Saturday, May 14, 2005

This is St. Anthony

And this song goes out to one of our dedicated listeners out there: Valerie Acker, class of 2005, this one's for you!

All I Want is You

You say you want diamonds on a ring of gold
You say you want your story to remain untold
But all the promises we make
from the cradle to the grave
When all I want is you

You say you'll give me a highway with no one on it
Treasure just to look upon it
All the riches in the night
You say you'll give me eyes in a moon of blindness
A river in a time of dryness
A harbour in the tempest

But all the promises we make
from the cradle to the grave
When all I want is you

You say you wanty your love to work out right
To last with me through the night
You say you want diamonds on a ring of gold
Your story to remain untold
Your love not to grow cold

All the promises we break
From the cradle to the grave
When all I want is you
You...all I want is...
You...all I want is...
You...all I want is...
You.

And to the people of Venice, I wish to dedicate this song:

Where the Streets Have No Name

I want to run
I want to hide
I want to tear down the walls that hold me inside
I want to reach out and touch the flame
Where the streets have no name

I want to feel sunlight on my face
I see the dust cloud disappear without a trace
I want to take shelter from the poison rain
Where the streets have no name
Where the streets have no name
Where the streets have no name

We're still building
Then burning down love
Burning down love
And when i go there
I go there with you
It's all i can do

The city's aflood
And our love turns to rust
We're beaten and blown by the wind
Trampled in dust
I'll show you a place
High on a desert plain
Where the streets have no name
Where the streets have no name

Where the streets have no name
We're still building
Then burning down love
Burning down love
And when i go there
I go there with you
It's all i can do

Our love turns to rust
We're beaten and blown by the wind
Blown by the wind
Oh, and i see love
See our love turn to rust
We're beaten and blown by the wind
Blown by the wind

Oh, when i go there
I go there with you
It's all i can do

Thursday, May 12, 2005

This is The Cinque Terre

As I have three more travel days on my Eurail and as there are four calendar days left in which I can use them, I decided to travel up to the Cinque Terre for a day trip. Four hours there. Four hours back. Awesome.

So I left way early this morning and hopped on a train. I had my own compartment for about 2 minutes, when I was joined by an Italian man of nearly 70. He knew a little English and, as he spoke, I found out that I knew a little more Italian than I had thought. We talked about our families, about our love back home, about what we do for a living, and about President George Bush.

"Charles," the Italian man, didn't care for PGB, especially with the Iraqi War and the oil stuff. Charles, as I later found out, was an Italian marine whose ship was submarined by the US in the 19050s. (Which war was that?).

At any rate, he and I talked for nearly all of the 4-hour journey. He's an electrician and sells major-bling plasma sets, sound systems, and other "I'd rather be alone and in my own world" sort of gadgets. He was all excited by his work-- and if it was my passion, I'd be too-- but as he was turning page after page of electronic shtuff, I couldn't but help think that what he was selling was "escape" and "isolation." Being without a TV for three months (and nearly six months prior to coming out here), I've realized how much I don't miss it and how much I grow as a person-- and in my relationships with other people-- when the TV isn't a part (usually, a demanding part) of my life.

Soapboxes aside, Charles invited me to coffee as the train pulled up to La Spezia, the entryway to The Cinque Terre. I had to decline, as my train for Riomaggiore-- the first town-- was about to depart.

"Don't forget about the train strike today!" he shouted as we left.

Train strike? ..... today???!?

Huh? I quickly got a ticket for my train and searched out the meaning to this admonition Charles provided. And, sure, enough, emblazoned on the ticket window was a sign-- in Italian-- letting everyone know that all trains in Italy will stop functioning at 2100. As I read this, it was 1200. And the only train that would make it back to Rome was at 1600.

As the strike was planned for merely 24 hours, I was stuck in a dilemma: stay in Cinque Terre for a mere four hours; or stay in Cinque Terre for three days and two nights (as there would be no trains to Rome after the end of the strike). Without money for a hotel, shampoo for my hair, and a really good reason to miss a Papal Mass on Sunday, I decided to suck it up and slog through the Cinque Terre in four hours.

Quickly, I learned that this is impossible.

I blew through the first town, Riomaggiore, and-- on the outskirts-- looked back to see this view:

Hmmmm.... maybe I should take some pictures.....

And so I did. I ate through my 256 MB memory card like the Cookie Monster ate cookies. As I hit town #2-- Manarola-- I knew I just had to slow down and admit to myself that I wasn't going to make it through.

