“The sentimental tourist
makes images in advance; they grow up in his mind by a logic of their own. He
finds himself thinking of an unknown, unseen place, as having such and such a
shape and figure rather than such another. It assumes in his mind a certain
complexion, a certain colour which frequently turns out to be singularly at
variance with reality.”
In the twenty-first century,
fifteen years is a long time in the life of an American city. I know that the
old house on Phila Street, two blocks off Broadway, the main drag, where we
lived from 1997 to 2000, burned down more than a decade ago. Hattie’s Chicken
Shack moved out of downtown and Border’s closed. I would still know my way
around but the “shape and figure” would be different. “I had made a cruelly
small allowance,” James writes, “for the stern vulgarities of life—for the
shops and sidewalks and loafers, the complex machinery of a city of pleasure.”
James spent a month in
Saratoga, where the thoroughbred track had opened in 1863. He was twenty-seven,
had been publishing short stories for six years and recently completed his
first novel, Watch and Ward, which would be published the following year.
In one of his late autobiographies, James would place himself among life’s “incorrigible
observers,” a role already on display. He takes a seat on the piazza of one
of the great hotels along Broadway,
“. . . affording
sitting-space in the open air to an immense number of persons. They are, of
course, quite the best places to observe the Saratoga world. In the evening,
when the ‘boarders’ have all come forth and seated themselves in groups, or
have begun to stroll in (not always, I regret to say, to the sad detriment of
the dramatic interest, bisexual) couples, the big heterogeneous scene affords a
great deal of entertainment. Seeing it for the first time, the observer is
likely to assure himself that he has neglected an important item in the sum of
American manners.”
When my middle son was about
three years old, we would go to a Broadway coffee shop on a sunny afternoon,
take a seat on the sidewalk, share an iced tea and watch the human parade. James
goes on to describe a distinctly American scene:
“The part played by
children in society here is only an additional instance of the wholesale
equalisation of the various social atoms which is the distinctive feature of
collective Saratoga. A man in a ‘duster’ at a ball is as good as a man in
regulation-garments; a young woman dancing with another young woman is as good as
a young woman dancing with a young man; a child of ten is as good as a woman of
thirty; a double negative in conversation is rather better than a single.”
It’s good to recall James’
drily comic sense. In his concluding paragraph, in a mock-pastoral mode, he
describes the “wilderness” surrounding Saratoga:
“You feel around you, with
irresistible force, the eloquent silence of undedicated nature—the absence of
serious associations, the nearness, indeed, of the vulgar and trivial
associations of the least complete of all the cities of pleasure—you feel this,
and you wonder what it is you so deeply and calmly enjoy. . . . And hereupon
you return to your hotel and read the New York papers on the plan of the French
campaign and the Nathan murder.”
See the photograph of Saratoga Springs taken by Walker Evans in 1931 – closer to James’ time than to ours.
Evans is facing south down Broadway, shooting from an upper floor in one of the
old hotels described by James, now razed.
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