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Authors: Elisabeth Tova Bailey

The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating

BOOK: The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating
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T
HE
S
OUND OF A
W
ILD
S
NAIL
E
ATING

The
SOUND
of a
WILD SNAIL EATING

ELISABETH TOVA BAILEY

Published by

ALGONQUIN BOOKS OF CHAPEL HILL
Post Office Box 2225
Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27515-2225

a division of
WORKMAN PUBLISHING
225 Varick Street
New York, New York 10014

© 2010 by Elisabeth Tova Bailey. Illustrations © Kathy Bray. All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America.
Published simultaneously in Canada by Thomas Allen & Son Limited.

This book is based on an essay that appeared in
The Missouri Review.
Permissions for other material reprinted in this book appear on pages 187–90,
which constitute an extension of the copyright page.
Design by Anne Winslow.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bailey, Elisabeth Tova.

The sound of a wild snail eating / Elisabeth Tova Bailey.—1st ed.

p. cm.

ISBN 978-1-56512-606-0

1. Snails as pets—Anecdotes. 2. Gastropoda—Physiology.

3. Gastropoda—Anatomy. 4. Bailey, Elisabeth Tova—Health.

5. Chronically ill—Biography. I. Title.

SF459.S48B35 2010

594’.38—dc22

2010018603

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

First Edition

To biophilia

A small pet is often an excellent companion.

— F
LORENCE
N
IGHTINGALE
,
Notes on Nursing,
1912

The natural world is the refuge of the spirit . . .
richer even than human imagination.

— E
DWARD
O. W
ILSON
,
Biophilia,
1984

PROLOGUE

Viruses are embedded into the
very fabric of all life.

— L
UIS
P. V
ILLARREAL
,
“The Living and Dead Chemical
Called a Virus,” 2005

F
ROM MY HOTEL WINDOW
I look over the deep glacial lake to the foothills and the Alps beyond. Twilight vanishes the hills into the mountains; then all is lost to the dark.

After breakfast, I wander the cobbled village streets. The frost is out of the ground, and huge bushes of rosemary bask fragrantly in the sun. I take a trail that meanders up the steep, wild hills past flocks of sheep. High on an outcrop, I lunch on bread and cheese. Late in the afternoon along the shore, I find ancient pieces of pottery, their edges smoothed by waves and time. I hear that a virulent flu is sweeping this small town.
A few days pass and then comes a delirious night. My dreams are disturbed by the comings and goings of ferries. Passengers call into the dark, startling me awake. Each time I fall back into sleep, the lake’s watery sound pulls at me. Something is wrong with my body. Nothing feels right.
In the morning I am weak and can’t think. Some of my muscles don’t work. Time becomes strange. I get lost; the streets go in too many directions. The days drift past in confusion. I pack my suitcase, but for some reason it’s impossible to lift. It seems to be stuck to the floor. Somehow I get to the airport. Seated next to me on the transatlantic flight is a sick surgeon; he sneezes and coughs continually. My rare, much-needed vacation has not gone as planned. I’ll be okay; I just want to get home.
After a flight connection in Boston, I land at my small New England airport near midnight. In the parking lot, as I bend over to dig my car out of the snow, the shovel turns into a crutch that I use to push myself upright. I don’t know how I get home. Arising the next morning, I immediately faint to the floor. Ten days of fever with a pounding headache. Emergency room visits. Lab tests. I am sicker than I have ever been. Childhood pneumonia, college mononucleosis—those were nothing compared to this.
A few weeks later, resting on the couch, I spiral into a deep darkness, falling farther and farther away until I am impossibly distant. I cannot come back up; I cannot reach my body. Distant sound of an ambulance siren. Distant sound of doctors talking. My eyelids heavy as boulders. I try to open them to a slit, just for a few seconds, but they close against my will. All I can do is breathe.
The doctors will know how to fix me. They will stop this. I keep breathing. What if my breath stops? I need to sleep, but I am afraid to sleep. I try to watch over myself; if I go to sleep, I might never wake up again.

T
HE
S
OUND OF A
W
ILD
S
NAIL
E
ATING

Part 1
THE VIOLET - POT ADVENTURES

Try to love
the questions themselves
as if they were locked rooms or books written in a very foreign language. Don’t search for the answers, which could not be given to you now, because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything.
Live
the questions now.

