Pilgrimage to Hydra
Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 3:29 am
I thought I'd tell you all about my recent pilgrimage to Hydra. Not that there's anything exciting to reveal, really, but it was a meaningful visit in its own way.
Myself and my nephew, being Leonard fans of some years standing, managed to persuade my mother and my wife to visit Hydra for the day. It was during the Easter holidays of this year, if I've got the dates right. I'd better point out that I live in Greece, on the island of Evia, and so day trips to the near islands (particularly to those in the Saronic Gulf) are not out of the question. We arrived on Hydra ill-prepared, without a map to Leonard's house, and only the memory of the strange hand-shaped knocker that I'd seen in a photograph. We eventually managed to find the house, thanks to the fact that my wife is Greek. But the important thing was not just to find the house itself, but to speak with Eviania, Leonard's "housekeeper", who holds the keys. The funny thing was, there are countless doors with the same hand knocker - and we only found the house, and Eviania, by pure luck, and by persuading my wife to chat with the locals.
Eviana, as any who have met her will testify, is a lovely woman. Leonard calls her "mama", by the way (funny, really, when you consider that she must be younger than him). She was very gracious with us, but was reluctant to let us in the house. Apparently the last gathering of Leonard fans on Hydra had left things a little tense between Leonard and those who wished to treat his house, as he put it, "like a museum". Leonard, who last visited Hydra about three years ago, was also annoyed by the fact that photographers arrived to take pictures of his home for a magazine without permission. Eviania was full of stories about Leonard - she described him as more like a god than a man, and couldn't help stressing how great a man he was. A great, great man she told us - not that we needed any persuading. Anyway, the conversation continued for long enough for us to get quite friendly with her. Looking back though, I still think we did the right thing in not pressing her to let us in to the house. We took some pictures of the outside of the house and the garden (including a bird on the wire!) - I can post some here if anyone wants - and left Hydra satisfied. I think Leonard deserves his privacy, even if he only visits occasionally.
Myself and my nephew, being Leonard fans of some years standing, managed to persuade my mother and my wife to visit Hydra for the day. It was during the Easter holidays of this year, if I've got the dates right. I'd better point out that I live in Greece, on the island of Evia, and so day trips to the near islands (particularly to those in the Saronic Gulf) are not out of the question. We arrived on Hydra ill-prepared, without a map to Leonard's house, and only the memory of the strange hand-shaped knocker that I'd seen in a photograph. We eventually managed to find the house, thanks to the fact that my wife is Greek. But the important thing was not just to find the house itself, but to speak with Eviania, Leonard's "housekeeper", who holds the keys. The funny thing was, there are countless doors with the same hand knocker - and we only found the house, and Eviania, by pure luck, and by persuading my wife to chat with the locals.
Eviana, as any who have met her will testify, is a lovely woman. Leonard calls her "mama", by the way (funny, really, when you consider that she must be younger than him). She was very gracious with us, but was reluctant to let us in the house. Apparently the last gathering of Leonard fans on Hydra had left things a little tense between Leonard and those who wished to treat his house, as he put it, "like a museum". Leonard, who last visited Hydra about three years ago, was also annoyed by the fact that photographers arrived to take pictures of his home for a magazine without permission. Eviania was full of stories about Leonard - she described him as more like a god than a man, and couldn't help stressing how great a man he was. A great, great man she told us - not that we needed any persuading. Anyway, the conversation continued for long enough for us to get quite friendly with her. Looking back though, I still think we did the right thing in not pressing her to let us in to the house. We took some pictures of the outside of the house and the garden (including a bird on the wire!) - I can post some here if anyone wants - and left Hydra satisfied. I think Leonard deserves his privacy, even if he only visits occasionally.