Beyond the Fringes
The author traces some abiding infatuations—and old antagonisms—to his seaside boyhood home
- By Jonathan Yardley
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The water off Peru is beautiful, but the water with which Newport is surrounded almost surpasses belief. It is the deepest, darkest blue I have ever seen, indeed at times it seems almost violently so. If in Peru I dream of Easter Island, in Newport I dream of whalers out from New Bedford, of ships smashing against rocks, of—as the hymn of my boyhood put it—"those in peril on the sea." This isn't morbid, it merely draws upon Newport's historic role as seaport, as a place where the American nation was founded and shaped, where, as my wife pointed out, innumerable houses in the old center of town have widow's walks.
When I was a boy, Newport was still a working sailor's town. Thames Street was filled with bars and rough trade of just about every imaginable variety. Now Thames Street is a shopping mall for day-trippers, and the old harbor is packed with fancy yachts. One of the reasons I stayed away from Newport for so many years was that I heard more than I cared to about its transformation from old colonial seaport to contemporary tourist trap. There's plenty of that as well as plenty of new construction. Some of the old mansions along Bellevue Avenue and Ocean Drive have been converted to condos, and the shopping malls along Route 214 in Middletown are strictly Anywhere, U.S.A.
Yes, that's depressing enough, thank you, but to my surprise it all pretty much rolls right off my back. My Newport may be a little harder to find now, under all the ticky tack, but it's still there: the Redwood Library and Athenaeum, to which my family made pilgrimages almost every day; Trinity Church, with its perfect colonial steeple and its unique high pulpit from which my father was privileged to preach on a few occasions; the house on Indian Avenue, different now (and better!), but tended by its present owners with as much love as Bill and Helen Yardley lavished on it; St. George's School, where for several summers I worked as a day-camp counselor, with its deep green lawn rolling down toward the deep blue water of Sachuest Bay.
As I write these words I have beside me a satellite photograph of southern Narragansett Bay. There is more water in it than land. Aquidneck Island floats in the middle like a large ship at permanent mooring, with nothing more substantial than a few slender bridges tying it to the North American continent. Almost everything I see in that photograph stirs a memory, and almost all those memories are happy. If it is my fate to have Newport nowhere except in memory for the rest of my life, I will still count myself fortunate.
Jonathan Yardley is the book critic of the Washington Post. His memoir Our Kind of People is partly set in Newport.
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