— R
AINER
M
ARIA
R
ILKE
, 1903,
from
Letters to a Young Poet
, 1927

1. FIELD VIOLETS

at my feet
when did you get here?
snail

— K
OBAYASHI
I
SSA
(1763 – 1828)

IN EARLY SPRING
, a friend went for a walk in the woods and, glancing down at the path, saw a snail. Picking it up, she held it gingerly in the palm of her hand and carried it back toward the studio where I was convalescing. She noticed some field violets on the edge of the lawn. Finding a trowel, she dug a few up, then planted them in a terra-cotta pot and placed the snail beneath their leaves. She brought the pot into the studio and put it by my bedside.

“I found a snail in the woods. I brought it back and it’s right here beneath the violets.”
“You did? Why did you bring it in?”
“I don’t know. I thought you might enjoy it.”
“Is it alive?”
She picked up the brown acorn-sized shell and looked at it.
“I think it is.”
Why, I wondered, would I
enjoy
a snail? What on earth would I do with it? I couldn’t get out of bed to return it to the woods. It was not of much interest, and if it
was
alive, the responsibility—especially for a snail, something so uncalled for—was overwhelming.
My friend hugged me, said good-bye, and drove off.

A
T AGE THIRTY-FOUR
, on a brief trip to Europe, I was felled by a mysterious viral or bacterial pathogen, resulting in severe neurological symptoms. I had thought I was indestructible. But I wasn’t. If anything did go wrong, I figured modern medicine would fix me. But it didn’t. Medical specialists at several major clinics couldn’t diagnose the infectious culprit. I was in and out of the hospital for months, and the complications were life threatening. An experimental drug that became available stabilized my condition, though it would be several grueling years to a partial recovery and a return to work. My doctors said the illness was behind me, and I wanted to believe them. I was ecstatic to have most of my life back.

But out of the blue came a series of insidious relapses, and once again, I was bedridden. Further, more sophisticated testing showed that the mitochondria in my cells no longer functioned correctly and there was damage to my autonomic nervous system; all functions not consciously directed, including heart rate, blood pressure, and digestion, had gone haywire. The drug that had previously helped now caused dangerous side effects; it would soon be removed from the market.

W
HEN THE BODY
is rendered useless, the mind still runs like a bloodhound along well-worn trails of neurons, tracking the echoing questions: the confused family of
why
s,
what
s, and
when
s and their impossibly distant kin
how.
The search is exhaustive; the answers, elusive. Sometimes my mind went blank and listless; at other times it was flooded with storms of thought, unspeakable sadness, and intolerable loss.

Given the ease with which health infuses life with meaning and purpose, it is shocking how swiftly illness steals away those certainties. It was all I could do to get through each moment, and each moment felt like an endless hour, yet days slipped silently past. Time unused and only endured still vanishes, as if time itself is starving, and each day is swallowed whole, leaving no crumbs, no memory, no trace at all.

I
HAD BEEN MOVED
to a studio apartment where I could receive the care I needed. My own farmhouse, some fifty miles away, was closed up. I did not know if or when I’d ever make it home again. For now, my only way back was to close my eyes and remember. I could see the early spring there, the purple field violets—like those at my bedside—running rampant through the yard. And the fragrant small pink violets that I had planted in the little woodland garden to the north of my house—they, too, would be in bloom. Though not usually hardy this far north, somehow they survived. In my mind I could smell their sweetness.

Before my illness, my dog, Brandy, and I had often wandered the acres of forest that stretched beyond the house to a hidden, mountain-fed brook. The brook’s song of weather and season followed us as we crisscrossed its channel over partially submerged boulders. On the trail home, in the boggiest of spots, perched on tiny islands of root and moss, I found diminutive wild white violets, their throats faintly striped with purple.

T
HESE FIELD VIOLETS
in the pot at my bedside were fresh and full of life, unlike the usual cut flowers brought by other friends. Those lasted just a few days, leaving murky, odoriferous vase water. In my twenties I had earned my living as a gardener, so I was glad to have this bit of garden right by my bed. I could even water the violets with my drinking glass.

But what about this snail? What would I do with it? As tiny as it was, it had been going about its day when it was picked up. What right did my friend and I have to disrupt its life? Though I couldn’t imagine what kind of life a snail might lead.
I didn’t remember ever having noticed any snails on my countless hikes in the woods. Perhaps, I thought, looking at the nondescript brown creature, it was precisely because they were so inconspicuous. For the rest of the day the snail stayed inside its shell, and I was too worn out from my friend’s visit to give it another thought.
BOOK: The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating
13.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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