As I have mentioned before, I much admire the stories of
Steven Millhauser. If you have not read
his “new and selected stories,” We Others, published last year, you owe
it to yourself to buy it for you and your best friend for Christmas, or
whatever end-of-the year holiday you favor.
I like Millhauser’s new story, “A Voice in the Night,” in
the Dec. 10 issue of The New Yorker. Every author has been asked the
question at a reading a lecture, or an interview: “Where do you get your
ideas?” Steven Millhauser’s answer is:
“a voice in the night.” I think it is a
good metaphor for the compulsion one must have to be a writer. I firmly believe
that to be a writer, you must feel an irresistible, inescapable compulsion to
write. I think of Raymond Carver,
feeling frustrated because he is stuck in a Laundromat in Iowa City when he
wants to be home writing, or when Alice Munro had to rent a little apartment to
get away from her domestic chores long enough to write. Both describe the need to write as something
that calls them. Sherwood Anderson described his “voice in the night” in this
way:
Having, from a conversation overheard […] got the tone of
a tale, I was like a woman who has just become impregnated. Something was
growing inside me. At night when I lay in my bed I could feel the heels of the
tale kicking against the walls of my body.”
All writers have also been asked at readings, lectures,
and interviews, ” When did you decide to become a writer?” Steven Millhauser’s answer in this story is:
“Three thousand years ago in the temple of Shiloh.” His story “A Voice in the Night” is his fictional account of the
source of his writing obsession.
“A Voice in the Night” is divided up into four three-part
sections:
Section I is a retelling of the
story in 1 Samuel, Chapter 3, in which the boy Samuel, age 12, hears his named
called in the night three times and thinks it is Eli, the high priest of the
temple of Shiloh;
Section II takes place in 1950,
in which an American boy age, seven, lies awake in his bed for four straight
nights, thinking of the Samuel story and wondering if he will know how to
respond if he hears a voice in the night;
Section III focuses on the boy at
the age of sixty-eight, now an author, thinking about his father, his Jewish
education, and his long-ago waiting for the voice in the night.
The story is about ‘being called” or “having a calling.”
Once in high school, when the boy asked his father, a university professor, if
he liked teaching, the father answered: “If I were a millionaire, I would pay
for the privilege of teaching.” The son
is moved by this answer, knows he has heard something important, and is proud
and envious of his father, thinking he wants to say that someday; he knows it
is “a calling. Samuel’s call in the
night.”
The author’s childhood is filled with three elements that
contribute to the writer’s calling:
First, stories, in this case, stories from the Jewish tradition:
Joseph in the pit, the parting of the Red Sea, David soothing the soul of Saul
with his harp; and children’s tales of Rapunzel being called to let down her
hair, Dr. Doolittle telling of the pushmi-pullyu’
Second, the mysterious sounds of words, as when his father said
the Rabbi was making boys jabber words they did not understand, calling it
“pure gibberish.” And the boy liked that word for the sound of it—gibberish;
Third, sentences: his father
tells him the three greatest opening sentences in all of literature are: “In
the beginning God created the heaven and the earth”; “Call me Ishmael,” and the
opening of the children’s book “Tootle”: Far, far to the west of everywhere is
the village of Lower Trainswich.”
“A Voice in the Night” with the author seeing understanding
the nature of his own calling:
“A calling. Not Samuel’s calling but another. Not that way but this way. Samuel
ministering unto the Lord; his father-teacher ministering unto the
generations. And the son? What about
him? Far, far to the west of everywhere,
ministering unto the Muse. Thanks, Old
Sea-Parter, for leaving me be. Tired now.
Soon we’ll all sleep.”
“A Voice in the Night” not only responds to the questions,
“Where do your stories come from? And “When did you become a writer,” it also
responds to the kind of fiction that Millhauser finds most irresistible—the
modern romance form, most often embodied in the short story form.
In the Oct 3, 2008 issue of the New York Times Sunday Book
Review, Steven Millhauser published a short essay entitled “The Ambition of
the Short Story.”
You can find it at:
I quote below the conclusion of that essay:
The short story believes in transformation. It believes in
hidden powers. The novel prefers things in plain view. It has no patience with
individual grains of sand, which glitter but are difficult to see. The novel
wants to sweep everything into its mighty embrace — shores, mountains,
continents. But it can never succeed, because the world is vaster than a novel,
the world rushes away at every point. The novel leaps restlessly from place to
place, always hungry, always dissatisfied, always fearful of coming to an end —
because when it stops, exhausted but never at peace, the world will have
escaped it.
The short story concentrates on its grain of sand, in the
fierce belief that there — right there, in the palm of its hand — lies the
universe. It seeks to know that grain of sand the way a lover seeks to know the
face of the beloved. It looks for the moment when the grain of sand reveals its
true nature. In that moment of mystic expansion, when the macrocosmic flower
bursts from the microcosmic seed, the short story feels its power. It becomes
bigger than itself. It becomes bigger than the novel. It becomes as big as the
universe.
