Sec. I. In the olden days of
travelling, now to return no more, in which distance
could not be vanquished without toil, but in which
that toil was rewarded, partly by the power of deliberate
survey of the countries through which the journey
lay, and partly by the happiness of the evening hours,
when, from the top of the last hill he had surmounted,
the traveller beheld the quiet village where he was
to rest, scattered among the meadows beside its valley
stream; or, from the long-hoped-for turn in the dusty
perspective of the causeway, saw, for the first time,
the towers of some famed city, faint in the rays of
sunset hours of peaceful and thoughtful
pleasure, for which the rush of the arrival in the
railway station is perhaps not always, or to all men,
an equivalent, in those days, I say, when
there was something more to be anticipated and remembered
in the first aspect of each successive halting-place,
than a new arrangement of glass roofing and iron girder,
there were few moments of which the recollection was
more fondly cherished by the traveller than that which,
as I endeavored to describe in the close of the last
chapter, brought him within sight of Venice, as his
gondola shot into the open lagoon from the canal of
Mestre. Not but that the aspect of the city itself
was generally the source of some slight disappointment,
for, seen in this direction, its buildings are far
less characteristic than those of the other great towns
of Italy; but this inferiority was partly disguised
by distance, and more than atoned for by the strange
rising of its walls and towers out of the midst, as
it seemed, of the deep sea, for it was impossible that
the mind or the eye could at once comprehend the shallowness
of the vast sheet of water which stretched away in
leagues of rippling lustre to the north and south,
or trace the narrow line of islets bounding it to the
east. The salt breeze, the white moaning sea-birds,
the masses of black weed separating and disappearing
gradually, in knots of heaving shoal, under the advance
of the steady tide, all proclaimed it to be indeed
the ocean on whose bosom the great city rested so
calmly; not such blue, soft, lake-like ocean as bathes
the Neapolitan promontories, or sleeps beneath the
marble rocks of Genoa, but a sea with the bleak power
of our own northern waves, yet subdued into a strange
spacious rest, and changed from its angry pallor into
a field of burnished gold, as the sun declined behind
the belfry tower of the lonely island church, fitly
named “St. George of the Seaweed.”
As the boat drew nearer to the city, the coast which
the traveller had just left sank behind him into one
long, low, sad-colored line, tufted irregularly with
brushwood and willows: but, at what seemed its
northern extremity, the hills of Arquà rose in
a dark cluster of purple pyramids, balanced on the
bright mirage of the lagoon; two or three smooth surges
of inferior hill extended themselves about their roots,
and beyond these, beginning with the craggy peaks
above Vicenza, the chain of the Alps girded the whole
horizon to the north a wall of jagged blue,
here and there showing through its clefts a wilderness
of misty precipices, fading far back into the recesses
of Cadore, and itself rising and breaking away
eastward, where the sun struck opposite upon its snow,
into mighty fragments of peaked light, standing up
behind the barred clouds of evening, one after another,
countless, the crown of the Adrian Sea, until the
eye turned back from pursuing them, to rest upon the
nearer burning of the campaniles of Murano, and
on the great city, where it magnified itself along
the waves, as the quick silent pacing of the gondola
drew nearer and nearer. And at last, when its
walls were reached, and the outmost of its untrodden
streets was entered, not through towered gate or guarded
rampart, but as a deep inlet between two rocks of
coral in the Indian sea; when first upon the traveller’s
sight opened the long ranges of columned palaces, each
with its black boat moored at the portal, each
with its image cast down, beneath its feet, upon that
green pavement which every breeze broke into new fantasies
of rich tessellation; when first, at the extremity
of the bright vista, the shadowy Rialto threw its
colossal curve slowly forth from behind the palace
of the Camerlenghi; that strange curve, so delicate,
so adamantine, strong as a mountain cavern, graceful
as a bow just bent; when first, before its moonlike
circumference was all risen, the gondolier’s
cry, “Ah! Stali," struck sharp upon the
ear, and the prow turned aside under the mighty cornices
that half met over the narrow canal, where the plash
of the water followed close and loud, ringing along
the marble by the boat’s side; and when at last
that boat darted forth upon the breadth of silver
sea, across which the front of the Ducal palace, flushed
with its sanguine veins, looks to the snowy dome of
Our Lady of Salvation, it was no marvel that the
mind should be so deeply entranced by the visionary
charm of a scene so beautiful and so strange, as to
forget the darker truths of its history and its being.
