Thursday, December 29, 2022

On a Literate Cat

 



1.

A few pages before the end of the second volume of E.T.A. Hoffmann’s Lebens Ansichten des Kater Murr (The Life and Opinions of Tomcat Murr), a curious episode epitomizes a theme central to the novel.  A dissolute prince, Hector, is living in sin in Naples with a dancer and, also, running after streetwalkers. During that pursuit, Hector encounters, an old, crippled gypsy woman begging on Toledo Street – Hoffmann was a lawyer and objective facts interest him: he doesn’t hesitate to provide addresses for the bizarre events that his books recount.  The gypsy woman is a sort of witch, familiar to us from 19th century opera, and she denounces Hector for wasting his resources lusting after whores when he could be enjoying the favors of a “lovely angelic child who is madly in love with you.”  (In Hoffmann’s stories people are always falling in love at first glance or, even, become smitten upon looking at cameo pictures, a motif also derived from opera as in Mozart’s Magic Flute  – sexual passion is unpredictable, convulsive, irresistable.  The notion of derivation is inexact here: these operatic sources, of course, derive from literary sources: long-forgotten, if once popular plays and novellas.)  Hector ignores the wretched and violent beggar – she was arrested the previous day for beating up a water-seller with her crutch.  He attributes her words to the fact that she is merely a “common procuress” – that is, just a pimp.  Some time passes but “on the promenade Villa Reale” (another address, this time a fashionable one), Hector descries a beautiful young maiden in the company of an elderly, well-dressed duenna.  The old woman walks with a limp and, when she cackles, Hector recognizes the elegant matron to be the gypsy-woman who accosted him on the street.  The question arises: is the gypsy disguised as a virtuous older chaperone, or, did the respectable matron disguise herself for some reason as a filthy gypsy hag?  Hector sees the two women entering a coach and, possessed by yearning, he runs “madly” after the conveyance.  Later, Hector consults his banker, one Signor Alessandro Sperzi “residing in the Largo dell Piane”.  He asks the banker about the old woman escorting the beautiful and wealthy young maiden.  It turns out that the matronly duenna is “Frau Magdala Sigrun”, associated with a well-to-do banking family in Augsburg (a German-speaking principalilty).  The banker remarks on her disguise with words to the effect: “the fact that she sometimes disguised herself as a gypsy was a strange fancy (eine wunderliche Grille) easy to understand in this land of the freedom of masquerade (Maskenfreiheit).”  


(I am using Anthea Bell’s 1999 translation of Hoffmann’s novel.  The author’s German is difficult – it’s hard to decipher unfamiliar words from context because Hoffmann’s prose is kaleidoscopic, mutating constantly and unpredictably from one thing to another.  He is also highly allusive, uses legal jargon, and the subject matter is often arcane.  In addition, Hoffmann, often, writes in interminable sentences with thickets of dependant clauses, a bit in the style of Lawrence Sterne or Jonathan Swift or, in German, Lichtenberg’s commentaries on Hogarth engravings. Sterne, in particular, was one of Hoffmann’s masters.  For these reasons, I found Bell’s translation invaluable in checking my sometimes sketchy understanding of the German prose.  However, Bell translates accurately, but freely – for instance, I would translate the sentence above as: “The fact that she sometimes mimicked a gypsy was a strange caprice that one might easily forgive in this land of the freedom of masquerade.”  My version, I think, is closer to the banker’s language that invokes a hypothetical observer willing to overlook the elderly woman’s perverse whim – after all, that’s how we do things here in Naples; this is not just my opinion but the general tendency of thought on this matter – an eminently bourgeois interpretation by the banker that normalizes what is completely bizarre.) 


Of course, the Banker’s explanation is no explanation at all.  And the episode on the street with the gypsy-beggar woman is a bit of Hoffmann’s customary stage decoration, a mise-en-scene that always defaults to the uncanny.  This bit of business is intended to create a sense of impending doom – indeed, the relationship with the young woman as, perhaps, portended by the gypsy’s solicitation, ends in attempted fratricide as well as poisoning.  But, more fundamentally, the episode points to a persistent and obsessive theme in all of Hoffmann’s literary work – identity is infinity malleable; anyone can become anyone else.  Everyone presents one face to the world while concealing a sinister secret self.  In Hoffmann’s proto-detective novel, Fraulein Scuderi, the great and famously skilled jeweler, Cardillac is revealed to be a madman and serial murderer.  In Tomcat Murr, the feline protagonist tries out various personae – he’s an ardent lover, poet, scholar, a lad in a drinking fraternity and, even, willing to make (unsuccessful) attempts to be a dog.  Characters are afflicted by bizarre mental illnesses and fission into schizophrenic identities.  Two young women regard the composer, Kreisler, the other hero of the book, as a “blue dragon” – it’s impossible to understand how this can be – and fear him as a sort of monster.  (The maidens allude to a play by the commedia dell’ arte writer, Gozzi, that features an articulate, lethal creature of that sort.)  In Tomcat Murr, Hoffmann retreats a little from the psychic chaos in his most radical book, Princess Brambilla, a wild fantasia set during the Venetian carnival, in which everyone transforms into everyone else whilst mythical figures pretending to be human roam the streets crowded with masked revellers.  (Brambilla was a “bridge too far” for most contemporary critics although some like Heine admired the book intensely – in my view, it’s so persistently unstable with characters morphing into weird forms on every page as to be nearly unreadable.)  Ultimately, Hoffmann’s fundamental recognition is two-fold: we’re all acting and, also, all improvising: identity is something that we make up as we go – the self contains multitudes, often at war with one another.  


2.

E.T.A. Hoffmann isn’t exactly unknown today.  Neil Gaiman refers to Hoffmann’s signature work in his book The Sandman and Michael Powell (and Emeric Pressburger’s) brilliantly inventive, and frightening, filmed adaptation of Offenbach’s opera The Tales of Hoffmann remains available on a Criterion DVD although one doubts that it’s a bestseller.  But the writer’s short stories and longer works like Tomcat Murr are simply too bizarre and overwrought to remain persuasive to contemporary sensibilities.  Hoffmann is excessive – he always finds the border at which plausibility and, even, good taste come to an end and, then, blithely steps over it.  His books are full of Romantic effusions that are tedious to read today – and that Hoffmann implicitly criticizes as hysterical and destructive: it’s often impossible to know whether his purple prose is intended seriously or as a parody -- more likely, I think,  the latter.  Furthermore, his texts are rebarbative, bristling with exotic allusions, place names, addresses as we have seen, and unreliable narrators.  Hoffmann was a satirist and bleakly amused by the fashions of his day, and his works are both grotesque tales of the uncanny as well as penetrating Menippean satire.  Menippean satire, expressed in works like Apuleis The Golden Ass and Petronious Arbiter’s Satyricon, is intrinsically difficult – these works involve collages of disparate material linked together by argumentative discourse or dialogue expressing wildly varying points of view.  Hoffmann’s prose is full of surreal and loquacious characters quarreling with one another against a ramshackle framework of episodic narration that is, often, disjointed and incongruous.  Hoffmann multiples the difficulties that his work presents by almost always presenting the effect first and the cause later – sometimes dozens or, even, hundreds of pages after the picturesque event depicted.  Kreisler, one of central protagonists in Tomcat Murr, has been given a cameo portrait that, when displayed, literally knocks adversaries to their knees.  This magical talisman, employed with devastating effect throughout the book, is only explained, and, then, inadequately in the last couple paragraphs of the 322 page novel (in nearly microscopic print in Bell’s translation).  Generally, Hoffmann presents everything as a mystery – as I have noted, one of his most famous novellas is the precursor to today’s detective novels.  Sometimes, he provides the solution to the riddle – sometimes, he doesn’t.  Accordingly, the reader proceeds slowly through his prose, groping a way forward among enigmas without much confidence that any of this will be rationally explained.  Hoffmann’s influence is decisive on Edgar Alan Poe, a writer who imitates him on every page.  Sentence by sentence, Poe is the greater writer; but Hoffmann is more madly imaginative and ingenious. However, the German’s effects are diffuse, an anathema to Poe who applied strict, obsessive (although also insane) principles of ratiocination to impose unity on his works.  Poe clings to reason like a drowning man clings to a spar from the ship destroyed by the maelstrom.  Hoffmann was a famous lawyer and, later, an appellate judge – logic was his professional metier and he is surrounded by reason of the most oppressive kind and, therefore, takes refuge in bizarre flights of fantasy.   


Hoffmann’s sense that identity is neither stable nor unitary derives from the many roles that he played in his life.  Born in Koenigsburg, East Prussia, Hoffmann was a polymath.  He loved music and became one of the most renowned and penetrating critics of that art during the period in which classicism was gradually developing into the Romantic art of Beethoven, Schumann, and Schubert.  (Hoffmann was seven years younger than Beethoven and died five years before him in 1822.)  In numerous reviews and essays, Hoffmann championed new developments in music, writing in his characteristically dithyrambic and ecstatic style.  The “A” in his name, E.T.A. Hoffmann, was assumed – he named himself “Amadeus” after Mozart, a composer that he revered.  Hoffmann supported himself as a student by giving piano lessons and he was a gifted musician.  He is credited with more than 80 compositions including several operas and his works were widely performed during his lifetime.  On occasion, he actually conducted orchestras for operas, notable Mozart’s Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute. He could draw well also – too well, as it happened, since he was fired from one of his first government jobs for distributing malicious caricatures of his bosses.    


After completing a law degree in Koenigsburg, Hoffmann moved to Berlin, the capitol of Prussia, where he made a name for himself as an aggressive and highly capable lawyer.  (Like Kafka, he was naturally gifted as an attorney and, apparently, enjoyed working as a lawyer).  Initially, Hoffmann was a government prosecutor and, apparently, highly effective.  Later, he was elevated to the appellate court and wrote many legal opinions per curium.  His legal endeavors led him to encounters with abnormal psychology, the mental states of murderous criminals and madmen, and Hoffmann carefully studied contemporary psychotherapy.  (He is also a decisive influence on Freud).  He was also interested in galvanism, alchemy and chemistry, mesmerism and other sciences and pseudo-sciences. Waves of rebellion swept through Germany in the wake of the French Revolution.  Although Hoffmann was a fervent admirer of Rousseau, he was also a Prussian and, therefore, devoted to law and order.  In that capacity, Hoffmann was appointed to the Commission of Inquiry set up by authorities to investigate revolutionary activity -- that is, claims of treason charged against political opponents of the regime.  Hoffmann distinguished himself by his fair-minded and judicious approach to these charges – he advocated for acquittal with respect to most of the defendants.  Later, Hoffmann came under judicial scrutiny himself.  His last work Master Flea was deemed seditious and censored by the authorities.  Hoffmann was charged with various offenses but died before trial.  


In my library, I have a heavy volume from the set of Hoffmann’s collected works constituting his “juridical briefs and opinions”.  In the preface, the editor warns that the book is not light reading and that most will find the intricate language, replete with technical terms and Latin phrases, as well as the enormous bureaucratic sentences “somewhat difficult to appreciate.”   I’ve dipped into the volume and, of course, it is unreadable.  I bought the book used but it seemed brand new and I found no traces that anyone had ever opened the book, let alone attempted to read it.


3.

