The Monkey Link (16 page)

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Authors: Andrei Bitov

BOOK: The Monkey Link
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“Where are we?” I ventured at last.

“Didn’t I tell you?” Pavel Petrovich said in surprise. “But it’s obvious! What, haven’t you ever visited a pickle plant?”

Something dreadful, like a smile, illuminated the sullen face of the sage Simyon, and I realized what and whom all this reminded me of.
The Three Musketeers.
The headsman of Lille! This greeting from my favorite author touched my heart, and my delight knew no bounds.

“And Simyon?” I asked politely, accepting the second glass.

Simyon looked away, grinding his teeth and flickering his jaw muscles.

“This isn’t his line,” Pavel Petrovich said, pouring. “He’s above it.”

We clinked glasses. I lifted mine in obsequious salute to our hospitable host. He flickered his jaw muscles again and said nothing.

Why was he so disdainful of me? When I’d been warmly predisposed toward him, through Pavel Petrovich. I felt hurt.

I hardly even remember what happened at first, despite the music of the cymlins, but later I remember well. I hadn’t noticed where Simyon disappeared to. Well, yes, if this wasn’t his line
 

I kept wanting to ask what his line was, but I also kept forgetting. Pavel Petrovich kept talking, and his thought did not weaken:

“Another reason I’m hardly an artist: I want to understand everything, rather than depict it. An artist isn’t especially supposed to think. His eyes and hands think, his head keeps silent. He’s not supposed to think in words, at any rate. For me, though, if it’s not in words it’s not a thought. The artist thinks in images
 

You’ve heard that expression? But what kind of thought is that? It’s a rock painter’s thought. That’s who drew the beast, by the way! Pithecanthropus!”

“Cro-Magnon,” I said.

“Oh, yes, that’s the one. All true artists are Cro-Magnon men. That’s why they like smocks and long hair
 

to hide their tails. And their faces—did you ever notice? They all have these narrow, steep foreheads, their eyes are set deep in the sockets. It’s even truer with sculptors. They’re even more cavemanlike. By a couple hundred thousand years. They have bristles on their ears, on their shoulders, on their backs. Without fail! The hairy man Yevtikhiev
 

you’re too young to have seen him
 

in the old science textbook
 

when I was little I thought he was a sculptor. That’s why they like to sculpt nudes, because nudes look like real people to them, without the fur
 

I don’t care for them, to tell the truth. Do you think I say this in envy? You’re thinking: He’s a failure—”

I wanted to say I wasn’t thinking that, but to my surprise I only heard myself bleat. Pavel Petrovich understood me in his own way and filled our glasses anew.

“I wouldn’t trade thought for anything! Not even for their genius. Although,” he said bitterly, “thought is lethal!”

I wanted to ask why, but could not.

“I’ll tell you why, right now,” he said, munching on a cucumber. “This is a great thought. We are born into a world that is not boundless, isn’t that so? Gradually we come to know it. Swaddled, we look around with our baby eyes and see our mother. She’s the whole world. Then the world grows to be the size of the room, the house, the street. Then we become convinced that we can never get to the end of it. Then they explain to us about the globe, about continents and countries, about the solar system, the galaxy, the cosmos. And, having taught us things beyond our power to conceive, they train us to substitute words for concepts. They don’t so much convince us that the
world
is boundless as that our opportunities to
know
are boundless. We don’t yet understand or know everything, they say, but we know more now than we used to, and eventually we’ll begin to know even more, and then one day we’ll know practically everything
 

The man with the capacity to think begins using that capacity to strive ever onward, ever further, and this is stronger than a drug, let me tell you. You may not get free of a drug, never mind an idea
 

You may stay there. Like Simyon
 

 

(I looked in the direction he had nodded in, and where Simeon was not.)

