Read Country Girl: A Memoir Online

Authors: Edna O'Brien

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Biography & Autobiography / Personal Memoirs, #Biography, #Biography & Autobiography / Literary

Country Girl: A Memoir (28 page)

BOOK: Country Girl: A Memoir
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On days when I couldn’t write a word, I took to tidying, emptying the hot press, sorting out clothes that the children had grown out of to take to the charity shop, and always I would come upon it, the forbidden cigarette. It so happened that Maurice Girodias had come to Putney to try to encourage me to write a sequel to
The Story of O,
and on leaving had presented me with the cigarette, suggesting the magic properties it held. This long white cigarette, such as I imagined Aubrey Beardsley smoking, held a fearful fascination for me. What might it do? Set me adrift in rosy nebulous places, or send me down into the fearful seas that I dimly knew I had once been to? I probably exaggerated its potency, but nevertheless I would put it safely back in the scarf and into the drawer. I attended workshops and seminars in search of the transcendental self, and numerous parties where there were people floating, claiming to have lapis
lazuli visions and to have touched the navel of wisdom, spouting tosh that passed for real poetry. Deep down, I was afraid of losing whatever stability I had.

Once, in Philip Dunn’s beautiful farmhouse in Mallorca, to which his daughter Nell had got me an invitation, there was another visitor extolling the alternative life. He was a Dutchman who carried around a veritable cache of drugs, and when I declined, he decided on a more drastic solution. Trepanning. With a Black & Decker drill he wished to bore a hole in the center of my forehead to give me the third eye and the enlightenment that I craved. From that too I fled, though unconsciously I was courting disaster.

The Sleeve of Saskia

The morning I had elected to take LSD with Laing was sunny and bright. Yet I had misgivings. It was 6 May 1970; the room was tidied, masses of peony flowers, white and pink, with blood-red spattering, in a big jug, and the river outside a picture of calm and tranquillity. Laing arrived punctually at ten o’clock, wearing a good suit and a collar and tie, which I had rarely seen him wear. I’d been a patient of his for about six months. The sessions, it is fair to say, were unorthodox, and sometimes he talked, and sometimes he would laugh, just quietly to himself. He was an admirer of the psychoanalyst Georg Groddeck, whose methods were equally unorthodox and who extolled the benefits of madness. Getting back to the original source, the family romance, was what mattered, and sometimes he told me some of his own infant memories, fearful figures to the left and right of the cot, an angry mother and his crawling over a mock-parquet linoleum floor. One day I brought a punnet of fresh figs, and he looked at their dark, aubergine skins, then got a knife out and slit them apart. He had us sit on the floor and observe them for the fifty-minute session, the opened figs, with the seeds in the pulp of reddish flesh.

On that morning in May when he arrived, I felt I should broach the dream I’d had, but at the same time I was hesitant. In it I was a very young girl on the way to school, when I tripped and fell on the road, a sharp stone splitting my forehead open. My brain tumbled out, and took the shape of a spinning top, when presently passersby, young and old, danced and trampled on it. As if that were not warning enough, I had learned from
Sean Connery, with whom I had had dinner the previous evening, that his trip with Laing, both being old friends from Scotland, had its freight of terrors. Yet I did not cancel the appointment. It was as if in some way I believed I could go through with it and yet escape the terrible ordeal. My reasons for wanting to take it were multiple. A secret part of me longed to be nearer to Laing, and another part of me believed, from various literature I had read, that my dreams and therefore my writing would be enriched.

I drank my potion from a glass. I do not recall it having any taste. As I sat there, I remembered that I must ask him to hold me, or at least hold my hand, but as the words came stuttering out, he had suddenly, in that winged armchair, metamorphosed into a rat, an executive rat, trussed inside a suit with a collar and tie. It was my last semi-rational thought on that day. The world was spinning, spinning, and the floor underneath began to sway like the waves of an ocean. I ran to the kitchen to escape it, only to find that it too was swaying and the walls to the touch had become flesh. I went back to the sitting room, where he was dancing, but I declined the invitation to dance with him, falling apart as I was. It went on for hour after hour. I was no longer sitting, I was on the floor, gasping, each onslaught more hideous than that which preceded it. Womb. Blood. Hell. Fire. The wounded pith of an opened fig.