The plot of Tomcat Murr is unimportant, incidental to Hoffmann’s primary concerns, the deployments of spooky Gothic elements against a broadly satirical background.  Sometimes, Tomcat Murr spoofs its uncanny aspects – it’s hard to grasp whether he is imitating the Gothic effects of The Monk or making fun of them.  In any event, the novel’s double narrative, the stories of Tomcat Murr and the half-mad composer, Kreisler, don’t cohere into any continuously developed plot.  Furthermore, and even more radically, Hoffmann doesn’t really make much effort to rhyme the cat’s adventures with the romantic and eerie events in Kreisler’s story – the parallel narratives, as in Faulkner’s Wild Palms, proceed, more or less, independently from one another.  (This may be an effect of the fact Tomcat Murr is unfinished – Hoffmann promises the reader a third volume of the novel scheduled to appear around “Easter” but the book wasn’t written and Hoffmann died before he could perform on that commitment.  Critics speculate on the content of the unwritten third book, a completely futile endeavor.  Some think that Hoffmann would have endeavored to fuse the two strands of the novel in the last volume, but this would have difficult because the author kills off his feline narrator at the end of Book Two.)


A fragment due to Hoffmann’s death, Tomcat Murr is also composed of fragments.  At the outset, the book’s editor informs us that the literate tomcat delivered his manuscript to the printer interpolated with sheets of paper used to blot excess ink spilled on the feline’s narrative.  These sheets of paper (Makulatur-Blatt – a fancy way of saying “waste paper”) comprise a biography of Johannes Kreisler, a Kapellmeister or “music director” retained at the Court of one of the German-speaking micro-principalities, an imaginary place called Sieghartsweiler.  The cat’s handwriting is messy: Murr uses a sort of cuff made from a shirt collar to hold the pen in his paw and, so, there are many pages of blotter paper scattered throughout the text of his narrative – in fact, about 60% of the novel is comprised of Kreisler’s waste-paper biography.  By an error, it is alleged, the printer set both texts (the cat’s autobiography and Kreisler’s story) so that the book presented to the public is a series of fragments – ten pages of Murr, twelve or so pages of Kreisler repeated across the length of the novel, itself a fragment that breaks off after the completion of its second volume.  The two narratives proceed in a roughly diachronic form – that is, both plots start at the beginning and move toward various climaxes; Hoffmann’s climaxes tend to be moments of revelation in which enigmas earlier installed in the narration are solved or, at least, illuminated.  However, both Murr and the unnamed narrator of the Kreisler biography are prone to surprising shifts of tone, flashbacks, and subsidiary stories inserted within the broader narrative – that is stories within stories.  Furthermore, the reader’s comprehension of the plot is complicated by the fact that there is considerable text posited as missing in each strand of the novel.  Hoffmann likes “cliffhanger” effects and, generally, ends each fragment with a surprising development or crisis, but, when the story resumes, the plot has skipped ahead.  This creates an effect integral to the book – that is, the concealment of important narrative information in the gaps between fragments.  Historians of literature sometimes assert that the fragment is the form characteristic of European romanticism.  Under the pressure of strong, idiosyncratic emotion, narratives and literary structures blow apart, yielding shards of highly charged text.  If this is true, then, Tomcat Murr represents the Romantic novel par excellence.


Tomcat Murr is vain, pretentious, narcissistic, and vengeful – on occasion, he threatens critics with his sharp claws.  Murr’s custodian, not really his master because cats are insubordinate and independent, is a magician named Abraham Liskov.  Abraham rescued Murr when he was a kitten – he was part of litter of kittens that someone was drowning.  Abraham is a scholar and student of the dark arts and Murr has learned to read and write by closely observing him.  From time to time, Murr wanders from Abraham’s dwelling but, in most cases, he finds the greater world threatening and not congenial to his somewhat rarefied sensibility and, so, inevitably he returns to his care-giver.  (Abraham admires the cat and feeds him on milk porridge and sausage.)  Murr writes various essays for the edification of “young cats” and his literary endeavors provide Hoffmann with a forum to satirize different forms of romantic-era discourse – sometimes, Murr, who fancies himself a great poet, writes verse that borrows the diction and emotional valence of early Goethe; on other occasions, he is witty and discursive, like Laurence Sterne.  The Murr fragments comprise a parody of the classical Bildungsroman and parts of the book evoke Goethe’s two novels describing the education of Wilhelm Meister.


Hoffmann provides Murr with a sidekick, Ponto the poodle.  Ponto is servile and pompous, initially a pet owned by Lothario, an absurd professor of aesthetics at the local university.  (Later, Ponto leaves poor Lothario when the professor’s wife is seduced by a cad, Baron Alcibiades von Wipp.  The disloyal Ponto carries love letter back and forth between Lothario’s wife and the Baron and, later, is proud to have the Alcibiades as his master.)  Ponto is imagined as a well-spoken, but foolish philistine, a type important to the German romantics of this era.  Philistines were imagined as the enemies of artists, stolid bureaucrats with dull minds, numb to the higher things in life.  For a time, Murr tries out this lifestyle but unsuccessfully and, for most of the book, he is an avowed enemy of the establishment, a feline proto-revolutionary.  Murr joins a typical German drinking fraternity and ends up fighting a duel.  Hoffmann plays the duel for suspense and the scene is actually thrilling in a grotesque way.  The drinking parties with fellow cats, involving much singing and excessive consumption of something called “punch” leads to severe hangovers (the joke is that a hangover is called a Katzenjammer in German – that is, “cat misery”; another gag is that the cats fancy themselves great choral singers, although the humans who hear them don’t agree and throw buckets of ice water on them; the cats are, so to speak, “caterwauling” although they don’t know it.)  A wise old cat dies and Hoffmann stages a spectacular funeral with a protracted discourse by a feline orator that, apparently, parodies obsequies common to the era.       


Murr is amorous and much of his autobiography recounts his various love affairs.  In his youth, he loves Miesmies (“Kitty”), a mesallience since she is illiterate and unimaginative.  After the funeral, at the Leichenschmaus (“the funeral banquet”), Murr encounters Mina, another attractive female that he courts.  Mina turns out to be Murr’s own daughter, apparently conceived with Miesmies, but our libertine narrator blithely informs us that love-affairs with one’s offspring are not prohibited in the world of cats.  At the end of the book, Murr is experimenting with inter-species romance – a young greyhound bitch, Minona purports to admire Murr’s poetry (she claims to have memorized it) and the vainglorious cat tries to make her his mistress.  Minona is associated with a canine literary club – the dogs are described as dolts and fools. We last see Murr, listening with disdain to Ponto’s account of his adventures as a go-between, carrying love letters and tryst assignations between the licentious Baron Alcibiades and Lothario’s wife. 


Each section narrated by Murr commences with a grandiloquent (and tedious) preface of general observations leavened with philosophical reflections.  Murr’s prose-style is intricate and hard to read, even Hegelian in its obscurity on occasion.  However, these parts of the book are merely “throat-clearing” and, after a page or so, the text reverts of Murr’s mock-heroic exploits.  Murr is a great plagiarist and periodically the editor intervenes to denounce the feline author for presenting passages from Schiller and Shakespeare as his own.   On the last page of the second volume of the book, the editor abruptly announces that Murr has unexpectedly died, but that fragments of his unpublished works will be cited in the next volume of the novel – a work that Hoffmann, ailing and involved in litigation over Master Flea, never began.  


The book’s plot involving Kreisler is much more complex, but, also, more conventional.  Kreisler’s narrative, presented as a biography, will be familiar to readers who have read Eichendorff’s From the Life of a Good-for-Nothing and other books by Hoffmann: the story involves an intricate love-triangle complicated by all sorts of digressions, flashbacks, and romantic complications.  The stage-machinery is operatic: palace gardens full of hidden trysting places, a monastery in the mountains, complex masquerades, some lurking ghosts (for instance a painter who committed suicide), gypsy-witches, and various species of madness – schizophrenia and paranoia feature prominently.  Notwithstanding the Sturm und Drang mechanics that drive the plot, the tone is blithe and, often, satirical.  Hoffmann mocks the pretensions of Prince Irenaeus, the pompous and self-aggrandizing ruler of a domain about the size of a postage stamp.  Irenaeus has two children, a son, Ignaz who seems to be a congenital moron (he has obsessive compulsive disorder and plays at executions) and a marriageable daughter, Hedwiga.  Irenaeus is motivated to seek a suitable husband for Hedwiga – his tiny kingdom is subject to the depredations of its neighbors and, in fact, has been reduced by aggression to little more than a palace and expansive garden.  Irenaeus badly needs royal allies and so he schemes to effect an alliance by marriage, probably at the expense of poor Hedwiga.  Irenaeus is also the guardian of another maiden, Julia  – it’s implied that Julia is also Irenaeus’ daughter as a result of a liaison with Baroness Benzon, one of the ladies in the Court.  


Irenaeus employs Kreisler as his Kapellmeister.  Kreisler is the son of an organ builder who created lavish baroque instruments, organs garlanded with cherubs and trumpet-blowing angels (some of them mechanically animated).  Unfortunately, the sound created by these organs is atrocious – the instruments look good but sound awful.  Kreisler has been neglected by his tyrannical father, entrusted to the care of an abusive uncle – Kreisler calls the man “Uncle Woe” (Weh-Oheim).  Taught to play the piano by his “Woe-Uncle”, Kreisler becomes a gifted, if highly unconventional, musician.  When he hears a properly constructed organ, Kreisler is inspired to take up his father’s trade, although by this time he has fled his paternal home.  During his wanderings, Kreisler encounters Abraham Liskov, later the human patron to Murr the tomcat.  Abraham is a conjuror capable of all sorts of legerdemain – he can create doppelgaengers by use of “an astral lamp,” muffles sound so that eavesdroppers are thwarted, and operates an oracle called “The Invisible Girl”.  “The Invisible Girl” is a glass sphere that seems to answer inquiries presented to it, speaking in the voice of a young woman who can not be seen.  We first meet Abraham contriving an elaborate fireworks display in the gardens of Irenaeus palace – the pyrotechnics go spectacularly wrong.  Abraham encourages Prince Irenaeus to hire his young protegee, Kreisler, as court musician.  Unfortunately, this leads to misfortune.


When Kreisler is introduced at Court, both Julia and Hedwiga conceive an immoderate, ecstatic passion for him.  Kreisler loves Julia, probably because she is talented singer.  (She performs his secular and religious works from time to time in the novel.)  The Kapellmeister is indifferent to poor Hedwiga.  Irenaeus has imported the scion of another noble family into the household – this is Prince Hector, a German who has developed some bad and licentious habits from his sojourn in Naples.  Hector woos Hedwiga but seems to desire a love affair with Julia.  When Hector stalks Julia in the garden, Kreisler intervenes, terrifying the aristocratic young man with a mysterious talisman, a cameo portrait given to him by his mentor Abraham.  A mysterious phantom haunts the large, wild garden surrounding the palace.  Everyone is terrified and the dim, ostentatious Irenaeus suspects a sinister cabal plotting to topple him from his already unsteady throne.  Kreisler, thwarted in love, retreats to a monastery where he drinks heavily with an alcoholic monk, Father Hilarius, and stages various masses and requiems.  Hector has vanished.  A strange, fearsome prelate from Italy arrives at the monastery and, because he is insanely ascetic, bans the performance of Kreisler’s music.  This monk, Cyprianus, conceals a dark secret, a moral lapse, that has turned him into a religious fanatic.  It turns out that Cyprianus is Hector’s brother and that a rivalry between the two siblings led Hector into attempted murder (and the poisoning of the young woman who was the source of this sibling rivalry).  


Kreisler returns to Irenaeus’ palace where we learn that Hector has been haunting the garden, dwelling with a servant in the various pavilions on the premises.  When Hector, who has been stalking both young women, is discovered, the dimwitted Irenaeus is thrilled.  Hedwiga, thwarted in her love for Kreisler, has succumbed to catatonic hysteria.  Aroused, at last, from her paralysis, she demurs to her father’s wishes and agrees to marry Prince Hector, who continues, however, his efforts at seducing Julia.  Irenaeus betroths Julia to the half-wit Ignaz.  This situation is obviously untenable: Ignaz has the mind of a seven-year old and Hedwiga, who is willing to marry Hector for her father’s sake, doesn’t even like, let alone love, the arrogant and libertine prince.  It is this romantic conundrum that Hoffmann establishes for solution in the novel’s denouement in the unwritten volume three.