Therein lies the immodesty of the short story, its secret
aggression. Its method is revelation. Its littleness is the agency of its
power. The ponderous mass of the novel strikes it as the laughable image of
weakness. The short story apologizes for nothing. It exults in its shortness.
It wants to be shorter still. It wants to be a single word. If it could find
that word, if it could utter that syllable, the entire universe would blaze up
out of it with a roar. That is the outrageous ambition of the short story, that
is its deepest faith, that is the greatness of its smallness.
Before Millhauser, one of the most important advocates for
this kind of fiction was Flannery O’Connor.
In the essay “The Grotesque in Southern Fiction,” in her collection Mystery
and Manners, O’Connor claimed that the social sciences had “cast a dreary
blight on the public approach to fiction.” (The paper was first read in 1960 at
Wesleyan College for Women in Macon, Georgia; one can only wonder, had she
lived, what she would have said fifty years later when social approaches to
fiction have narrowed artistic and critical vision even more). O’Connor complains that many readers and
critics “demand a realism of fact which may, in the end, limit fiction’s scope,
associating the only legitimate material for fiction with the movement of
social forces, with the typical, with fidelity to the way things look and happen
in normal life.
However, O’Connor’s “voice in the night” comes not as a
demand for “realism of fact,” but rather for what she called “the modern
romance tradition.” I have discussed
O’Connor’s role in this tradition in the introduction to the book I edited last
year entitled Critical Insights:
Flannery O’Connor, and will not repeat here my comments there. Both O’Connor and Millhauser’s
identification with the romantic tradition of the romance explains why they are
such masters of the short story form—a form that is much more aligned with
“mystery” than with “manners.” O’Connor
says works in this tradition make alive some experience we are not accustomed
to observe every day, experiences which ordinary folk may never experience in
their ordinary lives. She says the
fictional qualities of the romance “lean away from typical social patterns,
toward mystery and the unexpected” and that it is this kind of “realism” she
wants to consider. It is a fiction that more closely aligned with poetry, a
fiction that is “initially set going by literature more than by life.”
O’Connor says if the writer believes that our life is and
will remain essentially mysterious, “then what he sees on the surface will be
or interest to him only as far as he can go through it into an experience of
mystery itself.” For the romance
writer, “the meaning of a story does not begin except at a depth where adequate
motivation and adequate psychology and the various determinations have been
exhausted.”
When Frank Kermode in his Norton lectures several years ago
asked, "Why Are Narratives Obscure?" he cited Kafka's parable "Before the Law" in The Trial.
It’s about a man who comes to beg admission to the Law but is kept out by a
doorkeeper. So he sits there year after
year in inconclusive conversation with the doorkeeper outside the door unable
to get in. When he is old and near death, he sees an immortal radiance
streaming from the door. He asks the
doorkeeper why he alone has come to this door and receives this reply:
"This door was intended only for you.
Now I am going to shut it."
A terrible parable, you would have to agree. "To perceive the radiance of the shrine," says Kermode,
"is not to gain access to it; the Law, or the Kingdom to those within,
such as the doorkeeper, may be powerful and beautiful, but to those outside
they are absolutely inexplicable. This
is a mystery. While the insiders
protect the Law without understanding it, the outsiders like us see an
uninterpretable radiance and die."
A terrible parable indeed.
Kermode is concerned, of course, with the
radiant obscurity of parables. The word “parable” is used in the Gospel of Mark
as a synonym for "mystery."
It is the radiance Eudora Welty refers to when she says the "first
thing we notice about our story is that we can't really see the solid outlines
of it--it seems bathed in something of its own. It is wrapped in an atmosphere.
This is what makes it shine, perhaps, as well as what initially obscures
its plain, real shape." To Marlowe, sitting Buddha-like on the deck
telling the story of Kurtz, to outsiders to the mystery, the "meaning of
an episode was not inside like a kernel but outside, enveloping the tale which
brought it out only as a glow brings out a haze, in the likeness of one of
those misty halos that, sometimes, are made visible by the spectral
illumination of moonshine."
Why is there more mystery in short stories than in novels?
First there is the historical and prehistorical source of
the short story in myth and oral tale that, by its very nature, was concerned
with mystery, for everything was mystery and story was the only explanatory
model available. A genre never
completely departs from its origins.
Second, there is short story's dependence more on pattern
than plot for its structure. As a result
of this dependence, the action of a short story is more apt to be organized
around an implicit principle or idea rather than a series of events occurring
causally in time
Third, there is the mystery of motivation in short
stories. It is not easy to determine
why Bartleby prefers not to, what Roderick Usher is so afraid of. Part of the problem may be the short story's
close relationship to the romance form, which, allegorical in its nature,
develops characters that, even as they seem to be like real people in the real
world, are driven by the discourse demands of the narrative and thus act as if
they are obsessed, propelled by some central force rather than merely
logically, causally, or randomly.
Flannery O'Connor says "The type of mind that can understand
good fiction is not necessarily the educated mind, but it is at all times the
kind of mind that is willing to have its sense of mystery deepened by contact
with reality and its sense of reality deepened by contact with mystery."
Steven Millhauser, who hearkened to the “voice in the
night,” would surely agree.