Darn, I guess I'll just have to come back again.

So, here I am, savoring my short time in village #2: Manarola-- where everyone at work parks their boats... on the street.

Eventually, I stopped caring about making it all the way through. Any momentum to do so was lost somewhere on the cliff to the right.

Haha, I walked out onto the rocks on the far right...! (I really did!-- and yes, mom, I was safe).

Of course, as I strolled along the path-- sometimes steep, sometimes leisurely easy-- I couldn't help but notice a couple-in love here, and a couple-holding-hands there. Ahhh, the Via dell'Amore!... but where is my love? *snifffff*

(In twelve days, 7 hours, and 18 minutes, my darling shall arrive!-- And mad props go out to her as she graduates this Saturday! You're done, love!!!!!!)

With love scenting the air and its sweet perfume driving me mad, I decided to hurl myself over the cliffs. Ok, ok, I'm kidding. It was just my camera.

Haha, I'm still kidding. Kind of.

SEEEEE!!!??!! IT'S THE "CLIFFS OF INSANITY!!!!!"

Between Manarola and the third villiage-- Corniglia, I decided to do lunch. I hopped down off of the path, grabbed me a boulder, a PB&J, and enjoyed my little bit of heaven.

"That's a nice boulder...."

And what's a sea without a boat! Lunch and a sailboat.....!

"I SAIL!!!!! I SAIL!!!!! DR. MARVIN, I SAIL!!! ....AHOY!"

After lunch, I slogged up the hill to Corniglia. And I checked my watch: 1500. Rrrg, time to go.

"10 more minutes," I told myself.

I walked around the east cliffs of Corniglia and "accidentially" walked into someone's back yard.

.....ooops.

Yeah, so this is the living room, and here's the bedroom,... And, oh! I almost forgot! Here's the patio!

Well, 10 minutes flew by. I scampered down the hill, caught a train back to Rome, slept the entire way, and made it home just before 2100-- and just in time to eat chocolate cake!!! (Today is Janet's birthday).

And that's The Cinque Terre. I'm coming back to do Vernazza and Monterroso al Mare (the last two towns) sometime in the future.

Until then, I'll just have to obey this sign:

Well.... FINE!!!!!!

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

This is What We Do for a Study Break

As I put the last period on the end of this entry, I will scurry off to the Circus Maximus to play some frisbee. I don't know how I feel about playing on a field where thousands of Christians have died in the course of history.... But, when I think about it, they died for the faith and so that I could continue in the faith and, in so doing, glorify God. One way we glorify God is by play. I think it is a testiment to the faith if I should go there and play and praise God; they died for a good reason! So, off I go to play.

So, Steve, Lisa, Elizabeth-Jane, and I played frisbee this afternoon in the Circus Maximus. Way cool. Italians and foreigners alike gathered on the hillsides, pinicking and watching with smiles on their faces our crazy game played "with the hands." Yay for frisbee.

At the end of our silliness and exhibition of our mad skills, Steve and I decided to have a race... around the entire Circus Maximus. "You know... just like in the old days... just without a horse.... or a chariot.... or a crowd--"

"Steve, we have a crowd"

"...ok, or an emperor. Out of curiosity, how long do you thinks this is?"

"Ummm, I'd give it a quarter or a half...."

"A half a mile??!!?"

"Yeah, a half a mile."

"I think it might be more."

"Eh."

"Are you boys ready?" Lisa asked.

"I think I'm going to die!"

GO!!!

And there we go, running in the Circus Maximus.

Steve led for most of the way. Then, near the end of the Circus Maximus, he ran out of gas.

"Anthony, you can kiss my Glutius Maximus."


Woo hoo! We tied! Posted by Hello

Sunday, May 08, 2005

This is "What I Used to Love"

****UPDATE****
My narrative for the Germany trip is finally done. Check it out at http://gerber.blogspot.com/2005_05_01_gerber_archive.html
It might just make the pictures more interesting (if that is possible).

I now return you to the regularly scheduled blog....

****************************



Today, I have been putting together another paper for school. Yeah, as Finals draw near, SOME work needs to be done. Anyway, this paper is for my God & the Poets class (an amazing course!). And for this paper, I needed to find a poem and analyze it according to the directives outlined in class.

Ok, so that is what I've been up to. I tell you this now because I stumbled across one of the most beautiful poems I have ever read. I'm a big T.S. Eliot fan and am becoming a big St. John of the Cross admirer. It is no surprise, then, that I should like this poem of St. Therese of Lisieux. Here is her poem "What I Used to Love," composed at the request of her sister, Celine, some months after the latter's entrance into the convent at Carmel. It is very long-- but it goes fast, as it is SO AMAZINGLY GOOD!


