Books by Alexander Theroux
THREE WOGS (A Novel), 1972
THE SCHINOCEPHALIC WAIF (A Fable), 1975
THE GREAT WHEADLE TRAGEDY (A Fable), 1975
MASTER SNICKUP’S CLOAK (A Fable), 1979
DARCONVILLE’S CAT (A Novel), 1981
ALEXANDER THEROUX
Darconville’s Cat
Doubleday & Company, Inc.
Garden City, New York
1981
ISBN: 0-385-I595I-X
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 80-629
Copyright © 1981 by Alexander Theroux
All Rights Reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Acknowledgment:
Copyright 1923 and renewed 1951 by Wallace
Stevens.
Reprinted from
The Collected Poems of Wallace
Stevens
, by Wallace Stevens, by permission of Alfred A. Knopf,
Inc.
Master Snickup’s Cloak
was first published
by
Dragon’s World, Ltd. Copyright © 1979 by
Dragon’s
World, Ltd., and Alexander Theroux
THEY FLEE FROM ME
They flee from me, that sometime did me seek,
With naked foot stalking in my chamber.
I have seen them, gentle, tame, and meek,
That now are wild, and do not remember
That sometime they put themselves in danger
To take bread at my hand, and now they range,
Busily seeking with a continual change.
Thanked be fortune it hath been otherwise,
Twenty times better; but once in special,
In thin array, after a pleasant guise,
When her loose gown from her shoulders did fall,
And she me caught in her arms long and small,
And therewith all sweetly did me kiss
And softly said, “Dear heart, how like you
this?”
It was no dream: I lay broad waking.
But all is turned, through my gentleness,
Into a strange fashion of forsaking;
And I have leave to go of her goodness,
And she also to use newfangleness.
But since that I so kindely am served,
I fain would know what she hath deserved.
Sir
THOMAS WYATT
Explicitur
THIS IS A STORY of murder, which, as an act, is as
apt to characterize deliverance as it is to corroborate death.
There are certain elemental emotions that touch upon powers other
and larger than our own discrete wishes might allow—for every
consciousness is continuous with a wider self open to the hidden
processes and unseen regions created in the soul by the very nature
of an
opposite
effort—and while, taken together, each may
prove the other simply by contrast, considered separately neither
may admit of various shades in the law of whichever whole it finds
reigning at the time. That which produces effects within one
reality creates another reality itself. I am thinking,
specifically, of love and hate.
We cannot distinguish, perhaps, natural from
supernatural effects, nor among either know which are favors of God
and which are counterfeit operations of the Devil. Who,
furthermore, can speak of the incubations of motives? And of love
and hate? Are they not too often, in spite of the comparative chaos
within us, generally taken to be little more than a set of titles
obtained by the mere mechanical manipulation of antonyms? I have no
aspiration here to reclaim mystery and paradox from whatever
territory they might inhabit, for there is, indeed, often a killing
in a kiss, a mercy in the slap that heats your face.
There is, nevertheless, a particular poverty in
those alloplasts who, addressing tragedy, seek to subdistinguish
motives beyond those we have best, because nearest, at hand, and so
it is with love and hate— emotions upon whose necks, whether wrung
or wreathed, may be found the oldest fingerprints of man. A simple
truth intrudes: the basic instincts of every man to every man are
known. But who knows when or where or how? For the answers to such
questions, summon Augurello, your personal jurisconsult and
theological wiseacre, to teach you about primal reality and then to
dispel those complexities and cabals you crouch behind in this sad,
psychiatric century you call your own. It is the
anti
-labyrinths of the world that scare. Here is a story
for you. Your chair.
A.L.T.