Well might it seem that such a city had owed her existence
rather to the rod of the enchanter, than the fear
of the fugitive; that the waters which encircled her
had been chosen for the mirror of her state, rather
than the shelter of her nakedness; and that all which
in nature was wild or merciless, Time and
Decay, as well as the waves and tempests, had
been won to adorn her instead of to destroy, and might
still spare, for ages to come, that beauty which seemed
to have fixed for its throne the sands of the hour-glass
as well as of the sea.
Sec. II. And although the
last few eventful years, fraught with change to the
face of the whole earth, have been more fatal in their
influence on Venice than the five hundred that preceded
them; though the noble landscape of approach to her
can now be seen no more, or seen only by a glance,
as the engine slackens its rushing on the iron line;
and though many of her palaces are for ever defaced,
and many in desecrated ruins, there is still so much
of magic in her aspect, that the hurried traveller,
who must leave her before the wonder of that first
aspect has been worn away, may still be led to forget
the humility of her origin, and to shut his eyes to
the depth of her desolation. They, at least, are
little to be envied, in whose hearts the great charities
of the imagination lie dead, and for whom the fancy
has no power to repress the importunity of painful
impressions, or to raise what is ignoble, and disguise
what is discordant, in a scene so rich in its remembrances,
so surpassing in its beauty. But for this work
of the imagination there must be no permission during
the task which is before us. The impotent feelings
of romance, so singularly characteristic of this century,
may indeed gild, but never save the remains of those
mightier ages to which they are attached like climbing
flowers; and they must be torn away from the magnificent
fragments, if we would see them as they stood in their
own strength. Those feelings, always as fruitless
as they are fond, are in Venice not only incapable
of protecting, but even of discerning, the objects
to which they ought to have been attached. The
Venice of modern fiction and drama is a thing of yesterday,
a mere efflorescence of decay, a stage dream which
the first ray of daylight must dissipate into dust.
No prisoner, whose name is worth remembering, or whose
sorrow deserved sympathy, ever crossed that “Bridge
of Sighs,” which is the centre of the Byronic
ideal of Venice; no great merchant of Venice ever
saw that Rialto under which the traveller now passes
with breathless interest: the statue which Byron
makes Faliero address as of one of his great ancestors
was erected to a soldier of fortune a hundred and fifty
years after Faliero’s death; and the most conspicuous
parts of the city have been so entirely altered in
the course of the last three centuries, that if Henry
Dandolo or Francis Foscari could be summoned from their
tombs, and stood each on the deck of his galley at
the entrance of the Grand Canal, that renowned entrance,
the painter’s favorite subject, the novelist’s
favorite scene, where the water first narrows by the
steps of the Church of La Salute, the mighty
Doges would not know in what spot of the world
they stood, would literally not recognize one stone
of the great city, for whose sake, and by whose ingratitude,
their grey hairs had been brought down with bitterness
to the grave. The remains of their Venice
lie hidden behind the cumbrous masses which were the
delight of the nation in its dotage; hidden in many
a grass-grown court, and silent pathway, and lightless
canal, where the slow waves have sapped their foundations
for five hundred years, and must soon prevail over
them for ever. It must be our task to glean and
gather them forth, and restore out of them some faint
image of the lost city, more gorgeous a thousand-fold
than that which now exists, yet not created in the
day-dream of the prince, nor by the ostentation of
the noble, but built by iron hands and patient hearts,
contending against the adversity of nature and the
fury of man, so that its wonderfulness cannot be grasped
by the indolence of imagination, but only after frank
inquiry into the true nature of that wild and solitary
scene, whose restless tides and trembling sands did
indeed shelter the birth of the city, but long denied
her dominion.
Sec. III. When the eye falls
casually on a map of Europe, there is no feature by
which it is more likely to be arrested than the strange
sweeping loop formed by the junction of the Alps and
Apennines, and enclosing the great basin of Lombardy.
