whitebeard

Don't curse the darkness, light a candle.

Saturday, March 31, 2007


CHAPTER VII d

THE  ROCK OF S. FRANCESCO
Cap. VII pag. 173-188

Let us return in an unemotional moment and look dispassionately at the great Crucifixion in the Chapel. One perceives now that it has some striking defects, though at no time is it other than a noble work, simple and direct beyond the artist's wont. The form upon the Cross, moulded with a dignity of feeling and a tragic power rare in Andrea della Robbia, c1aims all the attention ; the saints and angels are quite subordinate, and fortunately we hardly notice the foolish sun and moon which some strange lapse of taste has induced the artist to admit above. But the effect of the central figure is much spoilt by the green used to give the appearance of death, and by the red hair and beard and the yellow of the cross, a realism of colour incongruous with the rest of the composition in idea anq. sentiment, and responsible for the conjecture of some writers, supported by a local tradition, that the original figure had been broken through some accident and this substituted for it by the later school. But a recent critic (See Cruttwel1, Luca and Andrea della Robbia, p. 168),  appeals, among other arguments, to the masterly character of the modelling in proof of its genuineness.
One may al so object to the saints that they lack impressiveness and depth of feeling when viewed closely. St. John is a very beautiful figure, but his show of grief is not very convincing, and the Madonna is singularly cold and unmoved. The kneeling St. Francis and  St. Jerome are of the gentle and plaintive type in which Andrea is accustomed to portray those two great spirits, and though the angels are individually beautiful, their expression is somewhat over-emphasised. There is in the whole work something rather theatrical. Signs of the co-operation of the artist's sons have been pointed out, and perhaps to the taste of Giovanni is due "the border of flowers and fruits outside the usual surrounding of cherubs, a decoration continually used by him and the whole school afterwards.
But the real interest of this great work of art must always be in its spiritual significance. It must have been produced about the time when Savonarola's great re1igious revival was shaking all Florence, and it seems to throw a light on the attitude of the artistic spirits of the Renaissance towards that movement. It was through their wonderfully developed sense of beauty that the religious impulse reached them.
Their aesthetic sensibility rose from appreciation of outward forms to enjoyment of spiritual ideas. In Andrea's angels I seem to see all that fashionable world, if I may so call it, of Florence, with its exquisite sensibilities, its grace, its culture, its curls, acknowledging a higher beauty, bowing down before the infinite nobility and dignity of the naked God upon the Cross; moved to the heart, forgetful of self, absorbed in sorrow and adoration 'before the image of the Divine Idea.
The Chiesa Maggiore, the principal church upon the Rock, was founded in 1348 by Conte Tarlato di Pietramala and his wife, contessa Giovanna di Santa Fiora, as may be learnt from an old inscription upon the façade. The Tarlati, who had possessed themselves at this time of Chiusi, the castle dose by, once the seat of Count Orlando and his House, were as zealous in their devotion to the stigmatised saint as the Guidi had been. Their benefactions to La Verna were in proportion to the devastation and misery which their greed and tyranny wrought in the country round. The church was only half finished when its founders died, and the piety of their heirs was not equal to parting with the fifteen hundred ducats which they bequeathed to carry on the work. It was not till 1459 that by the help of the Arte della Lana of Florence it was finished. The gothic design of the earlier builders was not carried out by the later ones, and the church has no remarkable architectural distinction, but it is spacious and dignified, and very richly decorated with Della Robbia works, presented by various patrons. There are no less than seven of these in this one church, including the medallion with the emblem of the Arte della Lana, in the roof. The two that claim attention first are the Annunciation and Nativity by Andrea della Robbia, the one in the  Niccolini Chapel on the left hand, the other in the corresponding chaI1el on the right, founded by Jacopo Brizzi in 1478. The Annunciation is generally considered one of Andrea's finest works and that in which he approaches most nearly to his master Luca.  Its noble simplicity and devout feeling impress one deeply at first. The attitude and the whole outward presentment of the Virgin are the perfect embodiment of meekness and loveliness; her hands are a marvel .of exquisite modelling, her draperies of' simple and graceful arrangement. It is only after contemplating this beautiful figure for a while that one begins to fee! a certain poverty of soul in her. The angel is also of great beauty, but a little over curled. He seems to lack animation; no swiftness of wings just folded, nothing of the hurry and eagerness of the newlylighted messenger disturbs his faultless equanimity. Both he and the Virgin seemed to have stayed as they are some time. On the other hand the little group in the sky is an unnecessary interruption to the holy quiet of the scene. But the whole setting of the work is chaste and restrained. The frame is ornamented with a simple floral pattern, and the colour is white on blue only, with a touch of green in the lily. One of its great beauties is the wonderful quality and colour of the surface. The thick .glossy enamel seems to give fluidity and smoothness to the folds of the drapery ; they fall and lie with the richness of the creamy spume which edges the waves upon a sandy seashore.
The arms of the donors, the Niccolini of Florence, who built the chapel, are on the predella.
The more homely Madonna of the Nativity charms one hardly less than the Annunziata just looked at. She has a simple childlike grace, void of self-consciousness, and her attitude as she bends over the Babe is very touching. The theme of this altar-piece achieved a great popularity; it appeals to a sentiment common to all, and followers of the artist have familiarised us with it in numberless imitations. In this, the original version, the beauty of the scene is disturbed by the figure of God the Father and by the choir of angels, which overcrowd the composition and detract from its simplicity and effectiveness. They appear to have been executed by an inferior and coarser hand. ( See Cruttwell, Luca ond Alldreo dello Robbia, p.170).
In a chapel just above the altar with the Annunciation, the Cappella Ridolfi, there is a large representation of the Ascension, by Giovanni della Robbia, (In giving thc authors of these works I have followed the attributions of Miss Cruttwell in her work already referred to) one of the finest works of this artist. Giovanni differs greatly in style from his father Andrea. He is of robuster and at the same time coarser character, and shows the more florid taste of the cinquecento. Instead of the refined and gentle types used by Andrea, he moulds broad and heavy figures, and the religious sentiment of the older master is replaced in him by a love of sensuous and earthly beauty. The new development which took place in the Della Robbia arts by the introduction of elaborate backgrounds and accessories, realistical1y coloured  into the pieces, converting a plastic medium from its proper use to serve pictorial ends; was chiefly owing to him. But in this Ascension he adheres to the old traditions in colour and arrangement. The work has been often attributed to Andrea, but the type of the Christ, a majestic figure and the homely, realistic and individualised heads of the apostles are characteristic of Giovanni. The Madonna del Rifugio, over an altar on the right lower down the church, is also by Giovanni; it is a rather uninteresting and conventional piece, with an insipid Virgin and characterless figures of SS. Antony, Onofrio and Francis, and a frowning Magdalen. There are also in the church two figures of St. Antony and St. Francis, in niches, in the manner of Andrea.