What follows is sheer speculation: I suspect that Irenaeus will demand that Abraham contrive an elaborate pageant for the wedding complete with brilliant and thunderous pyrotechnics.  The double wedding (Hector and Hedwiga / Julia and Ignaz) will involve heavily veiled brides.  In the chaos of fireworks and smoke, Kreisler, disguised as Ignaz, will be wed to Julia.  It’s not clear to me what Hoffmann will do with Hector and Hedwiga.  My guess is that Hedwiga will be banished to a convent, but there will meet Cyprianus, who repented his austere fanaticism at the end of Book Two.  Hedwiga and Cyprianus will end up married.  Hector, I suppose, will have to be killed or disposed of in some other way – maybe, he will return to military service in Naples and die on the battlefield.  Prince Irenaeus will marry his former inamorata, Baroness Benzon who has served as his confidante and advisor throughout the two preceding volumes and recognize Julia as an heir, thereby enriching Kreisler.  Although Hoffmann fills his stories with spectral and uncanny events, he tends to favor happy endings and, although I may have some of the details wrong, I suspect that I have accurately imagined the tenor of the book’s ending.         


4.

Strange influences abound in Tomcat Murr.  My plot summary suggests that the novel’s subject, unlike its bizarre form, is somewhat conventional.  The Murr narrative is a jolly Bildungsroman with satirical interludes involving parodies of German literary forms prevalent during the period.  Kriesler’s story is an elaborate Gothic novel involving a complex romantic triangle.  But, the texture of the book is gnarled and grotesque, studded with allusions and foreign phrases, weird with apparently supernatural effects.  I say “apparently” because Hoffmann, like Conan Doyle, for instance, generally provides realistic explanations for occurrences that are initially portrayed as occult and ghostly.  


In fact, the boundary between real phenomenon and the supernatural is porous.  Hoffmann describes love as a kind of galvanism.  The touch of the beloved induces a literal shock – Hoffmann invokes no fewer than three different electrical species (eels, rays, and the cutlass fish), specified, of course, by their Latin zoological names, to characterize the galvanic energy of erotic love.  The gloomy park surrounding Irenaeus’ palace is full of specters.  Abraham creates a Doppelgaenger that torments Kreisler using an “astral lamp.” The text is replete with examples of abnormal psychology: Ignaz seems to be both autistic and simple-minded (he execute small animals to Julia’s horror); Cyprianus is a morbid religious fanatic; Irenaeus is paranoid, constantly fearing rebellion; a young painter, Ettlinger, thwarted in love has drowned himself in the stream that flows through the gardens and his unquiet ghost seems to haunt the thickets and pavilions; in a spectacular scene, Princess Hedwiga becomes rigid and catatonic, a hysterical reaction to her misfortunes in love.  The moods of characters are mercurial – they change from wild ecstasy to profound despair in the course of a sentence or two.  Everyone seems on the brink of a schizophrenic breakdown, all lit by the bizarre radiance of exploding fireworks.


Hoffmann delights in florid landscapes, but his pen-portraits invoke the dark and gloomy, proto-romantic paintings of Jacob Ruisdael.  There’s always a thunderstorm approaching through the electrically charged air.  Of course, the picturesque park at Sieghartsweiler exists in an great amphitheater ringed by rugged mountains and gorges.  Ominous undertones throb beneath even brilliantly lit scenes.  


Kreisler, whose biography the book purports to present, is an uncanny figure himself.  He imagines the world is synaesthetic terms: Julia’s beauty embodies the sound of his musical compositions – she is that to which his art aspires.  Organs are ornately decorated but sound terrible.  Kreisler hears tones that no one else can perceive.  Throughout the book, he invents instruments to play the music that he alone can imagine.  Great wires are strung between palace towers to sound as an aeolian harp.  He builds a water organ and, then, an organ made entirely from paper, and contrives other strange instruments.  The music that he makes is eccentrically tuned – we learn that employs micro-tone in his compositions and had innovated strange and eerie chords.  


In Tomcat Murr, the plot is incidental to a series of uncanny (unheimlich) details that create an ominous, brooding atmosphere, a pervasive gothic tone, notwithstanding aspects of the novel that are clearly intended to be jocular, even funny after the manner of slapstick comedy.  The book’s tone oscillates wildly from one extreme to another just as the narrative stutters and jerks back and forth between the adventures of the vainglorious cat and the half-crazed musician.


5.

A comparison with Edgar Alan Poe is illustrative.  Poe is heavily influenced by Hoffmann, much of the American’s fame based on conveying into English prose effects invented by the German.  


During his time in Naples and his apprenticeship as a magician in Hoffmann’s novel, Abraham encounters a sinister Italian mountebank named Severino.  (Tomcat Murr is indebted to the Bildungsroman to the extent that it portrays Abraham, like the young Goethe, educating himself by immersion in the delights and appalling passions prevalent in Italy.)  Severino has invented an illusion called “The Invisible Girl” (unsichtbar Maedchen).  In a small chamber, a querent addresses questions to a glass sphere.  The sphere seems to reply, issuing oracular pronouncements in the voice of a young girl.  Abraham discovers that the trick relies upon a small, emaciated child, purchased from itinerant gypsies, named Chiara.  Confined in a tiny box, Chiara is hidden in the room and responds to the inquiries posed by the customer who has paid to have his or her fortune told.  Chiara seems to have some kind of second-sight.  In a Dickensian flourish, we learn that the more Severino beats her, the better her ability at pronouncing plausible and, even, inerrant prophecies.  Abraham rescues the young girl and Severino falls sick and dies.  Thereupon, Abraham assumes Severino’s name by which he becomes widely known as a magician and conjuror in Naples.  Furthermore, Abraham continues to exploit the gifts of the abused child – he operates the “Invisible Girl” illusion for his own profit and becomes renowned for that exhibition.  However, Abraham falls in love with Chiara and, ultimately, makes her his wife and, then, at the height of their fame, she mysteriously vanishes.  (The riddle of Chiara’s disappearance awaits solution, I assume, in the unwritten Third Volume of the novel.)  Chiara’s evaporation into thin air is the great sorrow of Abraham’s life and he is afflicted by this grief throughout the book.  


In the course of this subplot, Hoffmann mentions in passing another famous illusion of his era, Maelzel’s chess-playing Turk.  The Turk was an automaton, powered by gears and springs that worked audibly to cause the robotic figure to manipulate chess pieces on a board displayed atop a cabinet to which the robot was affixed.  The chess-playing Turk was skilled and accepted challenges from all comers, generally winning his matches.  Of course, the concept of the chess-playing automaton is a precursor to experiments in artificial intelligence such as Deep Blue, IBM’s computer chess master.  (Deep Blue played Gary Kasparov in 1996 – Kasparov won the series of matches 4 to 2; however, the headline was that Kasparov, a reigning world champion chess grandmaster, was defeated by the machine twice.  Kasparov thought he detected “creativity” in some of Deep Blue’s play and accused IBM of using its human chess masters to guide the program’s play.  What Kasparov thought was “creativity” turned out to be an error, an inadvertent loop in Deep Blue’s programming.)


In 1836, Maelzel’s chessplaying Turk, invented almost sixty years earlier by the German clockmaker and artificer Wolfgang von Kempelen, finally made its way to Richmond, Virginia.  By this time, the machine was very old, threadbare, and, probably, not working very reliably.  Nonetheless, the automaton played a series of games against Richmond opponents, winning most of them.  (Losses were ascribed to the machine’s age and ill-repair.)  Edgar Allan Poe claimed to have witnessed this exhibition, although as is typical with him, there is considerable doubt as to whether the writer actually saw the machine in action.  Probably, he read detailed newspaper accounts and, in his persona, as “Hoaxy Poe” (a moniker invented by the critic Daniel Hoffman), the writer simply claimed to be present.  (If Poe had been in the room, it seems obvious that he would have challenged the mechanical Turk to play chess with him, something that he doesn’t claim to have done.)


Poe’s essay “Maelzel’s Chess-Player” was published in The Southern Literary Messenger, April 1836.  The author denigrates previous “attempts at explanation” as “too obviously absurd to require comment, or refutation” or as “bizarre”.  In fact, earlier accounts of the automaton’s operation – “that a dwarf actuated the machine” or that “a well-taught boy” concealed in the cabinet adjacent to the robot – parallel Hoffmann’s glance at a solution to the enigma of the chess-playing mechanical Turk and are, in fact, more or less equivalent to what Poe argues, albeit in greater detail.  Poe sets up a “straw man” argument to demolish, namely that the automaton as a “pure machine” somehow is capable of playing chess.  So far as I can tell, no one ever really thought that the robot worked as a “pure machine” without human intervention.  Indeed, Poe remarks that neither of the chess-playing Turk’s exhibitors, Baron Kempelen, its maker, and Maelzel, the subsequent owner of the device when it reached Richmond almost sixty years later, ever exactly claimed that automaton operated as a pure machine.  (Nineteenth-century standards for truth-telling seemed to have allowed suggestive ambiguity or equivocation but not outright deceit and fraud.  Poe is careful not to accuse the exhibitor of actually lying about the Turk’s operation.)  Midway through the essay, Poe states the obvious: “Some person is concealed in the box during the exhibition.”  Of course, this is what previous commentators expressed in their writings and consistent with Hoffmann’s parenthetical remark about the Turk.  But Poe, who is always at pains to show that he is the most intelligent person in the room, regards prior speculation about the machine’s operation as inadequate, simply because the writers fail to explain in detail how the illusion was created.  Poe’s essay is obsessively and fanatically explicit as to his suppositions about the exact manner in which the trick was performed.  His so-called “decisive”solution (claimed in the third sentence of his essay) differs from earlier writing on the automaton in that Poe engages in “ratiocination”, that is, the application of deductive logic to the enigmas posed by the Turk.  In this respect. “Maelzel’s Chess-Playing Turk” can be read as adjuncts to his detective fiction, for instance, “The Purloined Letter” or “The Murders in the Rue Morgue.”  It’s not enough to state a hypothesis, Poe demands that any theory about how the Turk operated be proven by objective evidence beyond any shadow of doubt.


Like Flannery O’Connor, every sentence written by Edgar Allan Poe, must be regarded as allegorical.  The strange and contorted logic in “Maelzel’s Chess-Playing Turk” seems excessive to the subject matter, after all, merely an old-fashioned side-show exhibit when the threadbare Ottoman reached Richmond in 1836.  Some topic of general philosophical importance, accordingly, seems to be at stake in Poe’s prosecutorial and forensic analysis of this old illusion.  The question on which Poe deliberates is how do we distinguish a “pure machine” (Poe supplies the emphasis) from a machine activated by human agency – that is, a “partial machine.”  Human beings are “partial machines” – that is assemblies of vein, artery and tissue knit together with a web of nerves; galvanism proved that human beings were, at least, in part machines – dead tissue, Poe observes, could be reanimated, or compelled into motion, by the application of an electrical charge.  (As we have seen, the idea of an electrical charge animating emotion is also fundamental to Hoffmann.)  Poe himself was a partial machine – that is, a human calculator operating to apply logic (ratiocination) in such a way as to mathematically deduce truths.  But, of course, as Poe’s stories demonstrate, there is more to the “partial machine” of a person than merely a system of valves and pumps.  People are more than “meat machines” – they are ensouled; that is, there is a ghost in the machine.  Hence, at stake in Poe’s essay on the Turk is nothing less than a sort of negative demonstration of what constitutes a “partial machine” – how do we distinguish between what is purely machine and what is only partially machine, that is, human?   


