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Carriage Returner

~ Slow Travel, Quick Scripts

Carriage Returner

Category Archives: Travel

On a Camera Roll

17 Monday Sep 2018

Posted by jturner@mi-connection.com in Travel

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With some luck, back home, I have an interior shot on this stage set.
Doors wide open reveal a lush garden commensurate with the stars.

Ever since that visit in 2013, however, it has always been locked up.
Today, on the way to the bank, a foregone conclusion gets confirmed.


A Joyous Occasion, Touched By Sorrow

17 Monday Sep 2018

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Ginevra, the sole waitress at our favorite restaurant from our first visit on, is getting married in less than three weeks. Osteria del Trivio will be closed for the celebration. Worse, they will have lost a member of their family. By extension, at her departure for Udine, we will by rights share the phantom pain for a lost limb.

Yet great joy outweighs the slight touch of sorrow. Since at least the trip last fall, Umberto has relished joking about the wedding to come, trying with each one to see if he could raise a blush. At first a touch diffident, Ginevra seems now to be relishing the attention in turn. To a joyous new life in Udine, we lift a toast.


The Sign That Points Two Ways

16 Sunday Sep 2018

Posted by jturner@mi-connection.com in Travel

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The other night at 9 Cento, I met a gentleman who once worked in “signage.”
A job he’d taken after early retirement, it amounted to repricing merchandize.

Maybe this explains why he and I shared a good laugh over the signs in Spoleto.
When you look at them, there’s simply no telling which way they want you to go.

This morning I imagined he’d enjoy the bikers being had at the sign’s expense.
They looked and looked, crosschecking their apps, as if to make it make sense.

Soon to be good and lost somewhere between the forest and the trees
Later returned somehow, if only my stories were to be believed

Walkie-Talkie

16 Sunday Sep 2018

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While we sit and talk, the children from la gelateria next door
Move about the street with a two-way radio ready to restore
Communications at the instant it should prove to be needed.
As, of course, it always is: forever thus is a mystery seeded.


Later in the Day

16 Sunday Sep 2018

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After morning chores, we contemplate what La Cioccolateria holds in store

All Night Long

16 Sunday Sep 2018

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Italians appreciate their weekends. Often well into the wee hours.
Not just the teens. (More wee ones and elders than you’d expect.)

Last night, with me sound asleep, Rebecca had to face the music:
Choosing between a well earned breeze and la finestra shut tight.

A Piece of the Puzzle

15 Saturday Sep 2018

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According to TripAdvisor, there are sixty-four things to do in Spoleto. I’ve yet to check their list, but I suspect we’ve done most of them on one trip or another.

Reminds me of a week at the beach: it rained part of the time

So when our new neighbors ask what we’ve done today, I find myself at a loss. The business of living alone can keep the two of us well occupied on most days.

Another Sign of Restoration

14 Friday Sep 2018

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Between the spring and the fall
Comes the Spoleto arts festival.

It provides a special incentive
To give some places a face lift.




When I set Google Translate to work on the Latin,
“Lake on the Old Market” starts out making sense.

Only then nouns and verbs fall out of agreement
And the sense of direction turns back on itself.

“The place of the forum were restored to the dungeon
Of the oldness of the Senate’s decree of Spoleto,

The most exhausted…” by the end of the line I reach
the same place. Note Bene: The water sounds sweet.

The Italian Way

13 Thursday Sep 2018

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Slowly … slowly …. The reconstructions begins.
Yet all the while that the re-building is going on,
You can’t have it looking just any haphazard way.
Keeping the stair’s beauty is the only Italian way.

What once was a marble stair
Now a plywood barrier repainted to match

Up near the Rocca, at another restoration site,
A scrim of deception upholds the lines of sight.


Measured Progress

12 Wednesday Sep 2018

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In the time it takes us to pick up some focaccia at the end of the corso, a familiar Italian famiglia has progressed only so far (in meters) up the street.

As they approach
As we pass
As for the rest

If only I could take the measure of painted walls, I would know how far they’ve come. Or if I could put time in a bottle, I would pour a glass and raise it aloft.

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