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Monday, July 30, 2018

Visiting Naples (Italy) with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting Naples (Italy) with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Our train for Naples arrived early in the station, but would not depart.  I was anxious to get to the “Land of the Mid-Day Sun” or the “Mezzogiorno” in Italian.  I took the time to write a few notes in my journal:

On the way to Assisi, we passed Lake Trasimeno.  Haze and blue sky hovered above us.  It looked just like the background in most of Leonardo da Vinci’s paintings.  I always thought his landscapes were contrived, but there are parts of Italy that have misty sfumato atmosphere on a clear day.

Around Florence, Sienna, and Pisa while we were on the train, we could see from our windows that Italian farmers practice what is called “slash-and-burn” farming techniques. I thought only African countries practiced this fertilization technique.  (North Africa was part of the Ancient Roman Empire when they finally defeated Carthage.  Flaubert’s novel Salammbo has Carthage and Hannibal and his elephant tanks as a subject.)

I learned about this farming technique of slash-and-burn in an East Asian Geography class at the University of Chicago and my AP Biology Classes in high school.  Slash-and-burn fertilization is good for the soil for only about 3 years before harming it.

The train finally started moving, and I spent the morning staring out the window.  Blood-red tomatoes ripened in the sun and made me want to cut them in half, slather some Dijon mustard on the bread, and add the slices of tomato to make a sandwich.  I liked my version of tomato sandwich.  Mayonnaise can easily spoil in the heat.

On the way to Naples, I thought of how dirty Rome was.  Rome, however, seemed downright clean when we saw the garbage strewn on the streets of Naples when we arrived at the train station.

We walked to the hotel.  All along the way, people with sidewalk displays sold cigarettes, razors, and soap.  People tried to sell us watches in several languages until they arrived at French.

Communist graffiti covered the walls.  Inequitable housing codes and standards and lack of enforcement might have caused that form of protest.

Two girls zoomed by on a Vespa and cut off a car.  The car honked at them and the girls shook their fists at the car driver.  The girls were not wearing helmets.

When we arrived at the hotel, I showered and sat in bed while Laurent went out exploring and buying groceries.  Going to the grocery store overseas is a fun marketing research exercise.  You can ask yourself questions such as, “What do they make in a microwave or instant here?”

I picked up my journal and wrote some impressions:

The dirt in Naples unsettles me.  I wrote that both Rome and Naples were dirty and made me think that no one valued the architecture in these places.  It seemed like these cities had no civic pride.  Had corruption taken over everything?

The dark grime probably came from pollution.  Since our visit in 1988, many of the buildings we saw have been cleaned to prevent the grime from eating away at the monuments.

Everywhere in Italy, I noted that people wore fashionable clothes with creases ironed into sleeves, even if they did not have them.  I knew from helping with this chore that we also did this in Detroit and in the South, so insects would not lay eggs in the “burned and smooth” fibers of cotton.

The Appenine Mountain Range runs down most of Italy from North to South.  The mountains keep regional foods distinct as well as accents.  Italian television helped make Tuscan Italian, the language of Dante, the national language.

I watched television and listened to how words were pronounced the rest of the evening as I ate bread, water, and chocolate muffins.

By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

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Friday, July 27, 2018

Visiting the Villa Borghese Museum in Rome (Italy) with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting the Villa Borghese Museum in Rome (Italy) with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


We walked around Ancient Rome’s Forum and admired the columns we could see on roofless buildings.  We ended up at Rome’s current city hall and sat on the terrace on the backside of the building and watched a golden sunset set over the Forum.

A concert was going on in the front of the Town Hall, so we listened to that as Laurent started picking out the various buildings in the Forum that we had passed in front of on our walk with a guide.

I felt like this evening was the first time that I was able to relax in public in Rome; roving bands of gypsy children tried to steal purses in Rome in the 1980s.

We walked back along Via Cavour, which is a bit of a red light prostitute district.  Prostitutes stood on corners and openly solicited people.  The Roland Garros Tennis Courts and the Bois de Boulogne had a serious prostitution problem in Paris during the 1980s, too, with transgender prostitutes from Brazil.