Poe adduces several criteria observed in the Turk’s operation that convince him that the machine is only “partial” – that is, that there is a ghost concealed in the mechanism.  As opposed to pure machines, human agency is unpredictable and involves irregular motions – the Turk’s chess moves aren’t akin to clockwork.  Humans deliberate and the Turk pauses in its operation to consider unexpected moves made by its adversary.  Humans are fallible and the Turk sometimes makes bad moves and, even, loses on occasion.  We are readily distracted whereas animated clockwork is impervious to such influences; Poe notes that the machine is designed in such way as to eliminate visual or sound cues that might distract its concealed operator.  Humans like mirrors and the Turk’s interior seems to be mirrored to multiply reflections and, thereby, create an intricate illusory space in which the actual chess-player can hide.  We are creatures guided by our senses.  A clock or mechanical duck (one of Poe’s examples of earlier automatons) work fine in utter darkness.  But the Turk is always exhibited in bright light, presumably so the operator can see the playing board.  Finally, we feel pain.  The Turk, inhabited partially, by a human being can’t make certain motions – these would require contortions too painful for the operator to endure.  Underlying Poe’s analysis is anxiety about whether we can reliably differentiate between mechanical simulacra and real people – this is a concern more relevant to us today than it was to Poe’s genteel antebellum readers.  


Ultimately, the solution to the enigma of the chess-playing Turk, like the revelation of most illusions produced by conjurors, is trivial.  Poe tells us that the interior of the cabinet contains a concealed void 3 foot 4 inches vertically by 2 foot 6 inches deep and 2 foot 4 inches wide.  (The crazy specificity of these dimensions is typical of Poe; he says the void is “fully sufficient to accommodate a man very much above the common size” – a questionable assertion that creates a shiver of claustrophobia in the reader; it’s easy to think of “The Premature Burial” when perusing “Maelzel’s Chess-Player.”) When the automaton was exhibited by its inventor, Baron von Kempelen was accompanied by an Italian assistant, a fellow who vociferously denied any understanding of the game of chess.  But when the Italian was taken ill, matches with the Turk were suspended and Kempelen’s assistant was never visibly present when the automaton was in operation.  The owner of the Turk, Maelzel, when it played in Richmond was assisted by a man named Guillame (or William) Schlumberger “about the medium size but with a remarkable stoop in the shoulders.”  When the Turk was exhibited in Richmond (at the Dancing Academy of M. Bossieux, Poe tells us with characteristic obsessional precision), Schlumberger was taken ill.  By coincidence all chess matches with the Turk were canceled until the man recovered.  “The inferences from all this we leave (Poe writes) without further comment to the reader.”


The chess-playing Turk is grotesque, a aesthetic category that fascinated the Romantics.  The automaton occupies the twilight zone between the animate and inanimate, the human and the mechanical.  Heinrich von Kleist explores similar themes in his notable essay “On the Marionette Theater”, a writing from 1810 that, like Poe’s text, concerns questions of human agency, self-consciousness, and free-will.  In Hoffmann’s novel, Severino, the wicked mountebank and his successor, Abraham (who has assumed the name “Severino”) travel about with Chiara, the ghost in the machine, locked in a sort of casket.  Chiara, who becomes Abraham’s muse and wife, suddenly escapes from the confines of Hoffmann’s novel – she simply vanishes without a trace.  Hoffmann had no illusions about the chess-playing Turk, although his speculations possess the quality that Poe called “absurd” – I don’t know whether Poe was familiar with Tomcat Murr, although I suspect that he was.  Hoffmann says this about Chiara and the Turk: 


Chiara was often obliged to spend whole days crouching in the box...She went on journeys with Severino in the same box.  Chiara’s was a dreadful, unhappy fate like that of the dwarf whom the famous Kempelen carried about with him and who had to play chess hidden inside the Turk. 


Walter Benjamin begins his essay “Theses on the Philosophy of History” by describing the operation of the chess-playing Turk.  Then, he says:


One can imagine a philosophical counterpart to this device.  The puppet called “historical materialism” is to win all the time.  It can easily be a match for anyone if it enlists the services of theology, which today, as we know, is wizened and has to keep out of sight.


Sunday, December 25, 2022

Christmas 2022




1.

Christmas is a message transmitted from the past.  The signal originates in an ancient world mostly unimaginable to us.  It’s the broadcast from neo-Platonic, gnostic Jews, a pulse out of the “fabulous, formless darkness,” as Yeats wrote, describing the dismay with which the Romans beheld Christianity’s eruption into their world.  Today, the signal is much attenuated, befogged by time, a faint tremor.  We’re poised on the brink, it seems, of something equally formless because unknown and fabulous because beyond our imagining.


2.

Christmas is the cruelest day in the cruelest season.  Memories swarm around us in the icy darkness.  The dead are unquiet and whisper.  This year, my wife, Julie, lost her sister and her mother.  On Christmas Eve, Julie remembered traveling with her parents to the village of Pine Island to celebrate the holiday with her grandparents.  I suppose the kids were a little impatient and, probably, resentful about being hauled away from home to the old house where the old people lived.  There, the rooms were full of artifacts from the time before my wife was born, exotic images and things from the past that, for a seven-year old, might as well be Egyptian or Babylonian.  We don’t know what we have until we lose it.  Julie began to sob, remembering her grandparents who can no longer be visited, her parents who are now both dead, her sister who died this Autumn.  What would she give to see these people one more time?


I would guess that after the excitement of opening gifts and the rich, narcotic food, the children fell asleep in the car as it coursed through the cold and dark night returning home.  


3.

Half the world was covered in hideous cold.  At the ends of the streets in Austin where I live, walls of blowing snow blotted out horizons, fields, structures trembling under the onslaught of the wind.  Vortices of ice crystals spun over drifts in the driveways.  The wind-chill was forty-below.  It was the coldest Christmas in living memory, stalked by blizzards and calamity on the icy roads.  When I took my old dog outside, she shuddered and gingerly moved her paws through the snow as if they were scalded.  In the naked, quivering trees, a few crows were gathered, the living embodiment of the blizzard.


4.

My daughter’s friend, Keisha, spent Christmas Eve with us.  She works at a residential home for troubled adolescents.  Keisha said that one of the girls had made a shank from a peppermint stick licked to a point and taped onto a plastic spoon.


5.

The box was marked with yellow tape, like a police cordon, but labeled “fragile.”  The package was exceedingly heavy and hard to disassemble.  Inside, there was slab of terra-cotta sculpted as a facsimile of a Maya stela.  The carvings on the slab show a man sprawled under an ornate tree-like emblem.  The man’s eyes are closed and his noble beak-like nose is turned upward and he wears elaborate regalia, a feathered headdress and jaguar-skin leggings.  He rests unsteadily on a sort of altar punctuated with little staring eyes.  As is the case with classic Maya art, the carving is unfathomably intricate with borders decorated with rows of glyphs and the tree crowned with strips of talon and tail-feather.  


6.

At night, during the days before Christmas, I sit in the living room watching music on You-Tube: Patti Smith with hip-length braids of white hair, whinnying and spitting, as she sings “Horses! Horses! Horses! Coming in from all directions”, Neil Young performing at Willie Nelson’s Farm-aid, J. Geils Band “Angel in Blue”, Joni Mitchell with Bob Dylan (both of them young and beautiful), Bruce Springsteen, arias from Mozart, a cantata by Bach.  Some of these performers are dead now, others are still alive.  But time is passing and the signals are growing fainter, even though preserved for the time being on You-Tube, but soon enough these artist will all be as dead as Frank Sinatra or (as Alan Ginsberg wrote) “Emily Bronte and Hitler.”  You-Tube is the place where dead voices gather.


7.

I went outside to walk in the cold.  The sidewalks were drifted over and the wind howled lethal threats through the barren trees.  Walking in snow is tiring, particularly these drifts encased in shells of icy crystal – your foot pierces the snow’s surface and, then, flounders.  I was breathing heavily and the mucous in my nose was freezing.  When I went to the doctor the day before, the physician’s assistant told me that my heart was beating abnormally – there was a little stutter to its pulse.  “It’s ectopic,” the PA told me.  Walking in the calf-deep snow, I felt the exertion and I wondered if I would suddenly topple over.  I recalled a photograph in a book that I once perused about the German author, Robert Walser.  He was confined in an insane asylum in the Alps but allowed to hike the hills overlooking the sanitarium.  A  picture, documenting his death, shows a trail of footprints leading to where Walser has fallen, his body a black blot under dark hat and coat against the white of the snowy meadow.  I trudged through the snow, keeping my head down because of the terrible wind.  


8.

My neighbor keeps five rabbits in his front yard behind a wire fence.  There is a tent a bit like those canopies set up grave-side at funerals.  The rabbits live in hutches in the canvas tent.  


I was surprised to see three of the rabbits out in the cold, backs turned to the wind, round balls of fur huddled against the fence-line.  In the dark, the rabbits were featureless, formless except for the liquid mirrors of their eyes that caught and reflected the faint ray of a streetlight down the avenue.  


9.

One of my daughters is imprisoned in the women’s correctional facility in western North Dakota.  The penitentiary is where the high plains begin to break up into raw and seething badlands, veins of lignite and orange terra-cotta scoria produced when burning coal scorched clay in the guts of the earth.  My daughter sent me a form that I could complete so that candies and cookies could be mailed to her for Christmas.  Earlier I had told me ex-wife that I would send her money to put in my daughter’s prison account – she makes $1.33 per day when she works.  I didn’t want to wire the money to the account myself.  I said: “I don’t want to have a relationship with the North Dakota correctional facilities.”  But I swallowed my pride and provided credit card information so that the candy and cookies would be sent to the penitentiary.  I wonder if she received the basket of treats.  A few weeks after she was first incarcerated, I sent her a package of books ordered through Barnes & Noble and delivered, according to correctional department protocol, to the penitentiary.  The staff took the books and, instead, delivered to my daughter some torn and filthy underwear taunting her with the words: “Look what someone sent you!”  The books were long novels because I thought my daughter would have plenty of time to read.  But she never received them.


10.

On a pot in the Princeton Museum of Art, a Maya artist painted a rabbit with a white, staring eye.  The rabbit is holding a stylus in its paw.  The rabbit is a scribe about to letter an inscription on an accordion-folded scroll of paper made from boiled fig leaves.  The scroll is stiff, treated with lime to create a snow-white surface for the inscription.  


11.

In the invaluable catalogue for the exhibition of Maya art, The Blood of Kings, I found a reproduction of the carved slab that I unwrapped on Christmas Eve.  The image is intricate and warrants several pages of description in the book.  


In fact, the slab represents a limestone sarcophagus lid, excavated in 1952 from the depths of the Temple of Inscriptions in Palenque.  The sarcophagus contained the body of Lord Pacal, a Maya ruler who was born on May 26, 603 (A.D.) and died August 31, 683.  Lord Pacal ruled Palenque for 68 years having ascended to the throne when he was 12.  Sensing that death was imminent, Pacal ordered the construction of his tomb with work on the grave beginning around 675.


