Your
Father is a Better Man Than You Are, Right?
J.D.
Phillips
Chapel
Talk
December
8, 2005
One of the reasons
for having a core course, like C&T, is that it gives us the opportunity to
talk about the books in the course with just about anyone on campus. All
students have taken, or will take, the course. Most of the faculty have taught,
or will teach, the course. And an increasing number of staff members have taken
the course. The books in C&T, then, are one of the very few things we
genuinely have in common in our intellectual community here at Wabash, which is
otherwise dominated by the necessarily narrow and mostly isolated concerns of
disciplinary discourse. So today, I'm going to speak from our commons about a
few books in C&T, and about a few other things as well.
One of the books
we now read in C&T is an epic from old Mali, called The Sundiata.
Here is the provocative first sentence from the penultimate paragraph of the
book:
"Men of today, how small you are beside your
ancestors."
Now, one of the many ways in which this
is true is that we tell stories about
our ancestors, and characters in stories are larger than we are; in fact, they're even larger than the people telling the stories. And as you know, we
read stories in C&T, lots of them,
as this year's sophomores will eagerly attest to. I take as one of the main
aims of C&T simply learning how to read stories, including (maybe
especially) stories about our ancestors. So let me tell you about one of mine.
My maternal
grandfather, Gerald Lillie, was born in 1904 in north central Nebraska, on the
edge of the former Dakota Territories. His family was literally dirt poor; landless peasants in the
dusty, hinterlands. My grandfather was forced to drop out of school in the
fourth grade to help support the family. He cadged work as a hired man on the
ranches scattered across the Dakotas. But he had a way with animals, they say,
and so he found his niche as a horse breaker. During the winters he made his
way west and worked the orchards of the Pacific Coast. So by the age of 12, he
was a grammar school drop out, and he worked full-time as, in today's argot, a
stable boy and a migrant farm worker. The poverty was grinding. There was no
welfare; child labor laws hadn't yet found their way to the Dakotas. This was
my grandfather.
My mother was born
in 1942. Two years later, her father died. He was, by the way, one year younger
than I am today, so in a bitter inversion of the natural order of things, I am
older than my own grandfather, which, if you think about it, is kind of like
telling stories. The elder, the "father," founds, he
creates—children, myths, stories.
In fact, listening to these stories helps you move from childhood to manhood.
So back to my story.
My grandfather's
death was painful, but relatively quick. From the first symptoms until he died,
only three months passed. There was no insurance, no money, no real medical
care. They say he didn't miss a day of work until the day before he died. Kids
need to eat; fathers need to feed them; that's all. I think of him during those
last days, 20 years before I was born, a man I never met—coughing up
blood, hardly able to walk, but still tending to the horses—whenever I
hear a student or a colleague, or more likely, myself, whine about a cold or a
headache or a sore back. Like the men of Mali, how small I seem beside my
grandfather.
I spent the better
part of the winter of 1977, 33 years after my grandfather died, and when I was
12 years-old, begging my father to take me along on the winter calf round-up.
This is always an important ride, but in those days of the brave new world of
farm foreclosures, it seemed especially important; at least it did to me. All
the margins, the profits and the losses, were in the calves. But mostly, I
could tell it was important, because, unlike other work on the farm, only the men rode on the winter calf round-up;
the boys stayed at home with their mommas. But this winter, my nagging worked;
somehow, Dad relented; he let me ride.
On the morning of
the round-up, I was surprised to see no horse was saddled for me. If I was
going to ride with the men, then I was going to have to saddle my own horse.
And I did it with gusto, with the zeal of a child. We rode over the hills and
through the drifts in the valleys—dad, me, some neighbor
men—gathering the cows and their calves, finding a few strays. I was a
good rider then, in the way that children often are—small and sensitive
to the horse, too. So when we came to a calf—a scrawny little black-baldie;
I can still see it clearly—scared to death, struggling in a drift in a
gulley below the dam, his momma on the ridgeline above, lowing pathetically,
Dad saw that it was a tight spot, calling for a good rider, and so he sent me
in. My heart soared. I raced the mare I was riding down the hill, toward the
calf in the snowdrift. She galloped so gracefully, faster and lighter than she
would for a man, responsive to all my commands, finally stopping on a dime when
I gently pulled back on the reigns ten yards from the panicked calf.
