Modena's Duomo and the breath of God
A foot through the spokes, lions, rats and blasphemy. Memories blur and blend in Modena's most famous monument
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I've got lots of hazy memories that I can't really place of my father sitting me up on one the lions in front of the doors, as Modenese fathers do, and my mother, three yards away, laughing and waving. But my first real memory of the Duomo goes back to when I was three and in my mind it's linked to my first memory of pain. My father had brought me to the square by bike instead of our usual walk. On the way home he put me into the seat on the back, and because I liked dangling my legs instead of sitting them on the foot rests, as we turned into Via Università my foot got caught in the spokes making me squeal and shout in pain which in turn got my father shouting in anger and all in all worsening the situation, as was his wont, and as soon as we got to Via Della Cella he perched me on a low wall, where I sat crying, and told me that my mother would come and collect me as he had stuff of his own to do.
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I remember I was still in secondary school and there was nothing, and I mean nothing, to do during the winter afternoons and now and again I used to go to the Duomo with two friends of mine, and we'd look all around, and one afternoon Gianni Pecchini, one of the two friends, was standing in front of the crib enthralled, when he said "It's God awful gorgeous", and even if his words were entirely in good faith, for the laugh we said "you can't talk like that in a church", so he, still in good faith, replied "Jesus, Mary and Joseph, you're right", and at that stage we got such a fit of laughing that the three of us had to run right out of the Duomo.
I've been in and out of it many times since, I've strolled around it, on my own or in company, and at night I've stumbled out of the these side streets to see its white marble appear before my eyes. It's always a sight worth seeing.
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Six or seven years ago, towards the end of the summer, I was out walking with a friend and we ended up sitting on the steps of the door that looks onto Piazza Grande. It was very late. Then, despite the fact there was always someone crossing the square, we heard a strange rustling. There on the left was a rat tucking into his dinner, a cockroach perhaps. I've always liked to look at rats at night and I've always liked where they hang out. Suddenly they become full of life and energy, and you can imagine a complicated system of underground passages and tunnels, as ancient as Rome. And indeed chances are the apses hide some poor pigeon thrown into the throes of death.
Nonetheless, even though it isn't a particularly big building, even though I don't believe in God, I've always felt His breath in here.