A distinguished automotive executive who was a member of the Scuderia in the Thirties has impressed upon me the point that there were two marques that commanded Ferrari's intense interest: Packard, as we have seen, and Bugatti. The talent of Ettore Bugatti as the creator of legend and image fascinated Ferrari. My source is emphatic about the fact that the Cavallino/ Baracca elements of the carefully crafted Ferrari image were chosen in emulation of the Bugatti mix of pur sang horse-flash and fighter-pilot heroism-Roland Garros in the case of the man from Molsheim.
In all of the literature I have read on the marque I am unaware of any explanation of how the title of Commendatore came to Ferrari, nor of its correct meaning. First, let it be noted that in Italian, titles that end with -re-Signore, Dottore, for example-almost always drop the final "e" when followed by a proper name. To resume, then, when the Coppa Acerbo was organized under regal auspices at Pescara in 1924, one of the incentives to win was, perhaps on this sole occasion, bestowal of the rank of Cavaliere (Knight) of the Order of the Crown. In our hero's case, this reward may have been the actual incentive to win what would prove to be the most important contest in his career as a racing driver. Thus at the youthful age of 26 he fairly and legitimately became Sir Enzo Ferrari to the world-and in his own self-image.
How the Cavaliere in turn became Commendatore was explained to me by his faithful aide of decades, Franco Gozzi. Within the Order of the Crown there were three grades: Cavaliere, Commendatore, and Grand Ufficiale. It was due to his great achievements with the Scuderia in the Thirties that the Crown elevated him to the next rank, that of Commendatore. The title does not mean one who has received royal commendation, but one who may dispense commendation. Only war and the fall of the Italian monarchy prevented Ferrari's ascension to the ultimate degree.
As it grew, La Ferrari-the company- became a marvelously complex and unwieldy creature. It featured separate divisions for the design, development, fabrication, and campaigning of racing cars, and was boosted by its own small sales department. Then, of course, and to help pay for the costly racing sector, a full blown passenger-car manufacturing and marketing enterprise was allowed to take on a parallel existence.
Sir Enzo was getting no younger as this clamorous monster evolved. He was preparing to pass the scepter of command to son Dino-not to retire, God forbid, but in order to start getting some well earned rest after a long and tumultuous career. But Dino's health withered away and in 1956 he died, appearing to take with him all hope of linear succession. This tragedy in the life of the 58-year-old giant was lived out in the most public way for decades to come.
The wounds from the catastrophe were wide open when, in 1957, Enzo's suffering was vastly compounded when he was treated by certain elements of church, state, and press as a criminal public enemy because of de Portago's fatal exit into the crowd in that year's Mille Miglia. This suffering, too, took on a high public profile.
It was in about 1959 that Sir Enzo's image acquired a new, all too cryptic facet. Making vague allusion to the colorful Elizabethan buccaneer Sir Francis Drake, a journalist-either Gianni Reif or Dario Zanasi-referred to Ferrari as "II Drake." For some unimaginable reason the title, pronounced "drah-kay" in Italian, was seized upon by the national press and still today is a readily recognized way of referring to Il Grande Vecchio.
In 1960 the prestigious University of Bologna honored him with the tide of Ingegnere, a title he thereafter preferred over Commendatore. And as Enzo Ferrari was about to expire, the University of Modena finally came to life, making him on honorary Doctor of Physics.
Ferrari loved language, and spoke it with elegant force. He was a good public speaker who could have become an impressive orator. He loved the written word and had done some writing himself, first as a banal reporter of sporting events, later as a staffer on the Scuderia periodicals, which he invented and ran. He was not a good writer by any stretch of the imagination. His Le Terribili ("My Terrible Joys") appeared first in 1962, as a rather naive compendium of answers to questions posed by an imaginary interviewer Getting 115 version of the story down in durable print was the objective, not literary frills. That act of self-discipline, when he had myriad other responsibilities, was an excellent investment in image. The text has gone through many editions and much rewriting in various languages. Of course, it is the first reference that most writers consult for authoritative data on the great man's career. His memoirs have become history, regardless of their manifest subjectivity. If you want a thing done right, do it yourself. And it was all-important to Enzo that this thing be done right-his way.
I was in San Francisco and Sir Enzo in Maranello when we began a sporadic correspondence in 1949. He was just another early postwar specialty-car builder trying to find a foothold. By the time I became settled in Italy in 1963, Ferrari and his enterprise had already achieved worldwide renown, and both were impressive to observe at first hand. Admirable at times, he was awful at others, and was notorious for being irrationally unpredictable. As a human figure, he would have looked superb in a Roman toga. He could be jovial, but those in his entourage cringed at his frown. Ferrari and I would meet occasionally, but always under distracting, crowded conditions.
It was not until 1975 that this pattern changed. I had gone to the now Fiat owned Maranello factory to interview its president on the prospects for the marque in a country on the brink of takeover by the political Left. As I was leaving, who should hook my arm but Gozzi. He smiled
and said, "Borgeson, Engineer Ferrari would like to greet you before you get away. It will just take a moment."
By this time II Grande Vecchio had become literally a demigod for a good segment of the Italian population, and a personage of world distinction. I was delightfully surprised and honored. Sir Enzo's greeting was warm. He had been a student of the printed word about him since the early days, and he knew what I had put on paper. The ensuing conversation was as relaxed and intimate as though it had taken place in the den of an old friend. In the end it was I who had to take my leave. To chat with Ferrari was to exchange ideas with a totally unpretentious individual of very broad culture and erudition. He seemed to have read everything from Benedetto Croce to Einstein, with Stendahl, Ludwig, and Playboy thrown in along the way. And his schooling?
"Well, I did the three primary years, then three of technical school."
I suppose that the latter was essentially shop training. His enormous intellectual assets had been acquired, then, entirely through his own efforts. The climax of the rambling, easy-going session came when I asked Ferrari if the phenomenon that was the present-day firm rested on a particular philosophical base.
"La Ferrari," he said, "is the living expression of my dreams. A car is a rather beautiful and fascinating thing. It is because of that, and because there is no perfection but only evolution, that I continue to dream."
This caused me to quote words by Lawrence of Arabia, concerning dreams as a motivating force in life: "All men dream, but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds, wake in the day to find that it is vanity. But the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible."
"That is exactly it!" was Sir Enzo's emphatic response. "E' tutto It!"
In composing the foregoing I have had the precious help of my dear friends Gianni Cancellieri and Adolfo Orsi.-GB
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