On Wednesday we went to Pompeii. There were lots of tourists, lots of
sunburns, and very few fountains. There was also some city there or something.
Pompeii was really interesting because it is really easy to take it for
granted. It seems like it should be a complete city. Aaron, one of the
teachers, said that a third of the city was not because the site did not have
enough money to maintain the portion that WAS excavated. We may explore that in
a later post. Today is a play-by-play day.
Holy Cow, It’s Early
We got on the metro at 7, and took an hour and a half long train ride
from there to Naples. I slept, as did a bunch of other people in our group.
Sleeping was made slightly more difficult for me because I had gotten an
espresso at the train station, but that is the Italian lifestyle, I am pretty
sure. I was awake as we neared Naples and got our first good view of Mt.
Vesuvius though. That thing was majestic. There was a cloud above it that made
it look like it was smoking even! Exciting!
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| Pictured: false alarm. |
After a while though, riding trains was getting wearing. I began to
question whether I even wanted to be at Pompeii. Aaron was really good at
keeping us all together and excited to get there though. I could already tell
that it was going to be a long day though. At one point, a band came on the
train from Naples to Pompeii. I gave the guy coming around with a hat a euro.
Sometimes the excitement just didn’t show.
Finally Pompeii
We had to wait a little bit for Aaron to get the tickets, but finally
we got into the site itself. There was a huge line just to get in. There were
all kinds of people there—Italians, tourists, school children, elderly German
tour groups, everything. My post from Wednesday mentioned that I don’t get the
Italian insistence on wearing hot-looking clothes? As we walked in, there was a
guy in a full suit coming out of the gate! He wore a suit to ruins! The nicest
thing I was wearing was my gladiator sandals, and that was because I was sick
of wearing sneakers.
We got to the Forum and Aaron gave us a little bit of a talk about
Pompeii. I was pretty familiar with it because we learned all about it in my
freshman Latin class, but it was interesting the get a different perspective. Pompeii
was a city that had been covered by pyroclastic rock, like pumice, and ash, and
then was preserved until the early 1900s, when it was almost completely
excavated. When he asked for questions, Ellie asked whether the volcano was
completely dormant. Aaron’s response was “Eeh, not quite,” and a lecture about
tectonic activity in Europe.
The trip was supposed to be a free-for-all thing, where we wandered off
to have a look around without guidance, but we all agreed to follow Aaron
around anyway. It turns out, he had a list of places that he wanted to visit,
so we were going to get a pretty good tour. We started by walking down the main
street to check out some of the shops that were built along it. That was when
we encountered our first locked gate.
With a locked gate behind it, no less.
Aaron looked a little disappointed to see that. He noted that when he
had been to Pompeii before, there were lots of places that he was able to get
into that we might not be able to get into now, for whatever reason. Sev said
that she wanted a magic key. Adam pointed out that jumping over the gate would
be just as good as getting a key.
For some reason, Suzy decided not to try to jump over the gate for the
picture.
We went to the infamous brothel of Pompeii, which was a lot smaller than
I had imagined, frankly. In spite of that, there was still an incredibly long
line to get in. All to see some two thousand year old dirty pictures.
Ninety percent of these people are going to be very disappointed once
they get inside.
There was some evidence of restoration efforts going on around the
site. We passed some people wearing all white painstakingly putting pieces of
tile back into a mosaic on the floor. The tiles were tiny, and the task looked
like it was going to take a long time. They must have felt like the tiles were
worth preserving, though. They might have been a good example of the style
common for 79 AD.
Alternatively, they could have been a good example of poor Roman
housekeeping. Look how dirty that is!
In one of the villas in Pompeii, there was a wall that was partially
covered in paper. I noticed that a common thing for places under construction
in Rome was a picture of the final product covering the work, so I am guessing
that is what was going on with the villa as well. The other walls in the villa had some frescoes
on them. The frescoes were incredibly detailed and still smooth after thousands
of years!
Heaven forbid we miss out on the Doric columns and shrubbery.
We stopped for lunch at the cafeteria. Suzy and I got gelato,
naturally. It was really expensive though—3.50 euros for a cup! It was fine
gelato, but the flavor selection was pretty boring. Suzy got cherry and
pistachio, and I got chocolate and coffee. I suppose they had to keep it
someone tame for the tourists, but still.
Those are the faces of people used to paying 2 euros for gelato.
After lunch, we went to the lodging of the gladiators. There was a
central grassy area with a colonnade around the perimeter and rooms under the
colonnade. Many of the rooms were still intact, with modern doors on them, and
it looked like some of them were even in use. A couple had been adapted into
bathrooms, and one was labeled “office.” Some of the doors were unlabeled, but
I looked into the peephole of one and saw what looked like music equipment in
there. So maybe storage?
Storage: an unexciting legacy for a place that once housed gladiators.
We passed by one of the towers around the wall of Pompeii. I was
surprised that it was still nearly completely standing, because most of the buildings
that once had multiple levels were reduced to a single level by the pressure of
the volcanic material that buried the city. Naturally, they did not want us
going up the tower, because no one lets us have any fun.
Don’t tell me climbing up to that tower would not make you feel like
Indiana Jones.
We stopped for a photo-op with a clear view of Mt. Vesuvius, and I
captured this beauty:
By the end of the day, we were pretty sick of locked gates. They
usually were cutting off access to the things that were marked on the map, like
specific buildings and temples that Aaron was interested in. The fact that we
could see the stuff on the other side of the gate made it, if anything, much
worse. We KNEW there was cool stuff on the other side of the gate! We just
couldn’t get to it.
Pretty sure Steven nearly climbed over the gate here.
