Pieter12
Member
A quick look at book 2, and I saw a couple of pertinent entries:Perhaps....I'll re-read Daybook 2. Still, he did court both subjects and collectors...and San Francisco has always been an especially bohemian city, never "big" (walk from Diamond Heights to Bay in an hour) .
"November 16 [1929, I think]. ...S. F. was impossible, any city would be to me now [he had moved to Carmel by then] : the dirt, noise, cramped quarters, the drabness of humanity struggling for money enough for food, then hunting excitement. One must grub for money, no matter where, but here [Carmel] at least are trees to look out upon, the ocean nearby, clean sparkling air, and few people, elbow room, breathing space, and for excitement, I don't want the passive kind,—entertainment—I want the thrill of work."
"July 10 — ...Other recent and important notes: I am to have a frame at Hotel Del Monte [I believe it was a large luxury hotel in Monterey], which should bring sittings unfortunately from the class of unhealthy parasites I detest..."