* * * * *


"I have in my Beloved the mountains, the solitary and wooded valleys, the foreign islands, the resounding rivers, the murmur of the amorus zephyrs, the peaceful night, so like the dawn of day, the harmonious solitude, all that charms and that augments love."


St. John of the Cross.
Oh, how I love your memory,
My childhood days, so glad and free!
To keep my innocence, dear Lord, for Thee,
Thy love came to me night and day,
Alway.

So, when a little child was I,
To Thee I gave me utterly
Making with joy to Thee my promise high,
To wed a King beyond my view,
­Jesu!

I loved the Mother loved by Thee;
Saint Joseph, too, was friend to me.
How near Thy promised heaven seemed to be,
When shone, reflected in mine eyes,
The skies!

I loved the fields of wheat, the plain
Of emerald grass, the gentle rain.
Joy grew so great in me, 'twas almost pain!
How dear my sisters' presence there;
How fair!

I loved to cull the grass, the flowers,
Forget me nots in leafy bowers;
I found the violets' perfume, all the hours,
With crocus growing neath my feet,
Most sweet.

I loved the daisies fair and white;
Our Sunday walks, oh, what delight!
The azure skies so gloriously bright;
The birds that sang upon the tree
For me!

I loved my little shoe to grace,
Each Christmas in the chimney place;
To find it there at morn, how swift I'd race!
The feast of heaven, I hailed it well;
Noel!

I loved my mother's gentle smile,
Her thoughtful glance that said, the while:
"Eternity doth me from you beguile.
I go to heaven, my God, to be
With Thee!

"I go to find, in realms above,
My angel band in Mary's love.
The children whom I leave below, ah, prove,
Jesu! to them their guide and stay,
Alway!

Oh, how I loved my heavenly Lord,
In His blest Sacrament adored!
He bound me to Him by His given word
That He my Spouse from infancy
Would be!

I loved, upon the terrace fair,
My father's reveries to share;
To feel his gentle kisses on my hair.
I loved that father who shall tell
How well!

Teresa, seated on his knee,
Listened with me there, tenderly,
To those melodious songs he sang for me.
Those accents sweet I can not yet
Forget.

O Memory, what joys you bring!
You wake the thought of many a thing
That flew from me, long since, like birds awing.
Faces I see, voices I hear
How dear!

At sunset's hour I loved to be,
Teresa, heart to heart with thee;
Thy soul was as my very own to me.
My sister friend, my love, wert thou
As now.

Hand clasped in hand our hymns we sang.
Above earth's noisy clash and clang,
Our voices through the holy twilight rang.
Our dreams were then to Carmel given,
And heaven.

In Switzerland and Italy
The fairest scenes were shown to me;
But fairer yet I deemed the sight to be
Of him, Father of Christendom,
At Rome!

The Coliseum's hallowed ground,
With rapturous joy, my footsteps found;
The Catacombs re-echoed to the sound
Of hymns I sang to Thee, th' Adored,
My Lord !

What sorrows followed then, amain;
What fears have filled my heart with pain!
But Jesus came to help me, and sustain,
And His dear cross has been my stay
Alway.

I fled the world, I turned my face,
And. in a quiet resting place,
I sought in silent prayer for constant grace
My load to bear, and for my grief
Relief.

I loved to hear, from distant towers,
The sweet church bells ring out the hours;
I loved to cull, through burning tears, the flowers
And hear, at eve, among the trees,
The breeze.

I loved the swallows' graceful flight,
The turtledoves' low chant at night,
The pleasant sound of insects gay and bright,
The grassy vale where doth belong
Their song.

I loved the delicate morning dew,
On Bengal rose of charming hue;
I loved to see the virginal bee accrue
Its store of honey from the flower,
Its dower.

I loved to gather autumn leaves;
And, where the moss a carpet weaves,
How oft, from 'mongst the vines, my hand receives
A butterfly, so light of wing,
Fair thing!

I loved the glow worm on the sod;
The countless stars, so near to God!
But most I loved the beauteous moon, endowed
With shining disk of silver bright,
At night.

To my dear father, worn and old,
I gave myself with love untold.
He was all to me. Joy, and home, and gold,
Were mine in him; for him my kiss,
My bliss.

