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Authors: Keith Hopkins,Mary Beard

Tags: #History, #Europe, #General, #Travel

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I do remember me, that in my youth,
When I was wandering, – upon such a night
I stood within the Coloseum’s wall,
Midst the chief relics of almighty Rome;


… Where the Caesars dwelt,
And dwell the tuneless birds of night, amidst
A grove which springs through levell’d battlements,
And twines its roots with the imperial hearths,
Ivy usurps the laurel’s place of growth; –
But the gladiators’ bloody Circus stands,
A noble wreck in ruinous perfection!
While Caesar’s chambers, and the Augustan halls,
Grovel on earth in indistinct decay. –
And thou didst shine, thou rolling moon, upon
All this, and cast a wide and tender light,
Which soften’d down the hoar austerity
Of rugged desolation, and fill’d up,
As ’twere anew, the gaps of centuries.

Thanks in part, no doubt, to their appearance in the
Handbook
, these lines became one the most influential ways of ‘seeing’ the Colosseum, and were dramatically declaimed, or repeated
sotto voce
, by countless Victorian (and later) visitors to the monument.

For the rest of the nineteenth century, succeeding editions of
Murray’s Handbook
continued to insist that moonlight was the prime time to appreciate the Colosseum and to give detailed instructions on whether special permission was needed and, if so, how to obtain it. By 1862 an even more atmospheric option was available for the most plutocratic of
tourists, a private light show: ‘The lighting-up of the Coliseum with blue and red lights, a splendid sight, can be effected, having previously obtained the permission of the police, at an expense of about 150 scudi, everything included.’ One would hope that it
was
‘all inclusive’; at the rate of exchange with the pound advertised in the
Handbook
, 150 scudi is not far short of an adult manual worker’s annual wage in England at the time. No surprise perhaps that, after Rome became capital of the united Italy in 1870, such an extravaganza was taken over by the public authorities. The 1881 edition of the
Handbook
advised that the ‘illumination of the Colosseum with white, green and red lights, a splendid sight, takes place generally once a year, on the
Natale di Roma
(21 April), or on the occasion of some royal persons visiting the Eternal City.’ Even if the moon failed, in other words, the Birthday of Rome would always offer a dramatically floodlit Colosseum.

ROMAN FEVER

Yet scratch the surface of this apparently up-beat image of nineteenth-century tourism to the Colosseum and some rather more uncomfortable aspects emerge. This was partly a question of Protestant anxieties about the Catholic ‘takeover’ of the monument. A cross in the middle of the arena and a series of shrines at the edges were one thing – appropriate commemoration of the Christian martyrs who had supposedly lost their lives there. The idea that, as the
Handbook
had it, kissing the cross bought ‘an indulgence of 200 days’ was quite another. Equally awkward (even if it offered a picturesque vignette of primitive piety) was the ‘rude pulpit’ near by, from where a monk preached every Friday. The best you could say was that it was ‘impossible not to be impressed with the solemnity of a Christian service in a scene so much identified with the early history of our common faith’ (though, even then, the phrase ‘our common faith’ must have been a hard-working euphemism).

2. A memento of the Colosseum. This mid-nineteenth-century tourist
postcard shows the shrines of the Stations of the Cross around the edge of
the arena and (in shadow) the central cross.

There was also, predictably, the question of how far the romantic image of the lonely Colosseum by moonlight, so heavily advertised by the
Handbook
and other guides, was a self-defeating piece of propaganda. The impression we get elsewhere is that the Colosseum by night could be, by nineteenth-century standards at least, far too crowded and far too un-romantic for comfort. For example, in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel
The Marble Faun
(1860), set among a group of expatriate artists in Rome, a moonlit visit to the monument involves negotiating a host of other visitors, laughing and shrieking, flirting and playing peek-a-boo among the shadowy arcades. Hawthorne paints a vivid picture of mindless tourism. One party was singing (drunkenly, we are meant to imagine) on the steps of the central cross; another, English or American, following the instructions of the
Handbook
to the letter and ‘paying the inevitable visit by moonlight’, had climbed up to the parapet and were ‘exalting themselves with raptures that were Byron’s not their own’. No chance for silent contemplation of the wonders here.

