THE PAINTED TOMBS OF
TARQUINIA Continued
We sit at the tin
tables of the cafι above the gate watching the peasants coming in the evening
from the fields, with their implements and their asses. As they drift in
through the gate the man of the Dazio, the town customs, watches them, asks
them questions if they carry bundles, prods the pack on the ass, and when a
load of brushwood rolls up keeps it halted while he pierces the load with a
long steel rod, carefully thrusting to see if he can feel hidden barrels of
wine or demijohns of oil, bales of oranges or any other foodstuffs. Because all
foodstuffs that come into an Italian town many other things too, besides
comestibles must pay a duty, in some instances a heavy one.
Probably in Etruscan
days the peasants came in very much the same, at evening, to the town. The
Etruscans were instinctively citizens. Even the peasants dwelt within walls.
And in those days, no doubt, the peasants were serfs very much as they are
today in Italy, working the land for no wages, but for a portion of the
produce; and working the land intensely, with that careful, almost passionate
attention the Italian still gives to the soil; and living in the city, or
village, but having straw huts out in the fields, for summer.
But in those days, on a
fine evening like this, the men would come in naked, darkly ruddy-coloured from
the sun and wind, with strong, insouciant bodies; and the women would drift in,
wearing the loose, becoming smock of white or blue linen; and somebody, surely,
would be playing on the pipes; and somebody, surely, would be singing, because
the Etruscans had a passion for music, and an inner carelessness the modern
Italians have lost. The peasants would enter the clear, clean, sacred space
inside the gates, and salute the gay-coloured little temple as they passed
along the street that rose uphill towards the arx, between rows of low houses
with gay-coloured fronts painted or hung with bright terra-cottas. One can
almost hear them still, calling, shouting, piping, singing, driving in the
mixed flocks of sheep and goats, that go so silently, and leading the slow,
white, ghostlike oxen with the yokes still on their necks.
And surely, in those
days, young nobles would come splashing in on horseback, riding with naked
limbs on an almost naked horse, carrying probably a spear, and cantering
ostentatiously through the throng of red-brown, full-limbed, smooth-skinned
peasants. A Lucumo, even, sitting very noble in his chariot driven by an erect
charioteer, might be driving in at sundown, halting before the temple to
perform the brief ritual of entry into the city. And the crowding populace
would wait; for the Lucumo of the old days, glowing ruddy in flesh, his beard
stiffly trimmed in the Oriental style, the torque of gold round his neck, and
the mantle or wrap bordered with scarlet falling in full folds, leaving the
breast bare, he was divine, sitting on the chair in his chariot in the
stillness of power. The people drew strength even from looking at him.
The chariot drew a
little forward, from the temple: the Lucumo, sitting erect on his chair in the
chariot, and bare-shouldered and bare-breasted, waits for the people. Then the
peasants would shrink back in fear. But perhaps some citizen in a white tunic
would lift up his arms in salute, and come forward to state his difficulty, or
to plead for justice. And the Lucumo, seated silent within another world of
power, disciplined to his own responsibility of knowledge for the people, would
listen till the end. Then a few words and the chariot of gilt bronze swirls
off up the hill to the house of the chief, the citizens drift on to their
houses, the music sounds in the dark streets, torches flicker, the whole place
is eating, feasting, and as far as possible having a gay time.
It is different now.
The drab peasants, muffled in ugly clothing, straggle in across the waste bit
of space, and trail home, songless and meaningless. We have lost the art of
living; and in the most important science of all, the science of daily life,
the science of behaviour, we are complete ignoramuses. We have psychology
instead. Today in Italy, in the hot Italian summer, if a navvy working in the
street takes off his shirt to work with free, naked torso, a policeman rushes
to him and commands him insultingly into his shirt again. One would think a
human being was such a foul indecency altogether that life was feasible only
when the indecent thing was as far as possible blotted out. The very exposure
of female arms and legs in the street is only done as an insult to the whole
human body. 'Look at that! It doesn't matter!'
Neither does it! But
then, why did the torso of the workman matter?
At the hotel, in the
dark emptiness of the place, there are three Japanese staying: little yellow
men. They have come to inspect the salt works down on the coast below
Tarquinia, so we are told, and they have a Government permit. The salt works,
the extracting of salt from the pools shut off from the low sea, are sort of
prisons, worked by convict labour. One wonders why Japanese men should want to
inspect such places, officially. But we are told that these salt works are
'very important'.
Albertino is having a
very good time with the three Japanese, and seems to be very deep in their confidence,
bending over their table, his young brown head among the three black ones,
absorbed and on the qui vive. He rushes off for their food then rushes
to us to see what we want to eat.
'What is there?'
