08/23/2021
Robert Harrison on Great Narrative Endings
A monologue by Robert Harrison. Outro song: “The End” by The Doors
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I'm Robert Harrison for entitled opinions with a special episode on narrative endings.
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Let's begin with a quote from Stravinsky.
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"Far too much music finishes far too long after the end.
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Far too much music finishes far too long after the end."
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Something along these lines applies also to novels, I believe.
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Some of them end before they finish, some finish before they end, while others, and this is increasingly the case, are essentially endless.
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They just finish where they happen to break off.
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I agree with Gertrude Stein that conclusions are the weak points of most authors.
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That's a quote.
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The last lines of many modern poems tend to be lame, and the art of bringing a novel to a culminating end has all but disappeared from the literary fiction of the past few decades.
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But we don't traffic in laments here on entitled opinions.
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We may keep it dark, but we don't like to be wail and be moan, so instead of an ode on dejection,
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I propose to share with you today a few of the novelistic endings that I find notable or beautiful.
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So turn out the lights, and take a deep breath. We'll be right back.
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[Music]
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I'll start with a book that many people agree comes to a memorable conclusion.
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I mean the great Gatsby, which ends with the narrator Nick on a shore of Long Island sound,
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thinking about the Dutch sailors who first set eyes on the wild and wooded place that would later become New York.
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Most of the big shore places were closed now, and there were hardly any light except the shadowy moving glow of a ferry boat across the sound.
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And as the moon rose higher, the inessential houses began to melt away gradually,
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and I became aware of the old island here that flowered once for Dutch sailors' eyes,
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a fresh green breast of the new world. Its vanished trees, the trees that had made way for Gatsby's
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house, had once pandered in whispers to the last and greatest of all human dreams.
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For a transitory enchanted moment, man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent,
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compelled into an aesthetic contemplation he neither understood nor desired,
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face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder.
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And as I sat there brooding on the old unknown world, I thought of Gatsby's wonder
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when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy's dock.
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He had come a long way to this blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close
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that he could hardly fail to grasp it. He did not know that it was already behind him,
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somewhere back in that vast obscurity beyond the city, where the dark fields of the republic
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rolled on under the night. Gatsby believed in the green light theorgastic future that year
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by year, recedes before us. He diluted less than, but that's no matter,
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tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther, and one fine morning.
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So we beat on, boats against the current, born back ceaselessly into the past.
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The only thing that approaches infinity in human nature is our desire for more life,
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more prospects, and more future. Nick refers to man's capacity for wonder, but it's more
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than wonder, it's a craving for unlimited possibility, or the illusion thereof. And those Dutch
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sailors when they approached the new land came face to face for the last time in history
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with something commensurate to man's desire for unbounded horizons.
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The so-called American dream that brought so many people to the shores of this sprawling continent
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existed well before America itself did. And Fitzgerald, more than any other author,
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probed in his novels, the bitter disappointment that America's promise holds in store
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for those who dream the American dream more earnestly and audaciously. People like Gatsby,
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who came so close or so he believed to achieving his childhood dream of winning over Daisy
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and living with her happily ever after. He believed in the green light,
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says Nick, meaning the green light of hope, which in America is invariably linked to the green
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hue of its duller bills. But the orgasm future that recedes from us really belongs to the past
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because it's in our youth that we're intoxicated with future expectation.
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As we progress morosely into adulthood, the horizons that stretched out before us in youth
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now lie behind us. So we beat on boats against the current, born back ceaselessly into the past.
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Speaking of dreams and open horizons, their eyes were watching God by Zora Neil Hurston
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as a fully achieved ending in my view. Inside its third person narrative frame,
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the main character, Janey Crawford recounts to her friend Phoebe in her own voice,
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the story of her life with T-Cake after she left Eatonville and how she buried the one great love
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of her life T-Cake after a fierce hurricane in the Everglades led to his death.
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It's a dramatic story full of twists and turns. The novel's ending is bound up with its beginning,
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which starts like this, I quote,
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"Shifts at a distance have every man's wish on board. For some they come in with the tide.
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For others they sail forever on the horizon, never out of sight, never landing until the
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watcher turns his eyes away in resignation. His dreams mock to death by time. That is the life of men."
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Now women forget all those things they don't want to remember and remember everything they don't
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want to forget. The dream is the truth, then they act and do things accordingly.
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Janey's dream is bound to the horizon. The main narrator says of Janey's life before she met
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T-Cake, quote, "she had been getting ready for her great journey to the horizons."
