书城外语你值得拥有这美好的世界
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第27章 这就是纽约HEREISNEWYORK(2)

New York is the concentrate of art and commerce and sport and religion and entertainment and finance,bringing to a single compact arena the gladiator,the evangelist,the promoter,the actor,the trader,and the merchant.It carries on its lapel the unexpungeable odor of the long past,so that no matter where you sit in New York you feel the vibrations of great times and tall deeds,of queer people and events and undertakings.I am sitting at the moment in a stifling hotel room in 90-degree heat,halfway down an air shaft,in midtown.No air moves in or out of the room,yet I am curiously affected by emanations from the immediate surroundings.I am twenty-two blocks from where Rudolph Valentino lay in state,eight blocks from where Nathan Hale was executed,five blocks from the publisher’s office where Ernest Hemingway hit Max Eastman on the nose,four mile from where Walt Whitman sat sweating out editorials for the Brooklyn Eagle,thirty-four blocks from the street Willa Cather lived in when she came to New York to write books about Nebraska,one block from where Marceline used toclown on the boards of the Hippodrome,thirty-six blocks from the spot where the historian Joe Gould kicked a radio to pieces in full view of the public,thirteen blocks from where Harry Thaw shot Stanford Whites,five blocks form where I used to usher at the Metropolitan Opera and only 112 blocks from the spot where Clarence Day the Elder was Washed of his sins in the Church of the Epiphany(I could continue this list indefinitely);and for that matter I am probably occupying the very room that any number of exalted and somewise memorable characters sat in,some of them on hot,breathless afternoons,lonely and private and full of their own sense of emanations from without.

When I went down to lunch a few minutes ago I noticed that the man sitting next to me(about eighteen inches away along the wall)was Fred Stone.The eighteen inches were both the connection and the separation that New York provides for its inhabitants.My only connection with Fred Stone was that I saw him in The Wizard of Oz around the beginning of the century.But our waiter felt the same stimulus from being close to a man from Oz,and after Mr.Stone left the room the waiter told me that when he(the waiter)was a young man just arrived in this country and before he could understand a word of English,he had taken his girl for their first theater date to The Wizard of Oz.It was a wonderful show,the waiter recalled-a man of straw,a man of tin.Wonderful!(And still only eighteen inches away.)“Mr.Stone is a very hearty eater,”said the waiter thoughtfully,content with this fragile participation in destiny,this link with Oz.

New York blends the gift of privacy with the excitement of participation;and better than most dense communities it succeeds in insulating the individual(if he wants it,and almost everybody wants or needs it)against all enormous and violent and wonderful events that are taking place every minute.Since I have been sitting in this miasmic air shaft,a good many rather splashy events have occurred in town.A man shot and killed his wife in a fit of jealousy.It caused no stir outside his block and got only small mention in the papers.I did not attend.Since my arrival,the greatest air show ever staged in all the world took place in town.I didn’t attend and neither did most of the eight million other inhabitants,although they say there was quite a crowd.I didn’t even hear any planes except a couple of westbound commercial airliners that habitually use this air shaft to fly over.The biggest oceangoing ships on the North Atlantic arrived and departed.I didn’t notice them and neither did most other New Yorkers.I am told this is the greatest seaport in the world,with 650 miles of waterfront,and ships calling here from many exotic lands,but the only boat I’ve happened to notice since my arrival was a small sloop tacking out of the East River night before last on the ebb tie when I was walking across the Brooklyn Bridge.I heard the Queen Mary blow one midnight,though,and the sound carried the whole history of departure and longing and loss.The Lions have been in convention.I’ve seen not one Lion.A friend saw one and told me about him.(He was lame,and was wearing a bolero.)At the ball grounds and horse parks the greatest sporting spectacles have been enacted.I saw no ballplayer,no race horse.The governor came to town.I heard the siren scream,but that was all there was to that-an eighteen-inch margin again.A man was killed by a falling cornice.I was not a party to the tragedy,and againthe inches counted heavily.