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Scylla & Charybdis
[...]
Hurrying to her squalid deathlair from gay Paris on the quayside I touched
his hand. The voice, new warmth, speaking. Dr Bob Kenny is attending her.
The eyes that wish me well. But do not know me.
A father, Stephen said, battling against hopelessness,
[265] is a necessary evil. He wrote the play in the months that followed
his fathers death. If you hold that he, a greying man with two marriageable
daughters, with thirtyfive years of life, nel mezzo del cammin di nostra
vita, with fifty of experience, is the beardless undergraduate from
Wittenberg then you must hold that his seventyyear old mother is the lustful
queen. No. The corpse of John Shakespeare does not walk the night. From
hour to hour it rots and rots. He rests, disarmed of fatherhood, having
devised that mystical estate upon his son. Boccaccios Calandrino
was the first and last man who felt himself with child. Fatherhood, in
the sense of conscious begetting, is unknown to man. It is a mystical
estate, an apostolic succession, from only begetter to only begotten.
On that mystery and not on the madonna which the cunning Italian intellect
flung to the mob of Europe the church is founded and founded irremovably
because founded, like the world, macro- and microcosm, upon the void.
Upon incertitude, upon unlikelihood. Amor matris, subjective and
objective genitive, may be the only true thing in life. Paternity may
be a legal fiction. Who is the father of any son that any son should love
him or he any son?
What the hell are you driving at?
I know. Shut up. Blast you! I have reasons.
Amplius. Adhuc. Iterum. Postea.
Are you condemned to do this?
They are sundered by a bodily shame so steadfast
that the criminal annals of the world, stained with all other incests
and bestialities, hardly record its breach. Sons with mothers, sires with
daughters, lesbic sisters, loves that dare not speak their name, nephews
with grandmothers, jailbirds with keyholes, queens with prize bulls. The
sun unborn mars beauty: born, he [266] brings pain, divides affection,
increases care. He is a male: his growth is his fathers decline,
his youth his fathers envy, his friend his fathers enemy.
In rue Monsieur-le-Prince I thought it.
What links them in nature? An instant of blind
rut. Am I father? If I were?
Shrunken uncertain hand.
Sabellius, the African, subtlest heresiarch of
all the beasts of the field, held that the Father was Himself His Own
Son. The bulldog of Aquin, with whom no word shall be impossible, refutes
him. Well: if the father who has not a son be not a father can the son
who has not a father be a son? When Rutlandbaconsouthamptonshakespeare
or another poet of the same name in the comedy of errors wrote Hamlet
he was not the father of his own son merely but, being no more a son,
he was and felt himself the father of all his race, the father of his
own grandfather, the father of his unborn grandson who, by the same token,
never was born for nature, as Mr Magee understands her, abhors perfection.
Eglintoneyes, quick with pleasure, looked up shybrightly.
Gladly glancing, a merry puritan, through the twisted eglantine.
Flatter. Rarely. But Flatter.
Himself his own father, Sonmulligan told himself.
Wait. I am big with child. I have an unborn child in my brain. Pallas
Athena! A play! The plays the thing! Let me parturiate!
He clasped his paunchbrow with both birthaiding hands.
As for his family, Stephen said, his mothers
name lives in the forest of Arden. Her death brought from him the scene
with Volumnia in Coriolanus. His boysons death is the deathscene
of young Arthur in King John. [267] Hamlet, the black prince, is
Hamnet Shakespeare. Who the girls in The Tempest, in Pericles,
in Winters Tale are we know. Who Cleopatra, fleshpot of Egypt,
and Cressid and Venus are we may guess. But there is another member of
his family who is recorded.
The plot thickens, John Eglinton said.
[
]
Man delights him not nor woman neither, Stephen
said. He returns after a life of absence to that spot of earth where he
was born, where he has always been, man and boy, a silent witness and
there, his journey of life ended, he plants his mulberrytree in the earth.
Then dies. The motion is ended. Gravediggers bury Hamlet père
and Hamlet fils. A king and a prince at last in death, with incidental
music. And, what though murdered and betrayed, bewept by all frail tender
hearts for, Dane or Dubliner, sorrow for the dead is the only husband
from whom they refuse to be divorced. If you like the epilogue look long
on it: prosperous Prospero, the good man rewarded, Lizzie, grandpas
lump of love, and nuncle Richie, the bad man taken off by poetic justice
to the place where the bad niggers go. Strong curtain. He found in the
world without as actual what was in his world within as possible. Maeterlinck
says: If Socrates leave his house today he will find the sage seated
on his doorstep. If Judas go forth tonight it is to Judas his steps will
tend. Every life is many days, day after day. We walk through ourselves,
meeting robbers, ghosts, giants, old men, young men, wives, widows, brothers-in-love.
But always meeting ourselves. The playwright who wrote the folio of this
world and wrote it badly (He gave us light first and the sun two [273]
days later), the lord of things as they are whom the most Roman of catholics
call dio boia, hangman god, is doubtless all in all in all of us,
ostler and butcher, and would be bawd and cuckold too but that in the
economy of heaven, foretold by Hamlet, there are no more marriages, glorified
man, an androgynous angel, being a wife unto himself.
ENG310C1 - University of Ulster - 2003
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