Friday, June 06, 2008

Proust and me

Brian Schwartz headshot by Brian Schwartz

1.

It was the summer of 19__. I was at Oxford. I was sixteen. Now Oxford is a big industrial town, a bit gritty, but my college was on the fringes, and out there it was countryside. There were even a few gas lamps by the roadside, and when you walked out beyond, the woods and flowers were far older even than those antiquated lamps, and you got the feeling that you'd escaped from time. When I think of that summer, I think of the sun, pouring down like a blessing, dappling the grassy meadows, setting leaves aglow on a long hedge by whose side a dirt path meandered. I liked to walk that path, and I remember a girl who went with me from time to time. We boated down the narrow stream they call a river, through the fields, through the woodland hugging the water, out past farmhouses and sleeping villages, and I used to row even though you're supposed to use the punt pole, and I remember the splash of the oar and the little band of water droplets gleaming like transitory diamonds.

Now there was a whole band of older boys I tried to join. They would come trooping in to tea, all in a group, and since I was young and naive and American, they seemed impossibly elegant, their friendship unattainable, bathed in sunlight, golden. And that summer all they seemed to talk about was Proust. They were all reading it, and from what I could see it deeply moved them. So that was my first impression of Proust, and the name became a sort of magic totem to me, and whenever I think of it, even now, so many years later, it is inextricably tied up with that band of laughing jeunesse dore, and with sunlight on the hedges.

2.

Shortly after the Great War ended, Proust locked himself in a soundproof room, and there he spent the rest of his life, writing. I don't know if the room had any windows, but I think it didn't. Proust was far away, drifting among sights, smells, sensations, vanished worlds of long ago. I once heard that on one occasion he left his room and traveled halfway across Paris to see a hat which a woman had worn to a party twenty years before. Often, a trivial thing, the sight of a hat, the taste of that famous madeleine, would without warning immerse Proust in a flood of sensation, all the thoughts and feelings he'd had when he had first seen that hat, the way things were for that person who, many years before, had been Proust. For Proust, like all of us, had been many people, his passions and dreams as a child so different from today that his resurrected glimpse into that child's world was like a view into an alien mind. And, like a master quilter stitching a work of art out of rags and snippets, out of those tastes, those glimpses, those fears and passions recalled, he built his novel.

For "Remembrance of Things Past" is indeed a novel, fiction, though it is easy enough to forget this. For one thing, Proust was homosexual, so there was no Albertine. Or in a way there was, there were a thousand Albertines, a thousand people in each of whom he found a bit of Albertine. And this is true of all the characters that inhabit the humdrum yet bizarre, generic (in the sense in which truths about it are applicable to any group of people) yet unforgettable world that springs to being in these pages.

Reading this novel, unlike any other, we demand that there be some link with Proust's actual life. The characters are fiction, the events are fiction, more or less, but the sensations must be real. Proust actually felt them, all those incessant longings and anger and fear. This link to reality is necessary because Proust claims to have written, not merely a novel, but a treatise of psychology, a guide to, if not understanding the world, at the very least a hint on how to view it.

Or showing that other views are possible... by allowing us a glimpse into another person's world (or into his world as a ten-year-old, which he considers that of another person than his adult self), he also allows us to see the laws and processes common to both. He wrote this in the midst of a discussion on the goal (or, better, Holy Grail) of art:

"To grasp again our life -- and also the life of others; for style is for the writer, as for the painter, a question, not of technique but of vision. It is the revelation -- impossible by direct and conscious means -- of the qualitative differences in the way the world appears to us, differences which, but for art, would remain the eternal secret of each of us. Only by art can we get outside ourselves, know what another sees of his universe, which is not the same as ours and the different views of which would otherwise have remained as unknown to us as those there may be on the moon."

I've written elsewhere that sometimes it seems as if as if Proust and Wittgenstein (who after all was his comtemporary and in some ways grew up in the same milieu) were covering the same territory. The limits of language, the existence yet utter unknowability of the other, the tragedy of longing and yearning and loving that which must always elude our grasp. Wittgenstein seems to map the boundary, Proust strives to push and struggle and expand it every way he can, using music and art as another, more basic language to describe or at least indicate entities whose essence we cannot fathom. And the composer Vinteuil and painter Elstir, who make their appearance in the novel, are not based on real artists at all. Rather, they are fictional creations invented by Proust because in his long descriptions of their fictional compositions, he can expound his view of the world. The long description of Vinteuil's sonata uses the music to hint at other worlds which are infinitely precious and totally, except as glimpsed in art, beyond our ken... glimmering dings an sich which we cannot hope to know but which give life its value.