Contents
I. The Beginning 1
II. Darconville 3
III. Quinsyburg, Va. 112
IV. He Enters the House of Rimmon 15
V. Were There Reasons to Believe—? 28
VI. President Greatracks Delivers 29
VII. Quinsy College 34
VIII. Hypsipyle Poore 41
IX. A Day of Writing 48
X. Bright Star 51
XI. Chantepleure 62
XII. The.Garden of Earthly Delights 63
XIII. A Lethiferous Letter 77
XIV. The Witchery of Archery 79
XV. Tertium Quid 86
XVI. Quires 89
XVII. “An Embarrassing Occurrence at Zutphen
Farm” 93
XVIII. Isabel 95
XIX. Effictio 105
XX. A Wandering in Brocéliande 107
XXI. “The Little Thing” 109
XXII. The Clitheroe Kids no
XXIII. A Promise Fulfilled 122
XXIV. Giacomo-lo-Squarciatore 124
XXV. Miss Trappe’s Gift 132
XXVI. The Nine Photographs 134
XXVII. Master Snickup’s Cloak 138
XXVIII. A Promise Unfulfilled 146
XXIX. “Sparks from My Anvil” 147
XXX. Examination of Conscience 154
XXXI. A Gnome 159
XXXII. Fawx’s Mt. 160
XXXIII. Gloss 178
XXXIV. Hansel und Rätsel 179
XXXV. A Questionnaire 187
XXXVI. The Deipnosophists 190
XXXVII. Expostulation and Reply 219
XXXVIII. Love 222
XXXIX. The Cardinal’s Crotchet 233
XL. Oudemian Street 238
XLI. The Turner 251
XLII. The Jejune Dance 254
XLIII. The Unfortunate Jilts 265
XLIV. Heroic Couplet 267
XLV. Sounds of the Fundament 280
XLVI. The Wyanoid Baptist Church 284
XLVII. A Fallacy of the Consequent 298
XLVIII. Charlottesville 301
XLIX. Coup de Foudre 316
L. Dialogue on a Dank October 321
LI.
Conspectus Temporum
328
LI I. A Table Alphabeticall of Thinges Passynge
340
LIII. The Old Arcadia 342
LIV. Odi et Amo 356
LV. The Timberlake Hotel 358
LVI. The Wedding Is Banned 366
LVII. Where Will We Go? 376
LVIII. Over the Hills and Far Away 380
LIX. The Doorcard on F-2I 388
LX. Harvard 389
LXI. A Telephone Call 397
LXII. A Judgment in Italy 401
LXIII. Figures in the Carpet 405
LXIV. September 26 418
LXV. Odor of Corruption 420
LXVI. Accident or Incident? 429
LXVII. Dr. Crucifer 431
LXVIII. The Misogynist’s Library 442
LXIX. Biography of a Eunuch 452
LXX. Sic et Non 471
LXXI. The Deorsumversion 473
LXXII. Who? 479
LXXIII. The Supreme Ordeal 485
LXXIV. The Empty Egg 496
LXXV. Lacerations 498
LXXVI. Abomination of Desolation 507
LXXVII. The Nowt of Cambridge 509
LXXVIII. The Prodigal Son 520
LXXIX. Keeper of the Bed 522
LXXX. The Fox Uncas’d 540
LXXXI. Oratio Contra Feminas 549
LXXXII. The Unholy Litany 570
LXXXIII. Gone for a Burton 592
LXXXIV. What Is One Picture Worth? 597
LXXXV. A Digression on Ears 600
LXXXVI. The Tape Recording 605
LXXXVII. The Diabolical Pact 616
XXXVIII. Week of the Sabbat 618
LXXXIX. Malediction! 630
XC. Hate 634
XCI. A Carthaginian Peace 646
XCII. Revenge! Revenge! 658
XCIII. “Why Don’t You—?” 662
XCIV. Journey to the Underworld 671
XCV. The Night of Power 674
XCVI. Quire Me Some Paper! 680
XCVII. Venice 682
XCVIII. Wear Red for Suffering 691
XCIX. The Black Duchess 701
C. The End 702
Darconville’s Cat
I
The Beginning
Delirium is the disease of the night.
