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    Orpheus Emerged

    Page 7
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      ed the remaining flight and was soon dis-

      solved into the darkness of the alley below.

      Michael then got up and walked across

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 120

      the two rooms under the scrutiny of all the

      eyes. He went into his room and closed the

      door quietly. There was a hush—followed

      by many mumbles of excitement and

      curiosity, and finally, the murmur of depar-

      ture. The party was quietly breaking up and

      everybody was going elsewhere.

      Maureen put on her coat and went out

      with the others. She confessed that she was

      afraid of Michael—at least, for this night—

      and that she wouldn’t sleep there at all costs;

      and Barbara extended her an invitation to

      stay at her place for the night. So that Michael

      was left alone in the apartment that night,

      with the broken lamp left as it lay—and with

      whatever thoughts he had.

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 121

      IV

      WHEN MAUREEN

      RETURNED

      to her apartment the following day, she

      found a note from Michael stating that

      he would be gone for awhile, perhaps a

      week or so, on a trip south. He had

      packed a small bag.

      Michael had the habit of going off on

      short trips, especially when he began to

      feel the pressure of his own nervous

      tension, so that Maureen was not too

      alarmed at his absence. He always

      came back.

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 123

      Paul, too, had disappeared from the

      campus scene. Leo was of the opinion that

      he, for all that had happened, was probably

      gone for good. No one as yet understood

      the full significance of the violent scene at

      the party, with its touching and gentle

      denouement, so that the absence of both

      “participants” tended to reduce interest in

      the mysterious affair to a minimum.

      A third absence was noted around the

      general campus neighborhood, that of

      both Anthony and Marie. Arthur, who had

      grown accustomed to plenty of excite-

      ment, now felt suddenly becalmed; and

      though he was immersed in his studies of

      that week, he waited with some impa-

      tience for the return of Michael, or even of

      Paul or Anthony, for life was certainly not

      the same without these tempestuous

      beings.

      And so one day, Paul returned—exactly a

      week after Spring Day eve—and it was Leo

      who found him sitting on a bench in the

      park. It was a rather gloomy, gray-skied,

      ominous day full of the smell of rain and

      thawing spring muds.

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 124

      “Where have you been, Paul?” cried Leo

      happily, looking anxiously into his friend’s

      face. “I thought you were gone for good.”

      “I knew you would think that,” Paul

      answered, smiling and blushing. “Well,

      how are you, Leo?”

      “All right. Where did you go?”

      “Just out of the city for a while.”

      “To do what?” Leo persisted.

      “Come on,” Paul ignored his questioning.

      “Let’s go straightaway to Michael’s. I was

      going there myself, but now that you’re

      here, we’ll go together…”

      Leo glanced sharply at the other.

      “Do you think Michael will want to see

      you?” he asked, remembering all too clear-

      ly the incident of the floor lamp.

      “Certainly. He’ll have forgotten about

      everything. Don’t you even know Michael

      at all?”

      They walked up X Street. “Michael’s

      been gone all this time too,” Leo told Paul.

      “They say he took a trip south. And where

      did you go?…what did you do?”

      “Well, if you insist on knowing…I just

      went on a little excursion through the country.

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 125

      I slept

      on the

      grass, ate

      fruit for

      breakfast.

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 126

      That’s all.”

      They were going up the stairs at

      Michael’s apartment when they met

      Maureen coming down with a shopping bag

      under her arm. She seemed to be in a hurry.

      “Well,” was the first thing she said.

      “Michael’s going to be glad to see you!” She

      paused and glanced at Paul’s clothes. “You

      might as well give it up anyway. Michael’s

      not back from his trip yet. Why do you insist

      on bothering him?”

      “It’s none of your business,” said Paul

      evenly. Maureen shrugged her shoulders

      and went down the stairs; they heard the

      hall door alarm as she went out. Paul con-

      tinued on up the stairway and walked care-

      lessly into Maureen’s apartment; he went to

      the front room and flung himself on the

      couch. “Where are you, Leo?” he called.

      Leo walked into the apartment indecisively.

      “What are we going to do here?” he asked. “I

      don’t think Maureen will like it!” He stood over

      the couch and looked down at Paul.

      “You noticed the door wasn’t locked,

      didn’t you?” Paul said to him. “It’s fairly an

      invitation, my friend. But I had a purpose

      in wanting to come up here…what was it?

      Oh, yes! Poetry.”

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 127

      “What?”

      Paul went into Michael’s bedroom and

      began going through the workdesk drawer.

