A face followed me through the lands of
Central Europe, the rosy-cheeked visage of Empress Elisabeth,
better-known by her grotesquely cutesy German diminutive, “Sisi.”
I saw her image everywhere, rosy-cheeked and half-smiling, dressed in
a silver tulle gown with elaborate pins in her braided hair. She was,
in Europe in the 19th Century, the Diana of her time,
charming the glittering social life of the European capitals with her
legendary beauty and cannily maneuvering her way through society and
court politics.
I'm afraid I didn't see the appeal –
maybe it's just modern standards but I saw an awfully normal-looking
woman obsessed with the maintenance of her girlish waist, her
personality so wrapped up in her appearance that she would not permit
herself to be photographed later in life, married off to the
decidedly schlubby Emperor Franz Josef I, heir to the throne of the
Habsburgs, those Targaryens of the Alps, and she watched their inbred
children play cowboys and Indians in their sailor suits in the
Schonbrunn Palace. She would eventually be assassinated by an
idiotically grinning Italian anarchist as the contradictions of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire built, until a fateful day in Sarajevo
involving her fail-nephew and a Serbian bullet, and eventually the
empire's death in the negotiation rooms of Saint-Germain and Trianon.
But no matter – her face followed me
everywhere through the Habsburg Lands, reduced to an icon, in the
classical sense. An object rather than a human.
One of many objects of abject horror,
at that. The horror is found in the twee little wooden houses with
giant crucifixes on the side, in all the choirs of chubby middle aged
men singing hunting lieder in
Tyrolean caps, in magic flutes and Lippizaner stallions and giggly
rococo architecture and tales of courtly love, all the tourist traps
mit schlag.

And
yet it was impossible for me not to adore the peculiar artistic
expressions of the horror burbled up in those twilight years of
empire that Franz Josef and Sisi presided over and those following
uncertain years before the Anschluss, the invasion of the Sudeten,
and the Arrow Cross regime finally put an end to the entrancing
decadence. I was far more interested in metamorphoses and trials, a
dream story playing out on the streets of Vienna that would
unfortunately be remembered in the way it inspired Kubrick's final
belly flop, in Venuses in furs on remote country estates, in Zweig's
post-office girls and the snows of Gregor von Rezzori's yesteryear.
In the poses of Egon Schiele's contorted subjects. I have little use
for Mozart – I'll take Mahler, thank you very much.
Maybe
it's because I see the reflection of then in now.
I
followed the rivers, the Adige and the Inn and the Danube and the
Vltava. I arrived via Padua, where Giotto and Galileo called the
modern world forth, and where I drank the little cups of espresso
topped with mint foam in the cafe where the Revolutions of 1848 were
fomented, where Joyce wrote about Ireland from afar, through Verona,
Trento, and the Brenner Pass, under the clear white cliffs of the
Dolomites.
Like
countless youths on their wandervogel
in these parts many years before, and whose tracks I often very
deliberately followed, complete with the shelters they built in the
last few glorious years of Red Vienna, I took to the mountains, ready
for cool clean air and pokey country train rides and hearty pension
breakfasts and peaks to ascend. Each day I chose a path, with little
plan, on my map of the Hohe Tauern region, and set off, finding the
best ways to ford streams and scramble over boulders. There were
waterfalls to walk alongside, cow skulls nailed above the door of
each high meadow alm,
there was sun glittering off the glaciers, there was the distant view
to the fairytale schloss
perched on the mountainside where, in a more sublime era, Aristotle
Onassis and the Shah of Shahs had listened to chamber orchestras and
tucked into truffled quails, and down below, there was the little
alley where the brilliant Anton Webern had gone out for a late night
smoke break only to get blasted by a trigger-happy US Army cook. I
started each day with unpronunceable whole grain breads and local
cheeses and rowan berry conserves prepared by a tubby hausfrau
who didn't speak a world of English, and I ended each day with
generous pours of Oktoberfest beer and GrΓΌner
Veltliner and plum schnapps alongside kingly portions of trout and
venison to get me ready for my next day with 30 kilometers or so of
hiking, 2000+ meters of elevation change.
Yet
I couldn't lose myself to the reverie. Each glacier I traipsed over
was dead, a rump-end bit of filthy ice in the cirque of a long
valley, piles of gravel inhospitable to life. The mood wasn't helped
by the Euroshits in cashmere sweaters in their Audis at the base of
the mountain, on a day trip from Zell am See.
Less
Zweig's world of yesterday, more the modern Austria. Of the piano
teacher that Elfriede Jelinek wrote about, the losers and corrections
and woodcutters of Thomas Bernhard. And ergo the playing of funny
games seemed a reasonable response.
