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Old Glory
Jonathan Raban
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In 1979, Jonathan Raban journeyed down the Mississippi from
Minneapolis to New Orleans in a specially equipped 16-foot motorboat. Quite the loner, he
makes the trip on his own, exploring a river that has fascinated him from afar since early
childhood. "The book and the journey would be all of a piece. The plot would be
written by the current of the river itself. It would carry one into long deep pools of
solitude, and into brushes with society on the shore. Where the river meandered, so would
the book, and when the current speeded up into a narrow chute, the book would follow
it."
To undertake such a long and dangerous journey, Raban had to have been
fascinated by the rivers power and presence, its history. He attempts to learn how
to watch it, though hes sure that its unlearnable. "Even when I was
asleep, I was still travelling on it, dreaming of waves and dark sloughs and the endless
scribble of the current on top of the water.
Actual life was the river itself. It
was the roll of a wake lifting the boat and slamming it down." He writes of his fear
of and respect for the river. He keeps running into people who have lost family and
friends to the rivers sweeping current.
Raban is a great reader. As in his Passage
to Juneau (2000), he brings books from earlier centuries along on his trips to
see whether they help him understand the landscape and locals. For the Mississippi
hes found various river guides, including a volume on navigation among sandbars,
boils and eddies (they may have shifted actual location, but they remain awe-inspiring
and arbitrary) and a handbook for European immigrants, even The
Book of Mormon. The quotations he chooses provide appropriate comments for the
situations with which hes confronted.
Raban grabs the attention with original turns of phrase: "The
nearest I had come before to driving a tow was managing narrowboats on British canals
This was more like trying to steer six or seven blocks of Madison Avenue down a
twisty country lane." Travel writers make lists of phenomena; good ones put
observations together in a way that the list itself comes to life. "The voices had
slowed and turned more musical in their phrasing; the architecture had aged and spouted
trailing wrought-iron balconies and trellises; the vegetation had grown knottier and more
festooned. Now the South was coming in a rush of symbols: squashed-faced pirates, lianas,
brown-bagging, water-moccasins."
It is easy to make fun of "ugly Americans" overweight
and dressed in polyester, ignorant, oblivious to the world beyond their doorsteps
and many authors have done so. Raban is a bit more subtle and he later chose the
freedom and openness of the US to the restrictiveness of his native England. But he does
describe racism along the river, ignorance about the hostage situation in Iran, hokey
tourist traps.
Raban is very much on his own. Hes given up an academic position
because he couldnt stand the narrow regimen; his marriage fell apart a year before.
He occasionally meets women for a date (even stopping off and living with one for several
weeks in St. Louis). And he now and then finds kindred spirits among the men, guys who
spend weeks and years of their life observing the water, dreaming of heading out on it,
envious of him for doing so. But mostly he just rides the river and observes places and
people: "His words were easy and open-handed. His face wasnt. It looked as if
it masked a complicated inner life. Twenty years before it would have been a simple face,
hawkishly handsome, with a tight mouth and eyes set a little too thoughtfully far back in
the skull. Since then it had taken on a contradictory pattern of fine lines and
furrows."
Most Sundays, he pays a visit to a local church. As his own father was
a small-town vicar, he has a wary, respectful relationship with religion. Like a
sociologist, he observes many different ways of celebrating church services; he is
somewhat outside the action but well informed. "Community Baptism was a religion of
straight talking, practical know-how and self-reliance, in which making out as a
successful farmer or carpenter was intimately connected with the doctrine of personal
salvation. Between then and now, though, something had gone terribly stale. The
down-to-earth metaphors which had once been exact and fresh had turned to routine
exercises in folksy crackerbarrel about pay cheques, TAP airlines and drugstore
prescriptions."
Old Glory is long and winding like the river itself. But
Rabans way of looking at the world is so trenchant, his writing so vibrant, that
you, too, will be disappointed when the trip ends upon his arrival in the bayous of
Louisiana.
- Nancy Chapple