The noble figure sprawled at the center of the slab is Lord Pacal, twisted a little, as he falls from the World-Tree. The center of his forehead is split by a jade axe (or celt) signifying that he is dead.  Standing like a peanut on his nose, there is perched a bone.  (In Mayan, the word for “bone” and “seed” are the same – thus, the bone signifies the hope for resurrection.)  The world-tree is a Ceiba, marked with the glyphs te’ (wood) and nen (mirror) – mirror means brightness and so the tree is radiant; its wood shines.  Dragons emerge as cross-members of the world-tree; from their jaws scrolls emanate, marks that signify blood – the dragons are avatars of the “Perforator God” who pierces tongues and penises to release the sacred blood of kings that revives and animates the world.  Other glyphs tells us that the sap of the tree is the blood of the earth.  (Sap as copal is burned as incense, just as fig-bark papers clotted with the blood of the kings were set ablaze to give the gods a whiff of the sacrifices required to drive the machinery of existence.)  Pacal has fallen from the middle rungs of the world-tree, our world, and is dropping down into Xibalba, the Underworld.  Xibalba is a place of bad smells, stagnant water, darkness.  The maw of the Quadrapartite earth monster is open to receive the falling corpse of the king.  The jaws of a mighty centipede reach up to embrace Pacal as he descends.  Glyphs on the border of the slab name Pacal’s noble ancestors.  Above and below the scene, skybands depict the sun and moon and Venus, the destroyer and renewer.  A celestial bird, with an obsidian beak and resplendent tail feathers all dripping jewels, sings atop the world-tree.    


12.

On the night before Christmas Eve, I watched a lecture in art history delivered at Stanford by Alexander Nemerov.  (Nemerov is the son of a famous poet, Howard Nemerov; his aunt was the photographer Diane Arbus.)  Nemerov’s lecture was an introduction to his course on the history of art.  Delivered in an elegant-looking lecture hall, Nemerov appears as a shadowy figure, eclipsed by the 20 foot slides that are projected on a screen behind him.  

Some of the lecture was homely, quotidian – Nemerov mentioned landmarks on the Stanford campus and told his students the dates of their mid-term and final exams.  The first artwork considered in the course was a religious icon by Duccio.  The 13th century image is small and scalloped on its bottom frame where candles lit before the picture over the centuries have gnawed away the wood.  Mary and a sportive infant Jesus appear against a brilliant gold-leaf background, a glowing mirror-like void (nen).  Mary is recognizable as the portrait, perhaps, of some local courtesan but her face is somber – she knows in her heart that the baby will grow into a man who will be crucified.  The infant taps at her chin and wears a little gown like a choir-boy.  


Nemerov says that images like this are alien.  They are fragments from a lost world that have somehow survived the wrack of time.  When contemplating them, we must respect the “otherness” of the past.  As opposed to the past’s “otherness”, Nemerov posits the “glow” of the present – this is the glow investing the life that we lead.  It’s the halo or aura of the contemporary.  The goal of the art historian is to translate the irreversible “otherness” of the past into the “glow” of our present – that is, to let the strangeness and alien character of works of art from long ago glow with the aura of our current existence.  Neither the past nor the present should efface one another – rather, they should fuse and interpenetrate while remaining, also, distinct.  


Do the students understand what he is saying?  They are quiet, respectful, and applaud politely when he ends the lecture.


13,

I found Bach’s Christmas cantatas on You-Tube and watched them.  The music is beautiful, but, after awhile, everything sounds the same.  The cantatas were performed in a Baroque church in Vienna and, sometimes, the faces of the singing choirboys or the soloists with their round, dark mouths, were intercut with pictures of creches – wood-carvings depicting Joseph and Mary, the baby Jesus and the shepherds and three kings.  One shot shows a dignified-looking donkey. 


The musicians are trying to reach out to me, but I can’t quite understand their message.  There’s something stony about this music, marmoreal, like the faces of the effigies in the manger, that doesn’t communicate with me. 


14.

On You-Tube Bruce Springsteen performs his song “The Ghost of Tom Joad” with Tom Morello. It’s a concert in Anaheim, California, probably ten or twelve years ago.  The clip documents an impressively fierce and vibrant performance and I asked my son, Jack, to watch the video.  But he wasn’t interested.  “They’re all just old drunks,” he said, “has-beens, and it disturbs me to see this elderly rock stars.”  I drove him home.  The cold was appalling.  Jack said: “I can’t stand seeing stuff like that.  It’s so old.”  I replied: “It’s not old to me.  It’s part of my life.”  And, I thought, there is a timeless aspect to the soul, something in me that doesn’t grow old – although I look different, I’m still the same person that I was when I was twenty.  


15.

Claude Levi-Strauss, the great French anthropologist, remarked that American soldiers on their march across the continent often blew up French cheese shops and creameries where the stuff was made.  The   Americans didn’t like the smell of some of the cheese and said that it reminded them of decaying bodies, corpses rotting on the battlefields. 

16.

Once in Jerusalem, Levi-Strauss spoke about the messages that art transmits to us from the past.  Linda Schele and Mary Ann Miller, the epigraphers who finally deciphered written Mayan, were at the conference.  They recalled that Levi-Strauss said: “He made the point that some of us spend our lives trying to decipher (Maya or other ancient) art, only to discover that their messages were not intended for us.”


17.

As I walked from my car in my driveway after dropping Jack at his house on Christmas Eve, I looked into the sky.  The storm had cleared and the sky was studded with big, crystalline stars.  The wind still roared in the trees, but the clouds were gone and I could see into outer space.  Venus was as bright as an acetylene torch throbbing overhead in the south-southwest sky.  I watched the heavens for a minute or two, but, then, my hands became numb and the cold pressed tears out of my eyes and my brow burnt as if scalded and, so, I hurried inside.


To the memory of Terry Dilley, Kim Lockhart, and Rick Herreid


December 25,2022


Sunday, December 11, 2022

On Ill-dressed Fishes

 



When he lived in Venice for a little less than three years, Lord Byron claimed to have made love to 300 different women.  When not copulating, he also wrote industriously – the first part of his masterpiece, Don Juan, the last cantos of Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, and Beppo.  The latter is a novella in verse, the comic account of a Venetian nobleman, Giuseppe (“Beppo”) captured by the Turks, enslaved, and, then, freed to make a (potentially) inopportune return to the canals and lagoons of his home town.  Beppo arrives home during Carnival, raucous festivities that allow him to prowl around Venice masked and anonymous.  Of course, Beppo’s wife has taken a cavalier servente or cicisebo (this unusual onomatopoeic word means “whisperer”), that is, a gallant courtier that accompanies her to public events such as Mass, concerts, balls and parties and, perhaps, enjoys her favors from time to time.  This useful role was an institution in Venice, as well as other Mediterranean countries, and the convention that husband and cicisebo would be fast friends, united in their mutual devotion to the lady involved, was an enterprise that appealed to Lord Byron for obvious reasons.  In Beppo, the heroine’s husband, dressed ironically as a turbaned Turk, meets his wife and her cavalier during the carnival.  All ends happily.  Beppo is reunited with his wife, although she retains her relationship with the cicisebo, as authorized both by prevailing social mores and the acquiescent husband.  Byron felt that Italian society was more enlightened, and less hypocritical, than the English and makes this point with his jocular tale.  Composed in ottava rima, the narrative poem is often regarded as a rehearsal for the more complex, much longer, and more ambitious Don Juan.


Byron longer poems, particularly those that are satirical and comic, are digressive.  The poet is readily distracted and will go far afield from his narrative to achieve a good gag.  Indeed, much of the pleasure in reading this verse is observing Byron’s high-wire act, stretching the sinews of narrative as far as possible to acquire jokes or make ironic points, without falling and before snapping back to the poem’s argument or plot.  At the outset of Beppo, Lord Byron comments on the austerities of Lent that motivate the licentiousness of carnival (“or farewell to the flesh” as Byron remarks).  A gourmand as well as famous lover, Byron is always interested in food and feasting – he wrote that he traveled to Italy to see “Venice and the Alps and Parmesan cheese.”   In Beppo, he tells us that “(t)hrough Lent they live on fish, both salt and fresh.”  Byron notes that fish served during Lent is poorly seasoned and served without savory or piquant sauce: “To live for forty days on ill-dressed fishes / Because they have no sauces to their stews.”  Protestant travelers to Venice must eat bland-tasting fish, nearly inedible, to which they respond with “poohs and pishes.”  Byron says that these expressions of disgust come “(f)rom travelers accustomed from a boy / To eat their salmon, at least, with soy.”  Therefore, the poet recommends Englishmen planning a vist to Venice during Lent to “buy in grosses” (and have shipped to their destination) “Ketchup, Soy, Chili vinegar, and Harvey / Or, by the Lord, Lent might starve ye.”  


I’m interested in Byron’s mention of “Soy”.  The poet lived in Venice from 1816 to late in 1818 and I was surprised at his casual reference to Soy Sauce as a condiment.  My parents come from Nebraska where they were raised in the 1940's and ‘50's.  Fish was only rarely available on the prairies of central Nebraska and, of course, you had to travel to a big city like Omaha or New York or Minneapolis to find Chinese food.  When I was young, soy sauce was an exotic flavor, something that usually appeared on the table in little packets accompanying take-out chow mein.  Soy sauce was an arcane seasoning, a special treat to be enjoyed with special foods.  I suppose the stuff was available in better grocery stores, but I don’t recall my parents ever having that condiment on hand.  It wasn’t until I was in my thirties that I began to stock soy sauce in my pantry or refrigerator.  Therefore, I was surprised by Byron’s reference to the condiment – along with “ketchup, chili vinegar”and, some substance unknown to me, “Harvey”.  


Soy sauce (jiang-you in Chinese) is a venerable condiment.  In ancient times, salt was scarce and expensive.  Therefore, concoctions were devised to provide salty flavor without using large quantities of the expensive mineral.  Bamboo slips marked with writing and dating to 2200 years ago show that the sauce was brewed and traded in southwest China.  (Evidence for trade in jiang-you was found at the Mawangdui archaeological site near Changsha, China – this is a tomb complex dating to the Western Hang Dynasty about 200 BC to 9 AD.)  Soy sauce is made from fermented soybean paste.  Soy beans with wheat or barley are boiled in brine and, then, exposed to aspergilius oryzae, a fungus that ferments the paste.  This fermentation is said to “saccharify” carbohydrates into the sugars.  The resulting flavor is described by the Japanese word umami, a savory taste for which English has no exactly descriptor.  


The British were trading partners with the Dutch and, incidental to their empire, acquired in London, and other mercantile centers, exotic foodstuffs not otherwise available in Europe – for instance, catsup, an Indian condiment (basically a pickle of chili in vinegar), and various kinds of curry.  Accounting records show that the Dutch East Asia Company, the world’s first joint stock business-entity, headquartered in the Netherlands initiated the European trade in soy sauce.  In 1737, seventy-five barrels of the stuff were shipped from Dejima ,Japan to Batavia, present-day Jakarta, on the island of Japan.  (Dejima, meaning “built island”, was a walled, artificial atoll in Nagasaki harbor that had been a Portuguese trading enclave before becoming Dutch territory – the Japanese were eager to trade with Westerners but didn’t want to contaminate their society with Portuguese or Dutch merchants, and so they were confined to the export markets at Dejima.)  Thirty-five barrels of soy sauce ultimately reached Holland where the condiment proved to be very popular.  At first, Europeans were unable to brew soy sauce because they had no access to the specific fungus used to make the substance.  However, by the end of the 18th century, Europeans had developed fairly good substitutes for Asian soy sauce made with fermented portobello mushrooms. By Byron’s time, London was a funnel through which all the goods in the world flowed and, therefore, he was well acquainted with the stuff.  (Soy sauce was a relative late-comer to American cuisine.  The sauce was first brewed for American consumption in Hawaii in 1909.  When I was growing up, the leading producer of the condiment was La Choy.  This company first marketed soy sauce in the United States in 1933).