That's when I
remembered that I'd saddled her that
morning, and I could now feel Newton's First Law, set in motion by my own
boyish weakness in not being able to buckle the cinch tight when I saddled her,
inexorably working its relentless logic, as the saddle and I slid forward on
the saddle pad until my face was flush against the thick mane. Now, most times
when a horse, especially a spirited one like this mare, gets her front legs
tangled up in a saddle, she'll throw you in a desperate buck and kick. But I'd
been good to this horse; we were friends, and she trusted me. So she paid me
the courtesy of just bowing her face down into the snow and, with a little
jump, very gently letting the saddle and me—clinging like an idiot to the
saddle horn—slide off over her head into a heap. Still, I managed to hit
my nose on her jaw on the way down, and sure enough, it started bleeding. Well,
you can imagine the pathetic scene I was now the star attraction in: a 12
year-old boy lying tangled in his saddle in a heap in a snow drift, blood
smeared all over his face, mare with a bare saddle pad on her back nervously
trotting around him in circles, cow and her stuck calf both lowing
pathetically, and my dad and the neighbor men looking at me like I was the
sorriest piece of crap they'd ever seen. My face was red with blood and shame,
and all I wanted to do was to crumple up and have a good cry. But, and remember
this, a boy can't cry in front of his dad. So I squinted my eyes, bit my lip,
and thought angry 12 year-old thoughts to keep me from crying.
One of the
neighbor men looked at me, and then turned to my dad and said, "Ah, shit
Jon, why in the hell. . ." But my dad cut him off. "Just shut your
god-damn mouth, Floyd." He gave me a hard look, pulled on the reigns of
his horse, and rode off with the neighbor men, leaving me there to clean up the
mess, which I eventually did, the whole time thinking of the grandfather I'd
never met, and who, at my age, was working full-time breaking horses on the big
ranches across the Dakotas. Like boys in Mali, beside him, I felt small. Beside
him, I was small.
When my
grandfather died in 1944, he left a widow and four young children, one of whom
was my mother. As I said, she was two-years-old when he died. Her oldest brother
was six. And they were now destitute, living in the sort of abject squalor that
beggars description. Life was not easy for a widow and her four young kids in
Yankton, South Dakota in 1944. There was no government assistance—no
welfare, no ADC, no medicaire, no social security. Nothing. Grandma took in laundry from the rich folks in town, but
it wasn't nearly enough. So Sacred Heart Parish helped out with tins of food
and coal in the winter, which in South Dakota sometimes lasts for nine months.
Still, sometimes the house was cold; sometimes they went to bed hungry. Later,
when her kids were a bit older, my grandmother kept her family together by
working as a maid and a cleaning lady. She scrubbed toilets for the rich folks
in town until she was 80 years old. As an aside I note that when I was a young
professor at a rich private college in California, I taught a few courses in
that college's graduate liberal studies program. And one of my students was the
son of a retired lawyer from Yankton, South Dakota. I think Grandma was pleased
that her grandson was the professor of the son of a man whose toilets she'd
scrubbed for thirty years.
My grandmother
rented a tiny, one-bedroom house for the family; there might have been 600
square feet. My mom and her sister slept in a walk-in closet. My two uncles
slept in the tiny bedroom. Grandma slept on the couch in the main room. They
lived like this for 20 years, until each of the kids got married and left home.
I know that house well. Grandma lived in it—couldn't afford to buy it,
always rented—for 60 years, until just last year, in fact, shortly after
her 90th birthday, when she finally relented and moved into an
assisted living unit. Her house always seemed impossibly small to me, too small
even for one person, to say nothing of a family of five. Being in that house is
one of the few experiences I've had that has awakened in me a visceral sense of
the human horror of utterly desperate poverty. My mother grew up in that house.
I thought of these
hard things when we read The Joys of Motherhood in C&T this
semester. Among much else, this novel captures the devastating toll on the
human soul of grinding poverty, and how there's little anyone can do about it,
do-gooders' cloy intentions notwithstanding. Some people are poor, and that's
just the goddamned way it is.
I should note,
though, that my hopes for this novel were initially low, very low, in fact, in
no small part because of a dreary John Updike blurb on the back cover avering
that the novel "bears a plain feminist message." And I don't have
much interest in reading novels that bear plain messages, about feminism or
anything else. Instead, we ought to read novels that bring us into a more
unimpeded relationship with the complicated nature of things, especially in
C&T. (Put it another way: let the Dannies read the easy books; we should
read the hard ones.) Liberal education, genuine inquiry, doesn't tell you what
you ought to think, what you ought to conclude, again, about feminism or
anything else. And this is because—brace yourselves, because this is very
nearly heresy in some circles—genuine liberal education doesn't know what it is that you ought to think.
