When high summer arrives -- in Texas, long before this Thursday’s equinox – I think of Saratoga Springs, N.Y., where we bought our first house and lived for seven years. The Saratoga Race Course was less than a mile away. So were Yaddo and Broadway, the main drag downtown. We could walk everywhere. The town had a first-rate bookstore – Lyrical Ballad – housed in a former bank, where the pricey merchandise was kept in the vault (which a friend always called the oy gevalt). After twenty years in Texas, we still romanticize Saratoga, especially its sense of small-scale intimacy, the friendliness of neighbors and summertime.
The public,
if they have heard of Saratoga, likely think of the thoroughbred track. I know nothing
about horses and have never placed a bet in my life but for two newspapers I
covered the raffish, Liebling-esque characters who inhabit the track. I visited
Yaddo only once, for a story, and interviewed a writer who had brought
with him a complete set on Joseph Conrad’s work. I saw many concerts at the
Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) and once spent nearly an hour on one of
the small stages, chatting with the late pianist Junior Mance. I was an
audience of one, as the bigger acts attracted more listeners at the jazz festival.
In the
summer of 1870, Henry James, then twenty-seven, spent a month in Saratoga, and
in August published a travel piece about the town in The Nation, later
collected in Portraits of Places
(1883). The young James succumbs to a nostalgia for the past inspired by delightful places:
“The good
old times of Saratoga, I believe, as of the world in general, are rapidly
passing away. The time was when it was the chosen resort of none but ‘nice
people.’ At the present day, I hear it constantly affirmed, ‘the company is
dreadfully mixed.’ What society may have been at Saratoga when its elements
were thus simple and severe, I can only vaguely and mournfully conjecture. I
confine myself to the dense, democratic, vulgar Saratoga of the current year.”
That was my Saratoga
too, thankfully.
1 comment:
Saratoga is still OK, and has the best Indian restaurant for many miles around. Alas, some of the old businesses have changed. There used to be a wonderful used record, CD and DVD place called "The Last Vestige," which is no more. I don't think the book store is there any more, but you can still get a decent cup of coffee.
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