This is from the "archives" - written ten years ago about something that happened twenty-five years ago...
There
is something about the magical power of a Eurail pass that causes it
to burn in your pocket, like a gleaming quarter handed to a four year
old. You want to use the thing and you want to use it often. The side
effect is that all this moving around leaves very little time in each
destination, but in fact this need not be a problem at all, as my
friend Mark and I demonstrated one summer. We had already dispatched
with Paris and Nice in a matter of a few hours each and were now
rolling towards Venice.
The
approach by train into Venice is only remarkable in its profound
dullness and in that it gives no hint whatsoever of what is to come.
However, the minute you step out of the front doors of the train
station, you know where you are. Rather than the usual frenzied
Italian scene of buses and mopeds and honking and fumes there is a
great sweeping set of broad stone steps leading down to the Grand
Canal where the vaporetti (water buses) lie bobbing.
The
good fortune of Venice is that its Golden Age of wealth and lavish
spending on architecture was mercifully followed by a rapid descent
into obscurity, which ensured its preservation, like a fly trapped in
amber. These days Venice is of course anything but obscure. Many
people are frightened off by this popularity, fearing a nasty theme
park atmosphere - a kind of Disney-On-The-Canals populated by cynical
locals and sweaty throngs of braying tourists. This nightmare
certainly exists in spots, but we found that it could be easily
evaded as well.
The
instinct upon arrival is to trot right on down those grand steps and
make for the nearest vaporetto for a cruise down the Grand Canal to
the Piazza San Marco. Infinitely more agreeable, however, is the
land-route, which begins at a little bridge a few steps off to the
left. There are signs marking the way, but they are small –
evidently too small for most people. One minute: those braying sweaty throngs. The next minute: a deserted lane wending between stylishly
decayed 15th
century villas.
It
took us almost two hours to reach the Piazza San Marco in this
fashion and I easily count them among my best two hours of travel
anywhere. The route took us alongside slender canals, over tiny
arched stone bridges and across a profusion of little plazas and
squares. Some of these squares were fronted by grand buildings and
churches that were clearly of significance, but others featured only
graffiti and scraps of litter spinning in slow vortexes created by
isolated eddies of wind. I found the graffiti and litter oddly
comforting; an affirmation I suppose that Venice was a real place,
not just a carefully primped outdoor museum.
The
signs marking the way were well placed: they were unobtrusive and
always put just at the point where you began to wonder whether
perhaps you had taken a wrong turn and gone astray. This allowed for
a pleasant sensation of mild adventure as we slowly threaded the
labyrinth. The stillness of the place was remarkable. There were few
Venetians about and fewer still tourists. Those tourists we did meet
were invariably middle aged Germans earnestly examining some
architectural detail while referring to their encyclopedic guidebooks.
The
midway point of the walk is the famed Rialto Bridge. After the Piazza
San Marco and the Grand Canal, this bridge is probably Venice’s
best-known feature. Built in 1588 it was the first permanent crossing
of the Grand Canal, linking the two halves of Venice. It has a very
distinctive appearance with shops running up both sides, backed by
tall arches. The bridge is steep enough to require stairs to reach
the middle where the shops give way to a pleasing, albeit perpetually
jam-packed, vantage point over the canal. Pretty from a distance, up
close it is festooned with purveyors of
knick-knacks and enough obese tourists to give you pause to wonder
whether 16th
century structural engineering calculations could in any way
anticipate the girth and heft of the average 20th
century sightseer. We elbowed our way across and a few minutes later
- poof
- as in a fairy tale wish: all was peace and emptiness again.
We
ambled along contentedly again until the gradual increase in the
number of shops signalled that we were approaching the epicentre, the
Piazza San Marco, or St. Mark’s Square. First though, a word about
these shops. Evidently there are only three types of businesses in
Venice, with each type being roughly equal in prevalence.
