Authors: Georges Perec
Which animal do you know
That has a body as curving as a bow
And draws back inwards as straight as an arrow?
"Moi! Moi!"
Aignan (no doubt a fan of Miss Piggy) shouts back
at it.
A frown furrows its horridly bulging brow.
"You think so?"
"Why, naturally," says Aignan.
"I fancy you ought to know," says his inquisitor mournfully.
For an instant nobody says a word. A cold north wind cuts a
blast through a cotton-cloud sky.
"I always said a kid would bring about my downfall," sighs a
Sphinx so dolorous it looks almost as though it's about to burst
into sobs.
"Now, now, Sphinx, no hamming it up,
s'il vous plait"
says
Aignan gruffly and with a faint hint of compassion for his victim
— adding, though, "You must admit, had I got it wrong, you'd
instandy claim what's owing you. I got it right, I won; and so,
by law, it's curtains for you." And, raising an intimidating hand
in front of him, adds, "So - what about taking a running jump
off that cliff?"
"Oh no," it murmurs softly, "not that, oh God, not that. . . "
"St, sir Aignan roars back, without knowing why an Italian
locution should pop into his brain at such a point of crisis and
climax.
Picking up a thick, knobby stick, Aignan knocks it down - so
hard, in fact, that it falls unconscious, spiralling downward out
of control, spinning round and round in mid-air, down, down,
down, into a profound abyss, into an aching Boschian void. A
blood-curdling wail, a wail partaking of both a lion's roar and a
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cat's purr, of both a hawk's inhuman squawk and a hauntingly
human, all too human, cry of pain, throbs on and on all around
for fully thirty days . . .
With a fabliau of so obvious a moral, it's not too difficult to
intuit what kind of fiction or plot must follow. Aignan tours his
country, roaming back and forth, uphill and down again, arriving
at sundown in unfamiliar and unknown townships, proposing a
day's labour to local rustics and cartwrights and sacristans and
taking for his pay just a thin, fatty cut of bacon or a dry crust
with a scrap of garlic as its only garnish. Starvation gnaws at
him, thirst too, but nothing can kill him.
Whilst approaching his maturity, Aignan would soon know
how to adapt to almost any kind of situation confronting him,
would soon grow cool and nonchalant, fortifying his worldly
wisdom, magnifying his vision of his surroundings, his
Anschauung
, and crossing paths with many curious and intriguing
individuals, all of whom would, in various ways, transform him,
by giving him a job of work to do, or board and lodging, or by
indicating a vocation to him. A con man would instruct him in
his craft; a mason would show him how to build a small but cosy
shack; a compositor would tutor him in printing a daily journal.
But that isn't all. What occurs now (as you'll find out) is a
hotchpotch of cryptic plots and complications, simulating, word
for word, action for action, its conclusion apart, that saga of
profound roots, that amusing but also moral and poignant story
that a troubadour, whom history knows as Hartmann, took for
his inspiration, and whom Thomas Mann would follow in his
turn, via a trio of short fictions.
Thus, to start with, Aignan is told that his papa was good King
Willigis (or Willo for short) and his aunt was Sibylla. Sibylla,
though, was so fond of Willigis, fond of him with a passion that
sat oddly with kinship, that sororal adoration would gradually
blossom into carnal lust (notwithstanding Willigis's faithful old
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hound howling with horror and dying just as coition was about
to occur). Within 8 months and 23 days Aignan was born.
Blushing with guilt at his iniquity, hoping that castigation in
this world might guard him from damnation, Willigis (Willo for
short but not now for long) fought a holy war against Saladin
and was struck down, as was his wish, by an anonymous son of
Allah.
