Towers of Silence.....
{er...To the city, not the tourists, y'unnerstan?}
And round the corner the finest fifteenth century cloister in Rome, if not the world, that of the Pia Società di S. Giovanni dei Genovesi, is still fairly difficult to access....
I look up at the shuttered windows, not unlike my own flat across the river, and wonder what secrets they could tell....
And I look round the back, at the dingy, narrow Vicolo dei Falegnami, down which Moro may have been hustled and into the back door of via Sant'Elena, 8,
Before being killed, stuffed into the boot, and driven to be 'discovered' in Via Caetani, right outside one of the stations of the Fiamme Gialle, the Guardia di Finanza, Cossiga's Teste di Cuoio, a branch of Italian Military Police whose role, amongst others, is to be anti-terrorist. They also have a pleasant beach resort at Fregene, where Aldo Moro is thought to have been held for a while before being brought into the city to be murdered..... from where he got sand in his trouser turn ups.....
Beware of the Griffons, I say!
Yes, Rome is full of secrets. Mutterings in huddles of bandsmen,
Quiet phone calls from men in suits,
Whispers in the darkness of churches,
Or painful sighs behind closed blinds in secret service offices,
Me, I'll sip a beer and read my book,
Trust me....
I am watching Trust, a sprawling dramatisation of the kidnapping of John Paul Getty III in 1973. It takes me back, sort of, to Rome in the 70s. Getty was expelled from St George's English School a little before I taught there, and the whole affair was over a couple of years before I arrived.... but I claim a remote connection, and, in the midst of the herds of tourists on my recent visit, I feel a sense of belonging....
{er...To the city, not the tourists, y'unnerstan?}
This was my street, in Trastevere, where I lived on the second floor of 169 Via di San Francesco a Ripa....
They were exciting times, for many reasons. Kidnapping was one thing..... The deaths of three of my transvestite neighbours, found shot and dumped on the periphery of the city after some drug deals went wrong, added to the spice of life..... In the Caffè di Marzio, in Piazza Santa Maria di Trastevere, a hundred metres from our door, my flatmate was stabbed in the stomach, in exactly the spot from which I took this photograph....
Unsurprisingly, things have transmuted. Trastevere is now trendy, in a Montmartyrdom sort of way, with lots of bright young things and laughter and spritzers and chips.... Despite defacement, the sign on this Caffè hasn't changed....
But its interior and nature has.... You would never have got a beer here in the seventies. It was coffee or milk, and a digestivo, and that was about it.
But not everything e cambiato. Santa Cecilia still rests her marble head under the altar in her church....
And round the corner the finest fifteenth century cloister in Rome, if not the world, that of the Pia Società di S. Giovanni dei Genovesi, is still fairly difficult to access....
But despite the trends some of the narrow lanes and alleys in this part of town, where Genoese sailors stopped over while their ships were unloaded on the Ripa Grande, are still quiet and atmospheric....
And some, at least, of the restaurants maintain the post war charm that Fellini and co - and Peck and Hepburn - celebrated....
Across the river, in Roma propria, between Largo Argentina and Piazza Paganica, I pause at the doorway of via Sant'Elena, 8, known to have been home to one of the covi (hideouts) of the Brigate Rosse in the '70s, possibly even the place in which Aldo Moro passed his last hours on the night of May 8th/9th 1978, and where he was shot in the back seat of the red Renault 4, in the garage of what now claims to be a fish shop.
I look up at the shuttered windows, not unlike my own flat across the river, and wonder what secrets they could tell....
And I look round the back, at the dingy, narrow Vicolo dei Falegnami, down which Moro may have been hustled and into the back door of via Sant'Elena, 8,
Before being killed, stuffed into the boot, and driven to be 'discovered' in Via Caetani, right outside one of the stations of the Fiamme Gialle, the Guardia di Finanza, Cossiga's Teste di Cuoio, a branch of Italian Military Police whose role, amongst others, is to be anti-terrorist. They also have a pleasant beach resort at Fregene, where Aldo Moro is thought to have been held for a while before being brought into the city to be murdered..... from where he got sand in his trouser turn ups.....
Beware of the Griffons, I say!
Yes, Rome is full of secrets. Mutterings in huddles of bandsmen,
Quiet phone calls from men in suits,
Whispers in the darkness of churches,
Or painful sighs behind closed blinds in secret service offices,
Rome has always been like this. In the middle ages, powerful families sealed themselves inside towers like this, La Torre dei Capocci,
Or like this one, the Torre dei Conti, built at the beginning of the thirteenth century by Pope Innocent III, mentioned by Petrarch, and then partially destroyed in the earthquake of 1348....
Then there's the granddaddy of them all, the massive Torre delle Milizie, also from the thirteenth century, but leaning perilously above the ruins of Trajan's Forum, and reputedly the site where Nero fiddled when Rome burned....
Towers of silence. As Dylan sang, the streets of Rome are filled with rubble, ancient footprints are everywhere....
But light still shines on the tourists in the city, mostly happy and oblivious to the darker side of history. They take their selfies by the Fontana di Trevi,
Relax awhile in the Piazza di Spagna, where Little Pauly dances alone in Danny Boyle's Trust. Climb the steps to the church of Trinità dei Monti (hard by the Hassler Hotel where Tony Soprano ate his last pound of Foie Gras)....
Gape at the columns and the ruins of the Imperial Forum,
And wander aimlessly on the unnaturally white Carrara marble of the Wedding Cake, the Altare della Patria, in saluting distance of Mussolini's office in the Palazzo Venezia....
Me, I'll sip a beer and read my book,
And peer down at the dark street below, secretly wishing it were yesterday,
Then in the morning,
Is that really the time?
I must pick up my bed,
And walk....
And get back to sniffing at secrets in this dog-forsaken city....
And, trust me, a dog will have its day,
Or maybe it is the wolf, the wolf that suckled Rome and made it what it is....
Trust me....
What a fabulous essay and brilliant images - it makes me want to go back to Rome NOW, Penny
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