Letters (50 page)

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Authors: John Barth

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I shall go mad. I shall go mad. Why should not Ambrose (who shall not see the cover note) turn out to be André? Why should not
you?
Why should not my dear daft parents, decades dead, drop by for tea and declare that I am not their daughter, Germaine Necker-Gordon? Then God descend and declare the world a baroque fiction, now finally done and rejected by the heavenly publishers!

Madness! And in these letters (which you may presently read in print, for I shall do what that hand bids me, with every misgiving in the world) I perceive a pattern of my own, A.C. IV’s and V’s and VI’s be damned: It is the
women
of the line who’ve been the losers: Anne Bowyer Cooke and Anna Cooke, Roxanne Édouard, Henrietta and Nancy Russecks, Andrée Castines I and II and III—faithful, patient, brave, long-suffering women driven finally, the most of them, to distraction.

And of this sorry line the latest—unless she finds the spiritual wherewithal to do an about-face of her own with what remains of the second half of her life—is “your”

Germaine!

S:
Todd Andrews to his father.
His life’s recycling. Jane Mack’s visit and confession. 10 R.

Skipjack
Osborn Jones
Slip #2, Municipal Harbor
Cambridge, Maryland 21613

11 P.M. Friday, May 16, 1969

Thomas T. Andrews, Dec’d
Plot #1, Municipal Cemetery
Cambridge, Maryland 21613

O dear Father,

Seven decades of living (seven years more than you permitted yourself), together with my Tragic View of Order, incline me on the one hand to see patterns everywhere, on the other to be skeptical of their significance. Do you know what I mean? Did you feel that way too? (Did you ever know what I meant? Did you feel
any
way?)

So for example I did not fail to remark, on March 7 last, when I wrote my belated annual deathday letter to you, that it was occasioned by the revival of events that prompted my old
Letter
in the first place; but having so remarked, I shrugged my shoulders. Even seven weeks ago, when the dead past sprouted to life in my office like those seeds from fossil dung germinated by the paleontologists, I resisted the temptation to Perceive a Pattern in All This. I mean a
meaningful
pattern: for of course I noticed, not for the first time, that Drew Mack and his mother were squaring off over Harrison’s estate quite as Harrison and
his
mother had once done over Mack Senior’s. But I drew no more inferences from that than I shall from the gratuitous recurrence of sevens above; I merely wondered: If (as Marx says in his essay
The 18th Brumaire
) tragic history repeats itself as farce, what does farce do for an encore?

Then came, on April Fool’s Day, a letter from the author of
The Floating Opera
novel, inquiring what I’d been up to since 1954 and whether I’d object to being cast in his current fiction. I obliged him with a partial résumé—in course of which I began to see yet further Connections—then not only declined, at least for the present, to model for him, but observed that his project struck me as the sort conceived by an imagination overinclined to retracing its steps before moving on. I even wondered whether he might not be merely registering his passage of life’s celebrated midpoint, as I once did.

I’ve not
heard
from him since. But I withdraw that pejorative
merely,
and I am at once chastened and spooked by that clause
as I once did.
O yes: and at age 69 I’m also in love, Dad. Whether with a woman or a letter of the alphabet, I’m not yet certain.

Something tells me, you see—
lots
of things—that my life has been being recycled since 1954, perhaps since 1937, without my more than idly remarking the fact till now. The reenactment may indeed be fast approaching its “climax”; and as I made something of a muddle of it the first time around, I’d best begin to do more than idly remark certain recurrences as portentous or piquant.

Item:
the foregathering, in Cambridge and environs, of Reg Prinz’s film company, to shoot what was at first proposed to be a film version of some later work by the author of
The Floating Opera,
but presently intends to reprise at least “certain themes and images” from that first novel—and which features “Bea Golden.” Will she play Jane Mack?

Item:
in the morning’s mail, notice of two scheduled visits to Cambridge this summer of “our” showboat replica,
The Original Floating Theatre II,
about which Prinz had inquired of me only last Friday, in his fashion, whether it would be putting in here during the July Tercentennial celebration. He was interested in using it as a ready-made set for “the Showboat sequences”—should he have said sequel?—in his film.

