Venice has a cruel habit of defeating her admirers. Even her most confident suitors, who arrive via water taxi intent on enjoying all her charms and treasures, return home heavy with second-rate vongole and the humiliation of that unseen Titian. I was left in tears on a Venetian quayside when, after a long day of sight-seeing, I thought I had missed the once-a-day boat crossing to San Francesco del Deserto, the mystical island that Saint Francis had visited on his way back from Africa.
Luckily, there’s a cure for our heartache: Venice for Pleasure. This irreverent guidebook by the English art historian J.G. Links promises “a guide to the pleasures of Venice without its pains”, which, in our era of frantic mini-breaks — of Instagramming and TikToking our way around as many must-see landmarks as possible — is a marvel and a revelation.
“Very few travellers seem to enjoy their first visit to Venice,” Links cautions. “They are awed, dazzled, overwhelmed… [but] above all, they are exhausted by it; physically, mentally and emotionally, its assault is too much for the ordinary human being to withstand.” This is a book for that wild curiosity: a tourist in pure pursuit of pleasure. If they follow Links, they may end up skipping their three-hour tour of the Doge’s Palace, but “Venice will have woven its spell around them, and they will be captives for life.”
Links asks just one thing: that everyone be a walker, “or, at least, a dawdler”. And that is because his guide consists of four narrated walks around Venice, from the shimmering Zattere to the lonely Cannaregio. The streets, Links says, have “a miraculous spring in the paving which makes fatigue almost impossible”. And he is careful to stop at “as many cafes as possible” for coffee or apéritif, from where he enchants us with stories and architectural details about nearby palaces, churches and bell towers contemplating collapse.
With Links as a guide, the idea that Venice is somehow not real — that it is a circus, a Disneyland, a fossil — is banished. On my own strolls, I have seen drowsy postmen loading Amazon parcels onto little delivery boats at dawn; babbling Venetians spilling out of a bar onto the canal, eating baccalà mantecato and drinking wine from paper cups; families fleeing the stink of the summer to the furthest beach on the Lido; a seagull losing a brawl with a lagoon squid, turning the water jet black; a distressed elderly gentleman who has misplaced a valuable miniature he was hoping to sell. This is not a city without a soul.
There is another side to Venice: the merciless tour guides; the menageries of Murano glass animals; the overpriced, often-disappointing food (there is nothing worse than that fearful “delicacy”, the Venetian soft-shell crab, plucked from its squalid existence on the lagoon floor for your displeasure). Even Jan Morris, a lifelong admirer, admitted to feeling that tourism was “in some sense a prostitution of a great city, a degradation, a shame”.
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SubscribeIt’s interesting how the Romantic conception of Venice has won out in Western culture, when for most of its 1300-year history it’s been a city populated by a race of profoundly hard-headed people who sold anything anyone would buy, used the cash to buy everything they could, and stole everything else they couldn’t, or that wasn’t nailed down. When your city fathers refuse to draw the line at stealing saints, you know you’re dealing with some seriously hardcore materialists.
A charming article. Thank you, Olivia.
A very perceptive and well crafted article. Links is by far the best guide, but it is also well worth reading John Julius Norwich’s great history before boarding the train – you simply must arrive by train.
No! You must arrive by sea in the great Mistress of the Adriatic.
In a three masted schooner, the rigging singing, the sails flapping. and the glorious sounds of creaking woodwork under your feet. Not by motor or steam.
I’ve never been and always wanted to, but now, in my 60’s I’ve come to accept that I’ll probably never see Venice, even in January it would be an utter nightmare. No, Venice will remain a dream city for me now.
Au contraire. Venice in late November / early December and January / February can be pretty magical – foggy, bum freezingly cold, cutting winds if you turn down the wrong alleyway BUT minimal interlopers and still plenty of welcoming hostelries large and small where you can warm up. Highly recommended.
Ruskin’s ‘The Stones of Venice’ is also useful, if somewhat bulky by modern standards.