'Er c'θ ' He always begins with
wonderful deliberation, as if there was a menu fit for the Tsar. Then he breaks
off suddenly, says: 'I'll ask the mamma!' darts away returns, and says
exactly what we knew he'd say, in a bright voice, as if announcing the New
Jerusalem: 'There are eggs er and beefsteak et and there are some little
potatoes.' We know the eggs and beefsteak well! However, I decide to have
beefsteak once more, with the little potatoes left over by good fortune from
lunch fried. Off darts Albertino, only to dart back and announce that the
potatoes and beefsteak are finished ('by the Chinese,' he whispers), 'but there
are frogs.' 'There are what?' 'Le rane, the frogs!' What sort of frogs?'
'I'll show you!' Off he darts again, returns with a plate containing eight or
nine pairs of frogs' naked hind-legs. B. looks the other way and I accept frogs
they look quite good. In the joy of getting the frogs safely to port,
Albertino skips, and darts off: to return in a moment with a bottle of beer,
and whisper to us all the information about the Chinese, as he calls them. They
can't speak a word of Italian. When they want a word they take the little book,
French and Italian. Bread? eh? They want bread. Er! Albertino gives
little grunts, like commas and semicolons, which I write as er! Bread they
want, eh? er! they take the little book here he takes an imaginary little
book, lays it on the tablecloth, wets his finger and turns over the imaginary
leaves bread! er! p you look under 'p' er! ecco! pane! pane!
si capisce! bread! they want bread. Then wine! er! take the little book
(he turns over imaginary little leaves with fervour) er! here you are, vino!
pane, e vino! So they do! Every word! They looked out name! Er! you! Er!
I tell him, Albertino. And so the boy continues, till I ask what about le
rane? Ah! Er! Le rane! Off he darts, and swirls back with a plate of
fried frogs' legs, in pairs.
He is an amusing and
vivacious boy, yet underneath a bit sad and wistful, with all his
responsibility. The following day he darted to show us a book of views of
Venice, left behind by the Chinese, as he persists in calling them, and asks if
I want it. I don't. Then he shows us two Japanese postage stamps, and the
address of one of the Japanese gentlemen, written on a bit of paper. The
Japanese gentleman and Albertino are to exchange picture postcards. I insist
that the Japanese are not Chinese. 'Er!' says Albertino. 'But the Japanese are
also Chinese!' I insist that they are not, that they live in a different
country. He darts off, and returns with a school atlas. 'Er! China is in Asia!
Asia! Asia!' he turns the leaves. He is really an intelligent boy, and ought
to be going to school instead of running an hotel at the tender age of
fourteen.
The guide to the tombs,
having had to keep watch at the museum all night, wants to get a sleep after
dawn, so we are not to start till ten. The town is already empty, the people
gone out to the fields. A few men stand about with nothing doing. The city
gates are wide open. At night they are closed, so that the Dazio man can sleep:
and you can neither get in nor out of the town. We drink still another coffee
Albertino's morning dose was a very poor show.
Then we see the guide,
talking to a pale young fellow in old corduroy velveteen knee-breeches and an
old hat and thick boots: most obviously German. We go over, make proper
salutes, nod to the German boy, who looks as if he'd had vinegar for breakfast
and set off. This morning we are going out a couple miles, to the farthest
end of the necropolis. We have still a dozen tombs to look at. In all, there
are either twenty-five or twenty-seven painted tombs one can visit.
This morning there is a
stiff breeze from the south-west. But it is blowing fresh and clear, not
behaving in the ugly way the libeccio can behave. We march briskly along
the highway, the old dog trundling behind. He loves spending a morning among
the tombs. The sea gives off a certain clearness, that makes the atmosphere
doubly brilliant and exhilarating, as if we were on a mountain-top. The omnibus
rolls by, from Viterbo. In the fields the peasants are working, and the guide
occasionally greets the women, who give him a sally back again. The young
German tramps firmly on: but his spirit is not as firm as his tread. One doesn't
know what to say to him, he vouchsafes nothing, seems as if he didn't want to
be spoken to, and yet is probably offended that we don't talk to him. The guide
chatters to him in unfailing cheerfulness, in Italian: but after a while drops
back with evident relief to the milder company of B., leaving me to the young
German, who has certainly swallowed vinegar some time or other.
But I feel with him as
with most of the young people of today: he has been sinned against more than he
sins. The vinegar was given him to drink. Breaking reluctantly into German,
since Italian seems foolish, and he won't come out in English, I find, within
the first half-mile, that he is twenty-three (he looks nineteen), has finished
his university course, is going to be an archaeologist, is travelling doing
archaeology, has been in Sicily and Tunis, whence he has just returned; didn't
think much of either place mehr Schrei wie Wert, he jerks out,
speaking as if he were throwing his words away like a cigarette-end he was sick
of; doesn't think much of any place; doesn't think much of the Etruscans nicht
viel wert; doesn't, apparently, think much of me; knows a professor or two
whom I have met; knows the tombs of Tarquinia very well, having been here, and
stayed here, twice before; doesn't think much of them; is going to Greece;
doesn't expect to think much of it; is staying in the other hotel, not
Gentile's, because it is still cheaper: is probably staying a fortnight, going
to photograph all the tombs, with a big photographic apparatus has the
Government authority, like the Japs apparently has very little money indeed,
marvellously doing everything on nothing expects to be a famous professor in
a science he doesn't think much of and I wonder if he always has enough to eat.
