She turned, she said,
in her excitement for a moment, to shout the news of his approach to
others in the house, and in that instant he had vanished from her
sight. When she looked again, no one was there; the scene was fading
into night and stillness, and the woman wrung her hands in her
despair, saying: "Oh, Lord! Oh, Lord! What's to become of us?
What's happened now?"
Such was her
story. And, as always, it confirmed a fatal event. On that day in
April, more than two hundred miles to the westward, the bloody battle
of Shiloh had been fought in Tennessee, and at that moment, although
the news did not get back to them for several weeks, one of the
brothers, John, was lying on the field, his shattered face turned
upward, dead.
Such, then, were some of
the stories Aunt Maw told to George.
And
always, when she spoke so in the night, as the coal-fire flared and
crumbled in the grate, and the huge demented winds of darkness howled
around them and the terror of strong silence fed forever at his
heart--he could hear the thousand death-devouring voices of the Joy
ners speaking triumphantly from the darkness of a hundred years, the
lost and lonely sorrow of the hills, and somehow smell incredibly-
always and forever!--the soft, fragrant ash of the pine blaze, the
pungent sharpness of the whittled wood, the winy warmth and fullness
of mellow apples. And horribly, somehow, to these odors were always
added the death-evoking smells of turpentine and camphor- which were
a lost memory of infancy, when his mother had taken him, a child of
two, to such a room--warmth, apples, Joyner room, and all- to see his
grandfather the night before he died.
Upon
a thousand lost and lonely roads in the ever-lost and ever lonely
hills he heard the unctuous, drawling voices of the Joyners. He saw
them toiling up a wooded hill in sad, hushed, evening light to vanish
like a wraith into thin air; and the terrible prophecies of old wars
and battles, and of all the men who had that day been buried in the
earth, were in that instant apparition and farewell! He saw them in a
thousand little houses of the wilderness, in years more far and
lonely than the years of Vercingetorix, coming in at darkness always
to watch the night away beside the dead, to sit in semi-darkness in
some neighbor's ill-starred house, to sit around the piny
fire-flame's dance of death, and with triumphant lust to drawl and
whittle night away while the pine logs flamed and crumbled to soft
ash and their voices spoke forever their fated and invincible
auguries of sorrow.
What was it Aunt
Maw thus evoked by the terrific weavings of her memory? In the boy's
vision of that world, the Joyners were a race as lawless as the
earth, as criminal as nature. They hurled their prodigal seed into
the raw earth of a mountain woman's body, bringing to life a swarming
progeny which lived or died, was extinguished in its in fancy or
fought its way triumphantly to maturity against the savage enemies of
poverty, ignorance, and squalor which menaced it at every step. They
bloomed or perished as things live or die in nature--but the
triumphant Joyners, superior to all loss or waste, lived forever as a
river lives. Other tribes of men came up out of the earth, flourished
for a space, and then, engulfed and falling, went back into the earth
from which they came. Only the Joyners--these horror-hungry,
time-devour ing Joyners--lived, and would not die.
And
he belonged to that fatal, mad, devouring world from whose prison
there was no escape. He belonged to it, even as three hundred of his
blood and bone had belonged to it, and must unweave it from his
brain, distill it from his blood, unspin it from his entrails, and
escape with demonic and exultant joy into his father's world, new
lands and mornings and the shining city--or drown like a mad dog,
die!
From the first years of coherent
memory, George had the sense of the overpowering immanence of the
golden life. It seemed to him that he was always on the verge of
finding it. In his childhood it was all around him, impending numbly,
softly, filling him with an intolerable excultancy of wordless joy.
It wrenched his heart with its wild pain of ecstasy and tore the
sinews of his life asunder, but yet it filled his soul with the
triumphant sense of instant release, impending discovery- as if a
great wall in the air would suddenly be revealed and sundered, as if
an enormous door would open slowly, awfully, with the tremendous
majesty of an utter and invisible silence. He never found a word for
it, but he had a thousand spells and prayers and images that would
give it coherence, shape, and meanings that no words could do.
He thought that he could twist his hand a
certain way, or turn his wrist, or make a certain simple movement of
rotation into space (as boys will learn the movement to unsolve a
puzzle of linked chains, or as an expert in the mysteries of locks
can feel the bearings faintly, softly, rolling through his finger
tips, and know the instant that he finds the combination to unlock
the safe)--and that by making this rotation with his hand, he would
find the lost dimension of that secret world, and instantly step
through the door that he had opened.
And
he had other chants and incantations that would make that world
reveal itself to him. Thus, for a period of ten years or more, he had
a spell for almost everything he did. He would hold his breath along
a certain block, or take four breaths in pounding down the hill from
school, or touch each cement block upon a wall as he went past, and
touch each of the end-blocks where the steps went up two times, and
if he failed to touch them twice, go back and touch the whole wall
over from the start.
