Oct. 9th, 2009

jere7my: (Shadow)
Fortress arch

Saturday, June 27 - Rome

The Aventine felt to me like Rome's back porch. It's quiet, and shady, and green, with birds flitting about, and in many places you can sit back and look out over the rest of Rome spread out in front of you. It used to be a city hub — for fans of HBO's Rome, it's the hill Vorenus's gang took control of — but construction and shifting traffic patterns have made it a pleasant residential backwater.

I led [livejournal.com profile] adfamiliares up the Aventine on our second morning in Rome, seeking a particular keyhole. The little shaded avenue pictured above, the Clivo di Rocca Savella (Slope of the Savelli Fortress) tempted our feet to stray from the main street. Just as we passed that corner, in the shadow of the fortress wall, a plummy English voice declaimed to us from a clump of shrubbery:
When the grand horses come, we will move in circles
Not to be dancing the jig, but jumping up and down.
There was a young woman up there at the base of the wall, peering at us, crouching and crab-walking behind the bushes in a nest of unpacked camping equipment. When we passed her again on the way back, she continued:
And the young men arrive at the gates
in their beautiful suits and long cars
to meet us spinning in our summer frocks
and invite the children to go away with them.
(pause)
What are you, anyway?
It was exhilarating, to be addressed so madly — in English! — on such a quiet, flowered path, beneath a sunny sky, in Rome. Does such a thing happen, outside of novels? It's one of the things from the trip that I hoarded into myself, to unpack on gray days that are soaked with normalcy and routine. We didn't respond, or answer her question; it was too suddenly weird for us to react, too hard to imagine what role she hoped we would play. I wish I had — I'm obsessed with discovering her story, while remaining half-convinced that any true thing that I learned would crack the seal of the magic.

That particular street is also home to the Priory of the Knights of Malta and two excellent churches — Santa Sabina, where preparations for a wedding were underway, and Sant'Alessio — which will be featured in the next post. We ran ourselves ragged for the rest of the day — we saw the Palatine, the Capitoline Museum, the Forum, and the Colosseum, all of which will get or have gotten their own posts. For now, here are some pictures from the Aventine and other interstitial bits of Saturday. Cut for Knights Hospitaller! )

Here's the whole set (41 pictures).

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