He certainly is a
fretful and peevish, even if in some ways silent and stoical, young man. Nicht
viel wert! not much worth doesn't amount to anything seems to be his
favourite phrase, as it is the favourite phrase of almost all young people
today. Nothings amounts to anything, for the young.
Well, I feel it's not
my fault, and try to bear up. But though it is bad enough to have been of the
war generation, it must be worse to have grown up just after the war. One can't
blame the young, that they don't find that anything amounts to anything. The
war cancelled most meanings for them.
And my young man is not
really so bad: he would even rather like to be made to believe in
something. There is a yearning pathos in him somewhere.
We have passed the modern
cemetery, with its white marble headstones, and the arches of a medieval
aqueduct mysteriously spanning a dip, and left the highroad, following a path
along the long hill-crest, through the green wheat that flutters and ripples in
the sea-wind like fine feathers, in the wonderful brilliance of morning. Here
and there are tassels of mauve anemones, bits of verbena, many daisies, tufts
of camomile. On a rocky mound, which was once a tumulus, the asphodels have the
advantage, and send up their spikes on the bright, fresh air, like soldiers
clustered on the mount. And we go along this vivid green headland of wheat which
still is rough and uneven, because it was once all tumuli with our faces to
the breeze, the sea-brightness filling the air with exhilaration, and all the
country still and silent, and we talk German in the wary way of two dogs
sniffing at one another.
Till suddenly we turn
off to an almost hidden tomb the German boy knows the way perfectly. The
guide hurries up and lights the acetylene lamp, the dog slowly finds himself a
place out of the wind, and flings himself down: and we sink slowly again into
the Etruscan world, out of the present world, as we descend underground.
One of the most famous
tombs at this far-off end of the necropolis is the Tomb of the Bulls. It
contains what the guide calls: un po' di pornografico! but a very
little. The German boy shrugs his shoulders as usual: but he informs us that
this is one of the oldest tombs of all, and I believe him, for it looks so to
me.
It is a little wider
than some tombs, the roof has not much pitch, there is a stone bed for
sarcophagi along the side walls, and in the end wall are two doorways, cut out
of the rock of the end and opening into a second chamber, which seems darker
and more dismal. The German boy says this second chamber was cut out later,
from the first one. It has no paintings of any importance.
We return to the first
chamber, the old one. It is called the Tomb of the Bulls from the two bulls
above the doorways of the end wall, one a man-faced hull charging at the 'po'
di pornografico', the other lying down serenely and looking with mysterious
eyes into the room, his back turned calmly to the second bit of a picture which
the guide says is not 'pornografico' 'because it is a woman.' The
young German smiles with his sour-water expression.
Everything in this tomb
suggests the old East: Cyprus, or the Hittites, or the culture of Minos of
Crete. Between the doorways of the end wall is a charming painting of a naked
horseman with a spear, on a naked horse, moving towards a charming little
palm-tree and a well-head or fountain-head, on which repose two sculptured,
black-faced beasts, lions with queer black faces. From the mouth of the one
near the palm-tree water pours down into a sort of altar-bowl, while on the far
side a warrior advances, wearing a bronze helmet and shin-greaves, and
apparently menacing the horseman with a sword which he brandishes in his left
hand, as he steps up on to the base of the well-head. Both warrior and horseman
wear the long, pointed boots of the East: and the palm-tree is not very
Italian.
This picture has a
curious charm, and is evidently symbolical. I said to the German: 'What do you
think it means?' 'Ach, nothing! The man on the horse has come to the
drinking-trough to water his horse: no more!' 'And the man with the sword?'
'Oh, he is perhaps his enemy.' 'And the black-faced lions ?' 'Ach nothing!
Decorations of the fountain.' Below the picture are trees on which hang a
garland and a neck-band. The border pattern, instead of the egg and dart, has
the sign of Venus, so called, between the darts: a ball surmounted by a little
cross. 'And that, is that a symbol?' I asked the German. 'Here no!' he replied
abruptly. 'Merely a decoration!' which is perhaps true. But that the Etruscan
artist had no more feeling for it, as a symbol, than a modern house-decorator
would have, that we cannot believe.
I gave up for the
moment. Above the picture is a sentence lightly written, almost scribbled, in
Etruscan. 'Can you read it?' I said to the German boy. He read it off quickly
myself, I should have had to go letter by letter. 'Do you know what it means ?'
I asked him. He shrugged his shoulders. 'Nobody knows.'
In the shallow angle of
the roof the heraldic beasts are curious. The squat centre-piece, the so-called
altar, has four rams' heads at the corners. On the right a pale bodied man with
a dark face is galloping up with loose rein, on a black horse, followed by a
galloping bull. On the left is a bigger figure, a queer galloping lion with his
tongue out. But from the lion's shoulders, instead of wings, rises the second
neck of a dark-faced, bearded goat: so that the complex animal has a second,
backward-leaning neck and head, of a goat, as well as the first maned neck and
menacing head of a lion. The tail of the lion ends in a serpent's head. So this
is the proper Chimaera. And galloping after the end of the lion's tail comes a
winged female sphinx.