 

What is “Harvey sauce”?  This condiment was invented in 1730 by a woman working for Peter Harvey, the proprietor of the Black Dog Inn in Bedfont, Middlesex.  Sometimes called “rotten fish” sauce, the stuff is a variant on the ancient Roman (and Phoenician) condiment called garum made from fermenting anchovies.  If you want to produce Harvey sauce for yourself get six anchovies, mix them with two head of crushed garlic, a pinch of mushroom catsup and three tablespoons of soy sauce.  Let this concoction stand for a few thousand years and you will have piquant “rotting fish” sauce or Harvey (sometimes also called “Lazenby”) sauce.  This product was sold under a bright orange label by the same company that manufactured Worcestershire sauce.  It seems to be unknown today but was very popular in Victorian England – Dickens and Thackeray mention the stuff, Byron obviously liked it, and Mrs. Beeton, the author of a popular cookbook in that period (Mrs. Beeton’s Dictionary of Household Management 1861), recommends the condiment as an ingredient in no less than 26 of her recipes.  Byron enjoyed devising multi-syllable rhymes and seems to be delighted with “starve ye / Harvey.”  As a famous libertine and hedonist, it’s not an accident that he would indulge himself in a list of fish-sauces in his risque verse-tale, Beppo.


Sunday, November 20, 2022

On Beverly Hart

 



Beverly Hart, my mother-in-law, died about six weeks shy of her 91st birthday.  To me, she was a paradox: an irrational optimist who was simultaneously one of the most worried people that I ever knew.  When I first met her, thirty-five years ago, she seemed to specialize in worry – she fretted about her children and grandchildren and imagined all sorts of hazards and lurking dangers.  (Some of these worries arose from the way sex roles were defined in her family – she seems to have considered men, particularly younger ones, as irresponsibly reckless; there were a lot of snowmobiles and motorcycles in her family circle, machines that could be driven at high speeds over rough terrain.)  Her inclination to view the world as dangerous, however, was at war with her fundamental optimism.  When she was very old, she nagged her daughters to take her on excursions for which she was manifestly too weak and frail.  A trip to Duluth when she was ninety led to her being hospitalized in intensive care after sightseeing for two days.  And, yet, the next year, she again importuned her daughters to repeat the trip.  On her death bed, she was planning meals and gifts for Christmas.  This was at a time when her caregivers didn’t expect her to survive until Thanksgiving.  It sometimes seemed to me that Bev’s fears didn’t detract from her fundamental optimism, but, even, somehow fueled her tendencies to overestimate her vitality.  The more helpless she became, the more she imagined a future full of fresh hopes and adventures.  Most likely, Bev thought that her resources were more than sufficient to vanquish any misfortunes that she encountered.


Life, of course, presents challenges whether we imagine them in our future or not.  In Bev’s case, she had plenty of hard luck to guide her grim assessment of the peril lurking all around her.  Her mother was deserted by her father when she was a very small child and she grew up in household of independent and fierce women.  As far I understand, her father abandoned his family at the height of the Depression, in the “dirty thirties” as they were called.  None of this would have made any sense to a little girl, raised without a father, by a hardworking farm girl.  Her mother, Leota, packed potatoes harvested in the dense black earth near Hollandale where some shallow lakes had been drained.  It was hard work and she had a finger ripped off in a potato processing plant.  (When I first came to Austin in 1979, those mucky lake bottoms smelled of onions grown in the black slime and there were huge half-buried warehouses for onions and potatoes in Maple Island, a little village occupying a oak savanna hilltop that had once poked its head above the surrounding shallow waters and their concentric rings of marsh and wetland.  In those days, migrant workers from Mexico lived in squalid barracks at the end of gravel roads running like causeways through the swamps.)  My mother-in-law lived on a farm with her own mother and grandmother, a place with a haggard-looking two-story white clapboard house, stiff as an antique celluloid collar, a privy and no running water except what you could pump out of the well.  No doubt, she was poor although the neighborhood was full of uncles and cousins and, of course, as is the manner with peasant farming families, everyone had plenty to eat.  At Bev’s funeral, a nephew told me about the meals that they had eaten at the farm, six courses of hot food for “a little lunch.” with baked pastry made with lard.  For these people, meals were more memorable than love affairs or motorcycle accidents.  


The way off the farm was through school and Beverly went to a teacher’s college and received her license as an educator.  Her older sister, Nellie Mae, worked as a legal secretary and was the family’s glamor girl, although if truth be told, Bev was more attractive.  Nell was aggressive and outgoing and ended up marrying a tunneling contractor who started his work-life with a shovel in his hand but ended as CEO of a multi-million dollar business.  Nell had several homes and divided her time between the west suburbs in Minneapolis and California – her family had a house near Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada.  After teaching for a semester or two in Nevada, Bev returned to Minnesota and spent the rest of her life raising her family in Albert Lea within about thirty miles of the farm where she had been raised.  Bev’s suspicions that life was perilous and unpredictable were borne out in 1966.  At that time, Bev’s husband, Dick, was teaching earth sciences (geology as it was then called) in the Junior High School in Albert Lea and, because he was handy and ingenious – his father had been a carpenter – he had built a large two-story home for his family on the edge of the town.  (In those days, teachers didn’t work in the Summer at school, but shingled roofs and painted houses, and male instructors all coached athletic teams and could teach Shop in a pinch if so assigned and, so, it was very common for these men to serve as their own contractors and build their own homes mostly with their own labor and the help of friends.)   No sooner was the house completed, then, a tornado swept off the prairie and the big white house burst like a balloon – it was shattered into ten-thousand pieces of timber and lathe with nothing remaining but the cellar. 


Fortunately, no one was injured in the calamity although there were casualties elsewhere in town.  The family retreated to a yellow house on a hilltop where they had lived when their new home was under construction.  At Bev’s funeral, relatives disputed the location of this home, long since demolished.  Dick rebuilt and, after many hardships, moved his family back to the new house on the site where the previous structure had been uprooted and smashed by the tornado.  Later, Dick acquired land on Graves Lake, a place north of Grand Rapids, Minnesota and, at first, there was a rustic cabin on the property.  In those days, black bear roamed the north woods, raiding garbage dumps and trash bins.  The lake cabin was another source of worry for Bev.  One of her granddaughters said that the girls weren’t allowed to visit the outhouse after dark for fear of being accosted by bears – they had to pee in a coffee can.  The cabin on the lake was remodeled into a nice house but, of course, it was dangerous: a fisherman might fall off his boat and get entangled in the outboard motor and drowned; people drove around recklessly on golf carts and utility vehicles (there was an impressive Polaris garaged at the cabin); the lake’s shallows were shrouded in duck-weed that could grab you by the ankles and suck you under the water.  According to legend, the lake was named for several lumberjacks who perished in the frigid depths in winter when the ice broke open under a team of horses dragging some huge pine trees over the frozen track.  On an island in the middle of the lake, safe from bears, a hermit lived – he knew that people were unpredictable and prone to betrayal and, therefore, best avoided.  


Every attachment, of course, is first a source of pleasure and, ultimately, a well of grief.  What we love, we must learn to lose.  Men fell off ladders, gored themselves with chainsaws, snowmobiles rolled into icy ravines, and kids left pennants of flesh on asphalt when their motorcycles went sprawling down the highway, skidding into ditches full of rusty barb wire and broken bottles.  It was no better for girls: young women got pregnant and there were hasty marriages to unsuitable men.  Other girls married handsome buccaneers who turned out to be junkies or abusive alcoholics or just good-for-nothings.  At every wedding, there were brawls and the success of such festivities was measured by the number of police squad cars required to quell the riot.  


Families rarely achieve parity between the sexes – some families are male-dominated; others are governed by women.  In Bev’s family, there was a myth that women served the men – for instance, at family gatherings, everyone recalled a time in the not-so-distant past when “the menfolk ate before the women were served.”  But no one could remember exactly when this custom prevailed and, in fact, the women and girls ate alongside the men and boys that the females in the house bossed.  There was no doubt that Bev, and her sister, Nell, controlled things at home.  Males were relegated to the edges of the family circle – they were too unpredictable, potentially violent, and emotionally illiterate.  The men, at least, when they were younger, liked to kill things – they spent weekends hunting and fishing and there were always old black Labradors in the back yard, imprisoned in wire-mesh pens and baying at squirrels and the moon.  Bev kept dachshunds (she called them wiener dogs) and they lived in the house, lithe reddish-brown and bad-tempered beast-emperors jealously guarding their little territories of couch and easy chair.  As if in tacit reproach to the great hunters, Bev set out feeders for birds and squirrels and didn’t decline fodder to an occasional mendicant raccoon.  She built a pond in her backyard, aerated it with a little pump, and, in a stone basin, beneath a little trickling waterfall, she kept goldfish.  There was a fish for each grandchild, beautiful elegant creatures that wandered like colorful clouds through the artificial lagoon.  


Bev raised a couple of her grandchildren and, at least, the girls, whose interests she understood, spent many weekends at home, playing with Barbie dolls and watching videos on the TV.  (The boys were less in evidence: they couldn’t be trusted to not harass wildlife or get into other mischief.)  At sleepovers, Bev was tolerant – she didn’t care how long the girls stayed-up and fed them junk-food until they were stuffed.  No one went to church – Bev understood that praying didn’t help anything and that, in fact, petitions for succor merely amplified worry.  Lots of things could go wrong and, in fact, were pretty certain to go off the rails and, in that case, the only thing on which you could rely was yourself.  And, as far as Bev was concerned, this strain of pioneer self-reliance was, more or less, salubrious – she continued to grub and dig in her flower garden until she was 88, an elderly widow mowing her own lawn and mulching her own plants, feeding wild birds, and caring for her dogs.  Her mind never failed – until the last couple days, she was making plans for Christmas and writing out instructions for the disposition of her property if something might, perhaps, happen to her.  I saw her a couple days before she died and she spoke in a low voice, seemingly several sentences that no one doubted were meaningful, although we couldn’t understand her words.  


In the end, of course, all eulogies are fraudulent and all obituaries incomplete.  You can’t summarize someone’s life in a four paragraphs or four or five pages.  My impressions of Beverly Hart will likely ring untrue with those who knew her better. And, everyone acts against the grain of their own existence as well and people are unpredictable, often enigmas even to themselves – this is one of God’s dangers.  I’ve alway been puzzled by the fact that my mother-in-law left the lush river valley at Winona where she attended teacher’s college and where, in fact, she later taught (my wife’s first superintendent in Houston, Minnesota recalled Bevy Ann who had worked in his district many years before), departing this familiar country for the empty desert wilderness in Nevada.  Bev taught sixth-grade in Lovelock, Nevada, a remote place in the high desert at the center of Pershing County, 6500 square miles of barren terrain in which that village is the sole incorporated town.  There is a Paiute Indian reservation on the edge of the village and, when she lived in Lovelock, the town had only been in existence for 40 years.  No doubt, it was bitterly cold in the Winter with the winds blowing across the mountains and high elevations of the Black Rock Desert (the bacchanal of Burning Man takes place near here) and, of course, searing in the Summer.  In the early fifties, the empty land was a firing range for the army and artillery roared in the wasteland night and day so that if you strayed off the road you might find yourself bombarded and there were Basque ranchers who didn’t speak English and, probably, no air-conditioning during the scorching heat in the Summer.   No doubt there was some reason she went to that place, if only for a year, but no one has ever told me the reason for her sojourn in Pershing County and, I guess, this pleases me to the extent that I don’t intend to make further inquiries – it’s best to leave some things mysterious.  The dead keep their secrets well and, perhaps, this is mostly for the best.  In any event, there’s a risk to summarizing someone’s life.  My son, Jack, offended his mother by saying that Bev’s life was “small and uneventful”.  This was thoughtless and callow.  Uneventful?  Compared to whom: Hitler, Alexander the Great, Emily Bronte, John Keats?  And, of course, most “eventful” lives are full of misery either self-inflicted or inflicted on others.  No one, in their right mind, should desire an “eventful” life.  And, in any event, Bev gave birth to four children, each experience of that sort akin, I’m afraid to a mortal duel or combat, and, then, she raised her children, ran a household, bossed her kids and grandchildren and, finally, greatgrandchildren, and, up to the end of her life, steadfastly demanded that her wishes be fulfilled – she wanted to die in her own home, not a nursing facility or assisted care, with her children and dog within the range of her voice and, against all odds, achieved this.  It was a final battle in which she prevailed. There isn’t anything small about a life that lasts more than ninety years.  


