Between the larch wood and the hay barn, where they allegedly found the butcher’s big dog, “frozen, having fallen asleep under the boards,” the painter draws my attention to various trees, some in a group, others standing on their own. “Here, you see,” he said, “the spruce, Picea excelsa, the aristocratic sister to the spruce that is called the spruce fir, wrongly also silver fir. The fir …” He steps up to the fence and says: “Here, you see, the oak … This one is a durmast oak, this one a pedunculate oak … The oak has a growing season of two hundred years. The name is derived from the Old Indian word igya, which means, roughly, veneration. But you will also find ash and alder,” he said, “and even sycamore. And down there, you see, that yew that I told you about on the day of your arrival here. It’s a majestic holdout from primeval times …” As we walked along the larch wood—I had the feeling of walking in my own footsteps of the day before—he said: “This is a moment of demonic quiet. A phenomenon still too little investigated by science.” It really was quiet, not a sound from the work down in the valley. Nothing. “The world still entertains a very primitive understanding of such quiet. All my life I’ve thought of it as an illness in an exhausted nature, as hideously ripped-open abysses of feeling. To nature, this quiet is horrible.”
Of course it’s not possible to have an insight into everything, but I think he is depressed by not receiving any mail. “Since no one knows where I am, no one can write to me either. But nor do I want anyone to write to me,” he said. “I don’t write any letters, so no one knows where I am. I don’t think I’ll ever write another letter.” In his condition, he’s not up to writing in any case. When he sits down to make some notes in some “logbooks of inventions” that he started many years ago—“at the instant when I begin to go into myself”—his headaches worsen to the degree that he is forced to stop, to abandon a thought halfway, to shut his notebook, and lie down. And he really doesn’t want to write to anyone either. For him, that’s all in the past, so far that it’s all unavailable, out of reach, “not one person, nothing.” He regularly thought of himself now as drifting under water, and then frozen somewhere into a world of irrelation. “If you can’t open your mouth, you can’t scream.” Time went by, or then again not: “Sometimes it’s as though it stood still.” How it will end, “seeing as it will end,” I’m not sure. The worst case might suddenly come about, I know that from experience. I don’t believe in miracles, at least not now. I can imagine him killing himself. But it might take a long time till he does. He might wait for spring, and then summer, and then next winter, and so on. But it can’t be a matter of decades. Not with him. Not even years, because he is ill and will soon die anyway. There’s activity in his subconscious, even if everything’s been switched off on the surface. A great-uncle of his killed himself, by the way: he was a gamekeeper. Apparently because he was unable to take “any more human misery.” They found him in the woods. He had shot himself in the mouth. If you inquire, you will find sufficient cause in every individual. But, as the assistant says, his brother had “suicidal inclinations” from the outset. Suddenly he starts talking about his disease again, which is “completely asymptomatic.” At night he gets to the root of it, but then at the critical moment, it all recedes again. Only the pain was left, “a pain that is incapable of passing its apogee … At first,” said the painter, “I was told there was a treatment for my head, an approach, a method. But suddenly I looked behind the scenes of medicine: they know nothing, they can do nothing! I rejected all their methods. Doctors are just quacks, you know! Mechanics. It’s true, they can’t tell their patients immediately that they’re hopeless cases … that medicine is just a superficial calmative for body and psyche …” He said: “Another pillow to prop my head up at night? I’ve tried that, and I’ve tried no pillow at all. The pain comes when it pleases, and the illness suits itself, it’s completely ununderstood … you know, one would have to investigate the extremes of pain in all their gradations, trace the whole architecture of pain! Well, enough of my illness: illness gets people talking, whether common or refined … You want to know whether the other fellow is suffering as much as you are … you talk because you want sympathy. You hear about the catastrophic abuses in medicine: catastrophic coincidences, the feebleness of the so-called doctors, the many botched and bungled operations, incidents, and so on and so forth …”
• • •
“One might go to the bakery, perhaps,” he said. “But did you know the baker has tuberculosis? All the people here run around in a highly infectious state. The baker’s daughter has tuberculosis too, it seems to have something to do with the runoff from the cellulose factory, with the steam that the locomotives have spewed out for decades, with the bad diet that the people eat. Almost all of them have cankered lung lobes, pneumothorax and pneumoperitoneum are endemic. They have tuberculosis of the lungs, the head, the arms and legs. All of them have tubercular abscesses somewhere on their bodies. The valley is notorious for tuberculosis. You will find every form of it here: skin tuberculosis, brain tuberculosis, intestinal tuberculosis. Many cases of meningitis, which is deadly within hours. The workmen have tuberculosis from the dirt they dig around in, the farmers have it from their dogs and the infected milk. The majority of the people have galloping consumption. Moreover,” he said, “the effect of the new drugs, of streptomycin for example, is nil. Did you know the knacker has tuberculosis? That the landlady has tuberculosis? That her daughters have been to sanatoria on three separate occasions? Tuberculosis is by no means on the way out. People claim it is curable. But that’s what the pharmaceutical industry says. In fact, tuberculosis is as incurable as it always was. Even people who have been inoculated against it come down with it. Often those who have it the worst are the ones who look so healthy that you wouldn’t suspect they were ill at all. Their rosy faces are utterly at variance with their ravaged lungs. You keep running into people who’ve had to endure a cautery or, at the very least, a transverse lesion. Most of them have had their lives ruined by failed reconstructive surgery.” We didn’t go to the bakery. Straight home instead.