'What is the meaning of
this lion with the second head and neck?' I asked the German. He shrugged his
shoulders, and said: 'Nothing!' It meant nothing to him, because nothing except
the ABC of facts means anything to him. He is a scientist, and when he doesn't
want a thing to have a meaning it is, ipso facto, meaningless.
But the lion with the
goat's head springing backwards from its shoulders must mean something, because
there it is, very vivid, in the famous bronze Chimaera of Arezzo, which is in
the Florence museum, and which Benvenuto Cellini restored, and which is one of
the most fascinating bronzes in the world. There, the bearded goat's head
springs twisting backwards from the lion's shoulders, while the right horn of
the goat is seized in the mouth of the serpent, which is the tail of the lion
whipped forward over his back.
Though this is the
correct Chimaera, with the wounds of Bellerophon in hip and neck, still it is
not merely a big toy. It has, and was intended to have, an exact esoteric
meaning. In fact, Greek myths are only gross representations of certain very
clear and very ancient esoteric conceptions, that are much older than the
myths: or the Greeks. Myths, and personal gods, are only the decadence of a
previous cosmic religion.
The strange potency and
beauty of these Etruscan things arise, it seems to me, from the profundity of
the symbolic meaning the artist was more or less aware of. The Etruscan
religion, surely, was never anthropomorphic: that is, whatever gods it
contained were not beings, but symbols of elemental powers, just symbols: as
was the case earlier in Egypt. The undivided Godhead, if we can call it such,
was symbolized by the mundum, the plasm-cell with its nucleus: that
which is the very beginning; instead of, as with us, by a personal god, a
person being the very end of all creation or evolution. So it is all the way
through: the Etruscan religion is concerned with all those physical and
creative powers and forces which go to the building up and the destroying of
the soul: the soul, the personality, being that which gradually is produced out
of chaos, like a flower, only to disappear again into chaos, or the underworld.
We, on the contrary, say: In the beginning was the Word! and deny the
physical universe true existence. We exist only in the Word, which is beaten
out thin to cover, gild, and hide all things.
The human being, to the
Etruscan, was a bull or a ram, a lion or a deer, according to his different
aspects and potencies. The human being had in his veins the blood of the wings
of birds and the venom of serpents. All things emerged from the blood-stream,
and the blood-relation, however complex and contradictory it might become, was
never interrupted or forgotten. There were different currents in the
blood-stream, and some always clashed: bird and serpent, lion and deer, leopard
and lamb. Yet the very clash was a form of unison, as we see in the lion which
also has a goat's head.
But the young German
will have nothing of this. He is a modern, and the obvious alone has true
existence for him. A lion with a goat's head as well as its own head is
unthinkable. That which is unthinkable is non-existent, is nothing. So, all the
Etruscan symbols are to him non-existent and mere crude incapacity to think. He
wastes not a thought on them: they are spawn of mental impotence, hence
negligible.
But perhaps also he
doesn't want to give himself away, or divulge any secret that is going to make
him a famous archaeologist later on. Though I don't think that was it. He was
very nice, showing me details, with his flashlight, that I should have overlooked.
The white horse, for example, has had its drawing most plainly altered: you can
see the old outline of the horse's back legs and breast, and of the foot of the
rider, and you can see how considerably the artist changed the drawing,
sometimes more than once. He seems to have drawn the whole thing complete, each
time, then changed the position, changed the direction, to please his feeling.
And as there was no India rubber to rub out the first attempts, there they are,
from at least six hundred years before Christ: the delicate mistakes of an
Etruscan who had the instinct of a pure artist in him, as well as the blithe
insouciance which makes him leave his alterations for anyone to spy out, if
they want to.
The Etruscan artists
either drew with the brush or scratched, perhaps, with a nail, the whole
outline of their figures on the soft stucco, and then applied their colour al
fresco. So they had to work quickly. Some of the paintings seemed to me
tempera, and in one tomb, I think the Francesco Giustiniani, the painting
seemed to be done on the naked, creamy rock. In that case, the blue colour of
the man's scarf is marvellously vivid.
The subtlety of
Etruscan painting, as of Chinese and Hindu, lies in the wonderfully suggestive
edge of the figures. It is not outlined. It is not what we call 'drawing'. It
is the flowing contour where the body suddenly leaves off, upon the atmosphere.
The Etruscan artist seems to have seen living things surging from their own
centre to their own surface. And the curving and contour of the silhouette-edge
suggests the whole movement of the modelling within. There is actually no
modelling. The figures are painted in the fiat. Yet they seem of a full, almost
turgid muscularity. It is only when we come to the late Tomb of Typhon that we
have the figure modelled, Pompeian style, with light and shade.