Fully
one third of the shops devoted themselves to glassware. When I say
glassware I do not mean beer mugs and chemistry beakers and other
such useful objects, but bizarre coloured baubles and trinkets and
exceptionally impractical looking vases. There were scores of such
shops, often one right after the other, resulting in an effect that
was both dazzling and monotonous at the same time. To be fair, Venice
does have a long tradition of glassblowing, so aficionados of
demented looking pink and green glass animals from all around the
world know precisely where to come, but the backpacker is not well
served. Thin hand-blown glassware is about as sensible a souvenir to
have rattling about in one’s pack as live quail or unexploded
ordinance.
The
next third were similarly useless: Carnival mask boutiques. Much as
with the glassware emporia, there were scads of these, selling
nothing but papier-mâché Carnival masks. It’s a shame really that
what was once an appealing tradition has been reduced to a basement
rec room decorating standby on the level of the bamboo fan painted
with the hot pink tropical sunset.
A
brochure describing the Venetian Carnival during the Middle Ages
professed rather breathlessly:
“Masked
courtesans would participate in the most wanton games of lust, and
confident of their anonymity would shed all conventional inhibitions.
Noblemen, who would normally take painstaking care not to divulge a
hint of their sexual preferences, could perform in mask acts that at
the time were considered immoral and illegal.”
Cool.
Moreover, “Carnival” in those days lasted from December 26 until
Shrove Tuesday – over three months! Masking was also encouraged for
a period during the fall and again in early summer. Those wanton
Venetians. After the so-called Serene Republic (doesn’t seem so
serene anymore, does it?) fell on hard times the party was over, both
figuratively and literally. Ultimately Carnival was even banned
because of an unseemly number of fatal mishaps. I could not find
detailed descriptions of these “mishaps”, but it’s easy enough
to imagine what transpires when alcohol, masks, wantonness and canals
are thrown together. Carnival was revived in the 1970s by the
government as an annual one-week fleecing of tourists during
February. It is now Venice’s biggest yearly draw and provides an
interesting counterpoint to Rio’s now more famous festivities. The
Brazilians have stayed true to the medieval Carnival ideals of lust,
excess and craziness, whereas, at least according to the ubiquitous
postcards of dark cloaked figures with eerie white masks stalking
alongside mist-shrouded canals, Venice’s Carnival now looks
disappointingly austere and intellectual.
In
any case, neither of us were the target demographic for the mask
vendors. The final group of Venetian shops did, however, hit the
mark. Stationers. Stationers by the dozen. And not, I might add, your
standard Office Depot or Staples either. These were dimly lit little
warrens, furnished in the darkest, richest wood and crammed full with
luxurious cream-coloured velum, bricks of deep red sealing wax, black
and gold pens that cost as much as a major appliance and an
eye-popping assortment of antique brass and wooden gadgets –
everything the discriminating European aristocrat could want for the
sprawling oaken desk in his castle tower office. We pawed through
these goods, relishing the smells of ink and leather and old wood,
but there was nothing either of us could afford. Well ok, I
probably could have managed a few envelopes, but when you’ve lusted
after an antique desktop globe with a handsome carved wooden stand
for $2250, it’s absolutely not possible to be satisfied with
anything less.
Evidently
anyone in search of a crescent wrench, toilet paper or a sack of
potatoes in Venice was out of luck.
We
were in the midst of this engaging session of window-shopping when,
with startling abruptness, one of the little lanes spat us out onto
the Piazza San Marco. There she was, an expanse of cobbles encrusted
with pigeon shit, lined on three sides by some rather anonymous
looking Renaissance buildings and on the fourth by the unarguably
magnificent St. Mark’s basilica. No doubt some of these “anonymous”
buildings were actually of tremendous importance, but
blessed by our ignorance we ignored them and made straight for the
obvious target, the basilica.
Mark
was wearing shorts, but had had the foresight to bring a pair of long
pants along, so before the guards could pick him up and caber-toss
him out onto the square, he nipped around the corner and pulled his
long pants up over his already bulky shorts. This gave him the
appearance of a man with explosives strapped to his posterior, but
that failed to interest the guards and we were admitted without so
much as a bored glance.
