6
Quinn spent the next morning at the Columbia
library with Stillman’s book. He arrived early, the first one there
as the doors opened, and the silence of the marble halls comforted
him, as though he had been allowed to enter some crypt of oblivion.
After flashing his alumni card at the drowsing attendant behind the
desk, he retrieved the book from the stacks, returned to the third
floor, and then settled down in a green leather armchair in one of
the smoking rooms. The bright May morning lurked outside like a
temptation, a call to wander aimlessly in the air, but Quinn fought
it off. He turned the chair around, positioning himself with his
back to the window, and opened the book.
The Garden and the Tower:
Early Visions of the New World was divided into two parts of
approximately equal length, “The Myth of Paradise” and “The Myth of
Babel.” The first concentrated on the discoveries of the explorers,
beginning with Columbus and continuing on through Raleigh. It was
Stillman’s contention that the first men to visit America believed
they had accidentally found paradise, a second Garden of Eden. In
the narrative of his third voyage, for example, Columbus wrote:
“For I believe that the earthly Paradise lies here, which no one
can enter except by God’s leave.” As for the people of this land,
Peter Martyr would write as early as 1505: “They seem to live in
that golden world of which old writers speak so much, wherein men
lived simply and innocently, without enforcement of laws, without
quarrelling, judges, or libels, content only to satisfy nature.”
Or, as the ever-present Montaigne would write more than half a
century later: “In my opinion, what we actually see in these
nations not only surpasses all the pictures which the poets
have drawn of the Golden Age, and all their inventions representing
the then happy state of mankind, but also the conception and desire
of philosophy itself.” From the very beginning, according to
Stillman, the discovery of the New World was the quickening impulse
of utopian thought, the spark that gave hope to the perfectibility
of human life—from Thomas More’s book of 1516 to Gerónimo de
Mendieta’s prophecy, some years later, that America would become an
ideal theocratic state, a veritable City of God.
There was, however, an opposite point of view. If
some saw the Indians as living in prelapsarian innocence, there
were others who judged them to be savage beasts, devils in the form
of men. The discovery of cannibals in the Caribbean did nothing to
assuage this opinion. The Spaniards used it as a justification to
exploit the natives mercilessly for their own mercantile ends. For
if you do not consider the man before you to be human, there are
few restraints of conscience on your behavior towards him. It was
not until 1537, with the papal bull of Paul III, that the Indians
were declared to be true men possessing souls. The debate
nevertheless went on for several hundred years, culminating on the
one hand in the “noble savage” of Locke and Rousseau—which laid the
theoretical foundations of democracy in an independent America—and,
on the other hand, in the campaign to exterminate the Indians, in
the undying belief that the only good Indian was a dead
Indian.
The second part of the book began with a new
examination of the fall. Relying heavily on Milton and his account
in Paradise Lost—as
representing the orthodox Puritan position— Stillman claimed that
it was only after the fall that human life as we know it came into
being. For if there was no evil in the Garden, neither was there
any good. As Milton himself put it in the Areopagitica, “It was out of the rind of one apple
tasted that good and evil leapt forth into the world, like two
twins cleaving together.” Stillman’s gloss on this sentence was
exceedingly thorough. Alert to the possibility of puns and wordplay
throughout, he showed how the word “taste” was actually a reference
to the Latin word “sapere,” which means both “to taste” and “to
know” and therefore contains a subliminal reference to the tree of
knowledge: the source of the apple whose taste brought forth
knowledge into the world, which is to say, good and evil. Stillman
also dwelled on the paradox of the word “cleave,” which means both
“to join together” and “to break apart,” thus embodying two equal
and opposite significations, which in turn embodies a view of
language that Stillman found to be present in all of Milton’s work.
In Paradise Lost, for example, each key
word has two meanings—one before the fall and one after the fall.
To illustrate his point, Stillman isolated several of those
words—sinister, serpentine, delicious— and showed how their
prelapsarian use was free of moral connotations, whereas their use
after the fall was shaded, ambiguous, informed by a knowledge of
evil. Adam’s one task in the Garden had been to invent language, to
give each creature and thing its name. In that state of innocence,
his tongue had gone straight to the quick of the world. His words
had not been merely appended to the things he saw, they had
revealed their essences, had literally brought them to life. A
thing and its name were interchangeable. After the fall, this was
no longer true. Names became detached from things; words devolved
into a collection of arbitrary signs; language had been severed
from God. The story of the Garden, therefore, records not only the
fall of man, but the fall of language.