      “Ah,” he said, holding up several sheets of

      paper. “At last. This has been my first oppor-

      tunity to take these.”

      Leo, with his head in the doorway—a pic-

      ture of reluctant eagerness—asked, “What

      are they?”

      “They’re Michael’s writings, some of

      them, at least.”

      Paul stuffed the papers in his pockets and

      started to walk out of the apartment. “Come

      on,” he beckoned to Leo. “Let’s go out now.”

      “What’s Michael going to say your walk-

      ing into his bedroom and stealing his writ-

      ings. He’ll be so mad all over again, only

      worse!”

      Paul was laughing.

      “Are you going to keep them?” Leo

      inquired.

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 128

      “If I

      like them.”

      They were down on the street again.

      Paul, who had stopped, was looking up at the

      dark cloudy sky and sniffing the air. “What a

      terrible day,” he shuddered. “And yet there’s

      energy in the air. It may be a day of power.”

      They walked on up X Street. “Well,” Leo

      concluded. “That was a neat bit of lifting.

      Now what are you going to do with his poet-

      ry?”

      “Read it.” Paul was already reading a page


      as he walked.

      “Is that all you did,” Leo asked, smiling at

      Paul, “on your excursion, sleep on the grass

      and eat fruit for breakfast? Hey?”

      “That’s enough, isn’t it?” Paul said. “It

      was beautiful, you know. Will you look at

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 129

      this,” he added, waving a paper at Leo.

      “Listen. I’ll read you a line or two here:

      ‘Symbols pristine and splendorous I need,

      for my journey down this corridor: here,

      now, too late to rejoin the others, and acci-

      dent need not apologize.’ Foo! As though

      accident apologized for anything! What

      utter rot he writes!”

      “What is he talking about?” Leo asked,

      leaning over to look at the paper. “Symbols,

      corridors…”

      “And here’s some more,” Paul went on,

      ignoring Leo’s question. “ ‘I am high—I

      reprise my sympathy for the masses.’ More

      nonsense—he won’t call a spade a spade,

      the masses indeed! He means his family, of

      course. That’s the rotten part about all this

      business, this poetry. Oh! And look here:

      ‘On the other side of this corridor, across

      these obstructions inviting insanity, I see

      new emotions and a new humanity: a cul-

      tural emotional, ultimacies, new man, shad-

      ows of this grotesque deformity: Beauty is

      tyrant, passion overrules; this instinct is

      mute, this vision Eternal.’ You see, don’t

      you, Leo, that when he cannot express what

      he means, he says ‘this instinct is mute’ and

      such trash. Ultimacies… Now as to that, I

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 130

      don’t know. Cultural emotionals… Yes.

      Hmm. I only criticize what I understand, of

      course. Those points there, they may be of

      course way beyond my learning. Michael is

      a very learned fellow…”

      Leo began to laugh and had to stop short

      in the midst of their walking. “Really, Paul,

      you make me laugh. First you call Michael

      a dunce and a fool, and the next moment

      you dub him as ‘very learned.’ He’s neither,

      you know. You should learn to control your

      excesses—”

      “Yes? Well, then, if that’s so, what does

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 131

      this mean: ‘Mind the basis of Eternity.’ Now

      what on earth is that if it isn’t profound and

      learned? Mark you, Leo, I only criticize

      those parts of the work that I understand.

      But there are places where Michael is far

      beyond me…”

      Leo was still laughing.

      “ ‘Mind the basis of Eternity,’ ” repeated

      Paul almost angrily. “Explain that if you

      will, Professor!”

      “It wouldn’t be difficult,” gasped Leo

      faintly, “if I had knowledge of his special

      vocabulary, or even if I read the whole

      poem. You can be so charmingly naive—

      really, it’s amazing to watch.”

      Paul was thumbing through some other

      pages…now, he cried out exultantly, “And

      this! This I expected to find, by all means!

      Listen:

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 132

      ‘One October

      feeling is worth

      ten archetypal

      tragedies that

      occur beneath

      the tender blue

      char of morning

      skies: and one

      melancholy

      frowse of har-

      vest stack, now,

      beyond measure

      surpasses this

      news of human

      travail.’

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 133

      Don’t you see, in order to speak with God—

      as he puts it—he’s trying to de-humanize

      himself. Claims here October moves him

      more than news of human tragedy.”

      “That’s interesting…”

      “And now, to cap all the nonsense, is this

      despairing cry!” Paul went on excitedly.

