It's
the sounds that echo in my mind – water splashing in fountains, horns blaring
from irate taxi drivers and horses' hooves clopping along cobbled brick roads.
Images
play through my mind as though they're on a revolving carousel – towering 15th
century pillars standing next to modern office buildings. Walking into a
neighborhood church and seeing life-sized statues on Egyptian marble floors and
protected by solid gold ceilings.
These
are the memories I have of Rome, a once-in-a-lifetime trip my husband and I
took last week. He was there for business, but I got to tag along and see the
sights.
Luckily,
I joined up with two women, Kim and Karen, whose husbands were also on the
trip, and we walked miles throughout Rome accompanied by Karen's 6-year-old
son, Will, who never once complained. Bribes of chocolate gelato and visits to
Italian toy stores helped keep him in good humor.
The
guide books describe Rome as the eternal city, fitting as it was settled in 753
B.C. and has survived through invaders, floods, famine, bad times and good
times.
Wandering
through ruins that were built hundreds of years before Christ was born seemed
unreal, especially when examining the artistry and workmanship created without
modern tools.
We
followed our tour books through the city and made sure we stopped at all the
major tourist stops – the Pantheon, the Coliseum, the Trevi Fountain. We read
descriptions at all the churches, looked at gorgeously painted ceilings until
our necks ached and savored Italian pastas and freshly baked bread every
evening.
We
walked miles and miles, it seemed, and priests, nuns, school children,
tourists, natives, beggars and business people surrounded us. Buses and taxis
roared through the streets, filled with people on their way to the Coliseum,
the Pantheon and the many piazzas and fountains around the city.
Although
the well-known sights were astounding, Rome is filled with surprises around
every corner, and those are the ones that stand out for me. There was the kind,
elderly priest in a magnificent church who reminded Will to give his mother a
kiss and tell her he loved her.
There
was the delicately baked eggplant-and-cheese dinner my husband and I dined on
in a family-owned restaurant off the beaten path.
Walking
through numerous basilicas and churches, some historic and some off the beaten
path, we were rewarded around every corner with huge tapestries, marble sculptures
and Renaissance paintings. Although they were all beautiful, the crown jewel was
the Vatican.
As a
Catholic, standing on the cobblestones in St. Peter's Square was a dream come
true. Even more incredible were the treasures inside the Vatican.
We
heeded good advice from my sister-in-law and purchased online tickets. Thanks
to those passes, it only took us a couple of hours to wind our way past
hundreds of gorgeous museum artifacts until we found ourselves at the heart of
the Vatican, the Sistine Chapel.
Standing
underneath the stunning paintings of Michelangelo, we were surrounded by
languages from around the world – Russian, French, English, Portuguese,
Italian. All were speaking in hushed tones, their faces reflecting an
appreciation for the masterpieces surrounding us.
We
didn't need a common language to understand that talent and craftsmanship crosses
all boundaries. The beauty of the art found in Roma, as they call her, speaks
to all those who come to this historic and unique city.
For
those able to make the pilgrimage to Rome, this regal and grand signora will
reward visitors with thousands of memories and sounds of a long-ago past to
last a lifetime.
This column was originally published in The Fort Bend Herald.
This column was originally published in The Fort Bend Herald.
2 comments:
Beautifully portrayed. That's the ideal way to visit a city ... on foot and unrushed. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you, Steve! Sorry, but I just saw this comment. I can still close my eyes and see the cobblestones and streets, smell the fresh basil and hear the bells. A trip of a lifetime!
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