THE DOG BARKING
“I could say it’s the living end,” said the painter, “but it’s the end of life, by turns low down and high up, low down, then all around, it smashes its head against the snow blanket, it crashes incessantly against the awful iron in the air, the iron in the air, if you must know, that’s where it gets shredded, and you have to breathe it in, breathe it in through your ears, till you go crazy, till the noise shreds you, till your earlobes smash brain and muzzle, muzzle and brain with the limitless naïveté of destructiveness. Listen to it, stop and listen to it: that yapping! It’s not possible to eradicate it, all you can do is push it back, push it back with your brain, push back the yap, the bark, the ghastly godawful yowling, you can press it down, but then it comes up worse, it will crush flesh, soul and flesh, it’s established itself like maggots in space, established itself everywhere, in the shattering fat of history, in the quarterstaves of the insoluble diluvia … It makes no sense,” said the painter, “to try and hide in the dog barking, it will find you out, and then even your fear will be chewed up … Yes, I’m frightened, I’m frightened, everywhere I hear: fear and fear, and I hear fear, and this ghostly trauma of fear will ruin me, drive me mad, not just my illness, no no, not just my illness, but the illness and this trauma of fear … Listen … how the barking organizes itself, how it makes space for itself, listen, it’s the cracking of canine whips, it’s canine hyperdexterity, canine hyperdespair, a hellish serfdom that is taking its revenge, taking its revenge on its grim devisers, on me, on you, yes, you too, on all limitless apparitions, on all limitless, terrible, basically cut-off apparitions, on human organs, which are the organs of heaven and hell, on the infernal organs of the heights and the celestial organs of the depths, on the jailbird unhappiness of all tragedians … Listen, these tragedians, listen to them: that stubborn deafmute breed of snakes’ tongues, listen to them: the monstrously unappetizing r
epublic of all-powerful idiocy, listen to them: this unsolicited shameless parliament of hypocrites … There are the dogs, there is their yap, there is death, death in all its wild profusion, death with all its frailty, death with its stink of quotidian crime, death, this last recourse of despair, the bacillus of monstrous unendingness, the death of history, the death of impoverishment, death, listen, the death that I don’t want, that no one wants, that no one wants anymore, there it is, death, the yap, listen, the unlawful drowning of reason, the refusal to give evidence of all supposition, the spastic smack of soft brain on concrete, on the concrete floor of human dementia … Listen to my views on the yap, listen … I want to try and plumb the thinking of the infernal tempest, the confusion of eras, Cambrian, Silurian, Carboniferous, Permian, Triassic, and Jurassic, the monstrous Tertiary and Quaternary, the monstrously meaningless rejection of the great floods licking up from the depths … Listen to me, I am going into the yap, I go in and I smash their fangs, I yell at it with the thunder of my unreasonableness, I scramble its processes, its mendacious propaganda … Listen, stop, listen, the sweating stupid slavering dogs’ tongues, listen to the dogs, listen to them, listen to them …” We were standing on the spot from which you can see down into the Klamm. “Wolves,” said the painter. “From here you can see straight down the throat of all wolf science.” He was exhausted. I could hear the dogs. I could hear the barking and yapping. I was exhausted too. I was stunned by the painter’s outburst, my body felt crushed as though by a rockfall; “and then I found him crushed on the road, below me, at my feet,” the painter was saying. I immediately organized the painter’s outburst. I’m astonished, I need only to push the button on my listening machine, and the outburst passes over me. But I’m exhausted. I’m utterly exhausted. “Listen,” said the painter, “it’s the yapping of the end of the world. Quite manifestly it’s the end of the world in person, in this yapping. How sternly and implacably it’s proceeding in people’s faces, in people’s faces, in the face of thoughts, in the face of reason, against all ridicule.” He said: “I’m afraid. Come. Let’s go. Let’s go to the inn. I can’t stand to hear any more of that yapping.” Never had the dogs barked like this without interruption all day and all the previous night. “What else could this yapping portend,” said the painter, “as we know everything and understand everything, if not the actual end of the world.” He lengthened the words “end of the world” across his tongue like a priceless delicacy, and like a “sinful pleasure” he pulled the words “end of the world” across his tongue. Then we were silent. In the ravine, he said: “Infamy! Don’t you see what it says up there, high up in what we flatteringly term the mother of heaven: it says: Infamy!”