We visited the amphitheater. There was a wooden pyramid there that I am
guessing was not an original feature of the place. An exhibit was set up
showing the excavation of Pompeii, including plaster casts of the impressions
people made when they were covered by ash and killed. All of the poses
indicated that being in Pompeii at the time would have been horrible to be in
Pompeii.
They were all kind of contorted like this.
Aaron told us that there had not been a lot of jewelry or valuables found
in the private residences in Pompeii, which suggested that the people who had
the resources to left and took their valuables with them before they got turned
into future plaster molds. There was some stuff found in shops that sold things
like bronze, though. The shopkeepers were not able to take all of their stuff
with them.
After the amphitheater, we visited the Villa of the Mysteries. Suzy
complained about her feet being tired. I agreed. Suzy then pointed out the
strange smell of the place, which was probably caused by the vast amount of flowers
that lined the path to the villa. She said that it smelled like mustard, but I
thought it smelled more like smoke. At the villa, I did not hear a word that
Aaron was saying about the place. There was a dog, just lying in the middle of
the floor in one of the more important rooms!
What ancient rites? I’m going to name him Marcus Aurelius!
The dog must have heard me cooing over it, because he looked straight
at me before getting up and leaving the room. He ducked under one of the ropes
and came RIGHT UP TO ME. Normally, when I see stray dogs, I worry about rabies
and fleas and stuff, but this time he looked so friendly I plum forgot. He
allowed me to pat him for a second, then barked and started walking through the
villa. The rest of the class finally got distracted from Aaron’s lecture and
realized that there was a dog. We were all very excited. Suzy claimed that she
wished it was a cat, but I know the truth. We followed the dog through the
villa until we were stymied by a rope. A stupid rope.
Dogs are lucky. They do not have to respect stupid rope.
The dog noticed that we had stopped following him, so he turned and
looked at us meaningfully. Finally, I snapped. I think it was all the locked
doors from earlier. I ducked under the rope, and the rest of the class
followed, expressing awe at my bravery and relief that they get to see more of
Pompeii. We walked into a room, and then into a tunnel. The dog led the way
confidently for a stray.
Like an especially fun game of Follow the Leader.
Finally, we came out of the tunnel into a giant room. It was lined by a
colonnade and dominated in the center by a giant marble throne. Aaron whispered
that this was a temple that was not supposed to exist, a fairytale amongst
classicists. It was the Lost Temple of Augustus Iupiter Colossus Maximus.
Apparently, there was supposed to be a statue of Augustus as Jupiter on that
throne. Aaron wondered aloud where it was. We did not have to wait long to find
out.
A voice rang out from the shadows. “It was in my way!” A man revealed
himself. He was dressed like a cross between a bad imitation of Indiana Jones
and an old-timey archaeologist complete with monocle. He smirked and polished
his monocle. “I wanted a throne and there was one right here. Just had to get
that statue out of the way.”
He nodded toward a pile of rubble. Both Steve and Aaron looked like
they were going to cry. Aaron asked how he had managed to destroy something so
big. The man laughed maniacally.
“The same way Vesuvius is going to erupt today!” Ellie pointed out that
the volcano was not due to erupt for a long time. Hannah agreed, citing tectonic
plates. The man agreed with them, but then pulled back a sheet on a machine
that looked like a collection of concert equipment. He explained that a concert
was scheduled at Pompeii, which is where he got the parts for the machine. It
was a laser that would cause Vesuvius to erupt once more, and encase the whole
city in ash once more.
“Why?” Alexis asked. She was giving a signal to Jonah and Steve while
the guy was distracted. She probably knew the number one rule of dealing with
doomsday machines: distract their controller. The man explained that his
grandfather had actually discovered Pompeii, but got none of the credit for it.
“I am going to rediscover this place and get all of the accolades my
grandfather deserved!” he claimed.
There was a popping noise and a shower of sparks from the doomsday
machine. The dog barked loudly and wagged its tail, and the man sank back in
despair.
Steve and Jonah had successfully sabotaged the laser!
Someone managed to get cell phone reception enough to call the cops. It
turns out, we had been underneath the amphitheater the entire time. The dog
left us as the madman was hauled away in hand cuffs. It looked like he was
rejoining his owner. Aaron promised us all As for participation for the day.
All of these people are lucky to be alive.
Conclusion
I liked Ostia much better.

















New bedtime ritual: Alexis and I read your blog aloud together.
ReplyDeleteSide note, this story escalated quickly. I'm glad we all made it out okay.
I love this post! Pompeii was so much fun walking around even though a lot the things we wanted to see were closed. I definitely just wanted to climb the fence at some of those houses. I like your retelling of our adventures and heroism at saving the city from certain destruction, and you were right I did want to cry when we saw the rubble of Augustus statue! Great post! Well done!
ReplyDeleteThis was awesome! But on a serious note, why did you like Ostia better? I didn't go to Pompeii so I don't know what the difference is between the two. Pompeii was more rich, right? I would think Pompeii would be better because the plaster casts are there and you can see how the people were in a way. Also, you saved all the people of Pompeii! Or did you do something even more grand in Ostia that made that trip better? :)
ReplyDeleteGood post Morgan! Pompeii was a fun trip indeed, the train ride there was rough at some times, but overall it was worth it I think. Although, it was dissapointing to see that some places were closed so we could not access them. That was not very fun to see the gates. And yeah, our key could have been to climb over them too! Thank you for including me in your post, I appreciate it very much. Also, your story at the end, I was trying to recall all that happening, but I could not remember it all. But hey it was a very good story! Anyways I have a question. Did you like the Naples museum or not really?
ReplyDelete