Original words by Jamie James,. For the past 15 years, he
lived in Bali, which he wrote about in the June/July 2013 issue. He is also the
author of several books, including The
Snake Charmer. By StanleySobari
#Finding the sweet
spot: From the Devil’s Pulpit on Monument Mountain, a hiker surveys the wilds
of western Massachusetts. Nostalgia is big in the Berkshire, from old-fashioned
candy sticks in Stockbridge to antique cars and apple cider doughnuts in Great
Barrington
My roommate Jonathan promises that tonight we will see
history being made: The Two is performing Tommy, our favorite band’s
genre-bending rock opera, at Tanglewood, just off Route 7 in the woodlands of
western Massachusetts. It’s a hot day, this July 7,1970. Jonathan and I have
been here since midmorning to stake out a spot on the lawn, the cool place to
be, just behind the covered shed at this Berkshires landmark where the Boston
symphony Orchestra makes its summer home. Frisbees are flying in the breeze,
and so is the shoulder-length hair of the mostly male fans. As the golden haze
of midsummer deepens to a violet twilight, the Who finally takes the stage. The
crowd jumps to its feet and cheers. Pete Townshend leaps around like a mad
cricket, Roger Daltrey tosses his microphone high into the air, and when the
overture to Tommy begins, I can feel
Jonathan’s coming true.
FORTY SOME YEARS
LATER, that night endures-if only in HD and hyperbole by aging fans like
me. I’m driving north through Berkshire County, returning as a guest lecturer
to Williams College, my alma mater, just shy of the Vermont state line. It’s
New Year’s Day, two days after a deep snow falls, and the broad shouldered,
smoothly curving highway is nearly empty of traffic. But the rearview mirror of
my mind is all swirling stage lights and marijuana smoke, twinkling fireflies
and thundering bass lines.
I follow Route 7 along the Housatonic River, as the road
wraps around hills cloaked in evergreen forest. The river is frozen in wide,
white sheets, punctuated by intense rapids where the rocks poke through. On my
right, steep cliffs of dark purple granite hover overhead, dripping icicles thick
as a man’s leg. The morning light picks out tiny rainbows in the ice and
intense golden gleams from veins of quartzite. Even in the austerity of winter,
retracing this rail of youth brings fading memories into vivid focus.
Following my meditative ramble through wilderness, it’s
almost a shock to find civilization when I roll into the town of Great
Barrington. In my college days, the only place to stop here was Alice’s
restaurant, made famous by Arlo Guthrie’s folksy musical monologue of the same
name. Alice has moved on and her restaurant is long gone, so I pull over at the
Home Sweet Home Doughnut Shoppe. The name is yeolde hokey, but at least it fits
the place, which occupies the ground floor of a two-story frame house, white
with red shutters. The coffee is fragrant and strong; the classic glazed
doughnut about perfect.
I pay my bill and chat with the pop of this mom-and-pop
business. A Connecticut native, John Scalia moved here in 2009 with his wife,
Debbie, after their children flew the nest. “Business is booming around
Northampton, but if feels too urban,’ he explains. “We liked the vibe in Great
Barrington, so we opened shop here.” The Scalias’ doughnut spot may be new, but
it’s typical of the Berkshires that I remember. You see few national chains and
franchises; here most businesses have names like Tom’s Toys, Steve’s Auto
Repair, the mountain View Motel.
I’M ON THE ROAD AGAIN,
recharged by sugar and the primeval chords of “My Generation” on the Who mix I
downloaded for the drive. I’m making some progress in my attempt to feel like a
kid. I slide around a curve in the road and come abreast of a regional middle
school. I know just where I am, and pull off the road to admire the Devil’s
Pulpit.
My mind slips back to the day after college graduation: barreling
down Route 7 to meet some friends from Simon’s Rock, the ‘early college’ where
first-year students enroll as early as 16. Nathan, Mimi, and I planned to
picnic on nearby Devil’s Pulpit, a rock pillar that looms over the Monument
Mountain nature preserve on the northern outskirts of Great Barrington. When we
got to the park entrance, gray clouds lowered ominously. I pointed to the sky,
saying,’ Looks like rain’.
‘No problem,’ Nathan replied, shrugging. Nothing was ever a
problem for Nathan. “We can always find a cave or crag to sit under.”