In the sacristy is to be seen a reliquary of delicate gothic workmanship, containing a wooden bowl from which San Francesco ate, and a glass goblet said to have been given to him by Count Orlando, but hardly antique enough in appearance for such an early date. A very sacred fragment of linen rag, stained with the blood from the wounds of the Saint, is also preserved here, and there are some very fine embroidered vestments and altar furniture of the seventeenth century, presented by the Convent of Santo Spirito at Florence.
Outside the church, in a little chapel at the end of the loggia, dose to the entrance to the long corridor, popularly called the Cappella del Conte Checco, in remembrance of its founder, Count Francesco Montedoglio, we come across another Della Robbia altarpiece, this time a late and very coarse inferior work, a Pietà, gaudy and vulgar in feeling. There is also in the refectory of the convent, invisible to women visitors, a Madonna and Child of the school of Andrea della Robbia.
The Piazza is adorned with some modern monuments in honour of the patron saint, but they lack the feeling of the medioeval so essential to one's idea of the Poverello. This is supplied however by the living figures of the Brothers, who, as they pass backwards and forwards in their simple habits, girded with the three-knotted cord, revive the thirteenth century and its poetic enthusiasm and devotion before our eyes. Beside the picturesque sixteenth century well, a door leads into the Foresteria, the rooms reserved for strangers. Rere Padre Fortunato, the Forestaio, who keeps the keys of the gate, receives and entertains the visitor with the utmost kindliness and thoughtfulness, bringing forth of his best to stay the appetite which the mountain air has sharpened.
One of the most interesting spectacles at La Verna is the dark stone chamber in the Foresteria, just within the great entrance, where the poor folk, who are never lacking here, gather for shelter if the rain falls or the wind blows cold without. Here you may see a crowd of hoary elders with bowed shoulders and deep-seamed visages, crones with their heads bound in sybil fashion, young peasants with little bundles, on their way across the mountains into the Romagna, children, ragged and merry, all crouched and chattering within the vast black chimney-place, where they stir up a heap of smouldering twigs into a blaze, veiling themselves in a cloud of blue smoke.
Outside the precincts of the convent the primaeval forest reigns undisturbed as in the days of the first Brothers, sweeping down into misty depths on the south, and northwards rising up to the precipitous summit of La Penna. To this highest point of the Rock, Francesco doubtless often ascended. And here one seems to find him again with a more subtle realisation than amid the thaumaturgic wonders of the sanctuaries. His feet must have passed up the way one goes to-day, hurt by these same stones, comforted by mosses like these, caressed by delicate pink cyclamen growing as one sees them now in slim tufts between the boulders. The same mysteries of the woodland were around him, weird growths, distorted shapes, things with strange eyes in shadowed places, voices that whispered in unknown tongues overhead. But to him aH was consecrate by love. Praised be Thou, O Lord, for our sister, the Earth, who not only gives us sustenance, but brings forth also coloured flowers and herbs. You mount up beneath the solemn shade of the great beeches and pines, and presently find yourself on the edge of a dreadful precipice, over which, no doubt, the devil used to try in vain to hurl the saint. Up in these airy heights I fancy that perpetual contest must have become a kind of game, and the antagonists must have found that they had mistaken each other and that the Prince of the Air and the Soul of Man were both the merry sprites of God, paired in the eternal dance.
Here a great fragment of rock, detached from the mountain side, rears itself precipitously from the ravine, with just a little space for a foothold upon it. It is called the Sasso di Fra Lupo. The story-tellers relate that when Francesco first carne to La Verna the mountain was infested by a very wicked brigand, who robbed travellers that passed below, and compelled those that resisted to cross on to this giddy crag by a plank thrown aver the abyss, and kept them there till they yielded to his demands. The people named him Lupo, the Wolf. But the Brothers had no fear of him, Holy Poverty was their protector. The robber, however, feared them, the heralds of love and peace, and did his utmost to drive them away. But one day Francesco went to meet him and talk with him, and in a very short time tamed his rude heart, and brought him to such deep repentance, that he abandoned his trade of robber and turned Brother Minor. Re showed such gentleness and meekness in his new calling that Francesco changed his name from Wolf into Lamb, and he was ever afterwards known as Fra Agnello.
And so you continue upward, mounting the  painful steep till at last you win the utmost summit, La Penna, and stand as it seems on the sheer edge of the world, thrust out into the abyss of space. A vast and glorious prospect is before you, rolling away to where 'in the extreme distance the land is bound by the Adriatic sea. Eastward you look upon the mountains which nurse the infant Tiber and can trace the course of the Valle Tiberina running southwards within the misty folds of the hills. Many a distant city and landmark of fame may be descried. But one. cares little for geographical particulars in this place.
For here, too, Francesco has been before us. Where his foot trod a little chapel has not failed to spring up. One could have wished a soaring beech instead. Thought can only occupy itself with him, who had climbed so fast and far, changing wolves into lambs as he passed, leaving behind him a garden where he found a wilderness, yet never staying his foot, but always soaring upwards, singing like the lark that goes to salute the rising sun; casting off all the trappings of earth and hasting naked to meet the naked truth; rising in love through death to life. Here at last the climbing feet could go no further. And already it must have seemed like Heaven around him; the pastures of the Holy Valley far below, more pale, more delicate than any green .of this world, walled with rocks of jasper or fine gold. And beyond, clothed in celestial blue, beautiful and insubstantial as an allegoric scene, lay spread out the region of his earthly endeavours, the valleys and marches where he had wandered footsore and eager, the castles whither he had breathlessly ascended, to gather in his harvest of souls. There, far beneath him now and overpast, were his' sorrows, his yearnings, his fears. Lifted up here next the Empyrean, he could rest content; around him only the things which endure, the everlasting hills, the silence, God.