As for his Dauphin, Aignan, with immoral blood coursing
through his body, his mama, Sibylla, thought to abandon him
on a raft so that it might float away northwards to an insalubrious
district of filthy marshland, full of moronically drooling young
cutthroats (for adult consumption of alcohol was said to attain
as much as six gallons a month) and animals of unknown origin
but of, no doubt, voraciously carnivorous habits: talk was of a
dragon "stuffing guts wit' battalion, a' way down t' last drop o'
last man", as a charming patois had it in an inn into which many
locals would crowd for a warming drink on concluding a hard
day's work outdoors. In addition to which, it was always dark
and always drizzling - a cold, thin, stabbing, British sort of rain-
fall. Thus you wouldn't go far wrong in supposing that only
miraculous odds (I fancy a Christian would put it down to God
working in mystical ways and is probably right to do so; but
fiction has an intrinsic duty to contradict such an illusion of
propitiatory fatality; for if not, what's its point?) - in supposing,
as I say, that only miraculous odds could account for Aignan's
surviving up to and including his 18th birthday. But I mustn't
run on too quickly . . .
Anyway, on or about Aignan's 18th birthday, Sibylla, in a man-
sion fashionably got up
a la brabanfon
or
flamand,
is still doting, if now posthumously, on poor Willigis (or Willo) and turning
down all invitations to marry. A rich and rutting Burgundian
aristocrat pays court. Sibylla simply says no. "What!" says this
aristocrat in a purplish paroxysm of wrath, prior to razing half
of Hainault and marching on Cambrai.
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But wait . . . At this point in my story, to Cambrai, clippity-
clop, clippity-clop, riding Sturmi, his black and bay brown
Anglo-Norman stallion, clippity-clop, clippity-clop, gallops a
knight-at-arms, with all you could ask for in youthful vigour and
good looks. Brought to Sibylla's mansion, this dazzling young
paladin charms his monarch, who commissions him to slay his
Burgundian rival. "Your wish is my command," fair Sir Adonis
says instantly, kissing his lady's hand and adding wittily, "And,
may I say, your command is actually my wish."
Mounting Sturmi, with its saffron housing and its caparison
of indigo, and illustrious in his own gold strappings inlaid with
opal, his cloak, his broad cuirass and his coat of armour, Adonis
gallops out into a sort of oblong paddock with paling all around
it. A fish adorns his standard; and a long standing ovation from
his Braban^on champions totally drowns out an irruption of scur-
rilous anti-Braban^on sloganising from a mob of Burgundian
hooligans and paid agitators.
What a bloody clash of arms it is, with onslaught following
onslaught, mortal blow confuting mortal blow, chain mail
clashing clamorously against chain mail, attacks by harpoon and
spontoon, hook and crook! In all it lasts a full day. Finally,
though, by a cunning ploy, young Adonis dismounts his rival:
victory is his.
Brabant and Burgundy mutually disarm. Joyful carillons ring
out in both lands. Floors throb to dancing, walls to playing of
hautboys, horns and drums, roofs to toasting of this artful young
paladin — now, by a logical promotion, known as Grand Admiral
of Brabant. And, complying with a royal summons, our Grand
Admiral pays an additional visit to Sibylla's mansion. Boy looks
at girl, girl looks at boy . . . imagining how it turns out is child's
play (or, should I say, adult's play).
Oh you, browsing or scanning or skimming or dipping into
my story, or actually studying it word for word, moving your
lips as you go, I must now throw light on a startling twist in its
tail, though you no doubt know without my having to inform
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you who it is that Sturmi is carrying on its caparison - why,
that's right, it's Aignan.
Aignan, though, still blissfully ignorant of Sibylla's kinship
with him, falls into just that trap in which Oi'dipos was caught.
And Sibylla, ignorant of Aignan's analogous kinship, falls into
just that trap in which Jocasta was caught. For Sibylla admits to
an infatuation with Aignan. And Aignan admits in his turn to
an infatuation with Sibylla. And, without a filial qualm, Aignan
starts fornicating with Sibylla. And Sibylla, not surprisingly, starts
fornicating back.
Luckily or unluckily - it's hard to know which - Aignan all
too soon finds out what kind of filiation it is that links him with
Sibylla.
