John Dunphy & wife Rebecca Allen enjoy Trevi Fountain, cafe in Rome |
Dunphy enjoying Rome
Former BJ reporter John Dunphy, retired from the Orange County
(California) Register, is enjoying Rome with wife Rebecca Allen, who spent a
lot of years as deputy Features editor at the same newspaper.
Writes John:
“Rome's
famed Trevi fountain was all fenced in and dry, looking more like a shipwreck
than art. But we had a great walk around the area. Next was the Vatican tour
which was great, but bit too long for these old feet. Nothing a cold glass of
wine couldn't cure. Stay tuned...”
Rebecca
chimed in:
“We had
a 5-hour tour of the Vatican museums and the St. Peter's basilica today. The
weather was perfectly sunny and breezy. After we got back to the hotel to have
lunch and rest our aching feet, thunder and lightning crashed through the sky
and a wonderful downpour cleaned the air. We must be doing something right!
Sorry for the delay on letting you know we arrive safely. We couldn't figure
out how to use our international data plan at first.”
The Trevi Fountain was
constructed around 19 BC by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, son-in-law and favorite
general of Emperor Octavian Augustus, to supply the thermal baths he built in
the Campus Martius, by the Pantheon. The display spilling water was on the site
of the Church of St. Ignatius.
In 2006 when Paula
and I visited the Trevi Fountain an Italian policeman blew his whistle
vigorously when I dunked my bare feet in the swirling waters. It was part of
our 15-day bus tour of Italy, from Venice to the Isle of Capri, before we
headed for my heritage. That’s my hand around Paula behind the photo of Dunphy
sitting at a Rome café outside table in the montage above.
I walked through the
1884 stone house where my grandmother grew up, and slept in one bedroom with
seven other family members, in Mione, a 2-block-by-3-block hamlet in the
foothills of the Alps. And later we drove about 20 miles southwest to
Pellizzano, today a whitewater rafting tourist attraction, where my mother,
grandfather, aunt and uncle were born.
They all came to
America by 1920, and wound up in Fairmont, West Virginia, where my mother met
my Monongah coal mining father, whose family came to America from Mogilno, Poland and got
to West Virginia after trying their luck in Pennsylvania and Michigan.
No comments:
Post a Comment