Friday, November 8, 2019

Things Noticed Around Italy

In Naples, a young man wearing a cap walks down a narrow, cobble-stoned street and stops, scanning an Amazon package with a handheld scanner, modern technology on a street that once saw the rise and fall of the Greeks and Romans.  The cracks between the stones are filled with broken glass.  I hold on tightly to my purse.  We walk by a Roman tower, standing tall since A.D. 500.   Just beyond it our group stops at a coffee bar to drink espresso.  The children laugh at a street performer playing a stringed instrument with the "help" of a puppet.  We drop a coin in his hat, and his painted face smiles as he speaks in a high voice, “Thank you!”


We eat unknown fried food out of a paper cone. Biting into the first one I discover macaroni in a flavorful sauce.  Ella bites into a fried ball of a rice, pea, and tomato sauce mixture.  One tastes like a southern potato casserole you'd eat at Thanksgiving.  There is fried zucchini and eggplant, ending with a salty ball of fried dough.  I'm convinced I need more zucchini and eggplant in my life.



We walk into yet another old church.  In this one the bones of a saint have been covered over with wax shaped to look like his features.  The next church contains the relics of saints in a box behind a statue of their faces.  In the old Greek center of town we see a temple built to Dionysus.  



In the small hamlet of Erchie on the Amalfi Coast, an older woman with gray hair pulled back steps out on her balcony overlooking the sea, carefully hanging strips of lace on a clothesline to dry.  Her skin is wrinkled from constant exposure to Mediterranean sun.  She hangs doilies and delicate white tablecloths beside the lace.  James counts the steps from the beach up to our Airbnb:  190.  The mountains in the distance are a pale blue, almost blending in with the sky.


In Rome a young man without the use of his legs moves himself around the piazza in front of the Pantheon on a rolling board, begging.  Italians board the train for their morning commute bundled in puffy jackets and scarves.  The temperature is around 60 and will rise to 75 today.  When I order a frozen espresso drink the barista says, “Mamma Mia!” in disbelief.  He thinks it is too cold for a summertime drink in the morning.  



It seems that around every corner is a new piazza and yet another obelisk.  I wonder how Egypt has any left.  Most of the obelisks are no longer topped by images of Roman gods but with crosses, replaced when the seat of power moved from emperors to popes.  



I walk the road between triumphal arches and stand in the place where Julius Ceasar’s funeral took place.  The apostle Paul walked these streets now broken by time.  He wrote a letter to Timothy here.  He kept believing that Jesus is who He says He is here.  He kept believing he was free even while locked in prison, kept believing that the best is yet to come.  He asks his friends to bring his scrolls and his cloak before winter.


I walk away remembering other words Paul wrote with these very scenes in his mind:

But thanks be to God, who always leads us in triumph in Christ.

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