At one point he picked the huge gilt mirror off the wall and showed me my purple-faced, mad-eyed, gyrating self. I broke water as when I had given birth, cascades of it gushing out of me, and yet I could not feel any damp on the floor that I knelt on. No sense of time or changing light. A garbled account of coming into this world with a memory and a set of despair, and then twice I said,
“The edges are splitting on and on, and that you have to die more than once, my mother, my mystery, my little children, I can only bear you.”
I was dimly mindful of them in a
boarding school in Petersfield, far away, too far away, ever to reach.

He left some time after that and I was alone, crawling around that room like a wounded animal. I would have liked him to stay. I would have liked him to hold me. I would have liked a biscuit, and I knew exactly the soft ginger biscuit I wanted, except that I could not reach the kitchen, where the tin was kept. I crawled to the telephone, which was on a little table, and attempted to ring Ted Allan. The face of the phone had a metal front, with the lettering and numbers in a recess, and as I tried to dial, it was like dialing into my own gums and it proved beyond me. That was when I cried, endless tears and an untoward and useless pity for a whole world that I could not get to.

Respite of sorts reached me. Just before dark, I saw the evening light fade, and as it did, I had intimations of resplendent colors, in the sky, on the river, colors shooting out of my mind, rich and streaming. I was seeing, as I once had in Vienna, Pieter Brueghel’s hunters in the snow, and in that whiteness, the black trunks of the trees and the few crows were blacker still, while two hounds of velvety russet were asking to be stroked. The huntsmen with their spears dwindled in size as they went across a plain, toward the snowy peaks and the unseen gorge between mountain and whey-green sky. Then it was the sleeve of Saskia, the second wife of Rembrandt, as for ceremony, gold and dipping, and I suddenly wished that I had danced with the Rat Man. How long would it take me to get back to where I had been? As long, perhaps, as it had taken me to get there.

Eventually the doorbell rang and I found myself able to stand, then to walk, in order to answer it. Ted Allan and Sean Connery had come to see how I was faring, and as they later said, they were shocked to find a woman so drastically altered, talking daft, disconnected things and walking as if on stilts. My conversation ranged from bygone memories to snatches of
learning, to prescriptions I had made up in the chemist’s shop, to a line of a poem,
“O thou lord of life, send my roots rain,”
inevitably to the golden sleeves of Saskia. I asked for a biscuit and some red wine. The color of the wine was glorious. From the very meniscus down, I could see bands of different deeper reds, and I drank slowly as if it were nectar. They stayed for a long while, and by the time I went to bed, I was tired in body and in mind, having lived many lives in less than twenty-four hours.

The aftermath was frightening, as I became somewhat unhinged. Beth came with me to visit the children on the Sunday, and to bring the hampers, she doing most of the talking so that they would not notice the peculiarity in me. Some weeks later, in a shop in Bond Street, buying Hessian boots that were embroidered with daisies, I suddenly saw the yellow stamens stir and the flowers come to life. I, who love theater, could no longer go. In a theater in St. Martin’s Lane I had to vacate my seat almost as soon as I sat down, as the crown of my head was being lifted by swords in order to reach the elaborately carved ceiling.

The trip to Paris was to countenance these various seizures, but instead it precipitated one. I was with Roger Vadim in his apartment in the rue de Rivoli as we discussed the possibility of doing a remake of Diderot’s
The Nun.
Jane arrived from a day’s filming with Jean-Luc Godard, but was not her customary wooing self, as she threw down a cardboard box full of oysters and said something dismissive to Vadim.

It was the next day in my room in the hotel that the hallucinations returned. On my mantelpiece at home in London, I remembered, I had a postcard of the painter Jacob Cornelisz depicting
The Adoration of the Christ Child
in a brown interior, the browns enriched with motes of gold and angels suspended from the eaves playing trumpets in tribute to the naked infant lying on a wooden trestle; but my visitors were different. It was
in L’Hôtel in Paris, once known as Hôtel Alsace, which I had chosen for the fact that Oscar Wilde had died there and had left an unpaid bill. Tiny creatures, spitfires in little bibs, were swinging from every corner of the ceiling and hissing. Mere amoebae at first, they began to swell and multiply. I was doing what I could to evade them. I tried various strategies, reminding myself that in a guidebook I had read that the Eiffel Tower was held together by 2.5 million rivets and 18,000 pieces of metal, and bizarrely I thought of John Berryman in a hotel in Dublin drinking a quart of whiskey a day and trying to finish a poem. Then it was the turn of Salvador Dalí, whom I remembered as being in that same city but in a different hotel, jumping up to the ceiling to squash invading creatures with a towel. From the anteroom, which adjoined the bedroom, in order to give it the category of a suite, a grotesque figure appeared, a man with side whiskers, who lay above me, his whiskers frothed and wet with porter as the trolls in their corners laughed their little lungs out. I thought I was finished and rang a bell, which I found behind the silk pleating of the wall. A doctor was summoned, and it was he who diagnosed the cause of the hallucinations—I’d had a bad oyster. Medicines were got, and having taken them, I crept down into the center of the bed and pulled the quilt up over my eyes to ward off the invaders, whom I imagined to be skulking and muttering.