La Verna, this seeming abode of peace, has not escaped altogether the vicissitudes of history. After the first establishment of the convent, it suffered from the diminution of zeal which set in among the followers of the stigmatised saint and from the bitter fraternal quarrel which soon divided them. The sacred Rock remained in the possession of the Frati Conventuali, who represented the original Order, but by accepting privileges and modifications of the rule from successive Popes had early given up the true Franciscan ideal. After a time they grew so lax, that disorders and scandals occurred, and in 1431 Pope Eugenius IV. turned them out and installed in their stead the other branch of the Order, the Osservanti, or Brothers of the Strict Observance, who had adhered to the original rule. Then was seen the shameful spectacle of war and conflict upon the Mons Fe1ix. The evicted Friars, gathering together their friends and neighbours in the Valley, assaulted the Rock and drove out the new-comers. They were, however, once more ousted and the Osservanti restored, and not long afterwards Florence took the convent under her protection, giving it a year later into the charge of the Arte della Lana. These events are marked by the "stemme" sculptured upon the doorway leading into the interior of the convent; the arms of Eugenius IV. with the Triple Crown; the Cross of the Florentine people; the Florentine Lily; and the emblem of the arte della Lana, the Lamb with the Banner.
In 1498 d'Alviano and his Venetian troops occupied La Verna and committed horrible desecrations of all the holy places. They were virtually besieged there by the Florentines and the people around and were soon reduced to dreadful straits, and after four months were compelled to abandon the mount and later to retreat altogether from the Casentino.
In course of time the Osservanti themselves grew lax, and in 1625 they were replaced by the Padri Riformati, a reformed branch of the order, who are still in possession. In 1810 the convent was threatened with suppression by the Napoleonic Government, and the Brothers had already bidden farewell with bitter tears to the Rock, but they were allowed to return and keep the convent as a hospice for travellers.
The community has escaped the fate which has fallen since on the religious houses of Italy, as the Municipality of Florence succeeded in making good a claim to the possession of the mountain, and now allows the Brothers to remain in their ancient home  as its tenants.
In the course of the year many thousand persons visit the monastery. The indulgences attached to the
various sanctuaries attract a great concourse of pilgrims, , especially on the 17th of September, when the churches of La Verna share the privileges conceded to Sta. Maria degli Angeli at Assisi for the great Perdono. Then the good Brothers are hard pressed to house their men guests in the Foresteria, or rooms reserved for strangers in the convent, and to find room for all the women in the hospice built specially for their reception and presided over by sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis, at La Beccia, the tiny hamlet at the foot of the Rock. For after nightfall no woman may remain within the great gate of the convent.
In the vision of that long procession that has passed up the mountain without break through so many centuries what mighty shades appear! Saints and doctors of the Church, Antony of Padua, Bonaventura, Bernardino, Thomas Aquinas, cardinals destined to wear the triple crown, that tragic figure of an idealist, the Emperor Henry VII., and princes without number since, and bringing up the mighty file, a crowned Italian head at last, the gracious Queen Mother Margherita.
And among the thousands and tens of thousands of unrecorded pilgrims surely there comes early in the line a certain sad wanderer in the Valley below, whose name, robbed then by poverty and misfortune of its rights, record ed now, would, by its comparison, silence all those written above. He who must daily through the winter of his discontent." have looked up to the rude rock between Tiber and Arno and read the message which it bore far his proud soul, assuredly did not fail to ascend and kneel in the sanctuary of the man whom the love of poverty had carried so high and seeming despite could not weigh down. The figure of the poet, who bare the stigmata of the world's scorn and mis1lnderstanding, and of that sharper martyrdom which is the life of the creating spirit, is alone worthy to be remembered here beside the poet martyr of lave, he who

