A.J. Liebling’s valediction – to New York City, The New Yorker and the grand celebration that was his life as a writer – was published two weeks after his death, in the January 11, 1964 issue of the magazine that had printed more than five-hundred of his pieces since he joined the staff in 1935. In “Paysage de Crépuscule,” the writer gazes out the window of his office, looking west down Forty-third Street at twilight:
“The
skyscrapers that make up the two walls date from the twenties, the period of
the hollow ziggurat. The signature skyscraper of our own age is the upended
glass coffin. When I look at the set-back shoulders of the old ones, I
visualize them at the date of the crash, with suiciding holders of mortgage bonds cascading from
level to level, like spent fish coming down a salmon ladder. It was a brilliant
epoch.”
Everything in the scene triggers memories. Liebling, a native New Yorker, can see the Paramount Theater Building where he
interviewed the actress Pola Negri in 1931. He remembers the boxer Jack Willis,
“the astrologo-nutritionist, yogist and poet,” who lived in the Hotel
Woodstock. Much of the essay is devoted to James S. A. McDonald, the sports
writer who went by the pseudonym Col. John R. Stingo, and who was still living at age eighty-nine in the
Hotel Dixie down the block from The New
Yorker. Liebling describes him as “my favorite writer” and “the best
curve-ball writer since Anatomy Burton and Sir Thomas Browne, making the prose
of his contemporaries look shabby and unfurnished.” As always, Liebling is
attracted to bunco artists, confidence men, purveyors of dubious veracity.
He had devoted
an entire book to Stingo, The Honest
Rainmaker (1953). The racing writer worked
for the precursor of The National
Enquirer, where he wrote a column titled “Yea Verily.” Stingo is an old
English word for “strong ale or beer,” and came to mean “vigour, energy, vim”
(OED). The best line in the book Liebling consigns to a footnote: “The way to
write is well, and how is your own business. Nothing else on the subject makes
sense.” And here’s the second-best: “The Colonel has always believed that
fortune swims, not with the main stream of letters, but in the shallows where
the suckers moon.”
In “Paysage
de Crépuscule,” Liebling has Stingo recite the flim-flam man’s credo: “When I
first knew the Colonel, in 1946, I congratulated him on his bonne mine. He was then, by his own
count, seventy-two. ‘I have three rules for keeping in condition,’ he said. ‘I
will not let guileful women move in on me. I decline all responsibility. And,
above all, I avoid all heckling work. Also, I shun exactious luxuries, lest I
become their slave.”
Near the conclusion of his swan song Liebling writes: “I cite these associations because I do not wish readers to think Manhattan has no soul. Every corner is fraught with memory.” This final essay will remind seasoned readers of earlier Liebling triumphs, including the boxing and war reporting, The Earl of Louisiana (1961) and Between Meals (1962). He was a lifelong gourmand. He reveled in food and drink, and in the end, his pleasures killed him. Liebling died on December 28, 1963, at age fifty-nine.
[You can
find “Paysage de
Crépuscule” in Liebling at The
New Yorker: Uncollected Essays (eds. James Barbour and Fred Warner,
University of New Mexico Press, 1994).]
4 comments:
Grateful for this homage to the best of the better journalists ever. The comment about the city's soul says so much about how a writer needs to see a town's spirit and spirits.
The Sweet Science is one of my favorite books ever, and one that I reread the most. (It helps that my parents were big boxing fans - my father spoke of the Marciano-Moore fight as if it were the combat of Achilles and Hector before the walls of Troy.)
Been browsing your link for a long time... Share your enjoyment of Nabokov. I was looking for a list of his books... found one that ranked them . Number one was Lolita, also your first choice, I believe. I just reread and still not my first choice. The positive side of the list/ratings is that the blog attached pictures of old paperbacks showing the books. Here's the link, in case you haven't seen...:
https://www.rbth.com/arts/334446-vladimir-nabokov-novels-ranked
Further note: most days I've been reading your site - agreement and disagreement ( I'm a lot older than you), but how you can do it gaily, ahh, the energy of youth - I'm 3 to the 4th + 2.
"Where the suckers moon" was used as the title of an entertaining book by Randall Rothenberg about the Subaru advertising account, of all things.
Don Flanagan
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