At the same time, though, it was possible to feel frustrated that in some respects the commercial possibilities of the monument had not been sufficiently realised. One of the glories of the Colosseum, until it was aggressively weeded and tidied up in 1871, was the vast range of flower
species that had colonised its nooks and crannies – well over 400 different types, according to the most systematic study (illustration 30,
p. 179
). Why on earth, wondered the
Handbook
in 1843, was not more done with these? ‘With such materials for a
hortus siccus
[a collection of dried flowers], it is surprising that the Romans do not make complete collections for sale, on the plan of the Swiss herbaria; we cannot imagine any memorial of the Coliseum which would be more acceptable to the traveller.’

But all these were side-issues compared with the central problem that faced any visitor who knew something of the history of the building. How could one reconcile the magnificence of the structure, the scale and impact of what remained, with its original function and the memories of bloody gladiatorial combat and Christian martyrdom that had taken place in its arena? The
Handbook
skirted the problem briefly but awkwardly – and without even pointing explicitly to the
human
carnage that had been wreaked in the Colosseum: ‘The gladiatorial spectacles of which it was the scene for nearly 400 years are matters of history, and it is not necessary to dwell upon them further than to state that at the dedication of the building by Titus, 5000 wild beasts were slain in the arena, and the games in honour of the event lasted for nearly 100 days.’

Many others in the nineteenth century, however, visitors and writers alike, did feel a need to dwell on what had happened there and to debate the effect it must have on their appreciation of the monument. It is a theme that underlies Byron’s verses quoted earlier (how come that this monument of cruelty survives when the imperial palace has left such paltry traces?) and it was harped on too by Charles Dickens
when he visited Italy in the 1840s (‘Never, in its bloodiest prime, can the sight of the gigantic Coliseum … have moved one heart as it must move all who look upon it now, a ruin. God be thanked: a ruin!). But the debate is perhaps most sharply dramatised in Madame de Staël’s novel
Corinne
, when the exotic poetess who is the heroine of the book takes her Scottish admirer Lord Oswald Nelvil on a guided tour of the sights of Rome. The highlight of the day was the Colosseum, ‘the most beautiful ruin in Rome’, Corinne enthused. But Oswald (who was, frankly, rather a prig) ‘did not allow himself to share Corinne’s admiration. As he looked at the four galleries, the four structures, rising one above the other, at the mixture of pomp and decay which simultaneously arouses respect and pity, he could only see the masters’ luxury and the slaves’ blood.’ Despite her spirited defence of her position, Corinne signally failed to convince him that it was possible to appreciate the magnificence of the architecture separately from any disgust for the immoral purpose it had once served. ‘He was looking for a moral feeling everywhere and all the magic of the arts could never satisfy him’; nor in the end could the magic of Corinne.

In fact, the Colosseum repeatedly appears in nineteenth-century literature as a site of tragedy and an emblem of death, both ancient and modern. For memories of the slaughter of gladiators went hand in hand with the belief that the damp and chill evening air of the monument – romantic moonlit vista though it may have been – was a particularly virulent carrier of the potentially fatal malarial ‘Roman fever’. (This notorious danger of the Roman air is discussed in detail by the
Handbook
, in a section – significantly – placed directly after the description of the Protestant cemetery.) It
was Roman fever that carried off Henry James’ Daisy Miller after she had flouted social convention to spend the evening in the Colosseum alone with her Italian admirer, Signor Giovanelli. ‘Well, I
have
seen the Colosseum by moonlight … That’s one good thing’ she shouted defiantly, in what were almost her last words, to her other admirer, and critic, the ineffectual Mr Winterbourne (who was also lurking in the Colosseum, where he had been murmuring – what else? – ‘Byron’s famous lines out of
Manfred
’). The moonlit Colosseum proves only slightly less treacherous in Edith Wharton’s brilliantly satirical short story from the 1930s, ‘Roman Fever’, which exposes the shady past of two middleaged American matrons – Mrs Slade and Mrs Ansley – who are spending the afternoon together in a restaurant close to the Colosseum. In little more than a dozen pages, it comes to light that, years earlier, just before their respective marriages, Mrs Slade, suspicious of her fiancé’s interest in the other woman, had tricked Mrs Ansley into spending a perilous evening in the Colosseum. She had caught a nasty chill there, it is true. But, more to the point, as is revealed in the last line, she had also conceived her lovely daughter Barbara in its shadows – by Mr Slade. The Colosseum’s association with death and flirtation is here neatly rolled into one.

