LUCE 330 | Page 27

Ritratto di / Portrait of Natalia Ginzburg © Fondazione 1563 per l'Arte e la Cultura, Compagnia di San Paolo Natalia Ginzburg’s Voices – and lights – in the Evening A t the beginning of her novel Voices in the Evening (published by Giulio Einaudi editore in 1961, and re-published in 2015 in a new edition by Domenico Scarpa), Natalia Ginzburg writes: “It was October, beginning to get cold; in the village behind us the first street lamps had been lit, and the blue globe of the Hotel Concordia illuminated the deserted square with a vitreous light.” She thus touches the topic of light in the landscape. Her way of writing, as noted by Italo Calvino, always used simple elementary sentences that were, however, able to include a relation with the outside world made of affection, amazement, and irony. The landscape that is dear to Natalia is that of the Piedmont region: “in the distance, in the evening one could distinguish the lights of Castello, and the scattered ones of Castel Piccolo, high upon the shoulder of the hill; and beyond the hill – says the author –, is the town”. One of the protagonists of the story visits the city right up to “the last bus, at ten o'clock in the evening”; the city is coveted and evoked at sunset, when in the town where Elsa lives the lamps are lit. Natalia Ginzburg is fascinated by light. However, in her story centred around dialogues, light enters the scene indirectly, only in the dialogues, always at the same hour, always in the evening, therefore assuming an atemporal significance. “In the evenings, they were alone, she and Mario, in the great drawing-room, crowded with dark pictures, valuable china, and mirrors. A few candles in silver candelabra were lit, and there was no other light”. Madame Cecilia commented that “with those candles, at least they save on the electric light.” But “that was not true, they also paid enormous bills of electric light.” The stories, the many stories that Natalia tells, appear and reappear in the evening twilight that absorbs all the big and small events. “The next day, in the evening, Tommasino came to speak to my father.” After some days, “he started to come every evening,” and when the engagement is broken, Elsa asks Tommasino, “Is this what you were thinking about while we were in the sitting room in the evening, with Aunt Ottavia? You were turning your back on your own soul?” Just like Tommasino, also Elsa hid her identity in the evening; they buried their thoughts, as Italo Calvino specifies in his introduction to the mirror-story of the disenchanted and uniform vision of Natalia Ginzburg’s existence, where no one loves anyone anymore. In a rigorous and unscrupulous manner, Natalia Ginzburg uses the word “evening” in the dialogues without mentioning the lights. But in her short novel, the elegiac tone yields to the feelings of love in such an evanescent way that they disappear as soon as Natalia brings them to light, in the evening. 11 – To be continued. For “Epiphanies of light”, to date, the following short stories by Empio Malara have been published in LUCE: “Alessandro Manzoni, a creator of light” (n.317, September 2016); “Herman Melville. Light that invites us on a journey” (n.321, September 2017); “Light and dark in the portrait of James Joyce as a young man” (n.322, December 2017); “Flashes and lights in Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms” (n.323, March 2018); “The artificial sun in the novel The magic mountain by Thomas Mann” (n.324, June 2018); “The irreverent and irrational light in some texts by Carlo Emilio Gadda” (n.325, September 2018). “Philip Roth’s revealing lights in American Pastoral” (n.326, December 2018); “Marcel Proust’s lighted windows in the novel Swann’s Way” (n.327, March 2019); "In the Light of Leonardo da Vinci" (n.328, June 2019); "Fyodor Dostoevsky's dark underground as illuminated by Alberto Moravia" (n.329, September 2019) EPIPHANIES OF LIGHT / LUCE 330 25