By all accounts Munthe was a decent guy - he often treated the poor without charge, and was passionate about animal rights (the bird sanctuary at Mt Barbarossa, which he created on the island, is still there). He was also an early advocate of alternative medicine - often exploring hypnosis and music therapy in his treatments, rather than prescribing drugs.
He was giddy about royalty - and became friends with and physician to the Swedish royal family. The Queen of Sweden habitually spent several months of the year at the Villa San Michele. The rumour went round, as rumours do, that they were lovers - but this was never substantiated.
Munthe's villa is very lovely indeed, and we passed a delightful hour or two wandering round. The prospect from the end of the terrace across limestone cliffs to the harbour is pretty stunning, and there's also this back-end view of a granite sphinx, which makes it even more interesting, and rather mysterious ...
I've been to Capri a couple of times, but not within the last twenty-five years. I missed Munthe's villa, but will certainly visit it if I ever get back there. It sounds as if you and your wife had a great trip from the beginning to the end.
ReplyDeleteYes, it was a great, and a necessary trip, George. As much about rediscovering each other as discovering new landscapes ...
ReplyDeleteI love this notion of "rediscovering each other." Just think of how our worlds would change if we could do that with all of our relationships - those with our spouses, those with our children, those with our friends. Thanks for planting that idea in my head; perhaps it will bear fruit in my own life.
ReplyDeleteIt's a wonderful notion, that notion of rediscovery, isn't it - one that excites me deeply. Marriage, any long-term relationship or friendship, needs to be honoured in this way from time to time, I think. We let go of marriage etc far too easily sometimes, thinking things are stale, beyond repair, whatever (of course, sometimes they may be) - without considering that a slightly different/ equally interesting/differently challenging relationship may be possible.
ReplyDeleteAs Buddhism (and plain common sense) teaches us, flux and change are with us every second of our lives - so why not embrace it and adapt to it, rather than being defeated and diminished by it?