On arriving in
In due course I learnt that during his 1990s tenure, his righteousness Mayor Giuliani, campaigned to render wholesome the mean streets of
Those who have been here a while disagree on whether the sanitisation was positive. Many rue the loss of character, more rue the rise in rent and consequent need to move to the odious suburbs where bus-stops and discount stores reign. Others celebrate the drop in crime and the reduction in scattered piles of trash. Whatever the case, certainly the New York of Kerouac, Ginsburg, Burroughs et al is a world away from today’s. Theirs was as raw as a scar, a frontier-land wet with the creative and the new, a foul mix of drugs and sex and bad jazz, but a mix that yielded poetry, art and beatific energy. Although that I haven’t yet been mugged is at least in part due to the white-wash and fire-hose, I cannot help but feel nostalgic for a place I have never even known, the New York of old. While this city is still one of great frontiers of the world, art it seems has moved off the island and into the dark interior. And the vacuum the artists left behind was filled with fanny-pack-toting tourists and skinny hipsters, all drunk on their own particular version of the City (the tourists sigh, speak in whispers, and click their cameras at the cavernous rent left behind by the twin towers, the hipsters sit on the pavements and smoke cigarettes and congratulate themselves on setting the precedent for cool). But then perhaps I am no different. One day I will take a photo of the house where Kerouac spent weeks at a hot-keyed typewriter chattering out one-hundred feet of palimpsest. One day I will walk down a street in blue-jeans, hands in pockets, head bowed against the cold, a smiling girl clasping my arm, a la Dylan’s Freewheelin’. I have already portrayed the city as a furnace for the apocalypse—that image is now so well entrenched in my psyche I have dreams of the four riders galloping down Broadway—and will do so again. I have also repeatedly used the metaphor of the frontier, a metaphor I believe in. Not for geography, of course—there is, after all, little left to discover in the world (that said, there is a group of determined trackers in
Back to the graffiti then. A treat it was to catch a train to
***
This transmission is a rather auspicious one, the twenty-fifth so far. I’ve been in
I woke up this morning to four inches of snow on the ledge outside my window. In the last two hours that four inches has turned into five. The city has a pillow pressed to its face: a sky that is nondescript, uniform, blanket. In a few hours it is predicted that the snowfall will turn into rainfall and thus the snow will turn into sludge. Little here is permanent. So it goes.

4 comments:
Ah, the pale horse cometh... behold its messenger.
I am reminded of something Heinrich Heine once wrote: "Wild, dark times are rumbling toward us, and the prophet who wishes to write a new apocalypse will have to invent entirely new beasts, and beasts so terrible that the ancient animal symbols of St. John will seem like cooing doves and cupids in comparison."
How deeply unsettling and thrilling, all at once.
Skinny people: less to love.
And forget the moose, I'm more concerned about that Terror Cat the Dominion Post covered last year.
Mr Anthropist. That's a terrific quote. I hope you don't mind if I steal it for future use. I'll place it in my notebook between Revelations and Johnny Cash.
Jonathan: Terror Cat? I fear I was out of the country. The last New Zealand news headline I read (the most popular on stuff.co.nz for at least a week was 'Man attempts to have sex with goat'. It's moments like that when I don't really miss home.
It's moments like that which make me proud to be a New Zealander. The DomPost had a two page spread this weekend about the pros of a polygamous lifestyle...my favourite quote was from "Zachery" (not his real name) who insisted "it's not just about the sex". Obvioulsy a slow week in politics.
Post a Comment