The year before she died, Bev demanded that she be taken to a beach on the North Shore near Duluth.  I think the place is called Brighton Beach (Kitchi Gamma park) and it is famous for Lake Superior agates.  Although Bev couldn’t walk to forage among the stones washed up on shore, she asked her daughters to look for agates polished by the ceaseless surge of the waves.  These stones would make good souvenirs for great-grandchildren and, of course, collecting rocks was a kind of tribute to Bev’s husband, Dick, who had taught Earth Sciences at the Southwest Middle School in Albert Lea.  The day was clear and the shining waters of the lake were serene, although, of course, Superior’s depths are full of shipwrecks and drowned sailors.  The park is beneath Hawk Ridge, a height on the bluffs east of Duluth, where migrating eagles form great swirling kettles 900 feet overhead in the beginning of autumn.  Lake Superior agates were formed in catastrophe, lava flows effervescent with water vapor and hematite (iron ore) makes blood-red bands in the stones.  I don’t know whether any agates were collected on that visit to the beach.  Further, up the coast, rivers foaming the color of root beer plunged over cliffs.  The sun shone on the rust-colored cliffs and bays filled with smooth red stones.  


The family selected the song “Somewhere over the Rainbow” for the funeral.  The Wizard of Oz was one of Bev’s favorite movies – she had first seen the film when she was eight or nine years old.  In the song, Judy Garland yearns for a paradise beyond the stormy skies, up over the rainbow.  In the imagination, the song seems huge, but, in fact, its very short.  Judy Garland sings just before a tornado sweeps across the Kansas prairie, uprooting her house and dropping it into a technicolor meadow onto a wicked witch.    


            

Sunday, October 23, 2022

On an uncanny Godfather

 




For most contemporary readers, the Grimm brothers’ tale, “The Godfather” will seem like one of the strangest stories ever published.  But, in the prolific world of folk tales, where oddity is ubiquitous, “The Godfather” (Grimm #42) represents an entire genre of similar stories.  In the sea of story-telling, “The Godfather” isn’t unique; rather it represents a genus so populous as to require its own Aarne - Thompson - Uther index number – the story defines motif ATU 332 (or KHM 44) and, in fact, the Grimm iteration of the story is the type for this category: ATU 332 characterizes “Godfather” tales.  (The ATU index of folk tale motifs is the invention of a Finnish folklorist Annti Aarne; Aarne studied northern European Kinder und Hausmaerchen and classified the stories according to their predominant motifs.  Most stories, as it happens, contain several indexed narrative types.  Aarne’s work was published in 1910 in German and was refined by the American folklore scholar Stith Thompson about two decades later; the index was, further, refined by the German Hans-Joerg Uther in 2004.  In one of Borges’ sketches, a colossal map is created that correlates to the terrain on a one-to-one basis – no one knows how to use a map that is as big as the territory that it depicts and, so, Borges tells us that the map falls into disrepair, decays, and that, in remote parts of the kingdom, great fragments of the map can be seen half-drowned in lakes or wrapped around forests.  The ATU index is somewhat similar: it’s a map that is about the size of the territory that it represents and I’ve never been clear as to this mighty piece of folklore cartography is supposed to be used.)


A paraphrase of “The Godfather” is superfluous, although I will provide one.  Grimm’s fairy tales, at least, in their earliest editions are so laconic that they read as if already paraphrased.  And, in fact, I think their terse and skeletal form is significant – in many cases, the tales read like outlines upon a story-teller might improvise variations and details according to the circumstances of the telling.  It’s my sense that many of these stories are telescopic – that is, the tale can be expanded or compressed in the telling so as to fit the time allotted for the performance.  (Similarly, I think details in the story can be added or omitted according to the teller’s understanding of the audience and its expectations.)  It’s a bit hard to summarize something that already seems to be a summary.  Nonetheless, here is the story:


A poor man has innumerable children.  The man has run out of candidates to serve as godfather for his most recent child.  He has already enlisted “everyone in the world” as godfathers for his other children.  Distressed, the man lies down and falls asleep.  He dreams that he should go outside of the city gate and appoint the first person that he meets to be his child’s godfather.  And, so, this is what he does.


A man standing outside the city gate agrees to be child’s godfather.  The stranger, as he is called, gives the father a little bottle of water.  The stranger says that, with this water, the father can cure anyone of anything – but there is a condition: the water allows the man to see where Death is standing at the sick person’s bed.  If Death stands at the head of the bed, the person will survive and be healed.  If Death stands at the foot of the bed, the patient must die.  


The King’s son is sick.  The father attends to the ailing child.  Death is standing at the boy’s head and so the child is healed.  A second son becomes ill.  Again, Death stands near the boy’s head and so the father heals this child as well.  A third child, then, sickens.  Death stands at the boy’s feet and, so, he dies.

The father goes to the stranger’s house to tell him about what has happened.  On the first level of the house, a broom and a shovel are bickering.  The man asks them where the godfather lives.  They tell him: “One flight higher.”


The man goes up the stairs and finds “a bunch of dead fingers lying there.”  The man asks the fingers where the godfather lives and they say: “One flight higher.”


The man climbs the stairs to the third level in the house.  He encounters a pile of skulls who speak: “One flight higher.”


The man goes up to the fourth floor of the house.  There, fish are frying themselves in a pan.  The fish tell the man that the godfather lives “One flight higher.”


The man reachs the fifth floor of the house.  There is a door with a keyhole.  Peeping through the keyhole, the man sees the godfather.  On his head, there are “long, long horns.”  The godfather gets into bed and covers himself.  


The man says to the godfather that on the first floor of the house, he saw a shovel and broom quarreling.  “How can you be so simple-minded,” the godfather says, “that was just my man-servant and maid.”


The man tells the godfather that on the second floor, he saw dead fingers.  The godfather reproaches him for stupidity and says: “That was just salsify roots.”


The man tells the godfather that on the third floor, he saw skulls.  “Those were just heads of cabbage,” the godfather replies.


“I saw fish frying themselves on the fourth floor,” the man says. At that moment, the fish enter the room and serve themselves on a platter.     


The man says: “When I came to the fifth landing, I looked through the keyhole and saw that you had long, long horns.”


The godfather replies: “Now that’s just not true.”  (In German: “Ei, das ist nicht wahr.”)


It’s tempting to interpret this tale symbolically – in other words, to ascribe meanings to the weird imagery.  To some extent, I fall prey to this temptation in my remarks below.  But, we should start by accepting the story on its own terms.  As a performance told in real time, a person hearing the story wouldn’t have the leisure to define the incidents in the tale as allegorical or symbolic.  For instance, the “fish frying themselves” doesn’t necessarily have a meaning beyond what is tersely represented in the story – the uncanny occurrence doesn’t stand for anything.  In Maerchen, amazing events are like rocks and stones and trees – they have a sort of brute quiddity (“whatness”): that is, they just are.


In 1942, Martin Heidegger taught a seminar focusing on his idiosyncratic interpretation of Friedrich Hoelderlin’s ode, “The Ister.”  (These lectures, conducted in Freiburg at the height of World War Two, are infamous on political grounds.  But those contentious issues don’t concern us here.)  Heidegger begins his account of the ode by arguing that readers should not interpret the poem symbolically or as an allegory – interpretations of this kind distract our attention from the verse by making it “metaphysical.”  To Heidegger, great poetry is not metaphysical – that is, it can’t correlated to “spirit” or some suprasensuous or otherworldly realm.  The poem exists for itself and is not a signifier of some higher realm.  In other words, poems don’t “mean” in terms exterior to themselves.  The error underlying Western metaphysics, which Heidegger rejects, is identifying the suprasensuous, that is, “spirit” with what is superior and true.  Heidegger’s view is that poetry isn’t transcendent but immanent – it doesn’t look beyond itself to the “spiritual” and “symbolic” but, rather, is rooted in the earth, the sky and the way that human beings dwell on the earth and under the sky.  Heidegger says that the Ister (or Danube – “Ister” is an archaic geographic term for the Donau or Danube River) doesn’t represent anything and shouldn’t be construed allegorically or as something exterior to its identity as a river.  For this proposition, Heidegger cites the final lines in Hoelderlin’s ode: “Yet what that one does, the river / no one knows” (Was aber jener tuet, der Strom / weisst Niemand.)


Heidegger’s argument is that construing poetry in terms of symbolic meaning is an attempt to avoid the necessarily enigmatic character of the art – it makes what is concrete, if problematic, into “metaphysics.”  The reader of poetry must respect the “enigma” or to use the German word, the “Raetsel” embodied in the text.  Raetsel, meaning “enigma”, is rooted in the verb raten – that is, to counsel.  The enigma, accordingly, contains counsel or advice.  In the introduction to the 1812 edition of their Kinder und Hausmaerchen, the Grimm brothers identified the folk tales that they had collected with Poesie, that is, the “poetic imagination”.  In fact, they also counsel against making the tales into something that they are not.  And, so, I think it’s reasonable to bear this advice in mind when approaching “The Godfather” – at first, we have to accept the peculiar tale on the enigmatic terms that it presents to us.


Two-fold:

First, I think, we should notice that the story consists of two parts.  The first involves the father’s quest for a guardian for his child and the healing water.  It’s characteristic of Grimm’s stories that they are constructed from independent parts often only tenuously sutured together.  Narratives are built from discontinuous blocks of material – this arises from the fact that stories are not independent or complete in themselves but are amplified or made more meaningful by adjacent tales.


In this case, the opening of “The Godfather” is related to another story “Godfather Death” (Grimm 44).  “Godfather Death” is a very beautiful tale, much more “artistic” than “The Godfather” – that is, it is more symbolic and meaningful than “The Godfather” and, therefore, seems a more refined and esthetically pleasing story.  (But, of course, this is to interpret Grimm’s stories according to esthetic canons not really applicable to them – meaning and esthetic qualities are “secreted” as it were unintentionally and involuntarily by these tales.)  In “Godfather Death,” the father is given the choice of appointing either God or Death to be his child’s godfather.  In a startling and blasphemous decision, the poor man nominates Death as his child’s godfather – God is unfair, elevating the wealthy and afflicting the poor; but Death comes for all human beings regardless of their rank or worldly goods.  Death gives the child a gift, a healing salve but warns the his godson that there are limits to the potion’s power.  If Death stands at the head of a bed, the sufferer will be healed.  If Death stands at the foot of the bed, the sick person will die.  The remainder of the story concerns the godson’s efforts to thwart Death’s decrees.  Naively, the godson, who has become a famous doctor, decides that he can cheat death by rotating the bed in which the sick person is reclining.  He gets away with this stunt twice.  But Death is enraged, guides the famous doctor into a cave, and shows him an infinity of candles flickering in the darkness.  When a candle is snuffed-out, the life represented by that flame comes to an end.  Death ominously tells his godson that a candle that is “only burning a little is your life.  Watch out!”  (The scene in the cave is magnificently shown in Roberto Gavaldon’s Mexican film, Macario, produced in 1960).