And on Sunday he
would always do the second thing: he would never do the first on
Sunday. All through the day, from midnight Saturday until midnight
Monday morning, he would always do the second thing he thought about
and not the first. If he woke up on Sunday morning and swung over to
the left side to get out of bed, he would swing back and get out on
the right. If he started with the right sock, he would take it off
and pull the left one on instead. And if he wanted first to use one
tie, he would discard it and put on another.
And
so it went the whole day through on Sunday. In every act and moment
of his life that day he would always do the second thing he thought
about instead of the first. But then when midnight came again, he
would, with the same fanatic superstition, do the first thing that he
thought about; and if he failed in any detail of this ritual, he
would be as gloomy, restless, and full of uneasy boding doubts as if
all the devils of mischance were already out in force against him,
and posting on their way to do him harm.
These
spells, chants, incantations, and compulsions grew, interwove, and
constantly increased in the complexity and denseness of their web
until at times they governed everything he did--not only the way he
touched a wall, or held his breath while pounding down a hill from
school, or measured out a block in punctual distances of breathing,
or spanned the cement blocks of sidewalks in strides of four, but
even in the way he went along a street, the side he took, the place
he had to stop and look, the place he strode by sternly even when he
wanted bitterly to stay and look, the trees out in his uncle's
orchard that he climbed until he had to climb a certain tree four
times a day and use four movements to get up the trunk.
And
this tyrannic mystery of four would also get into the way he threw a
ball, or chanted over Latin when preparing it, or muttered ?????????
four times in the Subjunctive of the First Aorist, or ????? in the
Indicative Active of the First. And it was also in the way he washed
his neck and cars, or sat down at a table, split up kindling (using
four strokes of the axe to make a stick), or brought up coal (using
four scoops of the shovel to fill the scuttle).
Then
there were also days of stern compulsion when he could look at only a
single feature of people's faces. On Monday he would look upon men's
noses, on Tuesday he would stare into their teeth, on Wednesday he
would peer into their eyes, save Thursday for their hands, and Friday
for their feet, and sternly meditate the conformation of their brows
on Saturday, saving Sunday always for the second feature that
occurred to him--eyes when feet were thought of, teeth for eyes, and
foreheads when his fine first rapture had been noses. And he would go
about this duty of observing with such a stern, fanatical devotion,
peering savagely at people's teeth or hands or brows, that sometimes
they looked at him uneasily, resentfully, wondering what he saw amiss
in their appearance, or shaking their heads and mutter ing angrily as
they passed each other by.
At night, he
said his prayers in rhymes of four--for four, eight, sixteen,
thirty-two were somehow the key numbers in his arithmetic of sorcery.
He would say his one set prayer in chants of four times four, until
all the words and meanings of the prayer (which he had composed
himself with four times four in mind) were lost, and all that he
would follow would be the rhythm and the number of the chant,
muttered so rapidly that the prayer was just a rapid blur- but
muttered always sixteen times. And if he failed to do this, or
doubted he had got the proper count, then he could not sleep or rest
after he got into bed, and would get up instantly and go down upon
his knees again, no matter how cold or raw the weather was, no matter
how he felt, and would not pause until he did the full count to his
satisfaction, with another sixteen thrown in as penalty. It was not
piety he felt, it was not thought of God or reverence or religion: it
was just superstitious mystery, a belief in the wizard-charm of
certain numbers, and the conviction that he had to do it in this way
in order to have luck.
Thus, each night
he paid his punctual duty to "their" dark authorities, in
order to keep himself in "their" good graces, to assure
himself that "they" would not forsake him, that "they"
would still be for him, not against him, that "they"--immortal,
secret, "they" that will not give us rest!--would keep him,
guard him, make his life prevail, frustrate his evil enemies, and
guide him on to all the glory, love, and triumph, and to that great
door, the huge, hinged, secret wall of life--that immanent and
unutterable world of joy which was so near, so strangely, magically,
and intolerably near, which he would find at any moment, and for
which his life was panting.
One day a
circus came to town, and as the boy stood looking at it there came to
him two images which were to haunt all the rest of his childhood, but
which were now for the first time seen together with an instant and a
magic congruence. And these were the images of the circus and his
father's earth.
He thought he had
joined a circus and started on the great tour of the nation with it.
It was Spring: the circus had started in New Eng land, and worked
westward and then southward as the Summer and Autumn came on. His
nominal duties--for in his vision every incident, each face and voice
and circumstance, was blazing real as life itself were those of
ticket seller. But in this tiny show everyone did several things, so
he also posted bills, and bartered with the tradesmen and farmers in
new places for fresh food.
1 comment