Randolph Rogers | Nydia, the Blind Flower Girl of Pompeii, 1859

Randolph Rogers | Nydia, the Blind Flower Girl of Pompeii, 1859

"Nydia, the Blind Flower Girl of Pompeii" by Randolph Rogers (Waterloo, New York 1825-1892 Rome) was the most popular American sculpture of the nineteenth century.
According to Rogers, it was replicated 167 times in two sizes.
The subject was drawn from "The Last Days of Pompeii" (1834), a widely read novel by Lord Edward Bulwer-Lytton, which ends with the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in a.d. 79.
Rogers’s evocative portrayal of Nydia highlights her heroic attempt to lead two companions out of the burning, ash-covered city.


Her closed eyes and staff allude to her blindness, while the hand raised to her ear refers to her acute sense of hearing.
The destruction of Pompeii is symbolized by the broken Corinthian capital beside her right foot. | © The Metropolitan Museum of Art.


Among the most memorable characters in Edward Bulwer-Lytton's hugely popular novel The Last Days of Pompeii (1834) is Nydia, a blind flower seller.
In love with the noble-born Glaucus, who is engaged to Ione, Nydia knows the hopelessness of her position and endures her suffering with quiet courage.

On the fateful day in A.D. 79 when Vesuvius erupts and buries Pompeii, Nydia attempts to lead Glaucus and Ione to safety through the darkness caused by the falling ash.
In the crush of the fleeing crowds, the three become separated, and Nydia desperately seeks to find the others.


As Bulwer-Lytton wrote:
"... it occurred to Nydia, that as it had been resolved to seek the seashore for escape, her most probable chance of rejoining her companions would be to persevere in that direction.
Guiding her steps, then, by the staff which she always carried, she continued, with incredible dexterity, to avoid the masses that encumbered her path-to thread the streets - and unerringly (so blessed was that accustomed darkness, so afflicting in ordinary life) to take the nearest direction to the sea-side.
Poor girl! her courage was beautiful to behold! and Fate seemed to favor one so helpless.

The boiling torrents touched her not... but spared that frail form...
Weak, exposed, yet fearless, supported by but one wish, she was the very emblem of Psyche in her wanderings... of Hope, walking through the Valley of the Shadow; a very emblem of the Soul itself - alone but comforted, amid the dangers and snares of life".


Nydia ultimately does rejoin and save Glaucus and Ione, but realizing that her love will never be fulfilled, drowns herself in despair.
Randolph Rogers was one of the most gifted of the many American sculptors who lived and worked in Italy during the nineteenth century.

Like other neoclassical sculptors of the day, he sought subjects that would allow him to demonstrate an accomplished handling of the human form and technical understanding of the medium of marble, but which would also convey a strong moral message.

Just a decade earlier Hiram Powers had gained fame and fortune with his Greek Slave (1843), skillfully blending the allure of a full-length female nude with a narrative text that stressed her chasteness and piety.

With Nydia, Rogers followed a similar path, for although she is clothed, those familiar with the story would have delighted in the mix of sensual longing and doomed love.
Furthermore, unlike Powers' Greek Slave, who stands motionless, Rogers' Nydia is dramatically animated.


She is shown hurrying, hand to ear, listening for directional clues, as her drapery streams around her body and flutters behind her.
In a particularly beautiful passage, Rogers arranged the clothing folded around her staff and cascading down below it.
At her side a fallen Corinthian capital reminds the viewer of the death and destruction that surrounds her as she flees.

Nydia was a great success for Rogers, achieving a popularity rivaled by few contemporary sculptures and ultimately earning him more than $70,000.
In accord with accepted practice, Rogers first completed a full-size plaster model, which then served as the basis for marble versions that were cut and finely polished by skilled Italian masons.

Smaller examples, measuring only 36 inches, and much less costly, were also made in substantial numbers, spreading the sculpture's fame far and wide.

Full-scale versions such as this are far less common, and rank with Powers' Greek Slave and William Wetmore Story's Cleopatra as key works of American nineteenth-century sculpture. | by Franklin Kelly, published in the National Gallery of Art exhibition catalogue, Art for the Nation.



"Nydia, la fioraia cieca di Pompei" fu la scultura Americana più popolare del XIX secolo.

Secondo l'autore, lo scultore Americano Randolph Rogers (Waterloo, New York 1825-1892 Rome), ne furono realizzate 167 repliche in due diverse dimensioni.

Il soggetto è tratto da "Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei" (1834), un romanzo di Lord Edward Bulwer-Lytton molto letto, che si conclude con l'eruzione del Vesuvio nel 79 d.C.
La suggestiva rappresentazione di Nydia da parte di Rogers mette in risalto il suo eroico tentativo di condurre due compagni fuori dalla città in fiamme e ricoperta di cenere.

Gli occhi chiusi ed il bastone alludono alla sua cecità, mentre la mano portata all'orecchio si riferisce al suo udito finissimo.
La distruzione di Pompei è simboleggiata dal capitello corinzio spezzato accanto al suo piede destro. | © The Metropolitan Museum of Art


Nydia (o Nidia) è uno dei personaggi più famosi e commoventi del romanzo storico Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (The Last Days of Pompeii), scritto da Edward Bulwer-Lytton nel 1834.

Chi è Nydia

Il ruolo: È una giovane schiava greca, cieca, che vive a Pompei sbarcando il lunario come fioraia e suonatrice di cetra.
Il carattere: Nonostante la sua condizione di schiavitù e la cecità, è un personaggio fiero, sensibile e profondamente appassionato.

La trama ed il triangolo amoroso

L'amore non corrisposto: Nydia è segretamente e disperatamente innamorata di Glauco, un nobile e generoso ateniese.
Il salvataggio: Glauco, impietosito dalle sofferenze della ragazza (che veniva maltrattata dai suoi padroni), la riscatta e la tiene con sé, trattandola con estrema gentilezza.
La rivale: Glauco è però innamorato della bellissima Ione.
Nydia, consumata dalla gelosia, viene ingannata dal malvagio sacerdote Arbace, che la usa per dividere i due amanti.


Il riscatto e l'eroismo durante l'eruzione

Il momento di massimo splendore del personaggio coincide con la catastrofica eruzione del Vesuvio del 79 d.C.:

Il paradosso della cecità: Mentre l'intera città di Pompei viene avvolta dall'oscurità totale a causa della cenere e dei fumi tossici, i cittadini vedenti entrano nel panico più totale, incapaci di orientarsi.
La guida: Nydia, abituata a muoversi nel buio grazie ai suoi sensi super sviluppati (tatto e udito), diventa l'unica persona in grado di trovare la via di fuga.
Il sacrificio: La ragazza rintraccia Glauco e Ione nel caos e, mettendo da parte la propria gelosia, li prende per mano e li guida sani e salvi verso il mare, salvando loro la vita.

La fine tragica

Una volta in salvo su una barca, consapevole che il suo amore per Glauco non potrà mai essere ricambiato e sfinita dal dolore, Nydia decide di porre fine alle sue sofferenze.
Approfittando del sonno dei due amanti, si lascia scivolare silenziosamente nelle acque del mare, annegando.

La figura di Nydia ha riscosso un enorme successo nell'Ottocento, diventando un vero e proprio mito romantico.