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In her own voice, Janey speaks of the love and life, she had with T-Cake as a venturing out to the horizon.
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I'd done been to the horizon and come back now. She tells Phoebe when she returns to
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Eatonville after T-Cake's death, adding, "You got to go there to know there."
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With those words, she wraps up her own narrative and Phoebe goes back home with renewed hope.
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The novel ends with Janey making her way from the porch to her upstairs bedroom.
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I quote, "Janey mounted the stairs with her lamp. The light in her hand was like a spark of sun
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and this stuff washing her face in fire. Her shadow fell back and headlong down the stairs.
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I skip a little. Then T-Cake came prancing around her where she was and the song of the
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sigh flew out of the window and lit in the top of the pine trees. T-Cake with sun per a shawl.
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Of course, he wasn't dead. He could never be dead until she herself had finished feeling and thinking.
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She pulled in the horizon like a great fish net, pulled it from around the waist of the world
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and draped it over her shoulder. So much of life in its meshes. She called in her soul to come and see.
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One thing we can say about Janey Crawford is that she is no gatsby whose dreams are mocked to death
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by time and she certainly isn't a daisy who mocks dreams altogether.
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Janey's story does not end happily, at least not in any conventional sense of the term,
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but it does end truthfully in the sense that her dream never died but sought out its inner core of
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truth at the outer horizon. Only those who venture out can draw the horizon back in
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rather than watch it recede ever further out of reach. It takes a special kind of power to dream
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truthfully and pull in the vista like a great fish net and find so much of life in its meshes.
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We need a word for this power to lead the horizon back into oneself and wrap it around like a
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mantle. Let's call it the transcendental reduction of the castle in the sky.
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One of the great endings in modern fiction comes in the last paragraph of James Joyce's story,
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The Dead. The scene is winter. Upon returning with his wife Greta to their hotel room after a
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dinner party at his aunt's house, Gabriel Conroy is chilled to the bone to learn that in her youth,
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Greta was loved by a boy who had died for her. The boy, Michael Furry, leaving his sick bed one
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cold and rainy night, had come to her window to tell her he didn't want to live without her.
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He died shortly thereafter. The ghostly resurrection of Michael Furry in his wife's memory that evening,
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thanks to a song that she had heard at the party, opens an unbridgeable distance between her
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and Gabriel, precisely at the moment when he feels an urge to draw close to her. After she falls
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asleep in the grief of her memory, Gabriel lies awake, thinking about the boy who died in his
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17th year. I'm thinking about his wife, himself, his aunts, and all the people he knows and does not know
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who slowly but surely are on their way toward becoming dead. The story ends with a vision.
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A few light taps upon the pain, made him turn to the window. It had begun to snow again.
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He watched sleepily the flakes, silver and dark, falling obliquely against the lamplight.
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The time had come for him to set out on his journey westward. Yes, the newspapers were right,
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snow was general all over Ireland. It was falling on every part of the dark central plane,
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on the treeless hills, falling softly upon the bog of Alan, and farther westward,
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softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves. It was falling too,
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upon every part of the lonely churchyard on the hill where Michael Furry lay buried.
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It lay thickly drifted on the crooked crosses and headstones on the spars of the little gate
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on the barren thorns. His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe
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and faintly falling like the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the dead.
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The best response to an ending like this is silence, but let me intrude upon it here with a few
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brief comments noting that a clause in that last sentence like the descent of their last end
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associates the snow with human mortality. Falling thinkly through the universe,
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the snow is symbolic of the vast accumulation of the dead over many generations,
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an accumulation to which the living in their time bound falling will add their heavy numbers.
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The snow is general, it falls all over Ireland on every part of the plane on every part of the
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churchyard upon all the living and the dead. Yet one thing we know about snowflakes is that
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despite their countless numbers, each one is unique. There have never been two completely identical
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snowflakes in the history of the earth. And for all the emphasis on the general,
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the snowflakes in the last paragraph of the dead are implicitly
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individuated as well. For Gabriel's vision is linked to the image of a shivering boy standing
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under a tree in the nocturnal rain telling a girl named Greta that he no longer wants to live.
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The lonely lyrical image of Michael Furry gives the countless flakes falling silently to the ground.
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There's a blind, almost unbearable palpable.
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The spirit of Michael Furry not only animates the snow, but in some subtle sense is the symbol
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of what the snow symbolizes, namely the drift of life towards inevitable death.