It must have been a
wonderful world, that old world where everything appeared alive and shining in
the dusk of contact with all things, not merely as an isolated individual thing
played upon by daylight; where each thing had a clear outline, visually, but in
its very clarity was related emotionally or vitally to strange other things,
one thing springing from another, things mentally contradictory fusing together
emotionally, so that a lion could be at the same moment also a goat, and not a
goat. In those days, a man riding on a red horse was not just Jack Smith on his
brown nag; it was a suave-skinned creature, with death or life in its face,
surging along on a surge of animal power that burned with travel, with the
passionate movement of the blood, and which was swirling along on a mysterious
course, to some unknown goal, swirling with a weight of its own. Then also, a
bull was not merely a stud animal worth so much, due to go to the butcher in a
little while. It was a vast wonder-beast, a wellhead of the great, furnace-like
passion that makes the worlds roll and the sun surge up, and makes a man surge
with procreative force; the bull, the herd-lord, the father of calves and
heifers, of cows; the father of milk; he who has the horns of power on his
forehead, symbolizing the warlike aspect of the horn of fertility; the
bellowing master of force, jealous, horned, charging against opposition. The
goat was in the same line, father of milk, but instead of huge force he had
cunning, the cunning consciousness and self-consciousness of the jealous,
hard-headed father of procreation. Whereas the lion was most terrible, yellow
and roaring with a blood-drinking energy, again like the sun, but the sun asserting
himself in drinking up the life of the earth. For the sun can warm the worlds,
like a yellow hen sitting on her eggs.
Or the sun can lick up
the life of the world with a hot tongue. The goat says: let me breed for ever,
till the world is one reeking goat. But then the lion roars from the other
bloodstream, which is also in man, and he lifts his paw to strike, in the
passion of the other wisdom.
So all creatures are
potential in their own way, a myriad manifold consciousness storming with
contradictions and oppositions that are eternal, beyond all mental
reconciliation. We can know the living world only symbolically. Yet every
consciousness, the rage of the lion, and the venom of the snake, is, and
therefore is divine. All emerges out of the unbroken circle with its nucleus,
the germ, the One, the god, if you like to call it so. And man, with his soul
and his personality, emerges in eternal connexion with all the rest. The
blood-stream is one, and unbroken, yet storming with oppositions and
contradictions.
The ancients saw,
consciously, as children now see unconsciously, the everlasting wonder
in things. In the ancient world the three compelling emotions must have been
emotions of wonder, fear, and admiration: admiration in the Latin sense of the
word, as well as our sense; and fear in its largest meaning, including
repulsion, dread, and hate: then arose the last, individual emotion of pride.
Love is only a subsidiary factor in wonder and admiration.
But it was by seeing
all things alert in the throb of interrelated passional significance that the
ancients kept the wonder and the delight in life, as well as the dread and the
repugnance. They were like children: but they had the force, the power and the
sensual knowledge of true adults. They had a world of valuable
knowledge, which is utterly lost to us. Where they were true adults, we are
children; and vice versa.
Even the two bits of 'pornografico'
in the Tomb of the Bull are not two little dirty drawings. Far from it. The
German boy felt this, as we did. The drawings have the same naοve wonder in
them as the rest, the same archaic innocence, accepting life, knowing all about
it, and feeling the meaning, which is like a stone fallen into
consciousness, sending its rings ebbing out and out, to the extremes. The two
little pictures have a symbolic meaning, quite distinct from a moral
meaning or an immoral. The words moral and immoral have no force. Some acts
what Dennis would call flagrant obscenity the man-faced bull accepts calmly
lying down; against other acts he charges with lowered horns. It is not
judgement. It is the sway of passional action and reaction: the action and
reaction of the father of milk.
There are beautiful
tombs, in this far-off wheat-covered hill. The Tomb of the Augurs is very
impressive. On the end wall is painted a doorway to a tomb, and on either side
of it is a man making what is probably the mourning gesture, strange and
momentous, one hand to the brow. The two men are mourning at the door of the
tomb.
'No!' says the German.
The painted door does not represent the door to the tomb, with mourners on
either side. It is merely the painted door which later they intended to cut
out, to make a second chamber to the tomb. And the men are not mourning.'
'Then what are they
doing?'
Shrug!
In the triangle above
the painted door two lions, a white-faced one and a dark-faced, have seized a
goat or an antelope: the dark-faced lion turns over and bites the side of the
goat's neck, the white-faced bites the haunch. Here we have again the two heraldic
beasts: but instead of their roaring at the altar, or the tree, they are biting
the goat, the father of milk-giving life, in throat and hip.
On the side walls are
very fine frescoes of nude wrestlers, and then of a scene which has started a
lot of talk about Etruscan cruelty. A man with his head in a sack, wearing only
a skin-girdle, is being bitten in the thigh by a fierce dog which is held, by
another man, on a string attached to what is apparently a wooden leash, this
wooden handle being fastened to the dog's collar. The man who holds the string
wears a peculiar high conical hat, and he stands, big-limbed and excited,
striding behind the man with his head in the sack. This victim is by now
getting entangled in the string, the long, long cord which holds the dog; but
with his left hand he seems to be getting hold of the cord to drag the dog off
from his thigh, while in his right hand he holds a huge club, with which to
strike the dog when he can get it into striking range.
