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Villa
Cimbrone, Ravello
The history of the
villa parallels that of Ravello and of the entire Amalfi coast, which is to say
that sumptuous villas, including the villa Cimbrone,
started cropping up on the coast a thousand years ago.
The villa belonged to a noble
family called Accongiogioco and then to the Fusco, a wealthy and influential family
related to the royal Angevin
family of Naples. Around the seventeenth century, the
history gets shaky, but at some point it became an
integral part of a nearby monastery of Santa Chiara.
In 1904, Ernest William Beckett, an English gentleman
later known as Lord Grimthorpe, fell in love with the
villa while on the “Grand
Tour” and bought it. He renovated it into
what one sees today. Villa Cimbrone
became a luxury hotel hosting some of the juiciest
love-affairs and most famous personalities of the 20th
century, including E.M. Forster, Virginia
Woolf, D.H. Lawrence, the Duke and Duchess of Kent and
Winston Churchill. It was the setting for the famous
elopement of actress Greta Garbo and Leopold Stokowsky. On the vast grounds of the villa
there is a verse engraved in a stone tablet: the moon of heaven is rising once again how oft hereafter rising shall she look through this same garden after us in vain.
The Moon of Heav'n is rising once again: How oft hereafter rising shall she look Through this same Garden after me—in vain! That "original," of course, is the
English "translation" by Edward Fitzgerald 1809-83
("translation" in quotes because it was really a
paraphrase and not a translation) of The Rubaiyat of
Omar Khayyam, which didn't appear until 1859 and
which was totally unknown to English audiences before
that. (So much for the 18th century.) What probably
happened is that D.H. Lawrence changed the line to suit
himself, had it engraved on the tablet and just never
told anyone where he got it. I have failed college
students for less than that. |