I had asked for no visitors to be allowed up, and yet, three times, they were. Marguerite Duras was the first; feeling my forehead and my pulse, she hurried out and went to the pharmacy for suppositories and lime-blossom tea. Peter Brook was next, as we were supposed to be writing a screenplay together. It had a title and a theme, but not much else. It was called
Vacant.
He had conceived the whole structure of it in images, and on large white sheets of paper there were drawings, a shifting kaleidoscope of ideas that I was too fuddled to grasp, so the
meeting ended inconclusively. Then it was Samuel Beckett, no stranger to sickrooms and asylum rooms in his fiction, who opened the mini fridge, took out a miniature of whiskey and a glass, and sat down. It was some time before he asked me what was wrong, and I told him of the weird visitations, followed by the arrival of the two visitors, Marguerite Duras and Peter Brook.

“Ah, that could do it to you,” he said, and continued in his meditative mode.

It had grown dark and the objects in the room were indistinct. It was a well-known fact that Beckett did not like too much talk. All his works are littered with the aggravation of the nonstop talkers, the quaquaquas. Finally I ventured to ask what he was writing, to which he replied, “Nothing much, and what use is it anyhow?” Somehow the talk came round to burial places. I told him of my grave on an island in the Shannon, so isolated, with its several churches, roofs opened to the skies, wild birds swooping in and out, tombstones chalked with lichen. He was surprised and wondered if I was going back for a perpetual “dose of disgust.” He may have been remembering the monstrous treatment meted out to James Joyce, whom the authorities and Irish undertakers were so repelled by that his remains were never brought back. I remembered then that shortly after I had met Beckett in 1964, he had sent me a postcard—perhaps it was a manifesto he sent to many—saying he was in Dublin for the last time and had bought a black mourning hat in Elverys. Yet there remained so much of Ireland in him, in his voice, his walk, his stick, and in his writings, “the ruinstrewn land between road and ditch, the dear back roads, the daisies, the sheep, the lambs, the afterbirths,” as he observed them on the mountain walks which he had taken with his father, all that and the silver-voiced hammer of the stonecutters heard in the distance. Not even Synge had captured
Ireland with such feeling. I always thought of Jack Yeats, Synge, and Beckett in the same breath, men of kindred spirit, tramps of a noble scion, who literally walked the ground they would enshrine in painting or in language. The very first thing I had ever read of his was in the London Library, on the fourth floor, in that darkish cranny, where by chance I came on a book with reproductions of Yeats’s paintings, a book that I was very tempted to steal. In a brief radiant introduction Beckett had written that the artist who stakes his being is from nowhere and has no kin. I mentioned it and he looked up, pleased, forgetting that he had written it at all, instead remembering the long walks that he and Jack Yeats had in north Dublin, always taking their rest in some quiet pub to ponder. It may seem inappropriate to broach drink concerning such an exigent man, but most of the Irish geniuses, Joyce, Beckett, Flann O’Brien, and many others, were well-known habitués of the tavern, putting their sojourns to sedulous good use.

It was soundless in that room, except for the squeak of the casters of his chair on a bit of skirting board and chambermaids out on the landing calling peremptorily, yet gaily, to one another. He sat gazing ahead and sometimes up into the corners, where the freaks had earlier shown themselves.

“No need at all to go back,” he said, with a kind of resignation, and I knew that he could not have written of the ditches and the daisies and the ruinstrewn land unless he had loved it with such a beautiful, sad, and imperishable loneliness.

BOOK: Country Girl: A Memoir
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