NIGHT AT POMPEII.
On to Pompeii in the clear sunset, falling very lightly upon mountains, islands, little ports, and indentations of the bay. From the railway station we walked about half a mile to the Albergo del Sole under a lucid heaven of aqua-marine colour, with Venus large in ifc upon the line between the tints of green and blue. The Albergo del Sole is worth commemorating. We stepped, without the intervention of courtyard or entrance hall, straight from the little inn garden into an open, vaulted room. This was divided into two compartments by a stout column supporting round arches. Wooden gates f -rnished a kind of fence between the atrium and what an old Pompeian would have styled the triclinium. For in the further part a table was laid for supper and lighted with suspended lamps. And here a party of artists and students drank and talked and smoked. A great live peacock, half asleep and winking his eyes, sat perched upon a heavy wardrobe watching them The outer chamber, where we waited in armchairs of ample girth, had its loggia windows and doors open to the air. There were singing birds in cages; and plants of rosemary, iris, and arundo sprang carelessly from holes in the floor. A huge vase filled to overflowing with oranges and lemons, the very symbol of generous prodigality, stood in the midst, and several dogs were lounging round. The outer twilight, blending with the dim sheen of the lamps, softened this pretty scene of picturesqueness. Altogether it was a strange and unexpected plaoe. Much experienced as the 19th century nomad may be in inns, he will rarely receive a more powerful and refreshing impression, entering one atevenfall, than hove There was no room for us in the inn. We were sent, attended by a boy with a lantern, through fields of dew-drenched barley and folded poppies, to a farmhouse overshadowed by four spreading pines. Exceedingly soft and grey, with rose-tinted weft of steam upon its summit, stood Vesuvius above us in the twilight. Something in the recent impression of the dimly-lighted supper room, and in the idyllic simplicity of this lanternJitten journey through the barley, suggested. by one of those inexplicable stirrings of association which affect tired senses, a dim, dreary thought of Palestine and Bible stories. The feeling of the cenacolo blent here with feelings of Ruth's corn fir-Ids, and the white square houses with their flat roofs enforced the illusion. Here we slept in the middle of a contadino colony. Some of the folk had made way for us ; and by the wheezing, coughing, and snorning of several sorts and ages in the chamber next me, I imagine they must have endured considerable crowding. My bed was large enough to have contained a family. Over its head there was a little shrine, hollowed in the thickness of the wall, with several sacred emblems and a shallow vase of holy water. (-n dressers at each end of the room stood glass shrines, occupied by finelydressed Madonna dolls and pots of artificial flowers. Above the doors St. Michael and fc-t. Francis, roughly embossed in low relief and boldly painted, gave dignity and grandeur to the walls. These showed some sense for art in the first builders of the house. But the taste of the inhabitants could not be praised. There were countless gaudy prints of saints, and exactly five pictures of the Bambino, very big and sprawling in a field alone. A crucifix, some old bottles, a gun, old clothes suspended from pegs, pieces of peasant pottery and china, completed the furniture of the apartment. But what a view it showed when Christian next morning opened the door ! i'rorn my bed I looked across the red-tiled terrace to the stone pines with their velvet roofage and the blue-peaked hills of Stabice. > —Cornhill Magazine.
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Bibliographic details
Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 3178, 5 September 1881, Page 4
Word Count
641NIGHT AT POMPEII. Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 3178, 5 September 1881, Page 4
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