This picture is
supposed to reveal the barbarously cruel sports of the Etruscans. But since the
tomb contains an augur, with his curved sceptre, tensely lifting his hand to
the dark bird that flies by: and the wrestlers are wrestling over a curious
pile of three great bowls; and on the other side of the tomb the man in the
conical pointed hat, he who holds the string in the first picture, is now
dancing with a peculiar delight, as if rejoicing in victory or liberation: we
must surely consider this picture as symbolic, along with all the rest: the
fight of the blindfolded man with some raging, attacking element. If it were
sport there would be onlookers, as there are at the sports in the Tomb of the
Chariots; and here there are none.
However, the scenes
portrayed in the tomb are all so real, that it seems they must have taken place
in actual life. Perhaps there was some form of test or trial which gave a man a
great club, tied his head in a sack, and left him to fight a fierce dog which
attacked him, but which was held on a string, and which even had a wooden
grip-handle attached to its collar, by which the man might seize it and hold it
firm, while he knocked it on the head. The man in the sack has very good
chances against the dog. And even granted the thing was done for sport, and not
as some sort of trial or test, the cruelty is not excessive, for the man has a
very good chance of knocking the dog on the head quite early. Compared with
Roman gladiatorial shows, this is almost 'fair play'.
But it must be more
than sport. The dancing of the man who held the string is too splendid. And the
tomb is, somehow, too intense, too meaningful. And the dog or wolf or lion that
bites the thigh of the man is too old a symbol. We have it very plainly on the
top of the Sarcophagus of the Painted Amazons, in the Florence museum. This
sarcophagus comes from Tarquinia and the end of the lid has a carved naked
man, with legs apart, a dog on each side biting him in the thigh. They are the
dogs of disease and death, biting at the great arteries of the thigh, where the
elementary life surges in a man. The motive is common in ancient symbolism. And
the esoteric idea of malevolent influences attacking the great arteries of the
thighs was turned in Greece into the myth of Actaeon and his dogs.
Another very fine tomb
is the Tomb of the Baron, with its frieze of single figures, dark on a light
background going round the walls. There are horses and men, all in dark
silhouette, and very fascinating in drawing. These archaic horses are so
perfectly satisfying as horses: so far more horselike, to the soul, than those
of Rosa Bonheur or Rubens or even Velazquez, though he comes nearer to these:
so that one asks oneself, what, after all, is the horsiness of a horse? What is
it that man sees, when he looks at a horse? what is it that will never be put
into words? For a man who sees, sees not as a camera does when it takes a
snapshot, not even as a cinema-camera, taking its succession of instantaneous
snaps; but in a curious rolling flood of vision, in which the image itself
seethes and rolls; and only the mind picks out certain factors which shall
represent the image seen. That is why a camera is so unsatisfactory: its eye is
flat, it is related only to a negative thing inside the box: whereas inside our
living box there is a decided positive.
We go from tomb to
tomb, down into the dark, up again into the wind and brilliance; and the day
rolls by. But we are moving, tomb by tomb, gradually nearer the city. The new
cemetery draws near. We have passed the aqueduct, which crosses the dip, then
takes an underground channel towards the town. Near the cemetery we descend
into a big tomb, the biggest we have yet seen a great underground cavern with
great wide beds for sarcophagi and biers, and in the centre a massive square
pillar or shaft on which is painted a Typhon the seaman with coiled
snake-legs, and wings behind his arms, his hands holding up the roof; two
Typhons, another on the opposite face of the pillar, almost identical with the
first.
In this place, almost
at once, the Etruscan charm seems to vanish. The tomb is big, crude, somehow
ugly like a cavern. The Typhon, with his reddish flesh and light-and-shade
modelling, is clever, and might be modern, done for effect, He is rather
Pompeian and a little like Blake. But he is done from quite a new
consciousness, external; the old inwardness has gone. Dennis, who saw him
eighty years ago, thinks him far more marvellous than the archaic dancers. But
we do not.
There are some
curly-wig dolphins sporting over a curly border which, but for experience, we
should not know was the sea. And there is a border of 'roses'. really the
sacred symbol of the 'one' with its central germ, here for the first time
vulgarly used. There is also a fragment of a procession to Hades, which must
have been rather fine in the Greco-Roman style. But the true archaic charm is utterly
gone. The dancing Etruscan spirit is dead.
This is one of the very
latest tombs: said to be of the second century B.C., when the Romans had long
been masters of Tarquinia. Veii, the first great Etruscan city to be captured
by Rome, was taken about 388 B.C., and completely destroyed. From then on,
Etruria gradually weakened and sank, till the peace of 280 B.C., when we may
say the military conquest of Etruria was complete.
