“As for the scenes we shared in the Piazza Unita that day in 1897, I can hear the music still, but all the rest is phantom. The last passenger liner sailed long ago. The schooners, steamboats and barges have disappeared. No tram has crossed the piazza for years. The Caffe Flora changed its name to Nazionale when the opportunity arose, and is now defunct. The Governor's Palace is now only the Palace of the Prefect and the Lloyd Austriaco headquarters, having metamorphosed into Lloyd Triestino when the Austrians left, are now government offices: wistfully the marble tritons blow their their horns, regretfully Neptune and Mercury linger upon their entablatures. Those silken and epauletted passengers, with all they represented, have vanished from the face of Europe, and I am left all alone listening to the band.”
Quote by Jan Morris
Work
Trieste And The Meaning Of Nowhere
This work delves into the history, culture, and atmosphere of Trieste, a city often perceived as a place of transition and ambiguity. The author examines the city's role in shaping the identity of its inhabitants and its position as a crossroads of Eastern and Western influences. The book provides a nuanced understanding of the city's unique character and its symbolic representation of a place that is neither here nor there, both a destination and a point of departure. more
Author
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