of the grand panorama below were only fitful and unsatisfactory.
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THE
DESCENT
The descent
of’ the mountain was a labor of only four minutes. Instead of
stalking down the rugged paths we ascended, we chose one which was bedded
knee-deep in loose ashes, and plowed our way with prodigious strides
that would almost have shamed the performance of him of the seven-league
boots. The Vesuvius of to-day is a very poor affair compared to the
mighty volcano of Kilauea, in the Sandwich Islands, but I am glad I
visited it. It was well worth it.
It is said
that during one of the grand eruptions of Vesuvius it discharged massy
rocks weighing many tons a thousand feet into the air, its vast jets
of smoke and steam ascended thirty miles toward the firmament, and clouds
of its ashes were wafted abroad and fell upon the decks of ships seven
hundred and fifty miles at sea! I will take the ashes at a moderate
discount, if any one will take the thirty miles of smoke, but I do not
feel able to take a commanding interest in the whole story by myself.
CHAPTER
IV
THE BURIED CITY OF POMPEII.
They pronounce
it Pompeii. I always had an idea that you went down into Pompeii with
torches, by the way of damp, dark stairways, just as you do in silver
mines, and traversed gloomy tunnels with lava overhead and something
on either hand like dilapidated prisons gouged out of the solid earth,
that faintly resembled houses. But you do nothing of the kind. Fully
oneself of the buried city, perhaps, is completely exhumed and thrown
open freely to the light of day; and there stand the long rows of solidly
built brick houses (roofless) just as they stood eighteen hundred years
ago, hot with the flaming sun; and there lie their floors, clean swept,
and not a bright fragment tarnished or wanting of the labored mosaics
that pictured them with the beasts and birds and flowers which we copy
in perishable carpets to-day; and there are the Venus's and Abacuses
and Adonis's, making love and getting drunk in many hued frescoes on
the walls of saloon and bedchamber; and there are the narrow streets
and narrower sidewalks, paved with flags of good hard lava, the one
deeply rutted with the chariot wheels, and the other with the passing
feet of the Pompeii's of by-gone centuries; and there are the bookshops,
the temples, the halls of justice, the baths, the theaters -- all clean
scraped and neat, and suggesting nothing of the nature of a silver mine
away down in the bowels of the earth. The broken pillars lying about,
the odorless doorways and the crumbled tops of the wilderness of walls,
were wonderfully suggestive of the “burnt district” in one
of our cities, and if there had been any charred timbers, shattered
windows, heaps of debris, and general blackness and smokiness about
the place, the resemblance would have been perfect. But no -- the sun
shines as brightly down on old Pompeii to-day as it did when Christ
was born in Bethlehem, and its streets are cleaner a hundred times than
ever Pompeii saw them in her prime. I know whereof I speak --
for in the great, chief thoroughfares (Merchant Street and the Street
of Fortune) have I not seen with my own eyes how for two hundred years
at least the pavements were not repaired! - how ruts five and even ten
inches deep were worn into the thick flagstones by the chariot wheels
of generations of swindled taxpayers? And do I not know by these signs
that street commissioners of Pompeii never attended to their business,
and that if they never mended the pavements they never cleaned them?
And, besides, is it not the inborn nature of street commissioners to
avoid their duty whenever they get a chance? I wish I knew the name
of the last one that held office in Pompeii so that I could give him
a blast. I speak with feeling on this subject, because I caught my foot
in one of those ruts, and the sadness that came over me when I saw the
first poor skeleton, with ashes and lava sticking to it, was tempered
by the reflection that may be that party was the street commissioner.
No -- Pompeii
is no longer a buried city. It is a city of hundreds and hundreds of
roofless houses, and a tangled maze of streets where one could easily
get lost, without a guide, and have to sleep in some ghostly palace
that had known no living tenant since that awful November night of eighteen
centuries ago.
We passed
through the gate which faces the Mediterranean (called the “Marine
Gate”), and by the rusty, broken image of Minorca, still keeping
tireless watch and ward over the possessions it was powerless to save,
and went up a long street and stood in the broad court of the Forum
of Justice. The floor was level and clean, and up and down either side
was a noble colonnade of broken pillars, with their beautiful Ionic
and Corinthian columns scattered about them. At the upper end were the
vacant seats of the judges, and behind them we descended into a dungeon
where the ashes and cinders had found two prisoners chained on that
memorable November night, and tortured them to death. How they must
have tugged at the pitiless fetters as the fierce fires surged around
them!
