Richard Pangburn has suggested a story for me to consider
for “Puzzle the Prof” this year—Stephen Dobyns’ “A Happy Vacancy,” from his
collection Eating Naked (2000).
Richard says the story “starts out clever and ironic but
before the end of the story it critiques cleverness and irony and becomes
profound and deep. Perhaps too deep.”
As it happens, I read Eating Naked several years ago
and do remember with pleasure the opening story “A Happy Vacancy,” although I
like the very funny title story about the guy who hits a deer and changes his
life even more. Thanks, Richard, for
sending me back to “A Happy Vacancy,” which I have enjoyed once again. I am
intrigued by your suggestion that the story starts out clever and ironic but
ends up critiquing cleverness and irony to become something profound and
deep—perhaps too deep. By “too deep,”
do you mean that Dobyns is too explicit about the profundity of the concept he
illustrates here or that the concept is heavier than the story that carries it?
It seems appropriate to me to begin a consideration of “A
Happy Vacancy” at the end of the story, since everything before the end seems
to lead inevitability to it, where the concept that governs the story is stated
rather explicitly in a few dialogues
The first three quarters of the story exists for three purposes, it
seems to me—to make us laugh, along with everyone else but the dead poet’s
wife; to illustrate a philosophic view of life, death, and the comic; and to
get the wife to laugh with the rest of us.
Harriet, the wife of the poet who has died by being squashed
by a falling pig, has, eight weeks after his death, decided to leave Cambridge,
for the laughter that the manner of her husband’s death has stimulated all
around her has made her think that her former life has been shallow, that her
and her husband’s seriousness existed to keep people at a distance, served as a
strangler of spontaneity and impulse, and rigidified her life. She now thinks that the absurdity of her husband’s
death may have opened a new life and a new way of living to her; she just needs
to articulate the view to justify this new way of living.
She moves to Ann Arbor and gets a job at a hospice, for
since her husband’s death had made death a joke to her, she now needs to make
death “big” again. She tells a cancer
patient that death is a process that begins with birth and accompanies us all
through life. This is, of course, the
notion that Freud proposes in his book, Beyond the Pleasure Principle, i.e., that
“the goal of all life is death” (1920). Old
people in the hospice tell her stories, e.g. one old woman says she was a
freshman at Clark University when Freud presented his lectures on the Origin
and Development of Psychoanalysis.
Harriet realizes that these stories made
time seem causal and that she is attempting to “repair her sense of causality,”
since her husband’s death seemed to lie outside of causality. She thinks that all those people who laughed
at the manner of his death should have been terrified, for it indicated the
awful truth about the cosmos—“that if it had a divine direction, then its prime
mover is whimsy.” This very well may
echo Gloucester’s speech in Shakespeare’s King Lear: “As flies to wanton boys are we to th' gods,
They kill us for their sport.” Or it may just illustrate the
common shrug, “shit happens.”
Harriet meets a doctor who comes to the
hospice and tells him that she thinks people try to make their lives too
serious and that if you stare long enough at the most serious things in life,
maybe you can come out on the side of laughter. When he asks if she thinks that
seriousness is connected to fear, she says that we want other people to think
us serious, which “suggests a fear of not being sufficiently respected” but she
wonders what seriousness gets us, for “It neither delays our death nor makes it
easier to bear.”
When the doctor asks Harriet what she
thinks is the opposite of seriousness, she says, “love, because love accepts
all possibilities, whereas seriousness only accepts what it sees as
correct.” She says she is not against
seriousness, but that she is against the earnestness of seriousness, that she
wants to go beyond it, that she wants seriousness to be an element in her life,
but not its reason for being; seriousness can be no more than self protection,
but life can come along and brush it aside, by, for example dropping a pig on
your head.
The story ends with a conversation
between Harriet and a ninety-five year old man named Franklin. When she asks him what is the funniest thing
he can think of, he says it is the story of the man who was crossing the street
in Boston and a pig fell out of a helicopter and crushed him. Franklin says he has to die in the bed he
lies in and wonders why he couldn’t have been killed by a pig falling out of
the sky, for then he would, like the poet, be famous forever.
Harriet begins to laugh, and it is the
laugh of someone whose seriousness has been overthrown, a laugh that erases
every other concern. Dobyns ends the
story this way: “It is the sound of the world disappearing, as all the content
is sucked from our heads, to be replaced—briefly, oh too briefly—by a happy
vacancy. And doesn’t this sustain us?
Doesn’t it provide the strength to let us bear up our burden and continue our
mortal journey?”
It seems to me that this is a story that
does not demand interpretation, since Dobyns has provided the “meaning” of the
story at the conclusion of his narrating of the event that illustrates that
meaning.
Although I have taught Dobyns’ story
“Eating Naked,” I have never discussed “A Happy Vacancy” with students. If I were discussing this story in a class,
I would probably focus on the notion of a “concept” story—a story which begins
with a “what if” notion—e.g. what if a pig fell out of the sky and killed a
man. The problem for the writer, and
thus the reader, would be what to make of such an event.
This story may have been motivated by the
story of the Greek dramatist Aeschylus being killed by a tortoise dropped on
his head by an eagle. Or it may have
begun with Dobyns considering death as the inevitable end of all human
life. Or it may have begun with the
notion of undermining seriousness. I
don’t know. But, surely, if anything
needs to be made tolerable by laughter, it is death—that universal human
leveler. It makes no difference if you
take it seriously or you meet it with a laugh; it makes no difference if you
meet it with dignity or with a hoot, it comes to us all. It makes no difference whether you go gentle
into that good night or whether you rage against the dying of the light, you go
nonetheless. It seems somehow
appropriate that the greatest mystery of human experience might well be met
with one of the most significant human defenses against all that assails us—laughter.
I like this story. Although death itself
is not funny, the idea of someone who takes himself so seriously being
pulverized by a falling pig is irresistibly funny. If you gotta go, and yeah,
everyone does, then going in such a way that generates laughter rather than
tears may not be so bad. I don’t know how I will die, but I sure as hell don’t
want anyone crying after it happens.
My sister has a lung disease that the
doctors say is terminal. About a year
ago, she was admitted to a hospice. I
flew back to Kentucky to visit with her, thinking that it might be my last
opportunity. But now a year later, she
is still alive, albeit tethered to an oxygen tank. The hospice kicked her out because she refused to die. She and I joked about it when I saw her
last—that she got kicked out a hospice because she would not die fast enough
for them. Together we enjoyed the
“happy vacancy,” even for a brief moment, of not taking ourselves seriously, of
facing the inevitable without sentimentality, with a hearty laugh.
1 comment:
Thanks for that. I'm reading Stephen Dobyns' new novel this week, though I wish I'd waited for October to start it.
"Eating Naked" strikes me as a mid-life crisis story, a recurring theme in Dobyns' work.
For instance, sometime ago I blogged about his poem "How To Like It" and again his prose poem "Kentucky Derby Day, Belfast, Maine," in both of which the protagonist is intent on leaving his wife, dealing with both his misgivings and his desire to light out for the territories.
"Eating Naked" has a more mature take on the midlife crisis, as the man ultimately decides to stay with his wife. And thus, as a man who believes in love and marriage, I like it better.
Dobyns' "How To Like it" paired with Frankie Laine's "The Heart of the Wild Goose," can be read here:
http://trackofthecat.blogspot.com/2012/02/how-to-like-it-by-stephen-dobyns-and.html
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