So
onwards to the old capital of Mitteleuropa
culture, the city of Metternich's congress under gloomy skies. I sat
in the dining car staring out, Ethan Hawke not meeting his Julie
Delpy, to arrive in a brooding city of gray and beige stone, tourists
drinking spritzes and pretending to be warm in the outdoor cafes
under lurid neon. I choose a promising spot – a self-styled
“American” bar, from a time when such a distinction was
meaningful, with a sign saying “no sightseeing.” This should be
good.
And
it was. I spent the next 36 hours in a whirlwind, the kind that
should not be described lest it fall apart in memory. A Schiele
self-portrait and a Schiele beauty, on canvas and off. Hunters in the
snow. Minerals in the wunderkammer.
I'll leave it there.
Only
to be followed by the sense of desolation that follows true
happiness. It was then that I saw Emperor Franz Josef's shitter.
Apropos.
Northward,
then, through the Czech lands, which bore a shocking visual
similarity – not even a similarity, a clone – with the rolling
hills of Eastern Iowa where so many Czech farmers wound up, right
down to the Harvestore silos. And onto Prague, where I was greeted on
Wilsonova by an aging platinum blonde taking a smoke break and
staring down the world with utter contempt outside the sort of
“gentlemen's club” that caters to Brits that caption their photos
“What an absolute legend!” She was already wearing her PVC
thigh-high boots at 4 in the afternoon, made all the more incongruous
by her coffee-stained pink hoodie.
But
what could be a better city to arrive at in a bitter mood on a fall
afternoon, with its leering Art Nouveau signage for casinos and cheap
hotels, signs reading “EROTIC CITY” flickering in the rain,
foxlike girls walking swiftly past and meth-addled and toothless
gutter punks smoking and bullshitting outside dispensaries, statuary
of blackened saints and gilded trumpeters on the bridges over the
Moldau, the darkness made all the more glaring by the aggressive
attempts at selling happiness to the tourist hordes, ice bars with
robot servers, chanting Hare Krishnas (didn't know they still
existed), self-conscious naughtiness, street magicians with curled
mustaches, half-price specials on Becherovka shots, electro-swing
covers of Macklemore, strip clubs catering to groups of young Arab
men in matching black t-shirts and tight fades, all the invocations
to drink and fuck and spend. I drank. I didn't fuck. I spent more
than I should have.
And
I took a broken-down train with workingmen drinking plastic two liter
bottles of Staropramen at 8 in the morning to the mysterious little
town of Terezin, in the swamplands along the Elbe, where the
ambitious Gavrilo Princip breathed his last inside the star fortress
built for the protection of Habsburg Bohemia, and where thousands of
ghettoized Jews from around the Reich were sent to look serviceable
for when the Red Cross came around to make sure everything was above
board (the Red Cross seemed to think so). Their children's
colored-pencil drawings of princesses and football games hang in what
was once the camp school, children who thought that as uncomfortable
as this was, they would some day return to their homes in Augsburg
and Krakow.
Say
what you want about there being no atheists in the foxholes, I have
never in my life been more certain in my refusal to believe in a just
and kindly god.
Their
spirits followed me down the Danube to Budapest, where it was
impossible not to see the return of the fascist impulse, not least in
Orban's Hungary, in a city where life continued more or less as
normal, even as things got darker. Not least in the makeshift
memorial to the murdered partisans outside the hideous authorized
neo-neoclassical war memorial. And not least in the long trains of
flatbed cars with camo olive-drab troop trucks on the back en route
to Kherson and points east. And I stayed in what had once been the
Jewish quarter, and what still – somehow – kind of was. A
neighborhood of narrow, hemmed-in streets with unpainted tenements
and passing drunks and graffiti'd alleys, an Old World equivalent to
the Lower East Side of New York (at least as it once was) in more
than a few ways.
Sure,
I could be writing about the splendid Baroque streets, the Buda
Castle – Empress Sisi rearing her head again – ancient hot
springs, but what would be the point? After a while in Europe, the
ostensible wonders blur together. Distinguishing between them would
be a chore.
I
finished my last night in the heart of the Jewish Quarter at one of
the famed ruin bars that rose up in the abandoned houses of Budapest
after the wall fell in '89, when rock music was still considered
subversive, when a squat looked like a squat and not like a fashion
campaign trying to look like a squat. But I was – finally –
happy.
And
for the first time I set down my notebook and just soaked it all in
to the best of my ability. Sure I felt a little bit too old to be
there (in just a few hours I will no longer be a coveted 18-35 male),
but hey, the vibe was good, the beer was good, Phoebe Bridgers was
playing on the soundsystem well past the distortion point, and if the
world is burning, I might as well dance through it.
And
if she's reading this – to a certain mermaid a little off the
Stephansplatz, I'm terribly glad you were there to dance with me.