The Lure of Capri
What is it about this tiny, sun-drenched island off the coast of Naples that has made it so irresistible for so long?
- By Tony Perrottet
- Photographs by Francesco Lastrucci
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Yet the image of Tiberius’ indulgences became a fixture of Capri’s reputation, repeated as gospel and perpetuated in Robert Graves’ historical novel I, Claudius and in the lurid 1979 film Caligula, starring a haggard-looking Peter O’Toole as the imperious reprobate. But if Tiberius lent the island a dreadful notoriety, he also guaranteed its popularity. Its divine beauty would forever be inseparable from its reputation as a sensual playground, where the pursuit of pleasure could be indulged far from prying eyes.
After the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in A.D. 476, Capri entered a lonely period. Throughout the Middle Ages, Arabs and corsairs routinely raided the island. Capri began to regain its popularity in the 1750s, when excavations in Pompeii and Herculaneum, the Roman towns buried by an eruption of Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79, made Naples a key stop on the grand tour. Travelers, including the Marquis de Sade, in 1776, added Capri to their itineraries. (He set a part of his licentious novel Juliette at the Villa Jovis.)
The “discovery” of a natural wonder, the Grotta Azzurra, or Blue Grotto, only boosted the island’s popularity. In 1826, August Kopisch, a young German writer touring Italy, heard rumors of a sea cave feared by local fishermen. He persuaded some boatmen to take him there. After swimming through a small opening in the rocks at the base of a towering cliff, Kopisch found himself in a large cavern where the water glowed, he would write, “like the light of a blue flame.” It made him feel as if he were floating in an “unfathomable blue sky.” Further inspection revealed the source of the light: an underwater cavity that allows sunlight to filter in. Kopisch also found an ancient landing in the back of the grotto; islanders told him it had once been the entrance to a secret tunnel that led to one of Tiberius’ palaces, the Villa Damecuta, directly above. The grotto itself, they said, had been a nymphaeum.
Kopisch described his explorations in The Discovery of the Blue Grotto on the Isle of Capri, which tapped into the Romantic era’s interest in the spiritual and healing powers of nature. Soon travelers were arriving from Germany, Russia, Sweden and Britain to revel in natural beauty and escape conventional society. At the time, Capri had fewer than 2,000 inhabitants, whose traditional rural life, punctuated by religious feasts and the grape harvest, added to the island’s allure. Affluent foreigners could rent dirt-cheap rooms, dine under vine-covered pergolas and discuss art over light Caprese wine. In the village cafés, one might spot Friedrich Nietzsche, André Gide, Joseph Conrad, Henry James or Ivan Turgenev, who raved about Capri in an 1871 letter as “a virtual temple of the goddess Nature, the incarnation of beauty.”
The German artist Karl Wilhelm Diefenbach wandered around the island in the early 1900s wearing a long white tunic and gave tormented sermons to passersby in the town piazza. Former Confederate colonel John Clay H. MacKowen, who went into self-imposed exile after the Civil War, filled an enormous red-walled villa in Anacapri (Upper Capri) with antiquities. (The villa, known as the Casa Rossa, is open to the public today.) In 1908, the exiled Russian author Maxim Gorky started the School of Revolutionary Technique at his villa. One guest was Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, a.k.a. Nikolai Lenin, on the run from Czarist police after the failed revolution of 1905 in Russia.
Among this illustrious parade was a Swedish doctor, Axel Munthe, who, like so many others, came to Capri for a brief visit, in 1875, and fell in love with it. A decade later he moved to the village of Anacapri and built the Villa San Michele on the crest of a hill with stunning views of the Mediterranean. He filled the villa’s lush, secluded gardens with Roman statues, a stone sphinx and a carved Medusa head, most of which had to be carried up the 800 or so steps from the main harbor by mule. The Story of San Michele (1929) was translated into 45 languages and carried the island’s charms to a new audience. Today the Villa San Michele is a Swedish cultural center and bird sanctuary, and remains, in Henry James’ words, “a creation of the most fantastic beauty, poetry and inutility that I have ever seen clustered together.”
Writer Graham Greene and the exiled Chilean poet Pablo Neruda arrived later—in the 1940s and ‘50s, respectively. Although neither included Capri in his work, both of their sojourns were immortalized posthumously—Neruda’s in the fictionalized 1994 film Il Postino, and Greene’s in the 2000 biography Greene on Capri.
Not everyone saw the island as an Eden. In fact, a recurrent note of melancholy runs through many of the writings about Capri. Even Munthe, who had treated cholera patients during an epidemic in Naples, seems haunted by death and decay in his memoir. The modern Caprese author Raffaele La Capria insisted in his 1991 book Capri and No Longer Capri that morbid thoughts are inseparable from the island’s timeless beauty and rich history, which force “you [to] face with a shudder the ineluctable fact that you too will die.”
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Comments (4)
Re the April issue's The Lure Of Capri, the island is "mounted" on a tripod -- yes, like a three-foot milk stool, and made of lava, a child of Vesuvius. The tripod infrastructure is why there are so many grottoes and light caves. The airy lava rock contributes to the jaw-dropping acoustics in the caverns like the Matermania Grotto. When I was there in the 70's (for an entire week!) I of course went to the Blue Grotto and then to some smaller, less dramatic ones. I was a guest of a great orchestral musician who had a small house in town -- a villa he called it -- with a galley kitchen, a bedroom and bath, and a tomato and cucumber garden. He showed me the grotto "discovered" by Burt Lancaster somewhere back in the 40's or 50's. Also spent a wonderful afternoon in Anacapri and walked the duomo on duckboards looking at the painted tiles of the Creation. The great musician, Harold Gomberg, solo oboist with the New York Philharmonic for 30 years, later left Capri and moved to Madeira off the coast of Portugal -- to get away from the herds, though he did sneak back once and a while to Capri.
Posted by Robert Fisher on May 17,2011 | 06:49 PM
very interesting, especially the part of the civil war confederate colonel who retired there...
Posted by D on April 23,2011 | 01:00 PM
Would it have derailed the story to mention that the "Philidelphia heiress who...quickly divorced" John Ellingham Brooks was none other than the Modernist lesbian painter Romaine Brooks? The implication in your story is that she "found out" about him. Not so, according to Meryle Secrest's biography of Romaine Brooks. Society occasionally intervenes in the lives of those who are not the majority.
Posted by Kathleen Kuiper on April 7,2011 | 01:55 PM
The article makes reference to "Nikolai Lenin." Although "Nikolai" was once used in the West (particularly in the twenties) due to a misunderstanding, I believe that in Russia he is known only as Vladimir Lenin and that Vladimir is used in all current historical and biographical works.
Posted by Michael Brown on March 30,2011 | 10:31 AM