Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Giornale Adriatico-Mediterraneo: Porto Ercole
photograph by Hallie Cohen
Porto Ercole is one of the resorts you reach when you pass
through Tuscany on the way to the Mediterranean or Tyrrhenean Sea as its called at
this latitude. It’s a sleepy little resort, with small yachts and boats moored
in its harbor. Porto Ercole lacks the glamour of Portofino and other getaways on the Italian Riviera. It’s not the kind of place where myths are
made. There’s an old expression. “They’re not doing it to you. They’re just
doing it.” Caravaggio died in the seaside town of Porto Ercole in 1610. After
the brawl in which he killed Ranuccio Tomassoni he’d been forced to leave Rome
for Naples, but he received a pardon and was on his way home. “Not with a bang,
but a whimper,” to quote Eliot. Porto Ercole is also around the corner
from the Isola del Giglio, where in 2012 the captain of the cruise ship Costa
Concordia carrying 4252 passengers made a fatal deviation from his course and
crashed his ship into a reef resulting in the death of 32 people. Porto Ercole
is the kind of place where life goes on and people make little mistakes that
sometimes have larger consequences. The hotels along the mountainside leading
to the shore look like they’ve seen better days. Yet there's something
unique about the town’s failure to distinguish itself beyond coming in the way
of accidents looking for a place to happen. Because of the internet, there's a
ubiquitousness to sophistication. Little bohemias abound. However, Porto Ercole is free from the burden of its own history. It’s a relief to find an
enclave where the inhabitants are not legends in their own minds. Not
acquiescence, but a certain acceptance makes Porto Ercole the perfect place to
end a journey from the Adriatic. No one recognized Odysseus when he returned to Ithaca, except for his dog, Argos. You will remain mercifully unconnected when you roll into Porto Ercole.
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