We were attracted to Locarno by the
approaching fetes in honour of the fourth centenary
of the apparition of the Virgin Mary to Fra Bartolomeo
da Ivrea, who founded the sanctuary in consequence.
The programme announced that the festivities
would begin on, Saturday, at 3.30 P.M., with the carrying
of the sacred image (sacro simulacro) of the Virgin
from the Madonna del Sasso to the collegiate church
of S. Antonio. There would then be a benediction
and celebration of the holy communion. At eight
o’clock there were to be illuminations, fireworks,
balloons, &c., at the sanctuary and the adjacent premises.
On Sunday at half-past nine there
was to be mass at the church of S. Antonio, with a
homily by Monsignor Paolo Angelo Ballerini, Patriarch
of Alexandria in partibus, and blessing of the crown
sent by Pope Leo XIII for the occasion. S. Antonio
is the church the roof of which fell in during service
one Sunday in 1865, through the weight of the snow,
killing sixty people. At half-past three a grand
procession would convey the Holy Image to a pretty
temple which had been erected in the market-place.
The image was then to be crowned by the Patriarch,
carried round the town in procession, and returned
to the church of S. Antonio. At eight o’clock
there were to be fireworks near the port; a grand
illumination of a triumphal arch, an illumination
of the sanctuary and chapels with Bengal lights, and
an artificial apparition of the Madonna (Apparizione
artificiale della Beata Vergine col Bambino) above
the church upon the Sacro Monte. Next day the
Holy Image was to be carried back from the church
of S. Antonio to its normal resting-place at the
sanctuary. We wanted to see all this, but it
was the artificial apparition of the Madonna that
most attracted us.
Locarno is, as every one knows, a
beautiful town. Both the Hotel Locarno and the
Hotel della Corona are good, but the latter is, I
believe, the cheaper. At the castello there is
a fresco of the Madonna, ascribed, I should think
rightly, to Bernardino Luini, and at the cemetery
outside the town there are some old frescoes of the
second half of the fifteenth century, in a ruinous
state, but interesting. If I remember rightly
there are several dates on them, averaging 1475-80.
They might easily have been done by the same man
who did the frescoes at Mesocco, but I prefer these
last. The great feature, however, of Locarno
is the Sacro Monte which rises above it. From
the wooden bridge which crosses the stream just before
entering upon the sacred precincts, the church and
chapels and road arrange themselves as on p. 269.
On the way up, keeping to the steeper
and abrupter route, one catches sight of the monks’
garden—a little paradise with vines, beehives,
onions, lettuces, cabbages, marigolds to colour the
risotto with, and a little plot of great luxuriant
tobacco plants. Amongst the foliage may be now
and again seen the burly figure of a monk with a straw
hat on. The best view of the sanctuary from
above is the one which I give on p. 270.
The church itself is not remarkable,
but it contains the best collection of votive pictures
that I know in any church, unless the one at Oropa
be excepted; there is also a modern Italian “Return
from the Cross” by Ciseri, which is very much
admired, but with which I have myself no sympathy
whatever. It is an Academy picture.
The cloister looking over the lake
is very beautiful. In the little court down
below—which also is of great beauty—there
is a chapel containing a representation of the Last
Supper in life-sized coloured statues as at Varallo,
which has a good deal of feeling, and a fresco (?)
behind it which ought to be examined, but the chapel
is so dark that this is easier said than done.
There is also a fresco down below in the chapel where
the founder of the sanctuary is buried which should
not be passed over. It is dated 1522, and is
Luinesque in character. When I was last there,
however, it was hardly possible to see anything, for
everything was being turned topsy-turvy by the arrangements
which were being made for the approaching fetes.
These were very gay and pretty; they must have cost
a great deal of money, and I was told that the municipality
in its collective capacity was thought mean, because
it had refused to contribute more than 100 francs,
or 4 pounds sterling. It does seem rather a
small sum certainly.
On the afternoon of Friday the 13th
of August the Patriarch Monsignor Ballerini was to
arrive by the three o’clock boat, and there
was a crowd to welcome him. The music of Locarno
was on the quay playing a selection, not from “Madame
Angot” itself, but from something very like
it—light, gay, sparkling opera bouffe—to
welcome him. I felt as I had done when I found
the matchbox in the sanctuary bedroom at Graglia:
not that I minded it myself, but as being a little
unhappy lest the Bishop might not quite like it.
I do not see how we could welcome
a bishop—we will say to a confirmation—with
a band of music at all. Fancy a brass band of
some twenty or thirty ranged round the landing stage
at Gravesend to welcome the Bishop of London, and
fancy their playing we will say “The two Obadiahs,”
or that horrid song about the swing going a little
bit higher! The Bishop would be very much offended.