The next day we took the subway to the Villa Borghese Museum.  We bought a Museum guide outside in the park.

The second floor of the museum with paintings was closed when we visited making the Museum free to see the sculpture collection.  Frankly, the sculpture collection in this Museum is so magnificent that I hardly missed the painting. 

My favorite sculpture was Bernini’s rendering of Daphne as she runs away from Apollo.  The Gods turn her into a tree to escape her attackers.  Bernini captured her just as the strands of her hair were turning into leaves. 

I was thankful that I was able to see so much of the art that I had studied in high school and college while I was young and very healthy.

We exited the gardens onto the symmetrical Piazza del Popolo.  From there, we walked to the Spanish Steps.  Everyone gets photos taken in front of the Spanish Steps despite its being “touristy.”

We rushed to the Pantheon before it closed.   The Pantheon is an Ancient Roman Place of worship that the Catholic Church recycled for its use.  There is a huge dome over it.  It made me dizzy just to look up at it.

I had fun walking back to the hotel, looking at all the ancient villas with papal nuncios in them. 

By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

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Visiting St. Peter's Square in Rome (Italy) by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting St. Peter’s Square in Rome (Italy) with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


After visiting the Vatican Museum, we went outside to St. Peter’s Basilica and Square. 

The interior of St. Peter’s Basilica overwhelms with its twisting Baroque columns in gold designed by the architect and interior designer Bernini. 

Michelangelo’s Pièta of Mary holding her dead son glimmers from the sheer white marble it is made of.  The beauty of the stone almost makes you forget the sad subject matter, and the fact that Mary is absolutely huge; the sculptor’s trick to accommodate the sprawling Christ.

Bernini'a Ecstasy of Saint Teresa by Bernini seems to be suspended on nothing as she experiences religious transcendence.

Laurent came back from the crypt where he had been inspecting tombs of popes.  We walked from the cool marble interior of St. Peter’s Basilica outside to the blazing hot St. Peter’s Square.

I liked watching the Pope give his Christmas message from his window looking out over St. Peter’s Square on television every Christmas as a kid in Detroit. 

I even went to Christmas mass at St. Aloysius da Gonzaga Church down the street from my apartment building in downtown Detroit much to the amusement of the priests who presided there.  (They knew I was Protestant at the time.  I was told I could go up to be blessed only with my arms crossed on my chest, because I was a Protestant with a Valois grandma.)

I wanted to stop for a cup of coffee, but Laurent said that would be a waste of money.  I wanted to stand at a Roman espresso bar and read Repubblica newspaper headlines, too.


I could not read Italian very well when we went on our honeymoon.  I can read Italian now thanks to a lot of work at home.  My first books were Rushdie’s La Sonrisa del Jaguar about Nicaragua and L’Isla en Terraforma by Ugo Pirro.  I read Corriere della Sera newspaper if I can now for arts and culture coverage in Italian.

After our big walk around Rome, we took cold showers at home after walking around and passed out for our siesta.  We sat in the air-conditioned lobby of the hotel and wrote “thank-you” postcards to the family.

By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



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Visting the Vatican Museum in Rome with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting the Vatican Museum in Rome with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


We stayed in the less expensive rooms of a nice hotel called the Hotel Venezia in Rome.  Our room was on a courtyard with a window and moderately noisy neighbors.

We went out to buy groceries.  I really liked the Italian bread and cheese by this point in our honeymoon and liked checking out neighborhoods.  When we came back with our groceries, an Italian police car raced down the street.  4 policemen jumped out of the cars holding machine guns.

We stood still and let them go where they were going.  Even though I am from Detroit, I was even a little unnerved to see 4 machine guns on policemen without riot gear or SWAT gear on.

We walked around the block and peeked around the corner to see if the machine guns were gone.  They were, so we went to our hotel and installed groceries.  Then, we set out for a walk.

Scaffolding to clean buildings blackened by the centuries was everywhere, but I still caught glimpses of the column of Marcus Aurelius and the monument to King Victor Emmanuel, the man who reigned over a Unified Italy as we know it.

