Later in the Day
16 Sunday Sep 2018
Posted Travel
in16 Sunday Sep 2018
Posted Travel
in16 Sunday Sep 2018
Posted Travel
inItalians appreciate their weekends. Often well into the wee hours.
Not just the teens. (More wee ones and elders than you’d expect.)
Last night, with me sound asleep, Rebecca had to face the music:
Choosing between a well earned breeze and la finestra shut tight.
15 Saturday Sep 2018
Posted Art
in15 Saturday Sep 2018
Posted Travel
inAccording to TripAdvisor, there are sixty-four things to do in Spoleto. I’ve yet to check their list, but I suspect we’ve done most of them on one trip or another.
So when our new neighbors ask what we’ve done today, I find myself at a loss. The business of living alone can keep the two of us well occupied on most days.
14 Friday Sep 2018
Posted Travel
inBetween the spring and the fall
Comes the Spoleto arts festival.
It provides a special incentive
To give some places a face lift.
When I set Google Translate to work on the Latin,
“Lake on the Old Market” starts out making sense.
Only then nouns and verbs fall out of agreement
And the sense of direction turns back on itself.
“The place of the forum were restored to the dungeon
Of the oldness of the Senate’s decree of Spoleto,
The most exhausted…” by the end of the line I reach
the same place. Note Bene: The water sounds sweet.
13 Thursday Sep 2018
Posted Travel
inSlowly … slowly …. The reconstructions begins.
Yet all the while that the re-building is going on,
You can’t have it looking just any haphazard way.
Keeping the stair’s beauty is the only Italian way.
Up near the Rocca, at another restoration site,
A scrim of deception upholds the lines of sight.
12 Wednesday Sep 2018
When Grazia is on duty at our spot, due cappuccini all but goes without saying. Only we say it anyway–if only as prelude to naming whatever treats are in store.
When the help’s there, as this morning, we normally order the same two words. A verb may have helped. Or moving past the crowd to get closer to the counter.
But this time, unlike all the others, instead of our cups of Joe we beheld il conto (the “bill,” i.e., for those who are counting on a translation of our predicament).
Now Rebecca, at this moment (I discover later), figures the standing procedure at Italian bars has just changed to pay first and then to enjoy yourself at leisure.
Meanwhile I am speechless, as I overturn what few Italian words and phrases I have stored in the attic of my memory for emergencies never quite like this one.
About the time that Rebecca finds the right line the bargirl realizes we haven’t already been served. Just as we’re relieved, in other words, she’s embarrassed.
“Mi dispiace” joins “Non c’è problema” with broad smiles all around to span the crisscrossed communication. Once we finish, I seek instruction on a punchline.
12 Wednesday Sep 2018
Posted Travel
inIn the time it takes us to pick up some focaccia at the end of the corso, a familiar Italian famiglia has progressed only so far (in meters) up the street.
If only I could take the measure of painted walls, I would know how far they’ve come. Or if I could put time in a bottle, I would pour a glass and raise it aloft.
11 Tuesday Sep 2018
Posted Art
inWhen it comes to astronomy, as Father Guido Sarducci used to explain, there are two kinds of planets: one of them is “a-coming” & the other one’s “a-going.”
In the realm of art, the same distinction would seem to apply: there’s Rebecca’s collages, coming to be by layers, and my own décollages, getting stripped away.
11 Tuesday Sep 2018
Posted Travel
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