Lying down at the day’s intermission, I listen to Puccini arias, and am transported to Lucca, his walled hometown, with its *****-white streets, its darkened straits, its massive cathedral under eternal construction.
Life limps along in effervescent flux here, beauty kept dormant, or sprouting like a tree from the Torre Guinigi’s grassy roof.
A one-time amphitheater sports cloned tourist shops. Only one sells Puccini souvenirs. La Boheme survives on note cards and lop-sided bookmarks.
The composer’s legacy turned into trinkets made in China. A vast, discounted reserve of memory, kitsch and fame. Still, they provide me a precarious solace.
Music without words charts my tourist mood of endless angst. Opera is the grandest art, some critics claim. The human condition rendered thick in symbol and sound.
Happily, I carry the philosopher’s stone to decipher the soaring scores. They say, passion, foreboding, no regrets. A fluttering high C stirs the airwaves.
Ululating sopranos, searing tenors sigh heavenward. The last act over, the curtain rises on the dull, restless, repetitive routines of everyday life.
In the background, echoes of Tosca, currents of ruin and rust. We must embrace our destiny even on the off-notes. Opera’s solo signal: Amor Fati.