Monday, July 2, 2001 Rome (continued):
After the gelato break, we walked along the Vatican walls and on around to St. Peter’s Square (Piazza San Pietro). The arms of Bernini’s colonnades are always impressively, grandly welcoming. They really are a wonderful invitation to come inside the basilica.
However, a note of caution to visitors – be properly dressed. This is the one place in Italy where the “propriety police” are strictly enforcing the signs about proper dress. People in shorts, tank tops, and tight clothes were being turned away.
We saw women tying on wrap skirts over their shorts and people zipping on the bottoms of their convertible shorts. Several people pulled out light weight trousers and tops similar to those worn in operating rooms to slip on (it was hot).
After the gelato break, we walked along the Vatican walls and on around to St. Peter’s Square (Piazza San Pietro). The arms of Bernini’s colonnades are always impressively, grandly welcoming. They really are a wonderful invitation to come inside the basilica.
However, a note of caution to visitors – be properly dressed. This is the one place in Italy where the “propriety police” are strictly enforcing the signs about proper dress. People in shorts, tank tops, and tight clothes were being turned away.
We saw women tying on wrap skirts over their shorts and people zipping on the bottoms of their convertible shorts. Several people pulled out light weight trousers and tops similar to those worn in operating rooms to slip on (it was hot).
St. Peter’s Basilica is one of the grandest churches in Christendom. Nearly every part of it is done on an enormous scale that is overwhelming and ultimately oppressive. There is so little human scale to the place that the throngs of tourists seem like a busy ant colony.
sits grandly above Bernini’s baldaquin
The interior of the dome of St. Peter's Basilica designed by Michelangelo rises over the main crossing. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
Monument for Pope Alexander VII designed by Bernini. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
Tomb of Queen Christina of Sweden, a devout Roman Catholic who abdicated the throne and moved to Rome. Greta Garbo played her in a movie. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
'Pieta' by Michelangelo, marble, 1498-99. After a madman attacked the sculpture with a hammer in 1972 it was placed behind bullet-proof glass. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
Line (heavy on nuns) to view the sarcophagus of Pope John XXIII. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
Body of Pope John XXIII in a glass coffin. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
We left the church somewhat dispirited by the experience. Fortunately, the sun on the square with the enclosing colonnades is somehow more inspiring.
This is in spite of the fact that much of the square and the steps leading up to the church are obliterated by chairs, barricades and a temporary stage which we learn will be used for the Pope’s final mass of the summer before his retreat to Castel Gondolfo.
We found the taxi line on the far side of the square and headed back to the hotel.
Piazza San Pietro (St. Peter's Square) with canopy and chairs for outdoor papal mass. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
Tourist seeking directions from a member of the Swiss (papal) Guards. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
Piazza San Pietro with trees on the Janiculum Hill rising behind. The colossal statue of St. Paul from 1847 is in the foreground. Photo by Blomme-McClure |
) where we dined outside with the lively street life of the square as entertainment and the church of Santa Maria in Trastevere as a backdrop across the square. The food was delicious, but our waiter was the most obnoxious we encountered on our trip. He seemed to be the only surly waiter in Italy, including all of the others at Sabatini and we decided that it was just bad luck. We did manage to beg him to call us a taxi at the end of the meal. The taxi could only come to the edge of the square and then had to back up several blocks before he even had enough room to turn around.
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