Later in the Book of Genesis there is another
story about language. According to Stillman, the Tower of Babel
episode was an exact recapitulation of what happened in the
Garden—only expanded, made general in its significance for all
mankind. The story takes on special meaning when its placement in
the book is considered: chapter eleven of Genesis, verses one
through nine. This is the very last incident of prehistory in the
Bible. After that, the Old Testament is exclusively a chronicle of
the Hebrews. In other words, the Tower of Babel stands as the last
image before the true beginning of the world.
Stillman’s commentaries went on for many pages.
He began with a historical survey of the various exegetical
traditions concerning the story, elaborated on the numerous
misreadings that had grown up around it, and ended with a lengthy
catalogue of legends from the Haggadah (a compendium of
rabbinical interpretations not connected with legal matters).
It was generally accepted, wrote Stillman, that the Tower had been
built in the year 1996 after the creation, a scant 340 years after
the Flood, “lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole
earth.” God’s punishment came as a response to this desire, which
contradicted a command that had appeared earlier in Genesis: “Be
fertile and increase, fill the earth and master it.” By destroying
the Tower, therefore, God condemned man to obey this injunction.
Another reading, however, saw the Tower as a challenge against God.
Nimrod, the first ruler of all the world, was designated as the
Tower’s architect: Babel was to be a shrine that symbolized the
universality of his power. This was the Promethean view of the
story, and it hinged on the phrases “whose top may reach unto
heaven” and “let us make a name.” The building of the Tower became
the obsessive, overriding passion of mankind, more important
finally than life itself. Bricks became more precious than people.
Women laborers did not even stop to give birth to their children;
they secured the newborn in their aprons and went right on working.
Apparently, there were three different groups involved in the
construction: those who wanted to dwell in heaven, those who wanted
to wage war against God, and those who wanted to worship idols. At
the same time, they were united in their efforts—”And the whole
earth was of one language, and of one speech”—and the latent power
of a united mankind outraged God. “And the Lord said, Behold, the
people is one, and they have all one language; and this they begin
to do: and now nothing will be restrained from them, which they
have imagined to do.” This speech is a conscious echo of the words
God spoke on expelling Adam and Eve from the Garden: “Behold, the
man is become one of us, to know good and evil; and now, lest he
put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and
live forever—Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden
of Eden… .” Still another reading held that the story was intended
merely as a way of explaining the diversity of peoples and
languages. For if all men were descended from Noah and his sons,
how was it possible to account for the vast differences among
cultures? Another, similar reading contended that the story
was an explanation of the existence of paganism and idolatry—for
until this story all men are presented as being monotheistic in
their beliefs. As for the Tower itself, legend had it that one
third of the structure sank into the ground, one third was
destroyed by fire, and one third was left standing. God attacked it
in two ways in order to convince man that the destruction was a
divine punishment and not the result of chance. Still, the part
left standing was so high that a palm tree seen from the top of it
appeared no larger than a grasshopper. It was also said that a
person could walk for three days in the shadow of the Tower without
ever leaving it. Finally—and Stillman dwelled upon this at great
length—whoever looked upon the ruins of the Tower was believed to
forget everything he knew.
What all this had to do with the New World Quinn
could not say. But then a new chapter started, and suddenly
Stillman was discussing the life of Henry Dark, a Boston clergyman
who was born in London in 1649 (on the day of Charles I’s
execution), came to America in 1675, and died in a fire in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1691.
According to Stillman, as a young man Henry Dark
had served as private secretary to John Milton—from 1669 until the
poet’s death five years later. This was news to Quinn, for he
seemed to remember reading somewhere that the blind Milton had
dictated his work to one of his daughters. Dark, he learned, was an
ardent Puritan, a student of theology, and a devoted follower of
Milton’s work. Having met his hero one evening at a small
gathering, he was invited to pay a call the following week. That
led to further calls, until eventually Milton began to entrust Dark
with various small tasks: taking dictation, guiding him through the
streets of London, reading to him from the works of the ancients.
In a 1672 letter written by Dark to his sister in Boston, he
mentioned long discussions with Milton on the finer points of
Biblical exegesis. Then Milton died, and Dark was disconsolate. Six
months later, finding England a desert, a land that offered him
nothing, he decided to emigrate to America. He arrived in Boston in
the summer of 1675.