" On the rude rock between Tiber and Arno
 from Christ received the final seal."

At the lower end of the Rock, not a mile from the convent, are the .ruins of Count Orlando's castle of
Chiusi. The walk there leads through the delicious pastures which border the mount at its foot and are edged by shining streams that foam down their rocky ravines into green valleys far below. The picturesque village of Chiusi, of some importance when held by powerful barons, lies now in sunny peace beneath the hill. It used to be regarded, on Vasari's authority, as the birthplace of Michael Angelo, whose father, Lodovico Buonarotti, was Podestà of Chiusi and Caprese at the time of the great sculptor's birth. But of late Caprese, which lies on the eastern side of the mountain, seven or eight miles away, in the Valle Tiberina, has, I believe, made good a rival claim, and the glory of having produced that stupendous genius is taken away from the Casentino.
The Castle stands above the village, at the very end of the long Rock, which here drops abruptly into the Valley. A “castle precipice," in good sooth, with walls that embattle the natural wall of rock. Southwards it looks across the deep valley, and between mountain heights beyond to a fair distant world of gentle blue hills sparkling with habitations, pleasant quarry for the hawk's eye in this rocky nest to mark. This rock monster which bore San Francesco on its brow, carried, one sees, a sting in its tail. Strange juxtaposition or the palaces of peace and of strife, outward and visible sign of the stranger twinship of love and wrath in the mediaeval mind. The gentle Count Orlando and his House were succeeded in the dominion of Chiusi by the fiercer races of the Ubertini and the Tarlati in turn, and for a short time the Guidi of Bagno ruled here, but in 1404 Florence took possession of the castle and installed a Podestà in it to rule the district round.
Nothing but shattered walls remain of the strong. hold. Beneath it there clings a little church, and Il steep path zigzags down to the valley, whither the inhabitants wended long ago for good, abandoning the windy crag to solitude. I met no living thing up there, except a tall, meagre, sociable pig. One might think
that Circe had her pastures here too; but no, this altitude is no place. for her wiles. You stand on a ridge between two worlds. On your left, a pale, strange barren country, breaking in shelves and slopes of ashen rock, waterless, without tree or bush or blade of grass upon it. Yet in the people's eyes it is blessed, not cursed: witness its name, the Vallesanta, the Holy Valley. It is the same allegoric world that you look on from the Penna. And on your right what a contrasting scene! The sparkle and richness of deep valleys, of leafy trees, of coloured flowers and herbs, of silver streams.

posted by: Whitebeard at 17:07 | link | comments |
dante, casentino

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Petizione per il nobel per la Pace a GINO STRADA

Queremos promover la candidatura de Gino Strada al premio Nobel por la paz...
We want to promote the candidacy of Gino Strada to the Nobel prize for the peace...
Vogliamo promuovere la candidatura di Gino Strada al premio Nobel per la pace, non solo e non tanto per quanto da lui fatto, su tutti i terreni dove si svolgono "operazioni di pace", per salvare la vita degli ostaggi (ultimo Daniele Mastrogiacomo), ma per l'opera complessiva fatta con la creazione di Emergency, e per le migliaia e migliaia di persone alle quali, con la sua infaticabile opera, ha regalato un sorriso o una speranza.

Chiediamo agli altri bloggers di aiutarci, promuovendo sui loro siti questa petizione. Grazie.

per riferimenti: www.tafanus.it

Per firmare la petizione CLICCA QUI

posted by: Whitebeard at 09:19 | link | comments |
peace

Saturday, March 24, 2007


no comment

posted by: Whitebeard at 18:08 | link | comments |
censored news

Thursday, March 22, 2007

The elderly gentleman and the bad girl

 She charged Bush with war crimes and torture, citing examples; O’Reilly said this is "America hating." Stay tuned as we present the evidence to Fox News…


click with mouse

postato da stigli | 17:57 | commenti

posted by: Whitebeard at 18:10 | link | comments |

Monday, March 19, 2007

Ceterum censeo north american gang dimittendam esse

posted by: Whitebeard at 16:20 | link | comments |
iraq, us, civil rights, war, torture, censored news, iran

