Andrée and Dublin at Arrowhead |
Lee Massachusetts is everyone’s vision of a typical New England town. The Main Street is short and to the point. Buildings, unmolested by town planners, have maintained their character throughout the years. The house where we bunked for several days dates from the 19th century and has been well kept by its owner, an engineer who had, like Odysseus, moved about in the world. He was born, very likely in or near the house we occupied, moved with his family to Washington DC, where his father had found a job he could not refuse as an electrical engineer, and later back to Lee.
The firehouse across the street from Garfield House is a
solid stone structure that boasts a square steeple one easily might mistake for
a bell tower or a medieval watch tower.
Traveling around New England, one must – delicately,
delicately – approach the topic of politics. Open wounds are everywhere. New
England is solid ultramarine blue; which is to say, many people in New England
wish to see former President Donald Trump in leg irons waltzing through a
prison yard. My wife Andrée believes such emotions are far too enthusiastic. She
taught American Studies for many years and is intimately familiar with the
religious enthusiasms of the 17th century that saw a witch behind
every bush.
Trump, she likes to say when not in the presence of people
still suffering political whiplash from the 2016 Hillary Clinton/Donald Trump
presidential campaign, is in some respects a man more sinned against than sinning,
though, of course, she would never say such things in the presence of those who
wish to burn Trump at the stake – which is to say, in a good deal of New
England. Democrats in Connecticut, a part of New England, outnumber Republicans
by a two to one margin, unaffiliateds topping Democrats by a small number.
Andrée laid down the law long ago: There will be no politics
spoiling our vacations. This law of the household precedes Trump’s ascendency
to the presidency by, say, a half century or more. No politics means no
computers, no cell phones, no newspapers, no furtive notes written in the
shadows, and only mercifully brief encounters with witch-burners.
“Just change the subject, will you?”
In very few places throughout the world -- Washington DC, of
course, uncivilized places on the edges of the former British Empire, of
course, most of New England, of course, and Italy, everywhere and always –
political talk with strangers destroys the moment, and living in the moment is
essential to travel. In Florence, Italy, we almost missed, through dreamy
inattention, the spot where Savonarola had been burned at the stake. It is a
grave sin to have eyes and not see, ears and not hear, when traveling about the
world.
Just ask Odysseus, a victim of enchantment and forgetfulness
during the year he spent, not unpleasantly, with Circe. First, the traveler
forgets where he is, then who he is, and then the once solid world dissolves
like a dream.
“Pay attention!”
It was no chore for us to pay attention to Herman Melville.
In college, he was our literary touchstone. One day, early in our marriage, I
brought home a little-read book by Melville, Pierre or the Ambiguities. It was a romance novel, and Andrée, an
incurable romantic, fell for it head over heels. A little later, though we
already had been married a couple of years, she fell for me, not quite head
over heels.
We had visited Arrowhead, Melville’s home in Pittsfield,
years earlier when the house was in transition. No one was home, the house, garnet-red
at the time, was dark and forbidding and vacant. Even the spirit of the place
had taken flight. We peeked in the windows. Off in the background, Mount
Greylock, the highest elevation in Massachusetts, showed his hump.
Melville wrote Moby
Dick in this house. He dedicated the book to his good friend Nathaniel
Hawthorne, then living part time in Lennox. The book following Moby Dick, Pierre or the Ambiguities, was dedicated
as follows: “'To Greylock's Most Excellent Majesty ... the majestic mountain,
Greylock — my own more immediate sovereign lord and king — hath now, for
innumerable ages, been the one grand dedicatee of the earliest rays of all the
Berkshire mornings, I know not how his Imperial Purple Majesty ... will receive
the dedication of my own poor solitary ray ...''
Greylock, we found, was full of winding ways, but so was
Melville’s route through a tortuous world. Moby
Dick, now considered a classic American novel, was a conspicuous failure in
its day. And it was only after Melville had died that the book rose from its
deadening reviews, a more than solitary ray.
Today, as always, the book must be read aloud, not with the
eye but with the ear of the heart. It is music to the ear and, like all music,
it winds its way over long Shakespearian passages, moving gracefully at its own
pace. It was this music that had enchanted my wife Andrée so many years ago.
The trip to Arrowhead reminded me that traveling is in
inward experience, not merely a collection of interesting photos taken of interesting
places along the way.
For Mark Twain, a Connecticut resident for many years,
travels in Europe, where he wrote another little-read book he considered his
best, was a way of paying off his creditors: “I like Joan of Arc best
of all my books… It furnished me seven times the pleasure afforded me by any of
the others; twelve years of preparation, and two years of writing. The others
needed no preparation and got none.”
Twain was anti-clerical, not necessarily anti-religious. But
the character of Joan, buried for many years under heaps of anti-Catholic
perfidy, was paramount for Twain: “Taking
into account…all the circumstances—her origin, youth, sex, illiteracy, early
environment, and the obstructing conditions under which she exploited her high
gifts and made her conquests in the field and before the courts that tried her
for her life—she is easily and by far the most extraordinary person the human
race has ever produced.”
The Mount, Edith Wharton’s plush estate, was only a ten minute
ride from Garfield House, where we stayed.
There is a picture of a salon gathering on one wall of the
estate in which William James makes an appearance. Anything Jamesian is redemptive
for Andrée. As an American Studies and American Literature teacher for many
years, both in Catholic and Public schools, she taught James and others to her
students, who eventually came to appreciate James’ long winding prose
paths – very Shakespearian and even Melvillean.
Twain was not a James fancier: “Once you put him down, you
can’t pick him up again.”
But Andrée likes the winding ways of a strong – dare I say
it? -- Faulknerian sentence, very much like the path the imagination takes when
it is called into service in our travels.
Our next door neighbor at Garfield House, a permanent
resident and an expat from New York, told us that she had lived for a time in Wharton’s
reading room while she was an administrator of the Shakespearian Company that
put on plays at The Mount.
“You were an actress.”
“Oh, God no, please no – not an actress. I worked behind the
scenes as an administrator to put on the plays.”
“In New York?”
“Yes. New York had become too cloying, so I came here, fell in love with the place and staryed. By the way, you told
me that you like golf, but you do not like golfers. Just a word to the wise:
You had better not say that to the proprietor of Garfield House, who is an avid
golfer.”
I agreed, as Andrée said, to “change to subject” if it came
round to golf.
Golf, like politics in New England, has become in recent
days a secular religion full of saints and heretics – none of them,
unfortunately, quite like St. Joan of Arc.
Twain on politics: “In religion and politics people’s
beliefs and convictions are in almost every case gotten at second-hand, and
without examination, from authorities who have not themselves examined the
questions at issue but have taken them at second-hand from other non-examiners,
whose opinions about them were not worth a brass farthing.”
Now there, Andrée might say, is a near perfect Jamseian
sentence, very much like the hiker’s paths that cross and re-cross Mount
Greylock. Our very last adventure before leaving Lee for home was to ride – not
walk – the eight miles to the top of Melville’s “sovereign lord and king.”
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