      “‘Quelqu’un à dérangé ma noirçeur! This I

      scream to a deaf and dumb cosmos.’ That’s

      nice, isn’t it Leo, but yet so typical of the stu-

      pid poet. ‘Someone has disturbed my dark-

      ness,’ he cries in French. Why on earth in

      French? His darkness indeed! That’s why he

      will sleep at all times of the day and night,

      and dream. What was that I heard a few

      weeks ago in class, someone was talking

      about it…the death-instinct, the death-

      instinct of Freud…”

      “Perhaps.”

      “And he adds here, rather sulkily, ‘better

      to live in hell than to die in heaven.’ Does he

      claim it was heaven before?…ha ha! Then

      he admits it…”

      “What on earth are you talking about?”

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 134

      Leo now inquired impatiently.

      “All esoteric matters,” Paul said. “And

      look at this!” — he had found more lines to

      read — “ ‘Alone with no one to love, is hell

      alive: can I not wait for bunglers and stum-

      blers that straggle out to me? Here, as at the

      end of a telescope, a crater of the moon. I

      wait for one of my kind with whom to wallow

      in my kindness.’ Now that,” Paul scoffed, “is

      sheer nonsense. He’s trying to work up the

      reader’s pity, or God’s. And he adds:

      ‘Aesthetic hell, I’m home.’ Ho ho! That’s

      good…he knows more about himself than he

      cares to admit. Calls it a ‘sordid denoue-

      ment.’ But here, his hope is regained; he

      says, ‘Tell me—for my emotions have always

      been, since then, but shifting sand—tell me

      that this is Eternity, the Sphinx and not the

      sand.’ What does he think he’s found? Is he

      panting after the new vision too, like all the

      others? Ha ha ha.”

      “I swear,” Leo said, “I’ve never heard

      anything like your criticism. Why don’t you

      do it objectively? It’s terrible to walk with

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 135

      you and hear you defame the work of a man

      which you’ve just stolen.”

      “I’ll go one better,” Paul laughed, leering

      at Leo. “I’ll burn the whole works—what

      would you think of that?”

      “What? You mean, what would he think of

      that! You’re being very stupid, by the way; I

      don’t think you understand what he’s saying…”

      “Oh, yes!” cried Paul. “I understand bet-

      ter than he does. Look! He bases the whole

      long poem on a line from one of his dreams.

      Here, on the first page, it says ‘from a

      dream—’ and the quotation, taken, you see,

      from a dream he had, reads like this: ‘Is this

      the way I’m supposed to feel?’ Don’t you see,

      Leo, he’s searching for a new emotion, since

      he has rejected the one he had before. So

      first he disclaims the old emotion
    by saying,

      am I supposed to feel it anyway? Then…at

      the end of the poem, after a thorough explo-

      ration of his so-called new emotion and new

      vision, which is some sort of mystical solip-

      sism undergone in a ‘dark corridor’—per-

      haps a symbolism from a dream—he finds

      that his journey into these regions, across

      this corridor, has been a failure. It reads:

      ‘This corridor alone remains—this corridor-

      ial loneliness.’ Now, I admit that all this is

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 137

      lovely and appealing to the eye, to some

      extent, but it’s failure altogether.”

      “You may be right,” Leo put in, “but still

      it’s no reason for you to burn it. And I want

      to read these some time.”

      “Failure altogether,” Paul continued,

      ignoring Leo’s remarks. “He finds that

      there is no new emotion, or if there is, that

      it’s denied to him at least. Like that fellow

      Rimbaud that Arthur is always talking

      about. I was thinking about this Rimbaud

      all the past week.”

      “Paul,” said Leo warmly, “you’re the most

      unusual fellow! Is that what you were think-

      ing about on your bed of grass as you

      munched your fruit?”

      “Perhaps,” Paul laughed. “That and many

      other things, I admit. Now, let’s look at a few

      more of these things. This one is called ‘Song

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      ORPHEUS EMERGED 138

      of My Modern Sorrow.’ A likely title! He has a

      flair for attracting the eye! Look, that first line

      explains his whole failure—let’s sit down

      here and I’ll read you this…”

      They were now in the middle of the cam-

      pus green, and sat on a bench.

      Immediately, a flurry of pigeons swarmed

      around them.

      “ ‘Happiness is dead!’ he cries straight off.

      There is the root of his failure—I’ll explain.

      He goes on—‘Imponderable sorrow now

      rules, now stretches its moody nether-glow

      across my life, my city, and my soul. In the

      cities, silence mutters smokily. This is the

      Black Age.’ Ho ho! Now he really is down in

      the dumps, the Black Age he calls it. First

      having failed to find a new emotion, the

     


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