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Thank you, my friends and brothers

posted by: Whitebeard at 11:06 | link | comments |
us, civil rights, peace


CHAPTER VII c

THE  ROCK OF S. FRANCESCO
Cap. VII pag. 160-173
There are some ancient shields sculptured upon the façade, two of which bear the arms of the Catani of Chiusi, Count Orlando's family, a cross and three lilies.
Over the high altar of this church we see' the first of the beautiful altar-pieces in which Andrea della Robbia has offered up, upon the Rock of La Verna, the best of his hand and soul to the glory of San Francesco. The exquisitely refined and graceful work of this artist, who expresses with so much charm and tender senti­ment the meek and childlike spirit, and the sweet celestial visions of medioaeval faith, is peculiarly associated with the stigmatised saint. There was in Andrea's day a marked revival of the cult of the Stigmata, prompted by the half-mystical, half-curious spirit of the late fifteenth century. St. Francis and St. Catherine of Siena were the objects of special devotion, and the strange phenomena which had appeared in both of them seem to have been repeated in quite a number of devout persons at this time. Andrea, who reflects with naiveté the ideas and thoughts current in his time, represents the person and legend of St. Francis again and again in his altar-pieces. But his mild and some­what effeminate conception of the ardent-souled Fran­cesco Bernardone is not very satisfying, for the artist, with all his gifts, had no profound understanding of human character.
Vasari tells us how Andrea produced many altar­pieces on the Rock of La Verna which are imperishable in that solitary spot, where no painting, even for a few years, could endure. This does not . necessarily mean, how­ever, that he actually worked up here and was inspired by the very air and lofty surroundings in which the vision came to San Francesco, and the tradition that he had his furnaces dose by ,must be regarded. on1y as a romantic legend. (See Cruttwell, Luca and Andrea della Robbi, p.172).
 His works at La Verna are some of the most beautiful which he ever produced. Not one shows better the peculiar charm of his art than this altar-piece in the Chiesina, the Madonna giving her girdle to St. Thomas. Behind the doubting apostle kneels St. Clement, and San Francesco and San Bona­ventura are on the other side. Here are the most delicate, the most ethereally lovely of floating angels, the sweetest-faced cherubs, the most sincere and spiritual of saints, all drawn by the force of their adoration into a halo round the most gracious of Madonnas. The beauty of the angels in the predella is specially notable. In detail the work is almost perfect, but, like many of this master’s compositions, it is very overcrowded, and at a little distance the subject loses its significance. The arms of the Bartoli, who gave the altar-piece, are upon the predella. There are two other Della Robbia pieces in the church, gaudy and inferior productions of the later school-a Nativity and an Entombment.
The Chiesa Maggiore was not built till much later than the Chiesina, and one naturally seeks out first the sanctuaries more especially associated with San Francesco.
But before passing to the Luoghi Santi, as these are called, one is arrested by the glorious prospect of sky and mountain and valley upon which the pizza is open on the south. This at least. is the same now as when Francesco first stood on this place and breathed down upon the hundred castles tossed upon the spurs and ridges far below, his salutation: Peace be with you. All their master's  spirit was in the two disciples who chose this part­icular spot for the new home of Obedience, Chastity pd Poverty. Far here, lifted so high above the cares and necessities of the world, earthly possessions are seen to be merely a drag and burden upon the soaring spirit, which can have need of nothing save wings. And only to breathe here is to be pure, and to obey is to sing with the stars in their spheres.
Now in the wake of the Santuarista - the Brother vho holds the office of guide to the Luoghi Santi- you come to the part of the Rock specially consecrated by memories of the Seraphic Father. Here, on the edge of the precipice, the ground is rent with terrific chasms and deep caverns formed by titanic rocks heaped one upon another as if by some tremendous convulsion of the earth. These are the stony places in which San Francesco made his nest, and some of the most holy of the sanctuaries cling about their brink. Here is the place where the great beech tree once grew, beneath which Count Orlando had a little cell made for the saint on his first visit. Tree and hut of branches and turf are long vanished, and in their stead have risen two little chapels, one above the other. These were built by Contessa Caterina, wife of Count Roberto dei Tarlati, towards the end of the fifteenth century. Cardinal Galeotto of the same family, who was distinguished by a specially vindictive, arrogant and quarrelsome temper, and by an ardent devotion to the Poverello of Assisi, was buried in the upper chapel in a fine tomb, which has now disappeared. Upon the altar of the lower chapel, which is dedicated to the Magdalen, lies a flat stone called the Mensa di San Francesco, which has always been regarded with great veneration as the very stone upon which, accord­ing to an ancient legend, Christ seated Himself when He appeared one day to the saint and promised him special blessings for his order. In the pages of the Fioretti, San Francesco himself relates this vision to Brother Leo, bidding him wash the stone with water, with wine, with oil, and with balsam. There is an inscription in Gothic characters, almost obliterated, upon the stone, referring to the vision.