“A former commando. He stayed where they landed him
 

And there he began to shoot up. Got hooked. Now he needs nothing
 

They explain to us that oxygen, water, and food are necessary for life, and this, too, will be true, because that’s how it is
 

They explain that life on earth is the rarest of miracles, because the combination of conditions making it possible is unique and unrepeatable in the cosmos, that life’s range is phenomenally narrow, that we’ll perish the instant we lack a degree of warmth, a gulp of air or water. This, again, is true. And only our consciousness, if you please, is as omnipotent and boundless as the world
 

You don’t see the incongruity? Not yet? Let me explain. What we live in, what we see, perceive, and comprehend, what we call reality, is also a range, beyond whose bounds we perish in the same way that we freeze to death or suffocate. We think that our reality is boundless, that we just haven’t come to know the whole of it yet, if you please. In actual fact, however, our reality is that same range, no wider than the diapason we hear or the spectrum we see. We are alive only within this range. And we
live
only in this range, we don’t live in reality at all, only in a
layer
of reality, which, as a matter of fact, if we were capable of imagining its real proportions, is no thicker than a layer of paint. That’s where we live, in the oil-paint layer on which we were painted. And the painting is beautiful, for what an artist painted it! What an artist! Leonardo is as incomparable to Him as
 

as
 

Even the comparison with Him is incomparable!
He
painted for us the life whose structure we’re unraveling little by little—unraveling in the literal sense as well
 

‘So stone by brick we tore that factory down
 

 

{24}
We putter around, crawling on our layer, all the while thinking we’re penetrating deep inside. We don’t have the power to understand that deep inside there’s a reality not ours at all, not allotted to us, certainly not given to us in sensation
 

that the structure of our life has another structure of its own, which is certainly not located inside our life. Newton’s law is not confined in the apple, nor Archimedes’ law in the bath. The layer of life that was painted for us has a structure which in turn is a layer of reality, which in turn has a structure that is lodged, not in that layer, but in yet another, or in several, I don’t know how many more layers, which again wouldn’t explain anything to us even if we penetrated them. We had no mission to understand, our mission was to live! And it was beautifully—Lord, how beautifully!—incarnated. Now a thinking man existed, now an artist existed
 

The artist doesn’t understand. He mirrors. This is beautiful because all he can mirror is that which was already beautiful. But if in this process he also understands, if you please, then—assuming that he goes deep inside—he crosses through the layer. But the layer is thin, no thicker than paint, and what’s behind it? Behind it is the ground, behind that is the canvas, the foundation, and behind that is the abyss, a hole, torn edges, and then-—dust, darkness, a wall, with a nail and a string to hang himself by, an untalented signature with an inane title
 

No one but a painter understands painting, but believe me, true talent in painting will never go further than the mute guess that something does exist behind beauty. And yet, the thinking fool will go there. There they all are—Leonardo, El Greco, Goya, van Gogh
 

they all went beyond the range, beyond the bounds of representation, and found nothing but madness beyond those bounds
 

Cezanne .. And again his face twisted in pain, as from toothache.

“But what
about
Cezanne?” I said with sudden clarity, and marveled at my metallic voice.

“What about Cezanne? Nothing, really. He had never been a normal person. You don’t know a thing about painting anyway. So let’s don’t talk about him. Let’s take an artist of the word. Who has come closest to painting in words?”

“Gogol.” Here I had no doubt.

“Right. But he knew nothing about painting
 

Well, and what happened to him next? See? The same thing. He exhausted the layer of reality that the Lord had assigned for him to mirror, he crossed through that layer and went beyond the bounds of representation. Out there, something else begins—out there is faith. But what faith did Cro-Magnon man have when he was worshipping what he saw? Where faith is, the artist is no more. The artist can’t understand this, because he’s also an addict, because art isn’t just the image of life, it’s a way of life
 

Those of us who aren’t geniuses always have something to prevent us from becoming geniuses: laziness, sluggishness, society, sins
 

