Mistake 11: Not coming back
From:
Top 11 Tourist Mistakes

ABOVE: A cruise ship takes visitors away from
Venice.
Venice isn't one of those places that you can see once and
forget before you die. If you're like us, you'll become hooked on Venice, and
you'll want to spend more time in the city with each passing year.
In
her delightful book,
No Vulgar Hotel: The Desire and Pursuit of Venice, Judith Martin (better
known as "Miss Manners" ) writes:
"If...playing at being Venetian sounds like so much
Cinderella-crazed girlish nonsense, consider some of the toughies who have
thoroughly indulged their own fantasies: Lord Byron, Friedrich Nietzsche, Robert
Browning, Ernest Hemingway, Ezra Pound. And if they all seem to be wild
romantics, not to mention disgracefully self-dramatizing show-offs, here is the
confession of someone [Henry James] not exactly known for the expression of
unfettered personal passions: 'I adore it--have fallen deeply and desperately in
love with it.'"
Don't
get us, Judith Martin, or the late Henry James wrong: We aren't suggesting that
Venice is perfect. Too many neighborhood stores have been replaced by mask shops
or souvenir stands, the summers are hot and humid, and acqua alta--the
tidal flooding that can inundate low-lying areas of the city for several hours
at a time--is a frequent nuisance from late fall until early spring. Young
people must go to Mestre or Verona for pop concerts, and Venice's football club
(which last won the Italian Cup in 1940) has declared bankruptcy twice in recent
years.
Still, as Signora Martin tells us, the city has more
than enough virtues to attract and entrap Venetophiles:
"For all of its grandeur, it is built to the human scale. While
the tangle of streets, alleys, and canals forms a maze that can confuse even
old-timers, the city is small enough to be comprehensible. You will get lost,
but it will be in places that are familar and welcoming."
Another
virtue (if one ignores pickpockets) is the fact that, in Martin's words, "Venice
is startlingly crime-free....The experience of taking an urban walk at night,
finding oneself in a dark passage, and suddenly hearing the echoes of a
stranger's footsteps approaching from behind is disorienting in Venice, because
all it heralds is the arrival of a matron carrying home a pastry box by its
ribbons, and pleasantly open to being of help if you have lost your way."
By
now, it should be clear that Venice is an addictive pleasure, but one that
needn't require months in rehab. If you're like many visitors to Venice, you
won't need us to tell you that failing to come back is a painful mistake--and a
sin that you should make every effort to avoid.
Back to:
Top 11 Tourist Mistakes in
Venice - Introduction
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