We loved the sweet sound of the sea,
The storm, the calm, all things that be,
At eve, the nightingale sang from the tree.
Oh, seemed to us like seraphim
Its hymn!

But came one day when his sweet eyes
Sought Jesus' cross with glad surprise...
And then my precious, loving father dies!
His last dear glance to me was given;
Then heaven!

Jesus, with hand benign and blest,
Took Celine's treasure to his rest,
Where endless joys are evermore possessed;
Placing him near his throne of love,
Above!

Now, Lord, I am Thy prisoner here;
Gone are the joys once held so dear.
I have found out, none last, all seek their bier.
I have seen all my joys pass by,
And die.

The grass is withered in its bed;
The flowers within my hands are dead.
Would that my weary feet, Jesu! might tread
Thy heavenly fields, and I might be
With Thee!

E'en as the thirsting hart doth crave
Its lips in some cool stream to lave,
I seek from Thee, Jesu! the healing wave.
I need, to calm my ardors and my fears,
Thy tears.

Thy love, naught else, attracts my soul;
Heaven is my only aim, my goal;
Love, Love divine, has me in Its control.
I seek the Lamb upon His throne,
Alone.

Jesu! Thou art that Lamb divine;
Naught else I crave, if I am Thine.
In Thee all things in heaven and earth are mine!
Thou art the lovely Flower of spring,
My King!

Thou art the Lily, pure and fair;
Thy perfume sweet embalms the air.
O Bunch of sacred Myrrh, divinely rare,
Upon my heart, I beg Thee, stay
Alway!

Thy love goes with me where I go!
In Thee have I the sparkling snow,
The rains, the lofty hills, the valleys low,
The babbling brooks, the leafy trees,
The breeze!

All these I have in Thee, dear Lord:
The yellow wheat, the harvest horde,
The Rose of Sharon, type of Thee, Adored!
Round me what flowers of charming dyes
Arise!

I have the dear melodious lyre,
The solitude of my desire,
My waves, and mighty rocks, and brilliant fire,
My birds that sing, my murmuring stream,
Fair dream!

My rainbow in my rain washed skies,
Horizon where my suns arise,
Island in far off seas, pearl I most prize,
Springtime and butterflies, I see
In Thee!

Thy love is like the flowers of May,
The palm trees where the breezes play,
The nights almost as bright and light as day.
In Thee I find what shall not cease,
Sweet peace!

Delicious grapes in Thee are mine,­
The purple burden of the vine;
The virgin forest and the stately pine,
The fair haired children, Lord, I see
With Thee!

In Thee I have the springs, the rills,
The mignonette, the daffodils,
The eglantine, the harebell on the hills,
The trembling poplar, sighing low
And slow.

In Thee I have the waving wheat,
The winds that murmur low and sweet.
All Mary's flowers, once blooming at my feet,
The glowing plain, the tender grass, I see
In Thee.

Beneath my habit's plain, coarse fold
Thou givest me rare gems and gold.
Within my clasp what brilliant rings I hold,
Pearls, sapphires, rubies, diamonds bright,
Tonight.

The lovely lake, the valley fair
And lonely, in the lambent air,
The ocean touched with silver everywhere,
In Thee their treasures, all combined,
I find.

I have the barque on mighty seas,
Its shining track, the shore, the breeze,
The sun that sinks behind the leafy trees,
Lighting the clouds, ere it expire,
With fire.

In Thee, the glorious stars are mine;
And often at the day's decline
I see, as through some veil silken and fine,
Beckoning from heaven, our fatherland,
Thy hand!

O Thou Who governest all the earth,
Who giv'st the mighty forests birth,
And at one glance mak'st all their life of worth!
On me Thou gazest, from above,
With love.

I have Thy Face, I have Thy Heart!
Lo! I am wounded with thy dart;
Thou dost Thy sacred kiss to me impart.
I love Thee! Thee alone I view,
Jesu!

I go, to chant, with angel throngs,
The homage that to Thee belongs.
Soon let me fly away, to join their songs!
Oh, let me die of love, I pray,
One day!

Drawn by the light, the insect flies
To meet the flame wherein it dies.
So, to Thy light, my longing soul would rise;
So would I gladly in that tire,
Expire!

I hear, e'en I, Thy last and least,
The music from Thy heavenly feast;
There, there, receive me as Thy loving guest!
There, to my harp, oh, bid me sing,
My King!

Mary I go to see, and there
The saints, and those once treasured here.
Life is all past, and dried at last each tear.
To me my home again is given,
In heaven!




~St. Therese of Lisieux, April 28, 1895