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It's as if all the snow over Ireland falls in a medium haunted by the soul of one boy
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who died for a passion his society would not permit him to live.
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Michael Furry is dead, but as it goes to his more alive than any of the doubleneurs of which
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Gabriel is the every man, or so Gabriel imagines in his moment of self-examination.
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Gabriel embodies the rule of his class, his people, his society.
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Michael Furry remains an exception to that rule. That is why the presence of his ghost is able to
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carry Gabriel outside of himself. That night, an inspiring him, his vision of a universal snow.
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Only after this symbolic breakthrough into the realm of the universal does a story we have just read,
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assume a meaning that seemed painfully lacking in the prolonged, excruciatingly boring account
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of the dinner party at the Morcans. Suddenly all of these unacceptantly,
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eminently forgettable characters at the party become translucent. They now appear to us
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as individual snowflakes in their common descent towards a Bolivian, and their dinner party figures
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as a last supper of sorts. Back in 2008, I devoted a show to Joseph Conrad's heart of darkness,
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and I would like to give honorable mention to the ending of that novella here.
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Marlow is on the deck of the Nelly, a ship anchored near the mouth of the Thames River.
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He's wrapping up his story about his journey to the heart of darkness in the Belgian Congo
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to retrieve the remarkable Mr. Kurtz, who dies on the return trip down the Congo River.
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A year after returning to Europe, Marlow goes to Brussels to visit Kurtz's fiance,
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whom Kurtz called his intended. In order to hand over Kurtz's personal belongings tour,
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the intended, who idealized Kurtz, asks Marlow if he was with Kurtz when he died. I quote,
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"To the very end," I said shakily, "I heard his very last words. I stopped and frightened.
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Repeat them," she murmured, "in a heartbroken tone. I want, I want something, something, to live with."
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"I was on the point of crying at her. Don't you hear them?"
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The dusk was repeating them in a persistent whisper all around us in a whisper that seemed to swell,
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menacingly like the first whisper of a rising wind. The horror, the horror.
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His last word to live with, she insisted, "Don't you understand? I loved him. I loved him.
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I pulled myself together and spoke slowly. The last word he pronounced was your name.
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I heard a light sigh and then my heart stood still, stopped dead, short by an exulting and terrible
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cry, by the cry of inconceivable triumph and of unspeakable pain. I knew it, I was sure.
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She knew she was sure. I heard her weeping, she had hidden her face in her hands.
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It seemed to me that the house would collapse before I could escape,
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that the heavens would fall upon my head, but nothing happened. The heavens do not fall for such a
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trifle. Would they have fallen? I wonder if I had rendered Kurtz that justice, which was his do.
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Hadn't he said he wanted only justice, but I couldn't, I could not tell her it would have been too dark,
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too dark altogether. Marlow ceased and sat apart, indistinct and silent in the pose of a meditating
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Buddha. Nobody moved for a time. We have lost the first of the ab, said the director suddenly.
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The offing was barred by a black bank of clouds and the tranquil waterway leading to the
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uttermost ends of the earth flowed somber under an overcast sky, seemed to lead into the heart
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of an immense darkness. We'll be right back.
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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Back in 2006, I did a show with the Australian American author Shirley Hazard, who died in 2016.
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She was a good friend of mine. Shirley knew how to end her stories better than most of the writers
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of her generation. Her output was slim, but she did write one literary masterpiece, the Transitive Venus,
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which puts her in rare company indeed. I can't discuss the ending of that novel without
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spoiling me for those who haven't read it yet, but in a certain sense, Hazard herself includes a
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spoiler at the beginning of the book, where the narrator mentions that the character Ted Ties
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would go on to commit suicide later in life. At the end of the novel, Ted Ties puts the
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novel's main protagonist, Caro, on an airplane bound for Rome, where he is supposed to join her
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later that day. This, after a long odyssey of years filled with difficulties and disappointments,
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finally brings Ted and Caro together in a genuine love. Ted has taken leave of her as the
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passengers prepare to board the plane. I quote, "The passengers were claiming, clutching,
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harboring. Departure was doing this. There was one man, heavy in pale, familiar, who wore
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American sea sucker and used a leather bag as a battering ram. He did not greet Caro and might have
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been myopic. This was the doctor from New York who had proposed she wear glasses. Your flight
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they said, all the while she was looking back in case Ted should be there, your flight is boarding.