There were, however, other ways of discussing the gloomy or violent side of the monument. The hyperbole of Byron, Dickens and the like in conjuring the romantic image of a place of cruelty, sadness and transgression was hilariously subverted by Mark Twain in his 1860s tale of European travel,
Innocents Abroad
– a book which in his lifetime sold many more copies than
Tom Sawyer
or
Huckleberry Finn
. In some ways Twain was as enthusiastic an admirer of the
Colosseum as anyone, dubbing it ‘the monarch of all European ruins’ and much enjoying the irony of seeing ‘lizards sun themselves in the sacred seat of the Emperor’. But his best joke was to pretend to have found in Rome a surviving ancient playbill for a gladiatorial show, as well as a review of the proceedings from
The Roman Daily Battle-Ax
. Both, unsurprisingly, were almost identical in style and tone to their late nineteenth-century Broadway equivalents. Top of the bill was ‘MARCUS MARCELLUS VALERIAN! FOR SIX NIGHTS ONLY!!’ followed by ‘a GALAXY OF TALENT! such as has not been beheld in Rome before … The performance will commence this evening with a GRAND BROADSWORD COMBAT! between two young and promising amateurs and a celebrated Parthian gladiator … The whole to conclude with a chaste and elegant GENERAL SLAUGHTER!’ The spoof review chimed in nicely:

The opening scene last night … was very fine. The elder of the two young gentlemen handled his weapon with a grace that marked the possession of extraordinary talent. His feint of thrusting, followed instantly by a happily delivered blow which unhelmeted the Parthian, was received with hearty applause. He was not thoroughly up in the backhanded stroke, but it was very gratifying to his numerous friends to know that, in time, practice would have overcome this defect. However he was killed. His sisters, who were present, expressed considerable regret. His mother left the Coliseum … The general slaughter was rendered with a faithfulness to detail which reflects the highest credit upon the late participants in it
.

It is not hard to see what kind of high emotional writing about the Colosseum and its gladiatorial games Twain had in his sights. Indeed he proudly declared that he was ‘the only free white man of mature age’ who had written about the monument since Byron without quoting that other Byronic catch-phrase on the Colosseum’s victims (this time from
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage
) – ‘butchered to make a Roman holiday’. It ‘sounds well’, he explained, ‘for the first seventeen or eighteen thousand times one sees it in print, but after that it begins to grow tiresome’. Twain obviously had a point. But changing the rhetoric of response does not make the problem go away. His own humorous modernising, his domestication of the gladiatorial games into modern Broadway entertainment, was in the end another way of emphasising the main dilemma of the nineteenth-century visitor: how to make sense of the murderous games that had once taken place within the magnificent walls of the Colosseum. Was it really like Broadway? Of course not.

COLOSSEUM TODAY

The experience of the early twenty-first-century tourists is both like and unlike that of their counterparts of 150 years ago. Once again there is at least the occasional opportunity for moonlight access, but no private floodlighting on request. A modernist lift has replaced the old staircase giving access to the upper floors and October 2010 saw the opening of the topmost level of the building, for a limited period. In general visitors must make do with what is still a fabulous view, but from short of half the way up. The Christian additions have also been down-played. Gone is the dominant central cross,
indulgences and the Friday sermon; though a cross does remain to one side of the arena (placed there under the Fascist regime in 1926 – illustration 29,
p. 176
), the Pope still visits every year to perform the rituals of Good Friday and the continued insistence on the stories of Christian martyrdom makes the building a powerful point of intersection between the modern religious world and the ancient. There is even less peace and quiet now than there ever was. If a moonlit walk through the arena was a popular pastime in the nineteenth century, the numbers certainly did not match the almost four and a half million people who currently visit each year. And they are served by a tourist industry which may not offer the dried flowers that the
Handbook
considered such an appropriate souvenir of the Colosseum, but which does provide mementoes of the monument in almost every other conceivable form – from illuminated plastic to candy and fridge-magnets.

BOOK: The Colosseum
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