“Godfather Death” differs from “The Godfather” in many respects.  We are apt to view the differences so as to regard “Godfather Death” as a better, more artistically successful story than “The Godfather.”  In “The Godfather”, the storyteller never mentions the godchild.  It’s as if the speaker has forgotten the premise of the tale.  “Godfather Death” makes the godchild, the protagonist of the story and logically develops the theme of the gift of healing powers.  In “The Godfather”, the protagonist is the father and the gift intended for the stranger’s godson remains in the father’s hands.  Whereas “Godfather Death” is about the arbitrary nature of life and death, “The Godfather” turns away from that theme toward the macabre comedy in the Stranger’s house, a grotesquerie that defines the uncanny nature of the godfather.  As is characteristic of fairy tales, both narratives are rooted in a single premise, but the stories, then, radically diverge.  The foundation is the same but the next “block” in the narrative creates a completely different structure.  


Adam:

The man in “The Godfather” is exemplary, a representation of all humanity.  He has so many children that he has “already asked everyone in the world to be godfather.”  This is not merely a humorous exaggeration.  The man is Adam, the father of all men and women.  In Adam’s fall, death comes into the world.  The first figure that Adam meets after his dream counsels him to “go outside the town gate” is the devil.  The devil stands in a particular relationship to death.  Either he is also death or death’s brother.  


The devil:

We are conditioned by John Milton and theology to regard the devil as an awesome, even darkly majestic, spirit.  But the devil that appears in Grimm’s fairy tales isn’t Milton’s Satan.  He’s a buffoon, a shady con-man.  In some stories, the devil has a wife who hen-pecks him.  He has whiskers that intrepid heroes pluck from his beard.  The devil in these tales isn’t God’s adversary – he doesn’t even believe in God.  But this unimpressive barnyard figure is all the more dangerous precisely because he is so unprepossessing.  It’s easy to beware of a satanic presence cloaked in brimstone and fire; the devil as clown and charlatan is much more deadly and insinuating. 


The Woods: 

In Grimm’s tales, the protagonist almost always ventures away from hostile circumstances entering the great woods.  As Jack Zipes writes: “The woods is the mother of all things”, the “perilous realm” (to quote J.R.R. Tolkien) – the woods are lawless and, in them, anything is possible.  In “The Godfather”, the woods don’t appear.  Here the topography is even more abstract and stark: there is the enclosure of the city, apparently established by a wall, and there is the dangerous realm beyond the town-gate.  City and the chaos owned by Death are separated by the porous membrane of a wall and gate.  Traditionally, graveyards are outside the boundaries of the enclosed city.  The devil wanders ravening among the sepulchers.


The Doctor

It’s no coincidence that the devil appears as a quack doctor, peddling a useless remedy against death.  Death like the devil is our great adversary, but, also, our comrade, our bed-mate, as close to us as the pulsing of our carotid artery.  The little bottle of healing water has no power.  Death isn’t about to cede he authority to some country bumpkin.  Rather, it is death’s posture with respect to the ailing person (either at the head or the feet) that controls whether the patient will survive.  The “healing water” is just a prop to make the doctor look as if he has affected the outcome – the “little bottle” gives the doctor the appearance of authority, but it is really Death that is acting.  If Death stands at the patient’s head, the sick man or woman or child has already been healed; the water doesn’t do anything.  Humans fear death and will make a deal with the Devil to escape mortality.  Notice, how the storyteller has already forgotten about the premise of the tale – the search for a fitting Godfather for the child of Adam.  The child never appears in the story that now takes a turn away from the fraudulent remedy against death.


The turning

Three of the king’s sons fall ill.  King here means the sovereign of the enclosed city, that is, the power of law and reason.  Death stands at the head of two of the children and, so, they can’t die.  Death stands at the foot of the third son.  Therefore, he must die. The man realizes that he has been duped.  The water doesn’t have any efficacy, although, of course, he can use it fraudulently to pretend that he is a great doctor.  This is apparently unsatisfactory to the man.  He desires to have the power over life and death and not merely the simulacrum of such power.  So the man goes to remonstrate with Death or the Devil (since the two forces are aligned).  The Maerchen says that the man wants to “narrate” (erzaehlen) what has happened to the Godfather.  In effect, the man is a storyteller like the person imagined to narrate the tale to Grimm’s readers.  To tell the story is to critique a situation and explain it’s significance.


The house 

The Godfather’s house has five stories.  Of course, the house is infinitely lofty.  It has a story or level for everything in the world (cabbages, brooms and shovels) and everything that is not in the world (fish frying themselves and talking “dead fingers”).  The man might be forced to climb forever, passing through interminable levels, before meeting the godfather.  (This is how Kafka would imagine the ascent.)  The storyteller is more merciful and shows us only five levels in the godfather’s infinite domain.  Each level is linked by a verbal refrain: eine Treppe hoeher (“One flight higher”).   Grimm’s Maerchen often have little rhymes, nonsense refrains, or other archaic-sounding verbal formulae embedded in them: consider, for instance, the chant that causes Rapunzel to let down her hair or Rumpelstiltskin’s little song accompanying the childish game that he performs, hopping around his cottage.  “One flight higher” has the same function in “The Godfather”  – it’s like the ghastly refrain “there’s room for one more” in a myriad of ghost stories involving deadly elevators or planes about to fall out of the sky.  Eine Treppe hoeher, a gorgeous and sinister combination of long and short vowels, provides the storyteller with an opportunity to entertain his or her audience with a mini-aria, an occasion for the speaker to use a distorted voice or to improvise in basso profundo or falsetto tones.  


Is the Devil’s palace inside the city or outside of the gate in its walls?  I will leave that to you to work out.


The Broom and the Shovel

A broom and shovel are quarreling because they aren’t mere tools but actually a man and woman enchanted by the godfather.  Death or the Devil (the godfather) makes slaves of human beings.  The broom (a woman) and the shovel (a man) are, like all of us, instruments in the hands the godfather.


The Dead fingers

On the second level of Death’s mansion, dead fingers somehow speak.  The godfather later claims that the dead fingers are Skorzenerwurzel, that is, salsify root.  Salsify root is an edible vegetable sheathed in a mummy-brown peel or skin.  In European folk-medicine, salsify root was thought to have healing properties – it’s akin to the water that the godfather gives to the man to heal his patients.  Salsify heals snake-bite and is a remedy for heart problems.  Salsify is rooted in the earth – the idea of being “rooted” is intrinsic to the German world: Skorzenerwurzel or Skorzen-root.  Roots have magical characteristics because they spring from the dark loam of the earth.  The salsify root shows us that the godfather controls healing magic, but, also, eats the dead – the roots are thought to be “dead fingers” by the man.  Nonsense, the godfather says, this is just something that I eat.  Death eats people.  


The cabbage

On the third level of Death’s palace, the man encounters skulls that also tell him to seek the godfather “one flight higher”.  Later, the godfather explains that the skulls were really just heads of cabbage.  The palace, like Bluebeard’s castle, is full of corpses, dead and dismembered.  These corpses are the godfather’s fodder.  The godfather eats the dead, but, also, apparently can resurrect them, at least, to the extent that they are able to speak.  Cabbages grow on the surface of the earth – they are mundane, commonplace.  The Devil, as the father of lies, speaks to persuade the man that fragments of dismembered corpses revelatory of his true nature are really just the most humble and ubiquitous of vegetables, a fixture of every German root cellar and pantry.  Cabbages remind us that vegetation grows and, then, dies in a seasonal cycle.  As with the resurrected fingers (that are simultaneously roots), the godfather both kills, devours, and brings back to life.


The fish

On the fourth level of the godfather’s mansion, some fish are frying themselves.  This image invokes a whole spectrum of Maerchen wish-fulfilment motifs: Tisch-deck-dich (“Table set yourself”) is table that magically produces delicious food; in some tales, purses replenish their contents and, therefore, are always full of gold coins; a pot of porridge overflows and threatens to engulf the world with sweet mush; roast fowl offer themselves to be eaten; sausages dance merrily before they are devoured.  The godfather’s world involves eating and being eaten.  Fish come from depths.  They are pulled out of the dark, cold water.  What lurks in the depths is the ancient dream of the Land of Cockaigne, the Big Rock Candy Mountains, a place where the curse of Adam that man must work to earn his food no longer applies.  This is an ancient dream and one that is insidious.  Notice that the godfather refutes the man’s perceptions of the broom and shovel, the dead fingers, and the skulls.  But there is no refutation of the fish frying themselves, that is, the oldest and most pernicious of all wishes.  At the climax of the story, the fish appear in the godfather’s chambers on the fifth and highest level of the mansion, presenting themselves to be eaten.


The horns

When the man peeps into the forbidden room – he looks through a keyhole – he sees that the godfather has lange, lange Hoerner (long, long horns).  This is the final revelation in the Tower of Death, that is, that the godfather is the devil.  As it is often said, the devil’s best tool for enthralling men and women is to persuade us that he doesn’t exist.  In the tale, the devil modestly conceals his horns.  He climbs into bed, maybe to hide his hooves and scaley skin and forked tail.  Presumably, he wears a nightcap to conceal his horns.  The devil tells the man that his perceptions are all wrong.  Who are you gonna believe?  Me or your lying eyes.  Maybe, the man hallucinated the squabbling broom and shovel, the dead fingers, and the skulls.  But the fish are indisputably in the room, servants of the godfather, and offering themselves for his delectation.  The devil denies the existence of his horns, but we know that the horns are really there – just as the fish are present and ready to be eaten.  


The godfather’s furnishings

The five stories at the godfather’s house encompass everything in the world.  (Just as the man has asked everyone in the world to stand as his children’s godfathers).  All tools, as well as men and women who use those tools, are the property of the godfather who is death and the devil.  The sick, the ailing, those in need of healing by salsify root, the dead themselves are owned by the godfather.  The vegetables on the surface of the earth that are the staples of life are the godfather’s property as is the cycle of dying and reviving vegetation.  The abyss is the godfather’s and its depths and the denizens of those depths (dreams, fish, and the unconscious) are also his property.     


The source

“The Godfather” was published in 1812.  We know the story was collected from Amalie Hassenpflug the daughter of Huguenot emigrants to Hanau, Germany.  (Her father was a bureaucrat, a government official.)  Amalie was born in 1800 and so the Grimm brothers heard this profound and complex tale from a little girl.  How did she know the story? Presumably, the Devil told it to her.


The Third Edition

The Grimm brothers liked this story enough to reprint it in all of the editions of the Kinder- und Hausmaerchen that they published.  In their third edition, they made two minor amendments to the tale.  The formula describing the devil’s lange, lange Hoerner becomes a “pair of horns” or, simply, horns.  This isn’t an improvement.  The repetition of the word lange (itself a word that sounds like what it means) provide each horn with its own adjective: there are two uses of lange because the devil has two horns.  The other revision to the story also doesn’t improve it.  Wilhelm Grimm (the author of most of the changes to the book) tells us that the man lauft aus – that is, ran away at the end of the story.  Apparently, this is to allay the reader’s fears that the man has become another of the devil’s servants and, perhaps, even been eaten. I think its preferable for the reader (or listener) to be left pondering the fate of the man.  What happens to those who come face-to-face with the devil?


Outside the city gate

Why doesn’t the man notice the godfather’s long horns when he encounters him outside the city gates?  Of course, the devil goes in disguise so that we won’t recognize him.  But how did he accomplish this particular sleight-of-hand – that is, hiding his horns?  One of the best illustrators of the Grimm Maerchen was Otto Ubbelohde.  This German artist illustrated the definitive version of the tales, published in three volumes by the Turm Verlag in 1906.  Ubbelohde proves a simple and elegant solution to the problem of the godfather’s horns.  He depicts the man meeting the godfather outside the city gates.  The godfather is wearing a black, peaked sorcerer’s hat, presumably to conceal his horns.