Now
this was an impressive church. St. Marks was the first cathedral we
had seen with a strong Byzantine influence. Immediately upon entering
we found ourselves in a kind of foyer under a series of domes that
were completely covered with gold tile mosaics. This had the effect
of creating a roomful of upturned faces and rigorously craned necks.
We joined the hundred or so tourists already wedged into this space
and gaped awestruck at what was above us. The mosaics had that
Eastern Orthodox look about them that one associates with Russian
icons, although Venice always has been Roman Catholic. We presumed
that the story being illustrated above was that of the virtuous life
and abundant miraculous deeds of St. Mark, but it was difficult to be absolutely certain on that point as there was quite a bit going on up
there and all the figures wore similarly beatific expressions.
The
mosaics in the foyer were apparently just an aperitif - in the aircraft hanger sized main chapel there were
acres of gold mosaics in the high domes, on the columns, in the
niches, everywhere… The altar-screen was something else too - it was entirely
encrusted in jewels and enamel icons. Apparently St. Mark himself, or
at least some representative sampling of his body parts, was here
somewhere too. His original resting place was Alexandria, Egypt, but
two enterprising Venetian merchants dug him up and smuggled him here
as, much in the fashion of modern boomtowns that lure sports
franchises from more stagnant cities, they felt that their
up-and-coming town deserved an A-list saint. We meandered about for a
short while like stunned cattle and then, suddenly overcome by a
powerful craving to buy souvenirs, made for a stand we had seen in
the foyer. This was a restrained and tasteful affair – no
Pope-On-A-Rope or “To Hell With Satan” t-shirts here, only books,
postcards and a few small curios.
Disappointed,
we wandered back out onto the piazza. Mark still looked like he was
trying to shoplift a tablecloth, so he took off his long pants and
then we set about the serious business of getting the requisite
pictures of each of us feeding the pigeons in the middle of the
square with St. Mark’s Basilica forming the scenic backdrop. We
didn’t actually have any food for the pigeons, but not being
possessed of an especially keen intellect they allowed themselves to
be faked out repeatedly until we got a few nice shots.
Although
the basilica is clearly the star of the piazza, one’s eye is also
drawn to the bell tower associated with Doge’s Palace, one of the
otherwise undistinguished buildings marking the perimeter of the
square. This tower is quite tall and its pointy roof dominates the
Venetian skyline. It stands just kitty-corner from the basilica and
is traditionally something a visitor would climb in order to gain a
view of the city from above. We looked at it for a moment and
reflected on how ridiculous the word “Doge” sounded, like a
six-year-old boy saying “dog” when he’s in a silly mood. In
fact it’s just “duke” in the local dialect, but considerably
more fun to say.
Mark
looked at me, “Doge.”
“Doge,”
I shot back.
“Doge!”
“Doge!”
“Double
Doge!”
Well,
you get the picture. And with that our time was up. The tower was
going to be too expensive to climb anyway, so we trotted down to the
dock and located a vaporetto headed in the direction of the train
station.
The
profusion of boat traffic on the Grand Canal created a disagreeable
chop, so the boat rocked perilously as we tried to jump aboard. The engine sounded like a concerto of one hundred chainsaws with
guest accompaniment by a quartet of wood-chippers. I had actually
been looking forward to this ride along the Grand Canal as a scenic
cruise of sorts to cap our visit to Venice, but the sickening motion,
the noise, the nasty fumes and the fact that we were packed in like
Tokyo subway commuters diminished the pleasure somewhat. I spent the
trip wedged in such a way that my view was dominated by a man’s
right ear. It was an outstandingly hairy ear and as such was mildly
interesting, but I am confident that I did not need to go all the way
to Venice to see that. Otherwise though, the trip had been entirely
worthwhile. Four hours in Venice and, to quote Sir Edmund Hillary,
“we knocked that bastard off”. Next stop Vienna; it’s bigger,
so maybe six hours?
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