----St.
PONTEFRACT
DARCONVILLE, the schoolmaster, always wore black.
The single tree, however, that shanked out of the front yard he now
crossed in long strides showed even more distinct a darkness, a
simulacrum of the dread probationary tree—trapfall of all lost
love—for coming upon it, gibbet-high and half leafless in the
moonlight, was to feel somehow disposed to the general truth that
it is a dangerous and pagan notion that beauty palliates evil.
He was alone. It had always seemed axiomatic for him
that he be alone: a vow, the linchpin of his art, his praxis.
The imperscrutable winds of autumn, blowing leaves
across the porch, had almost stripped the tree, leaving it nearly
naked and essential against the moon that shone down on the quiet
little town in Virginia. It was late as he let himself into the
house and walked up the creaking stairs to his rooms where, pulling
a chair to the window, he sat meditatively in that dark chamber
like a nomadic gulsar—his black coat still unbuttoned—and was left
alone with those odd retrospective prophecies borne in on one at
the start of that random moment we, for some reason, choose to call
the beginning of a new life.
The night, solemn and beautiful, seemed fashioned to
force those who would observe it to look within themselves. He
watched awhile and then grew weary. He took a late mixt of some
rolls and a bottle of ale and soon dropped asleep on his bed,
dreaming out of fallen reason the rhymes received with joy he
shaped accordingly. It was only early the following morning that he
found on the bedside table next to his pen and unscrewed cap—a huge
Moore’s Non-Leakable—the open commonplace book in which, having
arisen in the middle of the night to do so, he had written a single
question: “Who is she?”
II
Darconville
I thought I heard the rustle of a dress, but I
don’t—I don’t see anyone. No, I imagined it.
—
Peter
Schlemihl; or, The Man Who Sold His Shadow
SEPTEMBER: it was the most beautiful of words, he’d
always felt, evoking orange-flowers, swallows, and regret. The
shutters were open. Darconville stared out into a small empty
street, touched with autumnal fog, that looked like the lugubrious
frontispiece to a book as yet to be read. His obligate room, its
walls several shades of distemper, was spare as the skite of a
recluse—a postered bed, several chairs, and an old deal desk he’d
just left, confident in the action of moderating powers, to ease
his mind of some congested thoughts. He looked at his watch which
he kept hung on a nail. The afternoon was to have been spent, as
the morning had, writing, but something else was on his mind.
There was an unfinished manuscript, tentatively
called
Rumpopulorum
, spread out there, a curious, if
speculative, examination of the world of angels, archistrateges,
and the archonic wardens of heaven in relation—he appropriated
without question the right to know both—to mortal man. The body of
material, growing over the last few months, was formidable, its
sheets pied with inky corrections and smudged with the additions
that overheated his prose and yet brought it all to test.
The human skull, his pencils in its noseholes, that
had been ritually placed on that desk a week previous—his first
days in the South— seemed appropriate to his life, a reminder,
mysteriously elate, of what actually wasn’t, something there but
not, a memory of man without one, for not only had he more or less
withdrawn from the world, long a characteristic of the
d’Arconvilles, but the caricatures of mortal vanity were as
necessary to his point of view as the unction of religious
conventionality was featureless.
Darconville’s cat leaped onto the windowsill and
peered up, as if collating the thoughts of his master: where were
they? How had they come to be here? What reason, in fact, had they
to be in this strange place? The young man, however, continued
leaning by the window and reviewing what he saw. But there was
another view, for behind it, or perhaps beyond somewhere, in vague,
half-blind remembrances of wherever he’d been—sources of endless
pleasure to him—he dwelled awhile to find himself, looking back in
time, surprised at the absence in it of any figure but his own. He
felt no particular responsibility to memory but accepted his
dreams, to which, living altogether as a twin self in the depths of
him, he could speak in inviolable secrecy.