For as it turns out (so I reported to him up on deck some hours ago), the
O.F.T. II
will play at Long Wharf not only during the week of July 18-25, but on the third weekend in June as well: 32nd anniversary of that midsummer night when I tried (and failed) to blow its prototype, myself, and
tout le monde
to kingdom come. Heavy-footed coincidence! God the novelist was hard enough to take as an awkward Realist; how shall we swallow him as a ham-handed Formalist?

Well, that production-within-a-reproduction must sink or swim without me; I shan’t be going. But since Harrison’s funeral on your 39th deathday; since my own 69th birthday and my letter to you; since my new association with Jane Mack, even with Jeannine—to get right down to it, since this evening’s cocktail party aboardship and subsequent sunset sail with one of my guests, since whose disembarkation I’ve sat here at the chart table drawing up parallel lists and exclaiming O, O, O—I’ve been feeling like the principal in a too familiar drama, a freely modified revival featuring Many of the Original Cast.

In the left-hand column (from early work-notes for my own memoir, drafted between 1937 and 1954, of Captain James Adams’s
original
Original Floating Theatre), the cardinal events of my life’s first half, as they seemed to me then and still seem today, 13 in number. On their right, more or less correspondent events in the years since. To wit:

1.
Mar. 2, 1900: I am born.

1.
June 21 or 22, 1937: I am “reborn”
(you know what I mean) after my unsuccessful effort to blow up the
O.F.T.

2.
Mar. 2, 1917: I definitively lose my virginity
to Betty Jane Gunter, R.I.P., upstairs in my bedroom in your house, puppy dog-style on my bed, before the large mirror on my dresser, and learn to the bone the emotion of
mirth.

2.
Dec. 31, 1954/Jan. 1, 1955: I definitively lose my middle-aged celibacy
(also, one idly remarks, after 17 years, and also on a Friday) to Sharon-from-Manhattan, after a New Year’s Eve party at Cambridge Yacht Club, thence to Tidewater Inn, Easton, where I relearn, if not mirth, certainly amusement. And refreshment!

3.
Sept. 22, 1918: I bayonet a German infantry sergeant
in the Argonne Forest, after learning to the bone the emotion of
fear.

3.
July 23, 1967: I forestall Drew Mack & friends from blowing up the New Bridge,
and in the process learn to the ventricles the strange emotion of
courage.

4.
June 13, 1919: I am told of a cardiac condition
that may do me in at any moment, or may never. I begin, not long after, the attempt to explain this state of affairs to you in a letter, of which this is the latest installment.

4.
End of June, 1937: I am told by my friend the late Marvin Rose, M.D., R.I.P., that in my place he would not worry one fart
about a myocardium poised for so many years on the brink of infarction without once infarcting. Never mind the discrepant chronology, Dad; my heart tells me that here is where this item belongs. I perpend Marvin’s opinion, in which I have no great interest since my “rebirth,” and resume both my
Inquiry
and my letter to you, of which etc.

5.
1920-24: My Rakehood, or 1st sexual flowering,
during which I also study law and learn of my low-grade prostate infection. Followed by a period (1925-29) of diminished sexual activity, my meeting with Harrison Mack, and my entry into your law firm.

5.
1955—?: My 2nd and presumably final sexual flowering,
altogether more modest: prompted by #2 above; aided by a prostatectomy too long put off, which relieved a condition both painful and conducive to impotence; principally abetted by dear Polly Lake. An efflorescence with, apparently, a considerable half-life: there is evidence that that garden is even yet not closed for the night. O yes, and I remeet the Macks, reinvolve myself in their Enterprises, and largely put by the profession of law for directorship of their Tidewater Foundation.

6.
Groundhog’s Day, 1930: Your inexplicable suicide,
which teaches me to the bone the emotion of
frustration,
and remains to this hour by no means explained to my satisfaction. I move into the Dorset Hotel; I pay my room rent a day at a time (see #4 left, above); and I open my endless
Inquiry
into your death. O you bastard.

6. I don’t know. June 21 or 22, 1937, when I close the
Inquiry
(see #13, below left)? June 22 or 23, same year, when I reopen it? I think fall, 1956, when publication of
The Floating Opera
novel prompts me to buy the Macks’ old summer cottage down on Todds Point, virtually move out of the Dorset, and abandon both the
Inquiry
and the
Letter,
from the emotion of
boredom.
Damn you.