So that the tombs
suddenly change. Those supposed to be of the fifth century, like the Tomb of
the Baron, with the frieze of horses and men, or the Tomb of the Leopards, are
still perfectly Etruscan, no matter what touch of the Orient they may have, and
perfectly charming. Then suddenly we come to the Tomb of Orcus, or Hell, which is
given the fourth century as a date, and here the whole thing utterly changes.
You get a great gloomy, clumsy, rambling sort of underworld, damp and horrid,
with large but much-damaged pictures on the walls.
These paintings, though
they are interesting in their way, and have scribbled Etruscan inscriptions,
have suddenly lost all Etruscan charm. They still have a bit of Etruscan
freedom, but on the whole they are Greco-Roman, half suggesting Pompeian, half
suggesting Roman things. They are more free than the paintings of the little
old tombs; at the same time, all the motion is gone; the figures are stuck
there without any vital flow between them. There is no touch.
Instead of the
wonderful old silhouette forms we have modern 'drawing', often quite good. But
to me it is an intense disappointment.
When the Roman took the
power from the hands of the Etruscan Lucumones in the fourth century B.C. and
made them merely Roman magistrates, at the best, the mystery of Etruria died
almost at once. In the ancient world of king-gods, governing according to a
religious conception, the deposition of the chiefs and the leading priests
leaves the country at once voiceless and mindless. So it was in Egypt and
Babylonia, in Assyria, in the Aztec and Maya lordships of America. The people
are governed by the flower of the race. Pluck the flower and the race is
helpless.
The Etruscans were not
destroyed. But they lost their being. They had lived, ultimately, by the subjective
control of the great natural powers. Their subjective power fell before the
objective power of the Romans. And almost at once the true race-consciousness
finished. The Etruscan knowledge became mere superstition. The Etruscan princes
became fat and inert Romans. The Etruscan people became expressionless and
meaningless. It happened amazingly quickly, in the third and second centuries
B.C.
Yet the Etruscan blood
continued to beat And Giotto and the early sculptors seem to have been a
flowering again of the Etruscan blood, which is always putting forth a flower,
and always being trodden down again by some superior 'force'. It is a struggle
between the endless patience of life and the endless triumph of force.
There is one other huge
late tomb, the Tomb of the Shields, said to be of the third century. It
contains many fragmentary paintings. There is a banqueting scene, with a man on
the banqueting bench taking the egg from the woman, and she is touching his
shoulder. But they might as well be two chairs from a 'suite'. There is nothing
between them. And they have those 'important' sort of faces all on the
outside, nothing inside that are so boring. Yet they are interesting. They
might almost be done today, by an ultramodern artist bent on being absolutely
childlike and naοve and archaic. But after the real archaic paintings, these
are empty. The air is empty. The egg is still held up. But it means no more to
that man and woman than the chocolate Easter egg does to us. It has gone cold.
In the Tomb of Orcus
begins that representation of the grisly underworld, hell and its horrors,
which surely was reflected on to the Etruscans from the grisly Romans. The
lovely little tombs of just one small chamber, or perhaps two chambers, of the
earlier centuries give way to these great sinister caverns underground, and
hell is fitly introduced.
The old religion of the
profound attempt of man to harmonize himself with nature, and hold his own and
come to flower in the great seething of life, changed with the Greeks and
Romans into a desire to resist nature, to produce a mental cunning and a
mechanical force that would outwit Nature and chain her down completely,
completely, till at last there should be nothing free in nature at all, all
should be controlled, domesticated, put to man's meaner uses. Curiously enough,
with the idea of the triumph over nature arose the idea of a gloomy Hades, a
hell and purgatory. To the peoples of the great natural religions the
after-life was a continuing of the wonder-journey of life. To the peoples of
the Idea the afterlife is hell, or purgatory, or nothingness, and paradise is
an inadequate fiction. But, naturally enough, historians seized on these essentially
non-Etruscan evidences, in the Etruscan late tombs, to build up a picture of a
gloomy, hellish, serpent-writhing, vicious Etruscan people who were quite
rightly stamped out by the noble Romans. This myth is still not dead. Men never
want to believe the evidence of their senses. They would far rather go on
elaborating some 'classical' author. The whole science of history seems to be
the picking of old fables and old lies into fine threads, and weaving them up
again. Theopompus collected some scandalous tales, and that is quite enough for
historians. It is written down, so that's enough. The evidence of fifty million
gay little tombs wouldn't weigh a straw. In the beginning was the Word, indeed!
Even the word of a Theopompus!
Perhaps the favourite painting
for representing the beauties of the Etruscan tombs is the well-known head of a
woman, seen in profile with wheat-ears for a head-wreath, or fillet. This head
comes from the Tomb of Orcus, and is chosen because it is far more Greek-Roman
than it is Etruscan. As a matter of fact, it is rather stupid and
self-conscious and modern. But it belongs to the classic Convention, and men
can only see according to a Convention. We haven't exactly plucked our eyes
out, but we've plucked out three-fourths of their vision.