He would not go a musical inch beyond the march in
“Le Prophete,” nor, willingly, beyond
the march in “Athalie.” Monsignor
Ballerini, however, never turned a hair; he bowed
repeatedly to all round him, and drove off in a carriage
and pair, apparently much pleased with his reception.
We Protestants do not understand, nor take any very
great pains to understand, the Church of Rome.
If we did, we should find it to be in many respects
as much in advance of us as it is behind us in others.
One thing made an impression upon
me which haunted me all the time. On every important
space there were advertisements of the programme,
the substance of which I have already given.
But hardly, if at all less noticeable, were two others
which rose up irrepressible upon every prominent space,
searching all places with a subtle penetrative power
against which precautions were powerless. These
advertisements were not in Italian but in English,
nevertheless they were neither of them English—but
both, I believe, American. The one was that
of the Richmond Gem cigarette, with the large illustration
representing a man in a hat smoking, so familiar to
us here in London. The other was that of Wheeler
& Wilson’s sewing machines.
As the Patriarch drove off in the
carriage the man in the hat smoking the Richmond Gem
cigarette leered at him, and the woman working Wheeler
& Wilson’s sewing machine sewed at him.
During the illuminations the unwonted light threw
its glare upon the effigies of saints and angels,
but it illumined also the man in the black felt hat
and the woman with the sewing machine; even during
the artificial apparition of the Virgin Mary herself
upon the hill behind the town, the more they let off
fireworks the more clearly the man in the hat came
out upon the walls round the market-place, and the
bland imperturbable woman working at her sewing machine.
I thought to myself that when the man with the hat
appeared in the piazza the Madonna would ere long
cease to appear on the hill.
Later on, passing through the town
alone, when the people had gone to rest, I saw many
of them lying on the pavement under the arches fast
asleep. A brilliant moon illuminated the market-place;
there was a pleasant sound of falling water from the
fountain; the lake was bathed in splendour, save where
it took the reflection of the mountains—so
peaceful and quiet was the night that there was hardly
a rustle in the leaves of the aspens. But whether
in moonlight or in shadow, the busy persistent vibrations
that rise in Anglo-Saxon brains were radiating from
every wall, and the man in the black felt hat and
the bland lady with the sewing machine were there—lying
in wait, as a cat over a mouse’s hole, to insinuate
themselves into the hearts of the people so soon as
they should wake.
Great numbers came to the festivities.
There were special trains from Biasca and all intermediate
stations, and special boats. And the ugly flat-nosed
people came from the Val Verzasca, and the beautiful
people came from the Val Onsernone and the Val Maggia,
and I saw Anna, the curate’s housekeeper, from
Mesocco, and the old fresco painter who told me he
should like to pay me a visit, and suggested five
o’clock in the morning as the most appropriate
and convenient time. The great procession contained
seven or eight hundred people. From the balcony
of the Hotel della Corona I counted as well as I could
and obtained the following result:-
Women 120
Men with white shirts and red capes 85
Men with white shirts and no capes (?)
The music from Intra 30
Men with white shirts and blue capes 25
Men with white shirts and no capes 25
Men with white shirts and green capes 12
Men with white shirts and no capes 36
The music of Locarno 30
Girls in blue, pink, white and yellow,
red, white
50
Choristers 3
Monks 6
Priests 66
Canons 12
His Excellency Paolo Angelo Ballerini,
Patriarch of Alexandria in Egypt,
escorted by the firemen, and his
private cortege of about 20
25
Government ushers (?)
The Grand Council, escorted by 22
soldiers
and 6 policemen 28
The clergy without orders 30
583
In the evening, there, sure enough,
the apparition of the Blessed Virgin was. The
church of the Madonna was unilluminated and all in
darkness, when on a sudden it sprang out into a blaze,
and a great transparency of the Virgin and child was
lit up from behind. Then the people said, “Oh
bel!”
I was myself a little disappointed.
It was not a good apparition, and I think the effect
would have been better if it had been carried up by
a small balloon into the sky. It might easily
have been arranged so that the light behind the transparency
should die out before the apparition must fall again,
and also that the light inside the transparency should
not be reflected upon the balloon that lifted it;
the whole, therefore, would appear to rise from its
own inherent buoyancy. I am confident it would
have been arranged in this way if the thing had been
in the hands of the Crystal Palace people.
There is a fine old basilicate church
dedicated to S. Vittore at the north end of Locarno.
It is the mother church of these parts and dates
from the eighth or ninth century. The frescoes
inside the apse were once fine, but have been repainted
and spoiled. The tower is much later, but is
impressive. It was begun in 1524 and left incomplete
in 1527, probably owing to the high price of provisions
which is commemorated in the following words written
on a stone at the top of the tower inside
1527
Furm. [fromento—­corn] cost lib. 6. 
Segale [barley] lib. 5. 
Milio [millet] lib. 4.
I suppose these were something like
famine prices; at any rate, a workman wrote this upon
the tower and the tower stopped.