En flânant de Messine à Cadix

 
 
 
Book cover of "En flânant de Messine à Cadix"

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"In peril on the sea" by Montague T. Hainsselin is a travel narrative written in the early 20th century. It follows a cultivated wanderer and his companion on a Mediterranean journey from Naples through Sicily toward Spain, blending eyewitness reportage with lyrical impressions. The likely focus is coastal ports, seaborne passages, and the human and urban landscape reshaped by disaster—especially around Reggio and Messina—before turning toward North Africa and Andalusia. The opening of the work finds the narrator in Naples hunting passage to Spain, daydreaming of exotic encounters aboard a German liner, then deciding first to cross into Sicily by land to see Calabria. As the train skirts the coast, hints of the recent earthquake sharpen into fields of rubble and a chastened, half-camped Reggio, where the travelers lodge in wooden barracks, wander stunned among ruins at dusk, and sense fear and distrust after dark. At dawn they cross the strait: from afar Messina looks serene, but up close it is a vast carcass of fallen palaces, gutted streets, and silent interiors, with a few eerie survivals—the theater intact, a statue untouched, a lone reinforced house now serving meals. Amid this devastation, a provisional city of shops and barracks hums to life, while water is drawn from hacked pipes and clearance seems impossibly slow. The section closes with a ride to Taormina and a hotelier’s harrowing testimony of the first days—panic, looting, scattered families, and frayed nerves—prompting the narrator’s sober reflection on how survival itself has morally unbalanced the living. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

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