7.
1930-37: My long involvement with Col. Morton of Morton’s Marvelous Tomatoes,
who cannot understand why I have made an outright gift, to the richest man in town, of the money you left me upon your death.
Money!
O you bastard.

7.
1955: My direction, for Mack Enterprises, of the purchase of Morton’s Marvelous Tomatoes,
which, following upon my remeeting Jeannine on the New Year’s Eve (#2 right, above), and followed by the appearance of that novel, led to my reassociation with Harrison and Jane: his madness, her enterprises.

8.
Aug. 13, 1932: I am seduced by Jane Mack,
with Harrison’s complaisance, in their Todds Point summer cottage, and learn—well, to the vesicles—the emotion of
surprise.
Sweet, sweet surprise.

8.
May 16, 1969:
We shall come to it. Same emotion, not surprisingly. O, O, O.

9.
Oct. 2, 1933: Jeannine Mack, perhaps my daughter, is born,
and the Mack/Mack/Andrews triangle is suspended.

9.
Jan. 29, 1969: Harrison Mack, perhaps her father, dies,
and the royal
folie à deux
at Tidewater Farms is terminated.

10.
July 31, 1935: The probate case of
Mack
v.
Mack
begins in earnest,
and Jane resumes our affair.

10.
Mar. 28-May 16, 1969: Another
Mack
v.
Mack
shapes up.
And O…

11.
June 17, 1937: Polly Lake farts,
inadvertently, in my office, and thereby shows me how to win
Mack
v.
Mack
and make Harrison and Jane millionaires, if I choose to. Of this, surely, more anon.

11.

12.
June 20 or 21, 1937: My dark night of the soul,
when a combination of accumulated cardiac uncertainty
(cf.
#4 left, above), sexual impotency
(cf.
#5 left & right, above), and ongoing frustration
(cf.
#6 left, you bastard), led me to

12.

13.
June 21 or 22, 1937: My resolve to commit suicide
at the end of a perfectly ordinary day, in the course of which I take breakfast coffee with Capt. Osborn Jones’s geriatric company in the Dorchester Explorers’ Club, pay my room rent for the day, work on my unfinished boat, drop in at the office to review cases in progress and stare at my staring wall, submit to a physical examination by Marvin Rose, take lunch with Harrison Mack, premise that Nothing Has Intrinsic Value, escort little Jeannine on a tour of the
Original Floating Theatre,
decide to employ its acetylene stage- and house-lights to my purposes that evening, take dinner with Harrison and Jane, am amiably informed that our affair is terminated (they being about to take off for Italy), resolve
Mack
v.
Mack
in their favor by a coin flip, return to the Dorset, close my
Inquiry
into your suicide, which I mistakenly believe I now understand, stroll down to the showboat, attempt my own, fail, and observe that I will in all probability (but not necessarily) live out my life to its natural term, there being in the abstract no more reason to commit suicide than not to. Got that, Dad?
Inquiry
reopened;
Letter
to you resumed;
Floating Theatre
memoir—and Second Cycle of my life—begun.

13.

Okay, the correspondences aren’t rigorous, and there are as many inversions as repetitions or ironical echoes. The past not only manures the future: it does an untidy job. #11, #12, & #13, which happened back-to-back 1st time around, are yet to recur, unless we count Polly’s airhorn work on the New Bridge in July 1967 as 11 R, and my subsequent vast suspicion (that Nothing—and everything else!—
has
intrinsic value) as 12 and 13 R. But now that I have perceived the Pattern—and just barely begun to assimilate 8 & 10 R—my standards of praeterital stercoration have been elevated. I now look for Polly to fire a literal flatus at us 32 days hence (or, like a yogi, take air
in).
It will no longer do that I have in a sense, via the foundation, already reconstructed the showboat I tried and failed to destroy in 1937 (Nature had a hard time of it, too: the
O.F.T.
sank three times between 1913 and 1938, was each time raised and refitted, was finally sold for scrap in ’41, but burned to the waterline off the Georgia coast en route to the salvage yard. Were the Author of us all a less heavy ironist, one would suspect arson for insurance; but I believe He managed spontaneous combustion in the galley, under the stage, where I and the acetylene tanks once rendezvoused). A second Dark Night clearly lies ahead for me, this June or next, followed by another Final Solution—and, no doubt, somebody’s second first novel, or first last!

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