This return of the mountain chain upon itself causes
a vast difference in the character of the distribution
of its debris on its opposite sides. The rock
fragments and sediment which the torrents on the north
side of the Alps bear into the plains are distributed
over a vast extent of country, and, though here and
there lodged in beds of enormous thickness, soon permit
the firm substrata to appear from underneath them;
but all the torrents which descend from the southern
side of the High Alps, and from the northern slope
of the Apennines, meet concentrically in the recess
or mountain bay which the two ridges enclose; every
fragment which thunder breaks out of their battlements,
and every grain of dust which the summer rain washes
from their pastures, is at last laid at rest in the
blue sweep of the Lombardic plain; and that plain
must have risen within its rocky barriers as a cup
fills with wine, but for two contrary influences which
continually depress, or disperse from its surface,
the accumulation of the ruins of ages.
Sec. IV. I will not tax
the reader’s faith in modern science by insisting
on the singular depression of the surface of Lombardy,
which appears for many centuries to have taken place
steadily and continually; the main fact with which
we have to do is the gradual transport, by the Po and
its great collateral rivers, of vast masses of the
finer sediment to the sea. The character of the
Lombardic plains is most strikingly expressed by the
ancient walls of its cities, composed for the most
part of large rounded Alpine pebbles alternating with
narrow courses of brick; and was curiously illustrated
in 1848, by the ramparts of these same pebbles thrown
up four or five feet high round every field, to check
the Austrian cavalry in the battle under the walls
of Verona. The finer dust among which these pebbles
are dispersed is taken up by the rivers, fed into
continual strength by the Alpine snow, so that, however
pure their waters may be when they issue from the
lakes at the foot of the great chain, they become
of the color and opacity of clay before they reach
the Adriatic; the sediment which they bear is at once
thrown down as they enter the sea, forming a vast
belt of low land along the eastern coast of Italy.
The powerful stream of the Po of course builds forward
the fastest; on each side of it, north and south, there
is a tract of marsh, fed by more feeble streams, and
less liable to rapid change than the delta of the
central river. In one of these tracts is built
Ravenna, and in the other Venice.
Sec. V. What circumstances directed
the peculiar arrangement of this great belt of sediment
in the earliest times, it is not here the place to
inquire. It is enough for us to know that from
the mouths of the Adige to those of the Piave there
stretches, at a variable distance of from three to
five miles from the actual shore, a bank of sand, divided
into long islands by narrow channels of sea.
The space between this bank and the true shore consists
of the sedimentary deposits from these and other rivers,
a great plain of calcareous mud, covered, in the neighborhood
of Venice, by the sea at high water, to the depth
in most places of a foot or a foot and a half, and
nearly everywhere exposed at low tide, but divided
by an intricate network of narrow and winding channels,
from which the sea never retires. In some places,
according to the run of the currents, the land has
risen into marshy islets, consolidated, some by art,
and some by time, into ground firm enough to be built
upon, or fruitful enough to be cultivated: in
others, on the contrary, it has not reached the sea-level;
so that, at the average low water, shallow lakelets
glitter among its irregularly exposed fields of seaweed.
In the midst of the largest of these, increased in
importance by the confluence of several large river
channels towards one of the openings in the sea bank,
the city of Venice itself is built, on a crowded cluster
of islands; the various plots of higher ground which
appear to the north and south of this central cluster,
have at different periods been also thickly inhabited,
and now bear, according to their size, the remains
of cities, villages, or isolated convents and churches,
scattered among spaces of open ground, partly waste
and encumbered by ruins, partly under cultivation
for the supply of the metropolis.
Sec. Vi. The average
rise and fall of the tide is about three feet (varying
considerably with the seasons); but this fall, on
so flat a shore, is enough to cause continual movement
in the waters, and in the main canals to produce a
reflux which frequently runs like a mill stream.
At high water no land is visible for many miles to
the north or south of Venice, except in the form of
small islands crowned with towers or gleaming with
villages: there is a channel, some three miles
wide, between the city and the mainland, and some
mile and a half wide between it and the sandy breakwater
called the Lido, which divides the lagoon from the
Adriatic, but which is so low as hardly to disturb
the impression of the city’s having been built
in the midst of the ocean, although the secret of
its true position is partly, yet not painfully, betrayed
by the clusters of piles set to mark the deep-water
channels, which undulate far away in spotty chains
like the studded backs of huge sea-snakes, and by the
quick glittering of the crisped and crowded waves that
flicker and dance before the strong winds upon the
unlifted level of the shallow sea. But the scene
is widely different at low tide. A fall of eighteen
or twenty inches is enough to show ground over the
greater part of the lagoon; and at the complete ebb
the city is seen standing in the midst of a dark plain
of seaweed, of gloomy green, except only where the
larger branches of the Brenta and its associated
streams converge towards the port of the Lido.
