14 OCTOBER 2006, Page 86

Remembrance of things past

Sarah Standing reflects on Venice — a city of operatic magnitude Going to Venice with someone you don’t really love is as recklessly short-sighted as intentionally losing your virginity during a meaningless onenight stand. It’s a seminal adventure that should be saved up; the clichéd carrot dangled before every true romantic’s heart. It’s one of those exquisite, rare cities that stands alone albeit precariously — and unfailingly delivers.

To go too soon or to go with the wrong person is like reading Anna Karenina at 17 and passing it off as just a slushy romantic novel. You have to have really lived, lusted and tumbled off the tightrope a few times before you can recognise Tolstoy’s depth of agonising passion and have any comprehension of what it’s like to have loved and lost. I think the same criterion applies to Venice.

I was lucky. I went for the first time with my husband in 1984, newly pregnant with our first child. We went in the middle of winter and, as we sped from the airport in our luggage-laden vaporetto, it began to snow. Proper, cinematic snow. My first impression of Venice, therefore, was of a distant, ghostly jewel rising from the lagoon like a watery mirage. For me it was a coup de foudre.

We could ill-afford to stay at the Danieli, (www.danieli.hotelinvenice.com), but Johnnie had made the grandest of grand gestures and surprised me by booking us into a shuttered and chandeliered room (the size of our studio flat in London) which overlooked the Grand Canal. As we checked in I can remember feeling quite giddy with happiness.

I’d always imagined Venice to be full of smelly canals and hordes of tourists jostling one another before dimly-lit Tintorettos, but out of season it’s a glorious ghost town, its emptiness only enhancing its charm and operatic magnitude.

When we walked through the Piazza San Marco — once rightly described by Napoleon as ‘the best drawing room in Europe’ — it was carpeted with thick snow. At night as we picked our way between the pigeons, heading for the warmth of hot chocolate at Florian’s, it felt as though we were drifting through a painted stage flat. It was a totally surreal and out-of-body experience. The eerie solitude of the square just compounded the elegiac, haunting allure.

Certain cities come with their own epitaphs and consequently have built-in expectations. If you visit New York you understandably tend to absorb the frenzied 24/7 business of the place, and Venice too produces its own unavoidable knee-jerk reactions. To me, it manages to combine overwhelming joy with deep sadness. It never disappoints, because its faded elegance is omnipresent. Layer upon layer of beaten-up beauty surrounds you, providing a feast for all the senses. I love the nonchalance. I love the fact you can tentatively push open the door to a church and suddenly find yourself staring at the most exquisite Bellini. There’s no accompanying fanfare, no entrance fees to get in, no guards standing by to protect — just the flickering light of a couple of candles and a veiled Venetian stooped in prayer for company.

Mundane, everyday life happily coexists beside such national treasures and mooching about is like having free reign to wander through an all-encompassing museum. I love all the unexpected vistas. A glimpse of washing incongruously left out to dry in direct juxtaposition to a Palladian villa. San Giorgio degli Schiavoni with its wall-to-wall dirty Carpaccios, the Frari’s Basilica with its Titians, Vivaldi’s church Santa Maria della Pietà are jumbled among tourist traps selling sinister Longhi masks, high-fashion boutiques, markets, dusty stationary shops, cafés and pedlars trying to flog fake Prada bags.

Johnnie and I go back every two or three years. It’s become an addiction. A harmless pleasure that unless fed regularly develops into a craving. It fortifies the soul. Last week we’d planned a long, lazy weekend away. Our bags were packed, the Ryanair bookings printed, the children all organised and taken care of. Just as we were about to leave for the airport Johnnie felt suddenly ill, struck down with some vicious gastric bug.

‘I’m sure I’ll be fine when we get there,’ he nobly mumbled from the bowels of the bathroom, sensing my impending disappointment.

‘You don’t really sound like you will,’ I retorted, a mite unsympathetically.

‘I might,’ he groaned. ‘I’ll try.’ And then I heard him mutter plaintively, ‘I just hope this time it isn’t death in Venice... ’. That did it. We didn’t go. Selfishly, I want all my memories of this city to remain good ones.

DAVID MONTGOMERY