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The Art of Being a Flâneur
  + stars: | 2023-06-19 | by ( Stephanie Rosenbloom | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +4 min
I followed the river toward the Uffizi Gallery where I stopped, enchanted by the scene below. It’s “a search for the delectable, delicious, almost gustatory delights of the moment,” as they put it. Other times, an object or architectural detail that piques your interest — a gate, a gargoyle — provides a portal to another time. Stories of vanished ages can be triggered by a single stone, then explored back home through books and websites. Being in a big city among so many strangers can be at turns exhilarating and disturbing.
Persons: Arno, Fred B, Bryant, Joseph Veroff, Puccini’s, Robert K, Merton, Elinor Barber, bento, Amer, plumb, Edgar Allan Poe’s “, Marie Roget, , Walter Benjamin, “ Charles Baudelaire Organizations: Uffizi, Lincoln Center, Metropolitan Opera House, Columbia University, Science, Metro, Poet Locations: Firenze, Florence, New York, Tokyo, Japan, Istanbul, Paris
‘I became insane,”Edgar Allan Poe wrote in an 1848 letter, “with long intervals of horrible sanity.” Which is not a bad description of director Scott Cooper ’s “The Pale Blue Eye,” adapted from the 2003 novel by Louis Bayard and set amid the macabre, rime-frosted Hudson Valley of 1830s New York—and the then-fledgling U.S. Military Academy at West Point. On the grounds, with a river view, a cadet has been found hanging and presumed to be a suicide. After the dead boy’s heart is cut out and stolen—a telltale sign that something more grisly is afoot—the cause of death is reassessed. Called in to help solve the crime—and, more importantly, derail a scandal—is Augustus Landor ( Christian Bale ), a much-respected former “constable” in New York City whose résumé, recited by the academy’s Superintendent Thayer (Timothy Spall) for no one’s benefit but ours, is illustrious: A retired detective instrumental in bringing down the Daybreak Boys, Shirt Tails and other gangs of New York, Landor developed methods of “bloodless interrogation” and solved the murder of a young woman at Elysian Fields, the now-long-defunct recreational area in Hoboken, N.J., that served as a playground for Manhattanites. The murder would later serve as the inspiration for one of Poe’s C. Auguste Dupin stories, “The Mystery of Marie Rogêt .” But where is Poe?
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