Sunday, July 25, 2010

Poetic Precedent

We have studied climate action plan precedents from cities around the world, but I thought we could use some literary words about cities. Here is an account of Boston albeit depressing from Henry Miller upon returning to America from Europe by boat. He finds American cities nightmarish (and this was in the 1940s!):

“Returning to the boat we passed bridges, railroad tracks, warehouses, factories, wharves and what not. It was like following in the wake of a demented giant who had sown the earth with crazy dreams. If I could only have seen a horse or a cow, or just a cantankerous goat chewing tin cans, it would have been a tremendous relief. But there was nothing of the animal, vegetable or human kingdom in sight. It was a vast jumbled waste created by pre-human or sub-human monsters in a delirium of greed. It was something negative, some not-ness of some kind or other. It was a bad dream and towards the end I broke into a trot, what with disgust and nausea, what with the howling icy gale which was whipping everything in sight into a frozen pie crust. When I got back to the boat I was praying that by some miracle the captain would decide to alter his course and return to Piraeus."

-Henry Miller, The Air-Conditioned Nightmare


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