Before he retired to his room, “not to sleep, but to howl to myself in the silence of horror,” he said: “How everything has crumbled, how everything has dissolved, how all the reference points have shifted, how all fixity has moved, how nothing exists anymore, how nothing exists, you see, how all the religions and all the irreligions and the protracted absurdities of all forms of worship have turned into nothing, nothing at all, you see, how belief and unbelief no longer exist, how science, modern science, how the stumbling blocks, the millennial courts, have all been thrown out and ushered out and blown out into the air, how all of it is now just so much air … Listen, it’s all air, all concepts are air, all points of reference are air, everything is just air …” And he said: “Frozen air, everything just so much frozen air …”
Fifteenth Day
“Diseased,” said the painter, “everything in the countryside, and most particularly here is diseased. It’s a grave mistake to assume that people in the country are of greater worth: country people, ha! Country people are the underclass of today. The underclass. And the country is degenerate, debased, so much more debased than the city! The last war has been the ruination of country people! Inside and out! Country people are just trash! And tell me now, what was ever so great about country people, about farmers? Were they so incomparable? Soil and inheritance, was that it? No, it was just gossip! Gossip, you hear? Gossip! Country people might be more reserved, but that’s the breathtaking, the disreputable, the heinous thing about country people! That whole simple, pitiless world of thought, where simplicity and low-mindedness get hitched and ruin everything …! Nothing comes from country people! Villages, morons in short sleeves! Country churches, moronic. Listen: I’m talking about the infestation of the country. The country is repulsive! I’ve never had any regard, not the least regard, for farmers. Perhaps you have a different view. As far as the future is concerned, the rural population is without significance. And the rural population! The country is no source anymore, only a trove of brutality and idiocy, of squalor and megalomania, of perjury and battery, of systematic extinction! Not even a monopoly of quiet anymore! There is, as I see, no crasser mistake than to assume that everything in the country, and in our countryside in particular, is roses, and to imagine it has something to teach us, that there is something philosophical about the way of life there, and that it is any better than in the cities! Well, it’s quite the opposite!
“Out where the world collides with itself, there’s welfare. Here there’s no welfare. Welfare can’t get into this valley. It’s too tight and too squalid and too ugly. The cliffs block its path. In the darkness it would lose its way in no time. Welfare only reaches the edges of the Alps. Whereas here, it’s dark. Here is work and poverty and nothing besides. Here it’s the noose or the river. The unions have plenty to say. The parties have plenty to say. And nothing changes. At forty, these men are washed up. Finished. You can see them a while longer, and then you hear they’ve fallen off a rock. They hang themselves in a storehouse, in power-plant outbuildings, in the cellulose factory washroom. Thinking of them often disturbs the women giving birth, you know. The electricity lines drive them all crazy, and the river roars like a cow with its throat cut.”
• • •
In the winter, it was naturally hardest to make any headway with building work, says the engineer. We are sitting down in the public bar, and the painter pretends the engineer’s words are of the greatest interest to him. He has a bad headache, but he doesn’t let on, drinks wine like the rest of us, and sometimes makes a move as though to check that his Pascal is still in his coat pocket.