And in the end, the fictional, as well as the real, Proust remains a hazy enigma. Thousands and thousands of pages, and so much is left out. Years and years skipped over, the most important events barely alluded to, or left out for the reader to deduce. And yet, we grasp the essence. And what a tragedy it is! "The heart changes," wrote Proust, "and that is our worst misfortune." Yet for Proust it was not so much change as an endless, painful cycle, which he fully perceived but was powerless to escape. An intense fear of abandonment pervades his earliest memories, and whenever he met a girl whom he feared would cuckold him, this fear was triggered and its intensity would make him fall in love with her. Of course, his fear was a prudent instinct and would be triggered only by the sort of girl who would betray him repeatedly, incurably. But without this jealousy, for Proust there was no love. Quite literally, love -- the thing for which he lived his life -- was pain.

For Proust, the things which give most of us life's joy and meaning -- friendship and helping others -- were a waste of time. And so he spent his life being blown about by his twisted love, searching love's unattainable happiness. And yet, as his book proved, it was not really love, or happiness, or gratification he was after. It was a search for the reality of things, pursued with such zeal and devotion that he gave up all for it, became a hermit with more rigor than the most religious monk for it, and ultimately died for it. I've always thought that the gap from qualia, from sense-perception, to a deeper reality was unbridgeable. But somehow Proust leapt across it, carried perhaps on wings of angels.

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Moby Dick

Brian Schwartz headshot by Brian Schwartz

Sometime around the year 1780, a Frenchman named Aimé Argand invented a new sort of lamp. Far brighter than candles, and more reliable, it was the lamp of choice for anyone who could afford one, and, though Argand himself never saw any of the profits -- his partner managed to steal both the patent and the money -- these lamps came to illuminate shops and houses around the world. Now the demand for oil to fuel these lamps was insatiable, and the only oil that would work was taken from the head and body of the sperm whale. And so, since there was money in it -- millions and millions of present-day dollars from every voyage -- boats set off to catch whales. Rugged wooden sailing ships, with a full three masted rigging but otherwise not much different from the dhows that plied the seas in the days of the Arabian Nights, or perhaps the Pharaohs. Four years worth of food and provisions they carried, for the ships might be gone four years out of sight of land. And what breed of men were these, who would sign on to such a voyage, and leave family, hearth and town for four years of being swept and tossed and blown who knows where on a rugged, unvarying ocean that, since the days of Caliph and Pharaoh had changed not at all?

Moby Dick

Shortly after 1850, everything changed. Kerosene lamps blazed, whale oil was unneeded. Steamboats and iron ships blithely cruised the waters. But, just before that happened, Herman Melville wrote a book about that vanished world. Now I don't know if people talk about the "Great American Novel" anymore, but a couple of decades back, it was every scribbler's secret dream to write it. More than a few people who should know say that the Greatest of all these Great American Novels is Moby Dick. Great it may be, and it's certainly American -- what other nation would field such enterprising cruises in search of a commodity that could be sold for profit? - but I'm not sure it's really a novel at all. In its secret soul it's more of an opera; or (as a few of its chapters are written) a play -- and if it is a play it's a sweeping Shakespearian drama; or more likely a symphony, a strange uplifting blend of Beethoven and Wagner and the ocean wind.

There's less character development than one would expect -- the question of just why these men decided to spend their years suspended on a wooden platform between infinite sky and a watery grave is, though often asked, never answered, and maybe it never could be answered any more than you could answer why the wind blows -- and there's pretty much no realistic dialogue at all. Oh the speeches of Ahab are lovely, and indeed they rival and perhaps surpass Shakespeare at his finest, but you can't imagine a real seaman uttering them. But of course these men aren't real seamen, anymore than the sighing of the wind, or notes in a symphony, or a flaming nova reaching its inexorable conclusion.