Sibylla, praying daily, not to say hourly, for God's pardon, has
a hospital built in which a crowd of filthy waifs and strays stay
for nothing, with not a limb, not a dirty hand or a stinking foot
or a gamily aromatic armpit, that its nursing staff will not lovingly
wash.
Aignan, donning a ragamuffin's rags, a hairshirt worn out of
mortification, with a stick in his hand, but without a vagrant's
rucksack or tin can, slips away at dusk from a mansion in which
an illusory and, alas, mortally sinful form of conjugal intimacy
lay almost within his grasp - slips far, far away, going hungry
and thirsty and living rough and tough, and pays for his infamous
conduct by asking God to vilify him, to damn him outright.
So pass four long and hard days of wayfaring, culminating in
his arrival at a poor woodman's hut. Aignan timidly knocks at
its door. In an instant its occupant is standing inquiringly in front
of him.
"Would you know," Aignan asks him, "of a
Locus Solus
not
far off in which, till Doomsday, God might punish my Sin
of Sins?"
"That I would, my lad, that I would," growls this doltish wood-
man (who is in fact as thick as two of his own planks). "Tis an
island, no, no, I'm wrong, 'tain't that at all, 'tis just a rock, sort
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of a crag, look you, with an awful sharp drop down t' bottom
o' loch. Tis just th' spot, I'd say, for a man with drink or dam-
nation on his mind!"
"Oh woodman, do you own a boat?"
"That I do."
"And will you row it out to your island, your rock?" Aignan
asks him imploringly. "For my salvation!"
Though caught short by this proposal, his saviour concurs at
last, with a warning that Aignan will rot on such a solitary crag
- rot till his dying day.
"I wish only for God's will," says Aignan piously.
At which his rustic Charon murmurs a (slighdy incongruous)
chorus: "And so say all of us!"
So our young pilgrim sails forth to this Island of Lost Souls on
which his companion, almost throttling him, binds him to a rock
with a hangman's tight collar. A nourishing mould or humus
oozing by night out of a cavity in his rocky crucifix is his only
form of nutrition; a storm or a cutting blast or an icy south wind
or a burning simoon or a sirocco swirling about him his only roof;
a typhoon or a tidal flood his only wall; and his only clothing (for
his poor, worn, torn rags rot away as fast as crumbling old wood)
is his birthday suit, soon just as poor and worn and torn as his
rags. Not cold but glacial, not hot but roasting, Aignan stands
thus, a living symbol of contrition, a human incarnation of purga-
torial pain.
Now half-starving for want of food, now wholly fading away,
notwithstanding that mouldy humus that God in all His wisdom
and compassion has put his way, Aignan gradually grows thin,
his body physically contracts from day to day, from hour to hour,
it slims down and narrows out until unimaginably gaunt and
scrawny, until as small and insignificant as that of a dwarf, a
pygmy, a homunculus, until Aignan is nothing at last but a
shrimp of a man, a Hop-o'-my-Thumb . . .
* * *
18 springs pass. In Roman Catholicism's sanctum sanctorum Paul
VI is dying. Vatican City is in a tizzy: it must now swiftly appoint
a Paul VII and affirm papal continuity. But six polls go by - and
no Paul VII! This cardinal submits a proposal for an idiot and
that cardinal for a glutton, a third opts for a psychopath and a
fourth for an ignoramus. Corruption is rampant: anybody willing
to put down a cool million in cash can practically buy his nomina-
tion as pontiff. Things look bad. Faith is vacillating. Nobody
thinks to pray to his patron saint.
It's at this point that black clouds start forming in Abraham's
bosom, bolts of numinous lightning shoot down from on high
and Almighty God in all His wrath pays an unusual visit on a
Cardinal - unusual in that His outward form is that of a lamb,
a lamb with stigmata of blood on its flanks and a couch of fragrant
blooms to accompany it.
"O hark my words, Monsignor," God booms out at His
Cardinal. "Thou now hast that Vicar of Christ that thou sought
in vain. I, thy all-knowing King of Kings, do appoint Aignan as
My apostolic missionary — Aignan, who hast, in that corporal