Let me say this again: we ought not tell
you what to think because we don't know
what you ought to think. And this is not an arch, pedagogical trick or lurid
academic posturing; it is a simple logical necessity. So my hackles were up
when I began this novel that appeared to pretend otherwise. But still I read
the novel (hey, it was assigned; like you, I had no choice), and happily it
turns out that John Updike was wrong; it's a much more complicated novel than
that. This book does not bear a plain
message, feminist or otherwise. And, hey, there's even more! For instance,
while it's set in Nigeria, happily again it is not "about" those
"weird" people and their "strange" customs way over
"there." It turns out that it's actually about people I recognize; I know these characters. And I suspect that maybe you do, too.
As I read this
novel my own transformation as a reader, from John Updike-inspired resistance
at the beginning, to a kind of cautious, slowly awakening Eros as I read on,
was mirrored by the same transformation in the heroine, the perfectly named Nnu
Ego, that's N-n-u E-g-o, Nnu Ego. She moves from angry resistance at the
beginning of the novel to a kind of grudging embrace at the end; it's her New
Ego, that's N-e-w E-g-o. But you have to actually read the book in order to be open to this kind of transformation.
Reading it as course material, a la John Updike, with a lesson to be absorbed, forecloses on this as a
possibility.
And of course, as
I was reading this novel, I thought of my grandfather. As far as I know the
family has only two photographs of him. One of them is my grandparent's wedding
picture. In it, my grandmother has a dour—can I just say it? a pissed
off—expression on her face. But my grandfather has the goofiest,
bandy-rooster grin on his face you've ever seen. When I was a child, I used to
look at this picture and feel sorry for Grandma. She just looked so damned sad.
But when I was older, I noticed there was more to this picture than I had first
realized. Something wasn't quite right about the color in my grandfather's
face. So I asked his brother-in-law, my great-uncle, about it. Turns out my
grandfather had a black eye, a cut above his lip, and a broken hand, and the
photographer had gamely tried to hide all of this. That's right, my grandfather
had gotten himself into a fight the night before he got married, and Grandma
had threatened not to marry him because of it. Eventually, though, she
relented, and that's what you see in the picture—a man, giddy, like Nnu
Ego's naif of a husband, Nnaife, over his good fortune in marrying such a lovely
young woman, and a woman, like Nnu Ego, pissed off at the giddy louse next to
her, but not sad, defiantly not sad,
as I'd mistakenly thought when I was a child. And today, happily married for 16
years, my sympathies are with my grandfather in this picture, at least in part,
and with Nnaife, too, because my understanding of this sort of male foolishness
is by now very deep. And, like my
grandfather, and like Nnaife, too, I have a special kind of expertise in that
look—and I should say, it's a kind of loving look—of "you're a
damn fool" that only a wife can give to her husband. As I said before, I
recognize these characters—in their poverty, in their maleness, in their
femaleness, in their humanness. And I think that most of you probably do, too.
Let me turn now to
The River Between, another novel we read this year in C&T. In this
novel, Waiyaki, a young Kenyan from a line of prophets, finds himself between
those in the tribe who have adopted the white man's Christianity and those who
have made a last defiant stand for their tribal traditions. Waiyaki navigates
this delicate situation in a way that flatters my own sensibilities: by
pushing, gingerly at times, harder at others, for education; for liberal
education, I'd like to think. To put it another way, a way that might sound
vaguely familiar to some of you: between anger and piety (that is, between the
anger you feel at the culture that
you come from and the piety you feel toward
that same culture) there is room for inquiry. Let me make three points about
this. First, I note that, yet again, here is a character from an African novel
who is familiar to us, who is not
simply an "other" for us to fetishize. Second, it is precisely this
sort of inquiry that ought to be the focus of our energies here at Wabash. And
third, to do this right—that is, to inquire and then to talk about it
like this—is dangerous in a way that's familiar to all of you who have freely followed a line of inquiry in
class to wherever it may have taken you, consequences be damned. In fact, it's so
dangerous that it might kill you. The River Between ends with Waiyaki's
murder. I am indebted to Jacob Klein for making this point clear to me in his
story of how Archimedes met his demise, which I shall now recount for you.