There's not much action either, though what there is is grand and bloody and majestic, as the sea and the whale rise up and claim their due, and when that happens, the writing becomes lean and sinewy, as fast and efficient as a lightning bolt. But fully nine-tenths of the book has no action at all. It is composed of long and elegant and surprising and often nonsensical essays on just about everything concerning whales except what you might want to know. There is nothing about the Argand lamp, it is mentioned only in passing how long a whale is, but there are chapters and chapters on why the whale is a fish and not a mammal, why the color white is sinister, how Jonah's whale could have moved so quickly between Jaffa and Iraq, etc etc etc. But, strangely enough, the effect of all of this is not to bore or baffle but, like a long crossing across a savage and monotonous landscape, ultimately to inspire awe and wonder, a sense of limitless magical

possibility, of, to use the first word in the book, "loomings", of vast and majestic forces, of motions, shufflings, grindings, sweepings, energy of the universe flickering like St Elmo's fire on the masthead, all this cornucopia of wonder that can't be seen from land. It's as if Melville is walking through a wild rambling museum or curiosities and saying "Look at this! Look at this! Ain't it grand?"

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Thursday, March 15, 2007

Prufrock

Brian Schwartz headshot by Brian Schwartz

T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliott

A writer writes alone. His words tumble forth from a magical inner void that is mysterious even to him, and which no one else can enter. That, basically, was T. S. Eliot's view. To analyze a poem by scrutinizing the life of the poet, he believed, was banal, robotic and misleading. And yet, it's so tempting. Someone who protests too much surely has something to hide. So when a friend asked me for my thoughts on Eliot's Prufrock, that exhilarating roller-coaster ride through a minefield of prophesy and boredom, Eliot's life was the first thing that came to mind.

Prufrock was published in 1917. Eliot was in his third year of marriage with Vivian Haigh-Wood. He loved her deeply and longed for a partner to share his creative explorations. But life with Vivian Haigh-Wood, who probably had BPD and whose behavior was to say the least erratic, was, like the poem, a roller coaster ride through a minefield. So of course I thought of her.

Prufrock is quite sensuous and at times erotic in its imagery:

"And I have known the arms already, known them all
Arms that are braceleted and white and bare
[But in the lamplight, downed with light brown hair!]
It is perfume from a dress
That makes me so digress?"

The protagonist wants to love, to be loved, and most important to communicate with someone. What's the point of any thought or exploration, he says, if she, perhaps his beloved, perhaps anyone at all, says, "that is not what I meant at all"

I've always thought, along with everyone else that the poem was an indictment of British society in 1917. Maybe it is. But, thinking about the lonely barren wasteland which was life for Eliot and Vivian, I realized that maybe it's more universal: a Jeremiad about love and communication. Wittgenstein concluded his Tractatus, a philosophical investigation on the nature of language and the limits of communication with this: "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent." Maybe Prufrock is a lamentation on the limits of human beings. Yes, there's always the hidden condemnation in the poem, he should have done better, he wasted his life but he should have done better. Maybe he couldn't. Maybe no one could.

Finally to top off my ruminations, I thought of this: 1917... there was a war on. As Prufrock drinks his tea, thousands of soldiers were charging into German machine guns and dying. Maybe that's the prophetic ghost at this banquet.

And then all at once my house of cards came tumbling down. Though not published in 1917, Prufrock was written in 1910. There was no war, no Viv, Eliot was, by his own account a virgin and had never visited England. So maybe Eliot was right. Biographical interpretation may look pretty on paper, but it's a waste of time. But then I realized: there is a sort of biographical analysis that does make sense. It's foolish to tie a theme in a symphony with the life of the composer. But one can attempt to analyze the structure of the melody.

Eliot grew up in staunchly bourgeois St Louis. He then moved to Boston and went to Harvard, which was quite cultured but was a safe isolated harbor from the winds sweeping in the modern age. In 1910 Eliot spent a year in Paris. And landed smack in the middle of artistic ferment. He may or may not have seen Braque and Gris and Picasso lording it over their acolytes in some picturesque Montmartre cafe, but he certainly was aware of cubism. And if you take cubism at its word — that it takes familiar objects, dissects them, reassembles them — you could argue that the meandering, elliptical structure of Prufrock is indeed cubist.

In 1910 Paris it seemed as if momentous things were happening, as if profundity was just around the corner. So maybe Prufrock is simply an indictment of St Louis compared to Paris. (In 1910, later on the US caught up with a vengeance.) Women come and go talking of Michelangelo. Maybe all that Eliot meant was, they should be talking of Picasso. But maybe, in spite of all, Prufrock indeed is a Jeremiad about love and communication. That's universal. And after all, as every writer knows, a writer writes alone.

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