Naples

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Naples
Naples is one of the most underrated cities in Europe, except, perhaps, by French schools whose students seem to arrive by the busload.  Its site along the bay in the shadow of Mount Vesuvius is spectacular. Its art, architecture, nearby archeological sites and food are as gratifying as the friendliness of the people. We went for four days and stayed 13, astonished by the depth of the beauty.   People were helpful and public transport was easy. We went everywhere by foot, bus and train. The garbage strike is long over. The only possible pickpockets we encountered were on a bus.   The expensive hotels are alongside the bay of the lovely Riviera di Chiaia. We preferred the more edgy side of town and stayed in the infamous area of Piazza Garibaldi near the main train station, the transportation hub, often cited by guides for its grit and its crime. There we found a cafe on the piazza so welcoming that we nearly wept upon leaving, a trattoria so pleasing that we ate there all but one night and a real neighborhood where people hung their washing on their balcony, carefully selected their daily marketing from curbside vendors and regularly greeted one another and us. It was a perfect experience.   At Antico Caffe Moro, named for the penny bank given to the founder by a grateful American soldier during the war, Ciro or Alfredo made us long cappuccinos, double espressos and incredibly delicious fresh juice from blood oranges for breakfast. Then we would talk in fractured tongues about life in Naples and our plans for the day. “Pay attention,” Ciro warned, pointing to his eye, as we headed for the streets.   At da Donato we were not the only regulars sampling Marilena’s homey Neapolitan fare but torn each evening about the selection — artichokes in olive oil, roasted peppers, thinly sliced prosciutto with fresh mozzarella as antipasto, perfectly cooked pastas including her revelatory linguini with scoglia, arugela and shavings of parmesan, and homemade lemon sorbetto. Some say their pizza rivals that of the more famous da Michele. We cannot cavil with that. Donato became as much club as eatery. Night after night we met interesting people and had lively conversation in a smattering of languages with people like Angelo from Pescara, tourists from Belgium, England and France and three sailors on shore leave from an American destroyer who made a picture of the USA — a chubby young man from Tennessee along with a black immigrant from Ghana and a Pakistani, both now calling New Jersey their home.  The temperature this winter was unusually cold — enough to chill cafe life outdoors but not at the famous Gambrinus where paying extra for the privilege to shiver in a seat on the piazza was rewarded by the view of Neapolitan street life along a huge arc from the shopping on Via Toledo through the arcades of Palazzo Reale, across the sweep of Piazza Plebiscito and up the steps of the Church of St. Francis of Paul.    Naples isn’t just a city, it is many within one. Each district is distinctive and reflects a connection to a past rich in infusions from afar. Greeks, Romans, Normans, Angevins, Aragonese and Bourbons left their marks over three thousand years.  A day could be considered full after climbing the magnificent double staircase to view the sumptuous royal apartments at the Palazzo Reale, strolling through the spiffy and strutted Galleria Umberto, and visiting the oddly shaped Angevin Castel Nuovo with its massive, detailed bronze Renaissance doors, serene chapel and still functioning baronial hall.  A day and a half wasn’t enough for the Museo Archeologico where the important finds of Pompeii and Herculaneum are casually guarded. There we found the fabulous Farnese bull, the splendid Greek sculptures of Herculaneum, the mosaics, frescoes and bronze satyrs of Pompeii and the Gabinetto Segreto of erotica.   The sites themselves are an easy ride on the Circumvesuviana train. Pompeii was least interesting, perhaps because it seemed sterilized. Most of the objects are now in museums. We found the Villa of the Mysteries closed, the staff somewhat surly and the hilly terrain tiring for lack of more than jagged stone walls and deeply cobbled streets. Yet, one could not help but be moved by the events long past and the sight of Vesuvius capped in snow looming beyond the extensive enclave.  Paestum, on the other hand, was exciting. We visited its three stately Greco-Roman temples on a wintry day when the sun washed the biscuit columns and lintels and wind rippled greening fields. There’s something at once connected and comforting about Paestum. Today one walks casually through remains once planned precisely.   Fifth century B.C. Herculaneum is simply stunning from its first sighting beyond the gates above the lower end of a rather sorry town. Thanks in measure to the Packard Humanities Institute, it is being conserved but not spoilt. It may be that only a small portion has been unearthed as it is now thought that much more still lies beneath the town. Ash buried Pompeii. Mud and lava encapsulated Herculaneum and that which can be seen is more intact and more interesting.   Some of the astonishing riches of Villa Papyri have been moved to the Museo Archeologico in Naples, but to wander through its skeleton is to understand just how well its owner lived until Vesuvius claimed it in 79 A.D. We took the lunch we brought with us at one of Herculaneum’s taverns — recognized not only by the excellent signs at the site but also because counters with holes for cooking pots were so well preserved they could be made useful again. Terra-cotta vessels still lay ready for sale in shops at least two millennia old, bits of frescoed still life’s can be made out here…
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