Sunday, 29 June 2014

"Italy is a dream that keeps returning for the rest of your life"

     Last weekend I found myself on the rooftop of a hostel in Sorrento, drinking wine, and having a heart to heart with some people from my program. The question was posed: “what’s your favorite moment of this trip?” I’ve had my last day of class, said goodbye to some amazing friends, and the first leg of my summer is officially over. I keep wondering, what is my favorite moment of this trip? The answer is that there isn’t one moment, there are a hundred different moments, some brighter than others, and they are all a dream.
Italy is a dream. It is a place rich with history, savory like proscuitto, baked gold in the sun, and surrounded by brilliant waters. For my whole life I have dreamed of Italy. I have dreamt of walking through rows of grapes on the Tuscan countryside, of eating pasta in a rustic café, of sipping cappuccino in the early morning mist. The layers of history are dreams themselves, half forgotten whispers that come to life in the crumbling ruins of Pompeii or the Coliseum. Ah yes, Italy is a dream, all the way from the cliffs that plunge into the Mediterranean, to the villas shrouded in grape vines, to the towering cypress trees and the smell of bread wafting from the bakeries.
            In the past month my dreams of Italy have solidified into reality. The memories I have are dreamlike in themselves – I have to pinch myself to remember they truly happened. They are rose tinted memories that will age like wine into a warm, full-bodied, exquisite mouthful of nostalgia…

      The first glimpse of the Duomo of Florence up close is simply awe-inspiring. It hits you in the chest and steals your breath away, makes your eyes pop, pulls your eyebrows up, and your jaw down. The Duomo is not aggressive, however. But calm. She is a sophisticated beauty who knows how good she looks, and commands the spotlight with graceful ease. She is mysterious, coquettish, complicated and, of course, devoutly and humbly religious - reminiscent of the Virgin Mary herself. From a distance, atop Piazza Michelangelo, I watch the sun rise over the city. Florence is calm in the mornings, before it rumbles to life with the shouting street vendors, and before it drinks in the seething summer heat. The lazy Arno begins to turn pink with the sky, as light touches the tower of the Palazzo Vecchio, and the great bulk of the lovely Duomo. Birds sing their morning anthem, and a new day dawns.



            I find myself on a rickety, one-person chairlift, climbing the mountain of the Island of Capri. My feet are missing the weight of skis, and are instead adorned in homemade leather sandals. There is no snow. Instead, a blanket of emerald grass unfurls into the iridescent waters below. White washed houses, brilliant purple flowers, and lush trees dot the landscape, as I rise ever higher above it all. I am deliriously happy, warm from the gentle morning sun, cooled by the salty breeze that plays on my skin. I can’t drink in enough of this beautiful island, of the cliffs rising from the water, of the smell of sea and forest. This moment is perfection. The sun will never drift behind the clouds, the breeze will never cease, the water will forever remain as brilliant as a blue diamond, and the yellow flowers sweeping my feet will simply never wilt.




            My belly is full of fresh pasta, olive oil, garlic, and bread. I lean with friends on the iron gate of someone’s garden in Ana Capri. “Isn’t it the most perfect garden you’ve ever seen?” One of them asks. “It’s perfectly European,” I reply, and it is. There are peppers hanging to dry above a wooden door. Baskets of fruit and colorful flowers and a bright red Vespa surround the little courtyard. As we watch, an old man with skin like Italian leather and wrinkles as deep as the sea emerges from the house. “Ciao, can I help you?” He asks. The next thing I know we are on the other side of the iron gate, standing amongst the fruit and flowers, the recipients of true Italian hospitality. 


The old man, Pepito, introduces us to his dog Vincent. His wife, Lucia, brings us fresh-from-the-oven pastries with dried fruit and powdered sugar. We speak in broken Italian and English, and manage to communicate with laughs and smiles and wild Italian hand gestures. This old couple defines Italian values – the importance of good food, shared in a true home. They speak of their family, display a cross above their door, live simply, close to the earth and ocean, and smile often. Their warmth is as infectious as the Mediterranean sun.

            The afternoon sun beats down a pebble beach in Capri, and I escape the heat by plunging into the turquoise water. It is so clear I can see the coral and rocks at the bottom, through the gentle waves. I swim out a distance and turn around to appreciate the view of the island. The simple fact that I am there, in that blue, blue ocean, is almost too much to handle. My face hurts from smiling so much. I rise and fall with the waves, hesitant to ever leave.

            The sun is setting off the coast of Sorrento. I stand n a rooftop, a glass of white wine cool in my hand. Wine in Italy is an art, a way of life. Wine is the flavor of the country, wine is the blood of Italy. Standing on that rooftop the importance of the drink is heavy in my mouth, filling my senses, and warming my soul. I watch as the sky catches fire. The clouds blush like a lover, and the sun gently kisses the sea. My body is warm from the Mediterranean sun, my skin has been scrubbed by the salty ocean. I am tired in the way you are after spending a day in the salt and sand – spent, but absolutely content. The water dances with fairy dust as the sun slowly sinks into the sea, and I close my eyes in an attempt to hold it there forever.



            It is nighttime now, and on the streets of Rome I have found a giant TV screen, erected in a campo for the World Cup. I am surrounded by blue jerseys, face paint, air horns, and waving Italian flags. I am adrift in a sea of patriotism. The crowd swells in unison with the flashy blue figures on the screen. We rise up as the ball flies toward the goal, and come crashing down in a rush of boos and sighs as the ball ricochets off the post. The game is ending, and the crowd erupts into a storm of cheers and shouts. “Italia!!!” We have won. Above the cheering masses, four bronze horses strain to pull a chariot up to heaven. The figure of Victor Emanuel II watches us all from atop the Capitol Hill.

            The sky explodes and I feel the booms and crackles in my chest. My neck is strained upwards so I can watch the entire sky sparkle above the city of Florence. On this, Saint Johns day, I celebrate with the Florentines beneath flashes of red, white, and green. I watch as glittering tendrils burst and drift to the ground. Sounds of ooh and ahh don’t need translation. There is no language barrier in our childlike wonder.

            And on my last night in Florence with my friends from the trip, I eat the most delicious gelato on the steps of the beautiful Duomo, who glows under the stars. We watch as tourists snap pictures, as the street vendors try and catch your attention with flashing lights and laser pointers, and we listen to a violinist play her sad tune. My friends all left the next morning, off to Paris and Dublin and home to the States, while I welcomed my family to the city of Florence. I moved out of my apartment, and tomorrow I say farewell to Florence.


            These are, I believe, my memories of Italy, although the line between dreams and memories gets foggy for me sometimes. When I think of this past month I won’t remember the bad days. I won’t remember the unbearable heat, the rude waiters, the missed train. That’s the difference between dreams and memories – dreams are distilled perfection, while memories are made of rougher stuff. I am happy to let Italy reside in the realm of my dreams – this country makes that easy.

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