You should also stay in the Pensione Calcina (Ruskin describes it as “a little inn, fronting the Giudecca [canal]”). Ruskin was staying there in 1877 when he wrote his impassioned letters to Count Zorzi supporting the nobleman’s passionate protests against the “restoration” of St Mark’s and offering his own watercolours made on earlier visits as evidence of the harm which restorers had already committed. After Ruskin’s death Zorzi persuaded the civic authorities to place a wonderful memorial plaque to Ruskin on the facade of La Calcina. Take with you a copy of Sarah Quill’s superb book “Ruskin’s Venice: The Stones Revisited” – a wonderful combination of text, photographs and reproductions.
Beautiful though it is, Venice is indeed a theme park. It has been so since the 1800’s. Does it make it less authentic? Most certainly this is now its “authentic” reality (along with the centre of Rome or Florence) but it isn’t the one the tourist is chasing, though.
If you look for something that hasn’t quite morphed yet into a theme park YET, I would suggest Naples and Palermo; allow plenty of time to enjoy them (and Pompeii and, especially, Sorrento can wait), but make haste before it is too late.
I suspect what many tourists are seeking in Venice, Rome, Naples, is something that looks and feels like a Merchant Ivory movie, or, better yet, “Enchanted April”. All lush scenery and haunting music–an extended fin de siècle sigh before the onslaught of modernity, or something equally escapist.
Enchanted April *is* lovely, though. Who wouldn’t want to go there… 😉
If you read some history and fiction about Venice, the Italian city-states, Byzantium and the rise of modern capitalism, you can easily dispel the myths and walk through the city charmed and engaged. Braudel, Mann, Hammarfelt. Also, view some art before e.g. Canaletto and during e.g Gugenheim Venice.
I remember the bright light coming from my wife’s eyes on the day we first arrived in Venice.
Both that day and the next I saw these women with huge shining eyes.
Take a woman who has never been to Venice, bring her there without giving her time to come to her senses, put her on that stupid water bus and enjoy her dazed eyes.
Wander off and get lost.
This technique has been working for us for about 10 years now and seems to be city independent – by that I mean it seems to work everywhere. Guaranteed to provide some sort of surprise.
Is good in Paris too but have a paper map on you,just in case your pleasant lostness starts to turn into panicky,sweaty,no sign of any bus stops,metro stops or taxis lost. Oddly enough that happened to me years ago in an unfamiliar area of MY HOME CITY where I live! Should I take a right or left turn. I chose wrong and ended up walking what felt like miles. Later looking on a map (pre Google maps) I saw there was a bus stop just round the corner the other way so I learned from that and I always have a local map on me if I start to feel a bit too lost,in a not fun way. We all have Google maps now too of course,but I like to have both options.
Venice may have been built for greatness, but it was built from trade. When the Doges became greedy and wanted a share and started to control who could trade the rot set in. Now it has become a theme park. Venice is a warning of what will happen to the rest of the West unless it returns to free, completive trade.
Venice lost its trade because of the discovery of the sea routes to Asia that undercut its trade through the Islamic world. Free trade has absolutely destroyed Western industrial economies over the last 30 years. Why do you think the middle class is disappearing? In wealthy countries free trade inevitably benefits owners of capital at the expense of the owners of labor; i.e. it makes the rich richer, and the working classes poorer.
Agree.
The persistence of theories that contradict reality (like fundamentalist free trade) is getting to be a bit frightening.
That is pure unadulterated rubbish frankly! The world – that means the world’s population – has grown massively richer because of globalism. Have there been winners and losers, certainly yes. Indeed paying people to do nothing on a massive scale isn’t a great strategy. I presume you think we ought to ban the importation of iPhones.
Protectionism has proved an absolute disaster in many cases, including in Franco’s Spain which saw no economic environment whatsoever for two decades, until it did start opening up its economy. Much the same could be said about India.