From these chapels you are led down by steps cut in the rock, and stand upon the edge of the precipice which falls sheer to the green meadows at the foot of the Mount. Then descending again by a long narrow stair into a deep and cavernous place walled by immense masses of rock, and slipping over the slimy stones and oozy crevices, you stand beneath the Sasso Spicco, that far-famed natural marvel, a gigantic table of stone poised in the air apparently without support, so slight is its attachment to the wall of rock from which it projects. I n the chill, dark shadow under this threatening mass, which looks ready to fall and crush any who dares to step beneath, a tall cross rears itself. San Francesco has carried the sanctification of humanity and of faith into this savage haunt of terror and danger. When one remembers how the medioaeval imagination peopled darkness and the unknown with the forms of evil and the shadow of death one ap­preciates the newness and courage of his spirit in pene­trating into these awe-inspiring places. To a world possessed by the fear of the devil, he was come to declare the praise of God; to reassure men of His undivided dominion, and that the shows of evil and sorrow were but misunderstood aspects of His love. The awful mysteries of Nature were answered by the consoling mysteries of faith, and to his ardent imagina­tion, ever occupied with the remembrance of the Passion, these tormented rocks were a visible witness of that moment of the great sacrifice on Calvary, when the earth shook and the veil of the Temple was rent in twain.
There is something also in Francesco's interest 10 these natural wonders which foreshadows the curiosity of the modern spirit towards the phenomena of Nature. One pictures the small frail figure slipping and spring­ing from stone to stone, wounding hands and feet, smiling with the joyousness of a child. So strongly does that vivid personality of seven hundred years ago still possess this place to-day, that lingering for a moment alone one feels it present, warm and quick, dispel1ing the deadly chill, vivifying the dead and deathless petrifaction around, calling one's eyes to the strip of glowing sky above, to the golden branches that dip from the brink of the chasm, and the reflected warmth that fills the green twilight of the cavern.
Having returned to the upper air, you are shown various tabernacles and shrines, each of which commemorates some miracle or sign of grace which has occurred on the spot. A long covered way leads from the Chiesa Maggiore to the most holy of all the sanctuaries upon the mount, the Chapel of the Stigmata. This passage was built in the latter part of the sixteenth century for the protection of the Brothers on their daily and nightly pilgrimage to the holy shrine, and is now decorated with incredibly bad modern frescoes, painted over a faded series of the sixteenth century. Half way down, a door on the left leads out into the open again and communicates by another steep stair with a dark and awesome grotto overhung by strangely suspended rocks. Here is the Bed of San Francesco, a flat rock moist with the eternal distillations of the mountain. Upon this the saint is said to have couched his emaciated frame when utterly worn out by spiritual wrestlings. The faithful regard this place with special devotion and weep compassionate tears upon the rigid stone, which has now been covered with an iron grating that it might not be quite worn away in time by their fervent kisses. Marvellous things are related of sufferers healed by stretching themselves upon this painful couch.
Re-entering the  corridor, you are conducted into several little chapels, of no great interest, on the way to the Sanctuary of the Stigmata. From one of these, dedi­cated to San Sebastiano, you issue forth again into the open, this time to stand over the precipice, which drops down beneath to a depth of over a hundred and twenty feet. Legend relates that to this spot, then unprotected from the abyss, San Francesco was wont often to come, and gazing out over the glorious landscape, give praise to God; and that one day, as he sat rapt in contempla­tion, the devil suddenly appeared in most horrible aspect, and seizing hold of him, would have hurled him over the brink. But the saint, crying out to God, turned and dung with both hands to the rock, which, yielding as if it had been wax, gave him shelter, so that the arch enemy flew off, completely confounded. The marks of the holy man's fingers are said to have remained long visible upon the rock.
You are now dose to the holy of holies, the Church of the Stigmata. To reach it you pass through the Chapel of the Cross, which stands on the supposed spot of the cell in which San Francesco passed his long retreat. Here it was that he remained hidden from his companions; here Brother Leo sought him every day and every night. Here the falcon, nesting in the precipitous crags outside, sang and beat his wings against the cell every morning to wake him, keeping silence like a compassionate and discreet person, the Fioretti tell us, till a later hour than usual on those days when Francesco was very weak and ill. But we must seek these fresh and tender memories in the open woods out­side. It is in vain that we endeavour to connect them with the cold and dark interior of this oratory, which is quite devoid of beauty or artistic interest. It was built originally in the gothic style, and is believed to have been frescoed by Taddeo Gaddi in the fourteenth century, and tradition says that it had an altar-piece painted by Giotto representing San Francesco's adventure with the devil on the precipice. But later on the cult of the Stigmata was neglected for a time and the chapel fell into decay, to be restored and deformed in the seventeenth century. Some relics of the saint are preserved upon the altar.
Both this chapel and the Sanctuary of the Stigmata were built by a very notable and zealous votary of the apostle of humility, no other than that proud and wrathful member of the great House of Guidi, Count Simone di Battifolle, who took upon himself the endowment and maintenance of these holy places and of the special rites of the Stigmata. He charged his descendants to carry on the pious duty, which they appear to have done in a somewhat fitful manner.
His great-grandson, Count Roberto, the friend of Petrarch, intended to be buried in a splendid tomb in the passage between the two sanctuaries, and left directions to that effect in his will, but they were apparently not carried out.
Upon the façade of the church there is a contem­porary inscription carved in marble, recording that in 1263, five days “after the feast of the Assumption of the glorious Virgin Mary, Count Simone, son of the illustrious Guido, by the Grace of God, Count Palatine of Tuscany, founded this oratory in honour of the Blessed Francis, to whom in this same place the seraph appeared in the year of our Lord 1225, within the octave of the birth of the Virgin, and impressed upon his body and signed him with the Stigmata of Jesus Christ by the grace of the Holy Spirit."
