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Friday, April 8, 2022

Prato and Madonna"s Girdle


His visit to the little city of Prato gave Edward Hutton occasion to relate the charming legend of Madonna's Girdle. In the Middle Ages a girdle was not an undergarment but a kind of belt worn about the waist. *     



Prato is like a flower that has fallen by the wayside that has faded in the dust of the way. She is a little cozy city, scarcely more than a castello, full of ruined churches; and in the churches are ruined frescoes, ruined statues, broken pillars, spoiled altars. You pass from one church to another… and you ask yourself, as you pass from one to another, what you have come to see: only this flower fallen by the wayside.

But in truth Prato is a child of Florence, a rosy child among the flowers—in the country, too, as children should be. Her churches are small. What could be more like a child’s dream of a church than La Madonna delle Carceri? And the Palazzo Pretorio—it is a toy palace wonderfully carved and contrived, a toy that has been thrown aside. …

And since Prato is a child, there are about her many children; mischievous, shy, joyful little people, who lurk round the coppersmiths, or play in the old churches, or hide about the corridors of Palazzo Communale. And so it is not surprising that the greatest treasures of Prato are either the work of children—the frescoes, for instance, of Lippo Lippi and Lucrezia Buzi in the Duomo—or the presentment of them, yes in their happiest moments; some dancing, while others play on pipes, or with cymbals full of surprising sweetness, in the open pulpit of Donatello; a pulpit from which five times every year a delightful and wonderful thing is shown, not without its significance, too, in this child city of children—Madonna’s Girdle, the Girdle of the Mother of them all, shown in the open air, so that even the tiniest may see. …



 

The very Girdle of Madonna herself, in its own chapel there on the left behind the beautiful bronze screen of Bruno di ser Lapo. There, too, you will always find a group of children, and surely it was for them that Agnolo Gaddi painted those frescoes of the life of Madonna and the gift of her Girdle to St. Thomas. For it seems that doubting Thomas was doubting to the last; he alone of all the saints was the least a child. How they wonder at him now, for first he could not believe that Jesus was risen from the dead, when the flowers rise, when the spring like Mary wanders to-day in tears in the garden…. After all, is it not the cry of our very hearts often enough at Easter, when the summer for which we have waited so long seems never to be coming at all? It came at last, and St. Thomas, like to us maybe, but unlike the children, would not believe it till he had touched the very dayspring with his hands, and felt the old sweetness of the sunshine. And so, when the sun was set and the world desolate, Madonna too came to die, and was received into heaven amid a great company of angels, and they were the flowers, and there she is eternally. Now, when all this came to pass, St. Thomas was not by, and when he came and saw Winter in the world, he would not believe that Madonna was dead, nor would he be persuaded that she was crowned Queen of Angels in heaven. And Mary, in pity of his sorrow, sent him by the hands of children, “the girdle with which her body was girt,”—just a strip of the blue sky sprinkled with stars,--“and therefore he understood that she was assumpt into heaven.” And if you ask how comes this precious thing to Prato, I ask where else, then, could it be but in this little city among the children, where the promise of Spring abides continually, and the Sun is ever in their hearts. Ah, Rose of the world, Lily of the fields, you will return, like Spring you will come from that heaven where you are, and in every valley the flowers will run before you, and the poppies will stray among the corn, and the proud gladiolus will bow its violet head; then on the hillside I shall hear again the silver laughter of the olives, and in the wide valleys I shall hear all the rivers running to the sea, and the sweet wind will wander in the villages,  and in the walled cities I shall find the flowers, and I too, with the children, shall wait on the hills at dawn to see you pass by with the sun in your arms because it is spring—Stella Matutina, Causa nostrae laetitiae. 

 


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*Note: Hutton relates that "a certain lad of Prato" following in the wake of a crusading army in Palestine in 1096 kissed the daughter of a great priest, and received from her the gift of Madonna's girdle.

 

Edward Hutton: Florence and Northern Tuscany with Genoa, second edition, London, 1908. Pp. 385-388.


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