--THERE'S NOT A PLACE I WOULDN'T GO
…“If
you want to see some real miracles, come around the square at 5:00 when all the
cripples start walking perfectly normal, until tomorrow morning when the
tourists show up.”
That was what our tour guide said as a
beggar--whose feet seemed irreparably turned inside-- shook his cup, asking for
money.
In a way, the quote sums up a lot of
what I didn’t like about Florence.
…I think the beauty of Florence lies on the outskirts,
in the country sides, beyond the festering city center where hordes of tourists
scrabble over the same set of worn marble tiles, viewing the same cathedrals,
dining at the same over-priced Trattorias, jamming generic designer houses—Gucci,
Fendi, Armani, Chanel, Ferragamo, Prada, Versace—no different than toddlers
waiting for free handouts of cotton candy.
This is not to say that city center-Florence is unappealing. On the contrary, there is a ton of energy
both emitted and absorbed within a ten mile radius. There are one-of-a-kind dishes, museums,
frescos, wonderful architecture. There
is a lot that demands your attention, that pulls on your senses, be they sight
or smell.
But the city center is also dirty
(almost every church could use a good scrubbing) with graffiti that should be
gotten rid of and pungent sewage odors wafting out of curb-side grates. The streets are just as narrow as those in
Rome, yet the drivers here seem bent on creating pedestrian carnage. Also, a lot of the shopping and dining (which
is endless) seems sadly redundant and unoriginal (perhaps those last two
descriptions make me redundant), and after some time, selecting a restaurant
seems a bit like playing roulette.
But south of the Arno River, detached
from the actual “city” city, it’s a different world. After passing over the water and turning a
corner down any street, you get a sense of calm. It’s cleaner.
It’s more mysterious. It feels
more intimate. The food and shopping are
considerably more varied, and the father you walk, the greater this becomes,
unlike north of The Arno.
It’s unquestionably beautiful on the
south side of the river, especially when one gets a view from high up where you
can then see the city at a glance while also catching (behind you, or
side-to-side) the rolling southern hills, replete with olive trees and
vineyards braided across hillsides, stucco homes standing like proud mastheads,
an occasional castled poking up from the greenery like a giraffe’s neck made of
ancient stone. It’s magnificent, every
square foot.
Today, at an altitude higher than the
famed Florence city-center dome, I happened upon Fort Belvedere, opposite the
dome, across The Arno. The views from
there were spectacular, even for one afraid of heights (like me.) Later on, chugging up a grueling steep slope,
I came upon a church built in the 10th century. Like most of the most magical cathedrals,
this one was ominous, yet it wasn’t so large so as not to also feel intimate. There were frescoes on the walls and ceilings,
gold leaf, marble floors with inscriptions, gardens outside, and off to the
side, designated mausoleums for the deceased elders who had served the
church. There was someone inside playing
the pipe organ as a paltry crowd of thirty (in downtown Florence the smallest
crowd you’d have in a church such as this would be 300) listened while seated on
a 1,000 year old pew.
So I guess the larger take-away is: break
away from the beaten path; do the unexpected; take a couple risks and don’t
worry if it’s going to screw things up; find the “self” that few others get to
see.
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