We chose the steeper path, where the trail follows a cut in
the rock, thickly wooded with evergreen and a few stands of oak and maple that
were then in full leaf, a brighter green. The lady’s slippers. Where the trails
converge, Inscription Rock, a flat boulder with an elegantly carved epigraph,
claims the mountains for “the people of Berkshire as a place of free enjoyment
for all time,” dated October 19, 1899.
The rough-hewn granite steps of the trail wind just below
Squaw Peak, the highest point, to the Devil’s Pulpit, a dizzying column with a
view almost to Vermont, nearly 40 miles away. The prospect takes in a few
church steeples and smokestacks along the curling ribbon of Route 7, but mostly
it’s an undulating sea of forest. Just as Mimi had opened the picnic basket, a
light rain began to fall. No problem: As Nathan foresaw, an overhang nearby
proved just wide enough for a cozy picnic.
Now, as I gaze up at Devil’s Pulpit from the roadside, a
lecture from an English course I took at Williams struggles up to surface: when
Nathaniel Hawthorne was living in Lenox and Herman Melville in Pittsfield, the
two men met for the first time on a climb up Monument Mountain with some
friends. Caught in a thunderstorm, they sat together under a rock-perhaps the
very place I picnicked with Mimi and Nathan. The two writers brainstormed for
hours, the beginning of a close friendship. Some scholars say this encounter
sparked Melville’s novel about a man’s demented quest of a great white whale: Moby Dick, the first and still a leading
contender for the title of the Great American Novel. He dedicated the book to
Hawthorne.
Four decades later, judging by what I’ve seen on the ground,
the view from the Devil’s Pulpit must look much the same. There’s a good reason
why Berkshire County has kept its wilderness: Fully one-third of the land is
permanently protected from development.
EVEN IF ITS YOUR
FIRST VISIT, Main Strait in Stockbridge may seem familiar. Norman Rockwell
called the town his home for 25 years and described it as “the best of America,
the best of New England.” In 1967 he completed a seeping portrait of the south
side of the street at Christmastime. The eight-foot-long oil painting holds
court at the Norman Rockwell Museum, just off Route 7, and showcase Stockbridge’s
collection of intact architecture-the redbrick town offices under a Dutch
stepped roof (now a candle shop), the neoclassical bank, and the baronial Red
lion Inn, fronted by a porch lined with tall rocking chairs.
I stop for lunch at the Red Lion. I’m not surprised to see
that most of the menu hasn’t changed in decades, and the long dining room,
embellished with lace curtains and shelves full of fanciful antique teapots,
looks as if it hasn’t changed in century. I order the famous native turkey
dinner with all the trimmings. Served on Blue Willow china, the thick slices of
turkey are moist, the dressing nutty – all smothered in a comforting blanket of
gravy.
Tanglewood, just down the road, west of Lenox, is closed for
the winter, but I make a quick detour to have a look. I park on the road and
hike across the parking lot, deep in snow. The lawn slumbers under a flawless
mantle of powder, gleaming bluish in the shade. Slanting afternoon sunbeams
highlight a row of icicles running along the eaves of the entrance gate, like a
blindingly bright pipe organ. Next summer’s program is posted: Tanglewood long
ago banished hard rock in favor of classical and jazz. As I return to Route 7, I
defiantly test the limits of my car speakers with my Who mix.
The risk in taking a sentimental journey is that the places
you want to revisit may have vanished, but when I get to Pittsfield I have the
opposite experience. I think back to the crisp fall day I drove in search of Melville’s
house, where he wrote Moby Dick. I had found 780 Holmes Road easily enough, an
18 th-century white farmhouse with a bronze eagle over the door, like a
thousand houses in the Berkshire. A sign in the driveway had warned: PRIVATE
These days Arrowhead, Melville’s home, is open to the public
as a museum, and I’ve been eager to make a return pilgrimage. I discover the house
has been painted mustard yellow, The original color, and filled with sturdy
wood furniture of the type that was here when Melville owned the place. A mammoth
chimney, velvety black with centuries of soot, dominates the ground floor. Melville
wrote a story about this chimney. The volunteer tour guide, an enthusiastic local
woman, explains that after Melville moved out, his brother Allan carved a few
lines from the story In the chimney. Tracing the engraving in the blackened
stone, she reads the first sentence aloud, “I and my chimney are settling together.” She grins. “Isn’t that
neat?”