“When we’re expecting a frost, we can’t do any concreting at all,” says the engineer. “But there are other things we can do: right now we’re sinking a bridge support. That’s not without its dangers.”
The painter says: “Isn’t it very cold over the river? It makes me cold to look at it, what can it be like to stand over it all day and give instructions.”—“It’s not cold,” says the engineer, “it’s just important to have a head for heights. If a man doesn’t, he’ll fall head first into the water before he knows where he is.”—“Is the water deep at that point?” says the painter. “Not right there,” says the engineer, “but the current is very powerful. Even if you happen to be a good swimmer, and physically strong as all our people are, you’ll have a job to get out, because it’ll just wash you away, and in a few seconds you’ll be at the old weir, and you’ll meet your death.”—“Ah, right,” says the painter, “there’s the old weir as well. Won’t the old weir be destroyed when the power plant is finished?” “Yes,” says the engineer, “then it’ll be redundant.”—“Of course,” says the painter. “How many people have you got working for you at present?” he says. “Two hundred,” answers the engineer, “but there are never that many at one time, some will be off for the day, some others will be sick. On average it’s a hundred and eighty.”—“A hundred and eighty!” says the painter, “that’s a lot of men!”—“It’s important to know where to assign them. What the most suitable occupation for each individual is at any given moment. Of course that’s a continual headache. But that’s what I do at night. At night I think about how to arrange things for the next day.”—“Do you write your ideas down?” asks the painter. “No, I never write anything d
own,” says the engineer, “I keep it in my head. In the morning when I drive down to the site, I issue the instructions I think up overnight. Or sometimes I tell the people who are eating and drinking in the inn to pass them on. That saves me no end of running around on the site. Getting from one work group to the next can be time-consuming. Often the different groups are working a long way from one another. One group might be working on the bridge, another will be loading and unloading on the road, a couple of hundred yards away, and a third will be over by the waterfall.” The painter says: “And where do you eat lunch?”—“In the canteen. Everyone does, except one or two who have time off and go up the mountain to eat at the inn, where the food’s better.”—“But then the canteen’s probably cheaper than here?” says the painter. “Cheaper, but not so good.”—“And what happened at Christmastime, did everyone go home?”—“Only a very few went home. Most of them haven’t got a home. We celebrated Christmas in the canteen. Me as well.”—“And does the contractor pay a Christmas bonus?”—“Yes,” said the engineer. “A generous bonus?” It was fairly sizable, says the engineer, “building firms are not mean when it comes to Christmas money.” In fact, the workmen did fairly well for themselves. A temporary worker on the site could reckon to pick up his three thousand schillings. “That’s more than a middle school teacher,” says the painter. “Of course, there’s no comparison between the work done by a laborer down there and a middle school teacher.”—“Of course not.” The knacker says: “And some do overtime, and they pick up four thousand and more.”—“True,” says the engineer, “but they’re working themselves into the ground.” It was no secret that they get lung disease, and often collapse and have to spend weeks in the hospital. “The contractor’s not happy to see too much overtime being worked. Because they know they’ll have to offer sick pay for weeks and months.” But for the amount of work they did down there, “they’re not overpaid.” Anyway, they needed the money, because they have to eat properly, and drink as well, so they don’t get depressed after work. “It’s the bachelors who do best for themselves. They’re usually young and strong, and can put a bit aside. After a couple of years, standing in the dirt, they often start their own business or something, the ones that know how.” He himself had once stood in the dirt like that. As a young fellow he had paid his way through college by temping on building sites, just as I had done, well, he had done it too, standing around in puddles and ditches, and worrying about getting through his eight cubic meters of earth per day, or risk getting fired. “I’ve done it all, and I know my way around, and the men know that, and that’s why we’re on such good terms.” There was no other engineer on the site that they got along with as well as with him. They had confidence in him, for instance when it came to representing them with the contractor. “As soon as the first warm days come along,” he says, “then we’ll start to make some headway.”—“I expect you’re pretty well paid yourself,” says the painter. “I’ve heard that construction engineers are among the best paid people in the country.”—“Yes,” says the engineer, “true enough, but I could have gone to India and made more money. But then I didn’t go to India, though I can’t say I wasn’t tempted.”