Curmudgeing Through Paradise
by
Fred Reed
A year ago,
Violeta and I sat in a sidewalk cafe in Rome, a city of blowing
exhaust, wretched traffic, and illegible graffiti spray-painted
left and right. Talking was difficult above the blatt of trucks
too big for narrow streets. Around the city ancient monuments slowly
dissolved in dilute carbonic acid and turned gray from drifting
soot. Italians, not particularly agreeable people, passed by in
the international jeans-and-sweatshirt scruff that is less a style
than an absence of thought.
We had reached
the fag end of a couple of weeks of wandering around the country,
mostly from Naples south to Sicily. Vi had not been out of Mexico
before. I was pleased to find that she was a born traveler, relentlessly
practical and unfazed by anything. It was a blessing. Being on the
road with an hysteric quickly palls.
I think she
had expected Italy to be sophisticated and stylish. Hadnt
Hemingway said so? Didnt the movies show such things? Instead
she concluded, correctly, that Naples and Rome were barely distinguishable
from her native Guadalajara: noisy, dirty, ugly, walls defaced by
punks in need of a horsewhipping. I was less surprised, having seen
the symptoms in many places. A rule of near-universal application
is that anything lovely is old, and anything new like everything
else new.
It is curious.
Ancient Rome had little disposable income, and ancient Greece less.
Building a Parthenon required great effort, as did the Gothic cathedrals.
Yet they were built, and statues carved, and fountains made to play
in the downtowns. Emperors built these things to glorify themselves,
rich men to impress. Whatever the motive, they were built and adorned
their times.
Today, with
resources thousands of times greater, with bulldozers, steel, and
unlimited money, we build little but square boxes and freeways.
Our civilization has become a sprawling eyesore.
I had made
the mistake of contracting a group tour, thinking that Vi might
find it less stressful than my normal get-there-and-figure-it-out
approach. As it turned out she detested the contrived jollity and
brainless lectures as much as I did. In Naples we broke away and
just wandered. It is a grimy nasty city, but speckled with anomalous
churches from other times.
I remember
one in particular. The interior was dark and hushed. The walls,
of thick stone, excluded the noise of traffic. It was empty except
for us. The vaulting, stained glass, and frescoes were exquisite
and, as always, unlike any others I had seen. These things were
not designed at corporate, one size fits all. Vi, being Catholic,
felt herself to be in something that she was part of. We went our
different ways to ponder in the gloom. Some things you do not do
with others.
I wondered
what life had been many centuries back when the church would have
loomed larger and humanity, smaller. Any church diminishes against
the scale of monumental office buildings. Eventually they become
little more than tourist attractions except to dwindling numbers
of believers. It must have been different when humanity was still
a minor occurrence against the landscape. The tenor of existence
has to change when you walk or ride horseback through wild forests
and mountain passes, seldom seeing others.
Capri was hideous.
Mobs of tourists covered every inch of the place that wasnt
occupied by trinket shops selling commemorative baseball caps. The
island itself was startling in its clouded peaks and sharp declivities
against the Mediterranean. Tiberius taste was perhaps not
limited to small boys (if that wasnt slander). But how do
you enjoy such splendor with fat people from Rhode Island squalling
at each other, But Charlie, the guide said
.?
There are too
damned many people in the world, and they have too much money. They
also have very little taste. The United States has fully achieved
dictatorship of the proletariat, and other countries follow. Karl
would be proud. Further, the unworthy have credit cards and so rush
off in droves to have a European Experience as they might to Disneyland
or Sea World. They may not know just where in Europe they are, or
who the Normans were, or what or when the Reformation was, but that
isnt the point. Just what is, I dont know.
The age of
Mass Man is at last upon us. Globalization, with its attendant homogenizing,
runs apace. Beijing begins to have traffic problems, like those
of everywhere else. It also looks like anywhere else. An urban shopping
mall in Guilin differs little from one in Tokyo or Georgetown or
Nong Khai. Like supermarkets, they provide things people want at
prices they will pay, and cannot be called evil. Yet they are uniform,
drab, and somehow disheartening. Square ugly office blocks and square
ugly apartment building appear overnight around the globe. They
are built so because they are cheap and efficient. These seem to
be the only considerations today.
A Claudius
or a Trajan might have built imposing buildings with the help of
the best artistic talent to be found. Corporations have no interest
in such things. Neither does the United States, which is as esthetically
impoverished as it is industrially fecund. Nor, as far as I can
tell, does any other country, though many show more respect for
what they have.
In America
today, if there is public statuary at all, it will be bought by
a committee of bureaucrats who, knowing nothing of the matter, will
be gulled into buying some atrocity approved by an Art Consultant.
A new library, if there are new libraries now, will be a brick box.
The symphonies die, the arts metamorphose into entertainment,
and careful writing is regarded as a gas-station attendant might
regard Sophocles in the original. The final triumph of the unwashed
has occurred.
I
think it sad. The distinctiveness and eccentricity of things lent
flavor to life. When Bourbon Street turns into a Bourbon Street
Theme Park, which it has, when Virginias horse country gives
way to identical subdivisions named Brookview Mews and Brook Run
Dales, and the Vatican is so jammed with people from Ohio that you
cant move, we lose something.
I sometimes
think that the chief difference between cockroaches and people is
an insufficiency of legs. But I am a curmudgeon.
July
7, 2006
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and the just-published
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be.
Copyright
© 2006 Fred Reed
Fred
Reed Archives
|