 The building was originally gothic, like the chapel. Vasari records that Taddeo Gaddi covered walls and ceiling with frescoes. These have all perished, and little is left of the original design of the church. But the interior is simple and dignified, and is furnished with choir stalls of fine sixteenth century intarsia work, well restored quite lately by Fra Leonardo, the sacristan. One has eyes for nothing else in it however but the great Crucifixion upon the east wall, filling the whole space behind the altar. It is impossible to judge of this, the most impressive of all Andrea della Robbia's works, on its artistic merits seeing it for the first time here. So wonderful1y does it sum up the meaning and mystery of the place that one is overcome with awe, aware only of the love and tragedy of the great Sacrifice, of the passion of Mother and Friend, of the anguish of the penitent sinners, expressed before one in that gleaming purity of white and blue above the dimness of the sanctuary.
Beneath, in the midst of the floor, guarded, by an outer grating of iron and a marble slab, whereon is carved in cinquecento style a representation of the event commemorated here, is the portion of rock which has been regarded for ages with peculiar awe as the very spot whereon San Francesco kne1t when he re­ceived the Stigmata. It is a vain and foolish curiosity that would search out the material circumstances of a
great spiritual experience and would fix the precise moment and place of its' happening. But the rites which man institutes in memory of that which is beyond comprehending must have a local habitation and a name. And the tears of penitence and love which have fallen upon this spot through all the long centuries, the souls for whom. it has been a stepping­stone from earth to heaven, have changed it by the alchemy of faith from a material into a spiritual thing. It has been the centre of a constant worship ever since Count Simone built the church. The pious baron instituted and endowed a little band of hermits-five, like the number of the wounds of Christ-for the special service of the Stigmata and built for them five little cells in the place which is now the sacristan's garden. In this retreat, only to be reached by a narrow path along the edge of the crag, these devotees led a life of extreme austerity, in strict seclusion from the rest of the community, and daily and nightly officiated in the church. The holiest members of the order were chosen for this high and difficult office. Men famous for sanctity; Giovanni della Verna, Corrado da Offida and others of the Strict Observants, were among them. But with time laxity of discipline crept in; few were found will­ing to dedicate them­selves to this life of self-denial, and grave disorders were apparent among those who did. The Counts of Batti­folle failed, on their side, to keep up the endowments for the bodily wants of the hermits, though each one on his death­bed earnestly recommended the pious duty to his successor. At length, in the fifteenth century, the hermitage was abolished, and nothing now remains of the cells. The offices in the church were com­mitted to the whole community, and from that time forth, every day and every night at the same hour, a long procession of brothers has issued from the Chiesa Maggiore and passed down the long way to the Sanctuary of the Stigmata, there to perform the ap­pointed rite.
Though once there was no sheltering corridor, they might not forego their journey for any tempest that midnight had loosed upon the Rock, or for any snow or bitterness of frost. If they did, the very beasts rebuked them. There is a legend that one night, the snow being very deep, the Brothers neglected this duty and in the morning they discovered to their confusion and shame, from the marks upon the snow, that the animals of the forest had gone in procession to the church instead of them.                                                    .
This solemn service of the Stigmata is a deeply impressive ceremony. When the hour draws near, you hear the sound of distant chanting as the procession leaves the Chiesa Maggiore. It approaches rapidly, and round the curve of the corridor comes a tall young novice lifting a great cross on high, followed by two long files of brown-frocked Brothers whose bare feet beat to the measure of the monotonous litany. They pass and enter the darkened sanctuary, and the little gate is shut behind them. Prostrating themselves, they touch the ground with their foreheads. When they have sung an antiphon, two of the most youthful of the novices kneel in the midst and indicate with outstretched arm and finger the spot of the Seraphic Father's mysterious martyrdom. Then, when the office has been recited in full, all remain for a long space motionless upon their knees, with faces and hands up­lifted in silent adoration. Above them shines the sun­illumined altar-piece, where the figure of the Man of Sorrows hangs on high upon the Cross, in the midst of the tears of saints and angels. In that shadowed crowd beneath, whose great ensample is written so clearly before them and whose accomplishment is hid in the obscurity of each individual heart, we may surely hear pulsing still, transmitted uninterrupted through all the centuries, the thrill of that mighty heart up­lifted here into the arcana of mystic ecstasy, may feel warm and strong and living still that pure love and faith and adoration which wounding glorified him. Here, more than elsewhere, their master is in their midst.
They rise and pass out and away down the long corridor as they came, and the sound of their chanting grows fainter and fainter; the sacristan locks the gate and the sanctuary is empty once more. But in the silence of the night those long dark files will come again, stealing down the dimly-lighted way, like the shades of their daylight selves, risen to drive away the malignant spirits and to consecrate to Christ even this the unholy midnight hour. Their weird chanting precedes them, scattering with the long cry of Ora pro nobis those stranger voices that whispered in the dark­ness before.
But the power of the Enemy is great at this, the moment of the spirit's weakness. So out of the obscurity where the cloaked forms kneel comes the sound of the seIf-inflicted disciplina, the clash of the chains with which they rend the flesh and strengthen the soul.
Ere the day breaks all have melted away into the shadows of the convent and the silence is once more unbroken.