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Then we
lounged through many and many a sumptuous private mansion which we could
not have entered without a formal invitation in incomprehensible Latin,
in the olden time, when the owners lived there -- and we probably wouldn't
have got it. These people built their houses a good deal alike. The
floors were laid in fanciful figures wrought in mosaics of many colored
marbles. At the threshold your eyes fall upon a Latin sentence of welcome,
sometimes, or a picture of a dog, with the legend, “Beware of
the Dog,” and sometimes a picture of a bear or a faun with no
inscription at all. Then you enter a sort of vestibule, where they used
to keep the hayrack, I suppose; next a room with a large marble basin
in the midst and the pipes of a fountain; on either side are bedrooms;
beyond the fountain is a reception room, then a little garden, dining
room, and so forth and so on. The floors were all mosaic, the walls
were stocked, or frescoed, or ornamented with bas-reliefs, and here
and there were statues, large and small, and little fish pools, and
cascades of sparkling water that sprang from secret places in the colon-nade
of handsome pillars that surrounded the court, and kept the flower beds
fresh and the air cool. Those Pompeii's were very luxurious in their
tastes and habits.
The most
exquisite bronzes we have seen in Europe came from the exhumed cities
of Herculaneum and Pompeii, and also the finest cameos and the most
delicate engravings on precious stones; their pictures, the leader of
the orchestra beating time, and the “versatile” sounds (who
had “just returned from a most successful tour in the provinces
to play his last and farewell engagement of positively six nights only,
in Pompeii, previous to his departure for Herculaneum”) charging
around the stage and piling the agony mountains high -- but I could
not do it with such a “house” as that; those empty benches
tied my fancy down to dull reality. I said, these people that ought
to be here have been dead, and still, and moldering to dust for ages
and ages, and will never care for the trifles and follies of life any
more forever -- "Owing to circumstances, etc., etc., there will not
be any per-formance to-night.” Close down the curtain. Put out
the lights.
And so
I turned away and went through shop after shop and store after store,
far down the long street of the merchants, and called for the wares
of Rome and the East, but the tradesmen were gone, the marts were silent,
and nothing was left but the broken jars all set in cement of cinders
and ashes; the wine and the oil that once had filled them were gone
with their owners. In a bookshop was a mill for grinding the grain,
and the furnaces for baking the bread; and they say that here, in the
same furnaces, the exhumes of Pompeii found nice, well baked loaves
which the baker had not found time to remove from the ovens the last
time he left his shop, because circumstances compelled him to leave
in such a hurry.
In one
house (the only building in Pompeii which no woman is now allowed to
enter) were the small rooms and short beds of solid masonry, just as
they were in the old times, and on the walls were pictures which looked
almost as fresh as if they were painted yesterday, but which no pen
could have the hardihood to describe; and here and there were Latin
inscriptions -- obscene scintillation's of wit, scratched by hands that
possibly were uplifted to Heaven for succor in the midst of a driving
storm of fire before the night was done.
In one
of the principal streets was a ponderous stone tank, and a waterspout
that supplied it, and where the tired, heated toilers from the Campagna
used to rest their right hands when they bent over to put their lips
to the spout, the thick stone was worn down to a broad groove an inch
or two deep. Think of the countless thousands of hands that had pressed
that spot in the ages that are gone, to so reduce a stone that is as
hard as iron!
They had
a great public bullet inboard in Pompeii -- a place where announcements
for gladiatorial combats, elections, and such things, were posted --
not on perishable paper, but carved in enduring stone. One lady, who,
I take it, was rich and well brought up, advertised a dwelling or so
to rent, with baths and all the modern improvements, and several hundred
shops, stipulating that the dwellings should not be put to immoral purposes.
You can find out who lived in many a house in Pompeii by the carved
stone droplets affixed to them: and in the same way you can tell who
they were that occupy the tombs.
Everywhere around are things that reveal to you something of the customs
and history of this forgotten people. But what would a volcano leave
of an American city, if it once rained its cinders on it? Hardly a sign
or a symbol to tell its story.
In one
of these long Pompeii halls the skeleton of a man was found, with ten
pieces of gold in one hand and a large key in the other. He had seized
his money and started toward the door, but the fiery tempest caught
him at the very threshold, and he sank down and died. One more minute
of precious time would have saved him. I saw the skeletons of a man,
a woman, and two young girls. The woman had her hands spread wide apart,
as if in mortal terror, and I imagined I could still trace upon her
shapeless face something of the expression of wild despair that distorted
it when the heavens rained fire in these streets, so many ages ago.