Upstairs, through the window of his study, I take in the
postcard view of snow-frosted Mount Greylock, the highest poi9nt in
Massachusetts. The guide says that this view inspired the tale of the Great
white whale. I consider mentioning the alternative creation story, that the
novel’s genesis was Melville’s literary summit with Hawthorne at the Devil’s
Pulpit, but decide against it. I don’t want to offend the guide.
By the time I hit Williamstown I’m deep into the strangely
beautiful fable of Tommy. As “Pinball
Wizard” booms, the lawn of my alma mater extends before me. The federal-style
wedding cake of the president’s house tops the hill in the mid-distance; beyond
it rise the gray Gothic spires of the college chapel. I won’t say that I feel
18 again, exactly, but cruising in on Route 7 sure fells like a homecoming.
A few days later, wandering the galleries of the small,
internationally renowned Clark Art Institute, I pause in front of one my
favorite pictures, Winslow Homer’s oil painting of two mountain guides. I can
almost feel the wind on my face. Immersed in fall foliage, one man is grizzled,
the other fresh faced-a dichotomy not lost on me as I contemplate my own
coming-of-age in this place, stuck in time in so many ways.
THE COLONIAL TOWNS along Route 7 in western Massachusetts
are quintessential New England any time of year. Summer festivals bring out
cultural crowds, while late September swarms wit hleaf-peepers.
Here, it’s all about the Berkshire farmer-not to mention the
cheese monger, butcher, distiller, and brewer. Chefs source locally at Gramercy Bistro, at the Massachusetts
Museum of Contemporary Art in North Adams, and at Williamstown spots. Mezze Bistro + Bar draws loyal fans t
oits bucolic farm setting for small plates with a Morrocan-Greek pedigree, and
Hops & Vines has oysters, craft beer, and a fireplace-a welcome sight after
a day on the road.
In continuous operation since the 18 th century, Stockbridge’s
Red Lion Inn remains a classic, with
rocking chairs on the porch and doilies and canopy beds in the rooms. On the
other end of the Stockbridge spectrum, the lakefront Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health hosts retreats with a
labyrinth, yoga and dance classes, and tai chi on the lawn. The Willamstown Bed&Breakfast is a
five-minute walk from Williams campus happenings. Outside Lenox, the ultraluxe Blantyre dates to 1901 and was modeled
after a Scottish castle.
The summer home of the Boston symphony Orchestra, Tanglewood in Lenox provides a cultured
sound track for picnics on the grass and seats in the historic shed. Jacob’s Pillow in Becket is the nation’s
leading summer dance festival (and it longest running). Film and TV talent come
to do the standards at the Tony Award-winning Williamstown Theatre Festival each summer. Dozens of their
productions have transferred to Broadway. In late October, the Williamstown Film Festival convenes the
likes of Sigourney Weaver and Joanne Woodward. The Barrington Stage Company’s Musical Theatre Lab in Pittsfield
premieres works from May to August. The 25 th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
started at this theater.
In Ethan Frome
(1911), Edith Wharton makes the winter landscape of Berkshire County a major
character in a page-turner about adultery, set during a blizzard in a fictional
town inspired by Lenox. Liam Neeson starred in the 1993 film. While Henry David
Thoreau was at Walden Pond, he wrote about a solo hike up Mount Greylock in
passage of A Week on the Concord and
Merrimack Rivers (1849). The account inspire an annual summer climb for
Thoreau fans.
Every U.S. dollar is printed on cotton-based paper from
Crane and Company, a Berkshires producer that’s been the sole supplier to the
Treasury since 1879.
North America’s earliest recorded reference to baseball
appeared in a Pittsfield bylaw dated 1791.
Oscar winner Gwyneth Paltrow made her acting debut at the
Williamstown Theatre Festival in 1981.
LITERARY TOUR
BERKSHIRE BARDS Quiet beauty here has incubated centuries of literature. Edith
Wharton wrote the House of Mirth (1905) at the mount, her
Lenox estate popular for its Italian formal garden and ghost tours. In cummington,
poet William Cullen Byrant’s home stead offers guided tours. Nathaniel Hawtonerne’s
“little red house,” where he wrote The House
of the Seven Gables (1851), has been rebuilt behind Tanglewood. In Pittsfield,
Herman Melville penned Moby Dick
(1851) from his study at Arrowhead, which looks out onto Mount Greylock.