After the Tomb of the
Typhon one has had enough. There is nothing really Etruscan left. It is better
to abandon the necropolis altogether, and to remember that almost everything we
know of the Etruscans from the classic authors is comparable to the paintings
in the late tombs. It refers only to the fallen, Romanized Etruscans of the
decadence.
* * *
It is very pleasant to
go down from the hill on which the present Tarquinia stands, down into the
valley and up to the opposite hill, on which the Etruscan Tarquinii surely
stood. There are many flowers, the blue grape-hyacinth and the white, the mauve
tassel anemone, and, in a corner of a field of wheat, the big purple anemone,
then a patch of the big pale pink anemone with the red, sore centre the
big-petalled sort. It is curious how the anemone varies. Only in this one place
in Tarquinia have I found the whity-pink kind, with the dark, sore-red centre.
But probably that is just chance.
The town ends really
with the wall. At the foot of the wall is wild hillside, and down the slope is
only one little farm, with another little house made of straw. The country is
clear of houses. The peasants live in the city.
Probably in Etruscan
days it was much the same, but there must have been far more people on the
land, and probably there were many little straw huts, little temporary houses,
among the green corn: and fine roads, such as the Etruscans taught the Romans
to build, went between the hills: and the high black walls, with towers, wound
along the hill-crest.
The Etruscans, though
they grew rich as traders and metal-workers, seem to have lived chiefly by the
land. The intense culture of the land by the Italian peasant of today seems
like the remains of the Etruscan system. On the other hand, it was Roman, and
not Etruscan, to have large villas in the country, with the great compound or
factory' for the slaves, who were shut in at night, and in gangs taken out to
labour during the day. The huge farms of Sicily and Lombardy and other parts of
Italy must be a remains of this Roman system: the big fattorie. But one
imagines the Etruscans had a different system: that the peasants were serfs
rather than slaves: that they had their own small portions of land, which they
worked to full pitch, from father to son, giving a portion of the produce to
the masters, keeping a portion for themselves. So they were half-free, at
least, and had a true life of their own, stimulated by the religious life of
their masters.
The Romans changed it
all. They did not like the country. In palmy days they built great villas with
barracks for slaves, out in the country. But, even so, it was easier to get
rich by commerce or conquest. So the Romans gradually abandoned the land, which
fell into neglect and prepared the way for the Dark Ages.
The wind blows stiffer
and stiffer from the south-west. There are no trees: but even the bushes bend
away from it. And when we get to the crown of the long, lonely hill on which
stood the Etruscan Tarquinii we are almost blown from our feet, and have to sit
down behind a thicket of bushes, for a moment's shelter: to watch the great
black-and-white cattle stepping slowly down to the drinking-place, the young
bulls curving and playing. All along the hilltop the green wheat ruffles like
soft hair. Away inland the green land looks empty, save for a far-off town
perched on a hill-top, like a vision. On the next hill, towards the sea,
Tarquinia holds up her square towers, in vain.
And we are sitting on
what would be the arx of the vanished city. Somewhere here the augurs held up
their curved staffs, and watched the birds move across the quarters of the
city. We can do so much even today. But of the city I cannot find even one
stone. It is so lonely and open.
One can go back up a
different road, and in through another gate of the city of today. We drop
quickly down, in the fierce wind, down to calm. The road winds up slowly from
the little valley, but we are in shelter from the wind. So, we pass the first
wall, through the first medieval gateway. The road winds inside the wall, past
the Dazio, but there are no houses. A bunch of men are excitedly playing morra,
and the shouts of the numbers come up like explosions, with wild excitement.
The men glance at us apprehensively, but laugh as we laugh.
So we pass on through a
second frowning gateway, inside the second circle of walls. And still we are
not in the town. There is still a third wall, and a third massive gate. And
then we are in the old part of the town, where the graceful little palazzos of
the Middle Ages are turned into stables and barns, and into houses for poor
peasants. In front of the lower storey of one little old palace, now a
blacksmith's shop, the smith is shoeing a refractory mule, which kicks and
plunges, and brings loud shouts from the inevitable little group of onlookers.
Queer and lonely and
slummy the waste corners and narrow streets seem, forlorn, as if belonging to
another age. On a beautiful stone balcony a bit of poor washing is drying. The
houses seem dark and furtive, people lurking like rats. And then again rises
another tall, sharp-edged tower, blank and blind. They have a queer effect on a
town, these sharp, rigid, blind, meaningless towers, soaring away with their
sharp edges into the sky, for no reason, beyond the house-roofs; and from the
far distance, when one sees the little city down far off, suggesting the
factory chimneys of a modern town.
They are the towers
which in the first place were built for retreat and defence, when this coast
was ravaged by sea-rovers, Norman adventurers, or Barbary pirates that were
such a scourge to the Mediterranean. Later, however, the medieval nobles built
towers just for pure swank, to see who should have the tallest, till a town
like Bologna must have bristled like a porcupine in a rage, or like Pittsburg
with chimney-stacks square ones. Then the law forbade towers and towers,
after having scraped the heavens, began to come down. There are some still,
however, in Tarquinia, where age overlaps age.
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