The girls and the man lay with their faces upon their arms, as if they
had tried to shield them from the enveloping cinders. In one apartment
eighteen skeletons were found, all in sitting postures, and blackened
places on the walls still mark their shapes and show their attitudes,
like shadows. One of them, a woman, still wore upon her skeleton throat
a necklace, with her name engraved upon it - JULIE DI DIOMEDE.
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But perhaps
the most poetical thing Pompeii has yielded to modern research, was
that grand figure of a Roman soldier, clad in complete armor; who, true
to his duty, true to his proud name of a soldier of Rome, and full of
the stern courage which had given to that name its glory, stood to his
post by the city gate, erect and unflinching, till the hell that raged
around him burned out the dauntless spirit it could not conquer. We
never read of Pompeii but we think of that soldier; we cannot write
of Pompeii without the natural impulse to grant to him the mention he
so well deserves. Let us remember that he was a soldier -- not a policeman
-- and so, praise him. Being a soldier, he stayed, -- because the warrior
instinct forbade him to fly. Had he been a policeman he would have stayed,
also --because he would have been asleep.
There are
not half a dozen flights of stairs in Pompeii, and no other evidences
that the houses were more than one story high. The people did not live
in the clouds, as do the Venetian, the Genovese and Neapolitans of to-day.
We came
out from under the solemn mysteries of this city of the Venerable Past
-- this city which perished, with all its old ways and its quaint old
fashions about it, remote centuries ago, when the Disciples were preaching
the new religion, which is as old as the hills to us now -- and went
dreaming among the trees that grow over acres and acres of its still
buried streets and squares, till a shrill whistle and the cry of “All
aboard - last train for Naples! ” woke me up and reminded me that
I belonged in the nineteenth century, and was not a dusty mummy, caked
with ashes and cinders, eighteen hundred years old. The transition was
startling. The idea of a railroad train actually running to old dead
Pompeii, and whistling irreverently, and calling for passengers in the
most bustling and business-like way, was as strange a thing as one could
imagine, and as unpolitical and disagreeable as it was strange.
Compare
the cheerful life and the sunshine of this day with the horrors the
younger Pliny saw here, the 9th of November, A.D. 79, when he was so
bravely striving to remove his mother out of reach of harm, while she
begged him, with all a mothers unselfishness, to leave her to perish
and save himself.
“By
this time the murky darkness had so increased that one might have believed
himself abroad in a black and monocles night, or in a chamber where
all the lights had been extinguished. On every hand was heard the complaints
of women, the wailing of children, and the cries of men. One called
his father, another his son, and another his wife, and only by their
voices could they know each other. Many in their despair begged that
death would come and end their distress.
“Some
implored the gods to succor them, and some believed that the night was
the last, the eternal night which should engulf the universe!
“Even
so it seemed to me - and I consoled myself for the coming death with
the reflection: BEHOLD! THE WORLD IS PASSING AWAY!"
. . . . . . . .
After browsing
among the stately ruins of Rome, of Bay, of Pompeii, and after glancing
down the long marble ranks of battered and nameless imperial heads that
stretch down the corridors of the Vatican, one thing strikes me with
a force it never had before: the insubstantial, unlashing character
of fame. Men lived long lives, in the olden time, and struggled feverishly
through them, toiling like slaves, in oratory, in general ship, or in
literature, and then laid them down and died, happy in the possession
of an enduring history and a deathless name. Well, twenty little centuries
flutter away, and what is left of these things? A crazy inscription
on a block of stone, which snuff antiquaries bother over and tangle
up and make nothing out of but a bare name (which they spell wrong)
- no history, no tradition, no poetry - nothing that can give it even
a passing interest. What may be left to General Grant's great name forty
centuries hence? This - in the Encyclopedia for A.D. 5868, possibly.
“URIC
S. (or Z.) GRANT -- popular poet of ancient times in the Aztec provinces
of the United States of British America. Some authors say flourished
about A.D. 742; but the learned Shah Food states that he was a contemporary
of Scharkspyre, the English poet, and flourished about A.D. 1328, some
three centuries after the Trojan war instead of before it. He wrote
‘Rock me to Sleep, Mother.’ ”
These thoughts
sadden me. I will to bed.
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