And there’s no way we can admit that what prevents us is instinct, the fear of death and the thirst for life. Unconsciously we’re afraid of tumbling out of the layer of reality, we want to stay alive. But we’ll never understand this, because we’ll never concede we aren’t geniuses. We have been prevented. Period. The artist’s crisis is not circumstances. There are always circumstances popping up to turn you from your path. The crisis is that you’ve come to the edge of the only layer in which an image can be depicted, and now you want to paint invisible objects in visible colors. No one’s advice or prescriptions will help you, no asceticism, no heroic feat. Anything is easier than to continue to paint life, which just now seemed alive and capable of representation—and was indeed alive, and simply remained alive forever for some people, because they laid no claim. It’s easier not to drink, not to smoke, to stay away from women, everything that other people are too weak to deny themselves is easier than to paint what comes
next
after the image you’ve already depicted.
He
painted the landscape for us, painted us in it, but how He managed to do this is not for us to understand. The genius moves with cosmic speed in his understanding, and he tears a hole in the image. The sincerity of his bewilderment and despair is equaled only by the blindness or muteness that befalls him. His guess as to the structure of the world—if it doesn’t drive him out of his mind—will strike him quite dumb. The fate of the genius is a cosmic catastrophe, not in the sense that we pity him on a cosmic scale, or that it has a cosmic effect on us, not in the sense that he would have given us something good if only he hadn’t gotten trapped in the denser layers, but in the sense that he and the cosmos have a common nature. All our geniuses have exploded and scattered like dust, just as our dear earth is about to do. Humankind is close to a catastrophe on the same scale that every genius has suffered. Except that the artist used to tumble through the canvas, while these people go beyond the frame itself: they’re exhausting the landscape on the very surface of the layer. Everything was made for us so that we would live and live out our lives. No more, and no further. Further is death. First the death of the lives we’ve lived, then of ourselves as well. There was as much as we needed of everything. Which means, no more than we needed. Not a whole lot. Just so much. The supply of temptation included. Lord,
when
will they realize that it’s gone—gone? There is no more.
No more!
Where can I get it for you, when there isn’t any more!” Pavel Petrovich screamed at me. “God had it figured, down to the last man. Next comes the inspector general. The inspector general’s coming! And the inspector general is—the devil.”

The might of this idea knocked me dead, though I should mention we had also killed the bottle.

“I don’t believe in the devil,” I said, suddenly resisting.


What
?!” exclaimed Pavel Petrovich—and Simyon, who came flying in from I don’t know where.

“I mean, I believe in the Creator, in Christ,” I babbled, hemmed in by the two sages. “I believe in them as a reality, that they existed
 

exist
 

But not that the devil exists the way they do. No.”

“He doesn’t believe,” Simyon whispered to Pavel Petrovich in fright. “Then what
does
he believe in??”

“Listen to him, listen,” Pavel Petrovich said.

“But the air is swarming!” Simyon flapped his sleeves like a panicked cock, gesturing around at the space where we were.

I recoiled. Pavel Petrovich treacherously nodded agreement.

“Swarming with what?” I said angrily.

“Invisible beings!” He looked around as if in terror.

“I don’t believe in the other world, either!” I said stubbornly.

“What do you
mean
?!” Simyon, it seemed, was dumbstruck.

Pavel Petrovich was observing us with some interest.

“Just what I say,” I said maliciously.

“But if this world exists,” Simyon said, his voice suddenly mild and ingratiating, “the other does, too.”

“Listen to him, listen,” Pavel Petrovich said, delightedly backing him up.

“Like a magnet—you can’t cut it in half,” Simyon said.

“Like light and darkness!” Pavel Petrovich exclaimed.

“Like life and death!” Simyon said, flickering his jaw muscles.

As though they had sentenced me, and now the time for my immolation had come
 

I was having trouble understanding. It seemed to me they had started speaking in some dead cave-language. Their words all hung in the air, the whole discussion, like an invisible, transparent pane, like a sheet of glass between them and me, with rain coursing down and thickening it, a transparent, viscous, fibrous downpour
 

Now the rat was there
 

now Simyon’s face would turn savage with kindness
 

now Pavel Petrovich’s face would become inspired and demoniacal, as though it, too, like the glass, had those weeping streams rolling down it
 

and now it would suddenly empty of significance, dissolve and wash away in the torrent, revealing the upturned nose and cantankerousness of Emperor Paul’s anti-profile
{25}
 

At that moment especially, his small, dimming eyes would fill with an intelligence like madness, and Simyon would be gone again, without a trace
 

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