posted by: Whitebeard at 09:21 | link | comments |
dante

Friday, March 16, 2007

The only road to peace
U.S. out of the Middle East
It is important when all the instruments of government collapse, we go in the final hour, to the most important line of battle: the people themselves. The people of this nation, I think, and I know it, are awake, and are being more awakened every day. They are hearing, and sensing, the danger that sits on the horizon."
Harry Belafonte, International Inquiry on Crimes Against Humanity Committed by the Bush Administration, January 20, 2006
Harry Belafonte's remarks to the Bush Crimes Commission still call out to us today, more than a year later. Enclosed are some upcoming events that reflect the spirit and content of the Not In Our Name Statement of Conscience and the Bush Crimes Commission which we urge you to support. The NION SOC does not give out your email address so we are sending this information to you.
1) Saturday, March 17 March on the Pentagon
Stop the Iraq War Now! No Iran War! Impeach Bush for War Crimes!
On March 17, 2007, the 4th anniversary of the start of the criminal invasion of Iraq, ANSWER has called for tens of thousands of people from around the country to descend on the Pentagon in a mass demonstration to demand: U.S. Out of Iraq Now! 2007 is the 40th anniversary of the historic 1967 anti-war march to the Pentagon during the Vietnam War. The message of the 1967 march was "From Protest to Resistance," and marked a turning point in the development of a countrywide mass movement. Troops Out Now Coalition has an Encampment to Stop the War which began on March 12 in Washington, DC and will join the March 17th protest.
Saturday, March 17th, assemble at 12 noon at 23rd St. and Constitution Ave. NW to march to the Pentagon after which there will be a rally.
As part of this march, World Can't Wait--Drive Out the Bush Regime! plans a contingent of 200 dressed in orange jumpsuits and black hoods representing the detainees held indefinitely and tortured at Guantanamo Bay and around the world. The orange jumpsuit has come to symbolize the crimes of the Bush administration.
Silently, but powerfully, the "detainee" in an orange jumpsuit makes the case against the horrors of the Bush wars. People are forced to examine a vivid image of what cannot be denied: the Military Commissions Act of 2006 legalizes torture, indefinite detention, and the abolition of the historical right of habeas corpus. Join them! orangejumpsuits@worldcantwait.org.
2) Sunday, Marh 18th 4 Years Far Too Many -- Help Make This the LAST Anniversary
United for Peace & Justice has called for local demonstrations to protest the war. Locate the demonstration in your area.
3) Join in on the current work of the Bush Crimes Commission which includes promotion, fundraising and distribution of the DVD of the hearings and broadcasting info about the Commission. Call us or come by with your ideas to promote the Commission. 212-941-8086, Commission@nion.us
Purchase your copy of the Bush Crimes Commission Hearings DVD at
http://www.bushcommission.org/?q=node/52
Make your contribution to the Bush Crimes Commission and NION SOC on line at http://www.nion.us/NSOC/sign.htm..
You can make a tax-deductible contribution to support the work of Bush Crimes Commission t http://www.ihcenter.org/groups/nion.html
Checks can be made out to NION SOC Inc., and mailed to NION, 305 West Broadway, #199, New York, NY 10013.
Visit our web sites: Not In Our Name Statement of Conscience http://www.nion.us
                               Bush Crimes Commission   http://www.bushcommission.org
 

posted by: Whitebeard at 21:37 | link | comments |

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Olympia 10th april 1979 - Gaza 16th march 2003

posted by: Whitebeard at 23:40 | link | comments |
israel, peace, palestine

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

 Emma Darwin's Diaries (1824-1896)
An introduction

Previously known only to a few scholars familiar with the additional holdings of the Darwin Archive at Cambridge University Library, Emma Darwin’s diaries are made available here through the kindness of their owner, Professor Richard Darwin Keynes. These pocket diaries have generously been on deposit in the Darwin Archive for a number of years. They provide a wonderful historical resource, not only for Darwin scholars but also as a social document of prosperous middle-class life in the Victorian era. Darwin Online is proud to present facsimiles of the entire extant collection of Emma Darwin’s diaries. The first diary is dated 1824, when Emma Wedgwood was sixteen, a lively and attractive young woman, shortly to participate in a European tour with her sisters and parents, Josiah and Bessy Wedgwood. She married Charles Darwin, her first cousin, in January 1839. The final diary in the collection records the last year of her life.

Continue 

posted by: Whitebeard at 11:53 | link | comments |
science

Monday, March 12, 2007

   

push with mouse

posted by: Whitebeard at 18:50 | link | comments |
us, civil rights, war, torture, censored news

Friday, March 02, 2007

What i demand is:the right of the Palastinien of the own country, the withdrew the israelis from the occupeid land during the six days war, recommanding the city of Jerusalem as an international city and the ban of any kind of weapon wich are able to start an offensive war!And after that all a kind of Marshall plane for Palestina with the aim to bring the standard of life the same as the other people of the other side of the border!

Dear friends of Avaaz.org,
not real talks  between Iraelis and Palestinians, but only real withdraw of Israel and US can bring peace to MO.  More courage and less fear of truth.  Best regards from Italy.

posted by: Whitebeard at 19:10 | link | comments |
iraq, us, israel, peace, war, palestine

 

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User: Whitebeard
Name: Urbano Cipriani
A retired teacher of history and litterature.

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