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On the plane she was shown to a seat by the window. Beyond the runway you could see a grove of
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spruces, dark, reclusive, genuine. On the airfield the technicians were gesturing with hands and flags,
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their blonde hair and blue clothes were blown in the slipstream. They wore devices to shield
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their ears from the roar. The roar could be seen reverberating on blue overall, surging into the
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spruces. Within the cabin nothing could be heard, only as the plane rose from the ground along
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his of air, like the intake of humanity's breath when a work of ages shrivels in an instant,
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or the great gas of hull and ocean as a ship goes down.
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The reader reaching this end is bewildered. What has happened? Why did Ted Tyson go on to commit
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suicide out of grief when he was on the verge of attaining a life with Caro with whom he had been
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in love for many years? Then you read that last page again and notice the detail of the doctor
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from New York who had proposed that Caro wear glasses. We met that doctor a couple of chapters
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earlier and so you go back and reread the very brief scene where Caro had visited the doctor about
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her eyes, where it's written, quote, "The doctor handed her a slip and pushed away his prescription pad."
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Three months later he was to die in a plane crash on his way to an ophthalmologist's
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Congress in Rome. So there your question is answered, the plane went down, but the shock of it remains.
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And then in the final analysis, this is a novel that ends not with human words, but with the sound,
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in fact with two sounds, a long his of air, like the intake of humanity's breath,
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when a work of ages shrivels in an instant or the great gas of hull and ocean as a ship goes down.
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I'd like to turn for a moment now to a novel by Etello Colvino. Among Colvino's many stories,
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invisible cities in my view has the best ending. In that book's last section,
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we learn that the world atlas of the Great Khan contains the maps of promised lands visited in thought,
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but not yet discovered or founded. It also contains maps of, I quote, "the cities that menace
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in nightmares and mal addiction." Leaving through the latter, the Great Khan declares to Makopolo.
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I quote, "It is all useless if the last landing place can only be the infernal city,
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and it is there that in ever narrowing circles, the current is drawing us."
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Makopolo answers him. The inferno of the living is not something that will be. If there is one,
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it is what is already here, the inferno where we live every day that we form by being together.
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There are two ways to escape suffering from it. The first is easy for many,
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except the inferno, and become such a part of it that you no longer see it.
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The second is risky and demands constant vigilance and apprehension,
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seek and learn to recognize who or what in the midst of the inferno are not inferno,
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and then make them endure, give them space.
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That's what I'd like to think we try to do here on entitled opinions, create an oasis in the midst
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of the wasteland and allow it to grow. But we're not done yet. One last ending to share with you.
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I can't say that it's the best ending of any novel I know, but it's certainly the one I find most
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moving, most evocative, and most powerful. And that's why I'll conclude this show with the long,
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a vanishing sentence that brings to an end Louis, Feddi no Celine's remarkable novel,
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"Voyaggio Budlanyi," or "Journey to the End of the Night."
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The hour is auroral, pre-don fact. A group of friends has just lost one of their own,
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Robinson, who earlier in the night was shot by his lover Madalon in a taxi after telling her
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that love discussed Sim and that he will never marry her. After hours at the police station,
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the narrator and a few others go to a bar on the Sin River that opens before Don,
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since it's a bar that caters primarily to the bargemen who want to drink before they set out on
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their workday. These friends go over what has just happened. They argue, they drink. One of them
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thumps a little stove and breaks it, and then without fanfare, the novel's last paragraph shifts
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the scene from inside the locale to outside. I'll read the French original first.
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"The French is a very nice place to become a black man." "The French is a very nice place to become a black man."
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"The French is a very nice place to become a black man."
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Far in the distance, the tugboat whistled. It's called Pass the Bridge. One more arch,
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then another, another bridge, farther and farther. It was summoning all the barges on the river
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every last one, and the whole city and the sky and the countryside and ourselves to carry us all
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away, the sin too, to have it all done with and speak no more about it.
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That's how I imagine history coming to an end, neither with a whimper nor a bang,
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00:31:16.840 |
but with the sound of a tugboat calling everything around it, to follow its recession beyond the
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bridge, beyond the lock, and beyond the river itself into a place where history,
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having exhausted its chaotic energies, deliqueses in waters beyond the city,
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where the noise of the world finally falls silent.
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I'm Robert Harrison for entitled opinions. Thanks for listening.
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[instrumental music]
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[instrumental music]
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[instrumental music]
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[instrumental music]
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Can you think you want to be?
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So in the country, just read me a name
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Well done, to straighten your head.
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Just with love.
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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[Music]
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