Now it happened
that Archimedes took an active part in defending his hometown, Syracuse,
against the Romans, by devising ingenious military machinery; the smart bombs
of his era. One day during the battle, Archimedes, it seems, was lost in
thought, computing and reckoning with his figures in the sand, when a Roman
soldier happened upon him. Here, then, is how Plutarch relates the end of this
story: "A Roman soldier, running upon him with a drawn sword, offered to
kill him. . . Archimedes, looking back, earnestly besought him to hold his hand
a little while, that he might not leave what he was at work upon inconclusive
and imperfect; but the soldier, nothing by his entreaty, instantly killed
him." It seems, then, that genuine inquiry, i.e., liberal learning itself,
is oftentimes incommensurable with the political realities necessary to secure
the very existence of our communities, communities that themselves, then, might
allow the opportunity for inquiry, inquiry that then might be crushed. And so
it was for Archimedes, and for Waiyaki, too. And alas, since it is precisely
this sort of mortally dangerous questioning and inquiry, which is the focus of
our energies for some of us at Wabash, so it might be for you, too. Let me say
this again. Liberal education—that is, to be liberated from slavish
devotion to received opinion, be it from parents, clan, race, culture, or even,
dare I say it, your professors!—is
a treacherous business. It is treacherous in all the familiar ways that this
plays out for you in your family, here on campus, and far, far beyond. And it
will be treacherous in ways that are
as unfamiliar to you now as leaving the family you came from, in all of its
forms (imagine it!), and founding your own family (someday your grandsons will
tell their sons stories about you; it's how our ancestors help boys
become men.).
Let me tell you,
then, one final story about my grandfather. One muggy night, in the summer of
1981, when I was sixteen years old, my cousin, Joe, stole the rusted-out, old
GMC pick-up his neighbor kept in the barn on the back of his property. So
naturally, Joe and I concocted a strategy to put the truck in the higher
service of trying to pick up some girls. The strategy we settled on sounded
wise at the time, but my God. Basically, we pooled our money and bought as much
beer as we could (two cases of Grain Belt, as I recall), put the beer on ice in
the back of the truck, drove down to the loop where all the teenagers in
Yankton, South Dakota zoomed round and round all night long, parked the truck,
climbed up into the bed, and hoisted our beers, pointing enthusiastically at
them and grinning like idiots every time some girls drove by. What girl
wouldn't find it irresistible? Need I say that we didn't pick up any girls that
night? But we did manage to add a drinking buddy to our little crew later in
the evening. One of the Indian kids who bussed in to Joe's school from the
Santee Reservation, Jimmy Littlefeather, drove by and no doubt struck by how pathetic we looked, climbed up in that
peculiar, laconic Indian way and joined us in the back of the truck, to help
our prospects.
Eventually, the
loop died down; all the girls went home, and all the boys dispersed to lick
their wounds and map out their strategies for next time. Jimmy Littlefeather,
Joe, and I decided to go to the only refuge we knew where it was safe for
teenagers to drink in Yankton, South Dakota in 1981: the cemetery north of
town, where my grandfather is buried. We parked not 25 feet from his grave and
drank deep into the night. Jimmy Littlefeather told us lies about his own
grandfather, a medicine man with special powers, he said, passed on from father
to son, father to son, and so on, down through the generations, with all of the
resulting powers therein now residing in Jimmy himself, bristling through his teenage,
medicine man soul. My response to all of this, which I enthusiastically shared
with Jimmy, was a simple and brilliant single word: bullshit. After the three
of us enjoyed a good laugh at this, Joe and I told Jimmy Littlefeather about
our own grandfather. We continued in
this way, pouring libations and making burnt offerings to our ancestors for
many hours—like Telemachous and the boys of Mali, and Waiyaki,
too—praying in our way, all the time me wondering about Jimmy's special
powers, and whether or not he could really
talk to his dead ancestors, and whether or not I might not be able to also,
sitting here so pious next to my grandfather's grave, and with the favored
progeny of all those generations of Indian medicine men worshipping here with
me.
Some time later, I
remember looking up with a start, woken from a dream, spooked, staring
motionless into a bright light, breathing hard, covered in sweat. It seemed
that Jimmy Littlefeather was right; was this my grandfather? "What did
your grandfather say," you might wonder? What did he say? He didn't say a goddammed thing. Aren't you listening to the story? I
told you, he died in 1944. And he
didn't say a goddammed thing in 1981; he'd been dead for 37 years. Jimmy's an
Indian; so what? He can't make a dead man talk. You've got to hear what's in
the story, not what you want to hear. It turns out that Jimmy
Littlefeather, Joe, and I drank until the small hours, until I finally fell
asleep piss drunk in the back of the truck. And the light? It was just the summer
sun, high in the sky, blinding me and
burning my hungover face the next morning. My grandfather didn't talk to me; I
just have stories. That's all there is, the story.
And so, finally we
come again to the opening question: is
your father a better man than you are? Are
you small beside your ancestors? Listen carefully, because I don't do this very
often, but here is the answer: in all possible ways, it is entirely up to you.