The monument looks like a wedding cake and is a good landmark when touring around the city.  We almost got hit by one of the many speeding drivers at this monument. 

Crosswalks are few and far between and generally disobeyed in the Holy City.  A stop sign in Rome appears to be just a suggestion, too.

We went through I do not know how many winding streets to get to the Trevi Fountain.  The piazza housing this place is small and was packed with scantily clad, blond women and Italian men with Guy Fawkes’ plastic surgery faces.

Laurent and I tossed coins into the Trevi Fountain, which is supposed to ensure your return to Rome.  From the Trevi Fountain, we walked to the Piazza Novana.

From what I read in our handy Berlitz guide, the Piazza Novana used to be a Roman Stadium for chariot races and was sometimes flooded to make a swimming pool.  Ancient Romans felt the heat, too.

On the way back to the hotel, we spotted the Pantheon, which we planned to visit.  Back at home port, I showered and could not believe all that we had seen on one night.

Plan A the next day was a visit to the Vatican City and Museums.  We appended ourselves to another tour group.  I knew what I wanted to see in the Vatican Museums and played tour guide for Laurent.

Anyone, who has studied Renaissance art history, would recognize Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel.  The colors of the newly restored (translation = repainted) Sistine Chapel glimmered in the sunlight. 

I still think Michelangelo is a better sculptor than painter.  The female bodies he painted, for example, are very bulky.  The breasts on the women also have about 12 inches between them, too.

I was happy to see the Laocoön sculpture.  Laocoön was the Trojan priest, who warned the Trojans not to take the Trojan Horse made by the Greeks into the Gates of Troy.  Sea serpents entwined him and his son and took him down into the depths of the ocean once he made the prophecy.

I was happy that this sculpture has not been destroyed despite its antiquity.  I think the priest knew what was coming and ran away with his kids.  The City of Troy did not have a happy ending.

I could not find the majestic statue of Augustus of Primaporta.  A Swiss Guard let us go into a closed off gallery after I saw the statue in profile and asked if I could see it in Italian with the name of the sculpture.

Most Roman emperors have their busts done to portray their faces as weathered soldiers, who earned their positions waging wars for food supplies and defending the kingdom.  The Louvre Museum in Paris (France) is full of busts like these.

The Augustus of Primaporta is a full-body sculpture with Augustus's face portrayed to look like a Greek deity.  He wanted to be venerated like a God and his clothing reflects this.  Augustus was more into fashion than food for his citizenry that would make Rome remain true to its Republican ideals.

His fashionable "armor" has 3-D figures on it.  This is impractical, because it can be torn off to destroy the clothing and open the emperor to attack.  Augustus could still protect himself, but he relied on well-fed supporters to protect him and keep the rabble down and amused with not-so-great food and circus and gladiator games in the Coliseum.

3-D figures means embossed material.  It is like embossed stationery; somewhat of a waste of money when there are more vital issues to take care of in a community.

The Ancient Romans developed cement.  Irrigation canals are built with cement, but you need engineers to build them and maintain them.  You also need a consistent system of laws to administer the irrigation canals and channels.  You also need judges to settle disputes and some form of law enforcement to back up legal decisions. 

(An aside - most of Europe gets one crop out of its fields in a growing season for one year.  The terraced rice fields in Japan and the Philippines get 2 to 3 crops of rice out of their fields in a single growing years with a more labor intensive crop.   Asian civilization is also very advanced like that of ancient Egypt and Rome.)

We stayed in the Vatican Museum Galleries for 5 hours and still did not see the entire collection.  My art history studies at the University of Chicago allowed me to make a list of important works to see, which we did.

We stopped at the Vatican Post Office to buy stamps for postcards for thank-you letters for wedding gifts.  I knew they would forgive the etiquette breach of not sending cards, if they had conversation-item stamps from the smallest country in the world.

The Sovereign Military of Malta is actually supposed to be the smallest country.  It is located in the Vatican, but I could not find it.  The Swiss Guards would not tell me where it was.

In any case, the visit to the Vatican Museums was worth the whole trip to Italy.


By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

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