Through this salt and sombre plain the gondola and
the fishing-boat advance by tortuous channels, seldom
more than four or five feet deep, and often so choked
with slime that the heavier keels furrow the bottom
till their crossing tracks are seen through the clear
sea water like the ruts upon a wintry road, and the
oar leaves blue gashes upon the ground at every stroke,
or is entangled among the thick weed that fringes
the banks with the weight of its sullen waves, leaning
to and fro upon the uncertain sway of the exhausted
tide. The scene is often profoundly oppressive,
even at this day, when every plot of higher ground
bears some fragment of fair building: but, in
order to know what it was once, let the traveller
follow in his boat at evening the windings of some
unfrequented channel far into the midst of the melancholy
plain; let him remove, in his imagination, the brightness
of the great city that still extends itself in the
distance, and the walls and towers from the islands
that are near; and so wait, until the bright investiture
and sweet warmth of the sunset are withdrawn from the
waters, and the black desert of their shore lies in
its nakedness beneath the night, pathless, comfortless,
infirm, lost in dark languor and fearful silence,
except where the salt runlets plash into the tideless
pools, or the sea-birds flit from their margins with
a questioning cry; and he will be enabled to enter
in some sort into the horror of heart with which this
solitude was anciently chosen by man for his habitation.
They little thought, who first drove the stakes into
the sand, and strewed the ocean reeds for their rest,
that their children were to be the princes of that
ocean, and their palaces its pride; and yet, in the
great natural laws that rule that sorrowful wilderness,
let it be remembered what strange preparation had
been made for the things which no human imagination
could have foretold, and how the whole existence and
fortune of the Venetian nation were anticipated or
compelled, by the setting of those bars and doors to
the rivers and the sea. Had deeper currents divided
their islands, hostile navies would again and again
have reduced the rising city into servitude; had stronger
surges beaten their shores, all the richness and refinement
of the Venetian architecture must have been exchanged
for the walls and bulwarks of an ordinary sea-port.
Had there been no tide, as in other parts of the Mediterranean,
the narrow canals of the city would have become noisome,
and the marsh in which it was built pestiferous.
Had the tide been only a foot or eighteen inches higher
in its rise, the water-access to the doors of the
palaces would have been impossible: even as it
is, there is sometimes a little difficulty, at the
ebb, in landing without setting foot upon the lower
and slippery steps: and the highest tides sometimes
enter the courtyards, and overflow the entrance halls.
Eighteen inches more of difference between the level
of the flood and ebb would have rendered the doorsteps
of every palace, at low water, a treacherous mass
of weeds and limpets, and the entire system of water-carriage
for the higher classes, in their easy and daily intercourse,
must have been done away with. The streets of
the city would have been widened, its network of canals
filled up, and all the peculiar character of the place
and the people destroyed.
Sec. VII. The reader may
perhaps have felt some pain in the contrast between
this faithful view of the site of the Venetian Throne,
and the romantic conception of it which we ordinarily
form; but this pain, if he have felt it, ought to
be more than counterbalanced by the value of the instance
thus afforded to us at once of the inscrutableness
and the wisdom of the ways of God. If, two thousand
years ago, we had been permitted to watch the slow
settling of the slime of those turbid rivers into
the polluted sea, and the gaining upon its deep and
fresh waters of the lifeless, impassable, unvoyageable
plain, how little could we have understood the purpose
with which those islands were shaped out of the void,
and the torpid waters enclosed with their desolate
walls of sand! How little could we have known,
any more than of what now seems to us most distressful,
dark, and objectless, the glorious aim which was then
in the mind of Him in whose hand are all the corners
of the earth! how little imagined that in the laws
which were stretching forth the gloomy margins of
those fruitless banks, and feeding the bitter grass
among their shallows, there was indeed a preparation,
and the only preparation possible, for the
founding of a city which was to be set like a golden
clasp on the girdle of the earth, to write her history
on the white scrolls of the sea-surges, and to word
it in their thunder, and to gather and give forth,
in worldwide pulsation, the glory of the West and
of the East, from the burning heart of her Fortitude
and Splendor.