Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, First Series eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 372 pages of information about Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, First Series.

Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, First Series eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 372 pages of information about Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, First Series.

On a clear October morning, when the vineyards are taking their last tints of gold and crimson, and the yellow foliage of the poplars by the river mingles with the sober greys of olive-trees and willows, every square inch of this landscape, glittering as it does with light and with colour, the more beautiful for its subtlety and rarity, would make a picture.  Out of many such vignettes let us choose one.  We are on the shore close by the ruined bridge, the rolling muddy Rhone in front; beyond it, by the towing-path, a tall strong cypress-tree rises beside a little house, and next to it a crucifix twelve feet or more in height, the Christ visible afar, stretched upon His red cross; arundo donax is waving all around, and willows near; behind, far off, soar the peaked hills, blue and pearled with clouds; past the cypress, on the Rhone, comes floating a long raft, swift through the stream, its rudder guided by a score of men:  one standing erect upon the prow bends forward to salute the cross; on flies the raft, the tall reeds rustle, and the cypress sleeps.

For those who have time to spare in going to or from the south it is worth while to spend a day or two in the most comfortable and characteristic of old French inns, the Hotel de l’Europe, at Avignon.  Should it rain, the museum of the town is worth a visit.  It contains Horace Vernet’s not uncelebrated picture of Mazeppa, and another, less famous, but perhaps more interesting, by swollen-cheeked David, the ‘genius in convulsion,’ as Carlyle has christened him.  His canvas is unfinished.  Who knows what cry of the Convention made the painter fling his palette down and leave the masterpiece he might have spoiled?  For in its way the picture is a masterpiece.  There lies Jean Barrad, drummer, aged fourteen, slain in La Vendee, a true patriot, who, while his life-blood flowed away, pressed the tricolor cockade to his heart, and murmured ‘Liberty!’ David has treated his subject classically.  The little drummer-boy, though French enough in feature and in feeling, lies, Greek-like, naked on the sand—­a very Hyacinth of the Republic, La Vendee’s Ilioneus.  The tricolor cockade and the sentiment of upturned patriotic eyes are the only indications of his being a hero in his teens, a citizen who thought it sweet to die for France.

In fine weather a visit to Vaucluse should by no means be omitted, not so much, perhaps, for Petrarch’s sake as for the interest of the drive, and for the marvel of the fountain of the Sorgues.  For some time after leaving Avignon you jog along the level country between avenues of plane-trees; then comes a hilly ridge, on which the olives, mulberries, and vineyards join their colours and melt subtly into distant purple.  After crossing this we reach L’Isle, an island village girdled by the gliding Sorgues, overshadowed with gigantic plane-boughs, and echoing to the plash of water dripped from mossy fern-tufted millwheels.  Those who expect Petrarch’s Sorgues to be some trickling poet’s rill emerging

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Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, First Series from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.