Little was known of his first years in the New
World. Stillman speculated that he might have travelled westward,
foraging out into unchartered territory, but no concrete
evidence could be found to support this view. On the other hand,
certain references in Dark’s writings indicated an intimate
knowledge of Indian customs, which led Stillman to theorize that
Dark might possibly have lived among one of the tribes for a period
of time. Be that as it may, there was no public mention of Dark
until 1682, when his name was entered in the Boston marriage
registry as having taken one Lucy Fitts as his bride. Two years
later, he was listed as heading a small Puritan congregation on the
outskirts of the city. Several children were born to the couple,
but all of them died in infancy. A son John, however, born in 1686,
survived. But in 1691 the boy was reported to have fallen
accidentally from a second-story window and perished. Just one
month later, the entire house went up in flames, and both Dark and
his wife were killed.
Henry Dark would have passed into the obscurity
of early American life if not for one thing: the publication of a
pamphlet in 1690 entitled The New Babel.
According to Stillman, this little work of sixty-four pages was the
most visionary account of the new continent that had been written
up to that time. If Dark had not died so soon after its appearance,
its effect would no doubt have been greater. For, as it turned out,
most of the copies of the pamphlet were destroyed in the fire that
killed Dark. Stillman himself had been able to discover only
one—and that by accident, in the attic of his family’s house in
Cambridge. After years of diligent research, he had concluded that
this was the only copy still in existence.
The New Babel, written in
bold, Miltonic prose, presented the case for the building of
paradise in America. Unlike the other writers on the subject, Dark
did not assume paradise to be a place that could be discovered.
There were no maps that could lead a man to it, no instruments of
navigation that could guide a man to its shores. Rather, its
existence was immanent within man himself: the idea of a beyond he
might someday create in the here and now. For utopia was
nowhere—even, as Dark explained, in its “wordhood.” And if man
could bring forth this dreamed-of place, it would only be by
building it with his own two hands.
Dark based his conclusions on a reading of the
Babel story as a prophetic work. Drawing heavily on Milton’s
interpretation of the fall, he followed his master in placing an
inordinate importance on the role of language. But he took the
poet’s ideas one step further. If the fall of man also entailed a
fall of language, was it not logical to assume that it would be
possible to undo the fall, to reverse its effects by undoing the
fall of language, by striving to recreate the language that was
spoken in Eden? If man could learn to speak this original language
of innocence, did it not follow that he would thereby recover a
state of innocence within himself? We had only to look at the
example of Christ, Dark argued, to understand that this was so. For
was Christ not a man, a creature of flesh and blood? And did not
Christ speak this prelapsarian language? In Milton’s Paradise Regained, Satan
speaks with “double-sense deluding,” whereas Christ’s “actions to
his words accord, his words / To his large heart give utterance
due, his heart / Contains of good, wise, just, the perfect shape.”
And had God not “now sent his living Oracle / into the World to
teach his final will, / And sends his Spirit of Truth henceforth to
dwell / in pious Hearts, an inward Oracle / To all Truth requisite
for me to know”? And, because of Christ, did the fall not have a
happy outcome, was it not a felix culpa, as
doctrine instructs? Therefore, Dark contended, it would indeed be
possible for man to speak the original language of innocence and to
recover, whole and unbroken, the truth within himself.
Turning to the Babel story, Dark then elaborated
his plan and announced his vision of things to come. Quoting from
the second verse of Genesis 11—”And it came to pass, as they
journeyed from the east, that they found a plain in the land of
Shi-nar; and they dwelt there”—Dark stated that this passage proved
the westward movement of human life and civilization. For the city
of Babel—or Babylon—was situated in Mesopotamia, far east of the
land of the Hebrews. If Babel lay to the west of anything, it was
Eden, the original site of mankind. Man’s duty to scatter himself
across the whole earth—in response to God’s command to “be fertile
… and fill the earth”—would inevitably move along a western course.
And what more western land in all Christendom, Dark asked,
than America? The movement of English settlers to the New World,
therefore, could be read as the fulfillment of the ancient
commandment. America was the last step in the process. Once the
continent had been filled, the moment would be ripe for a change in
the fortunes of mankind. The impediment to the building of
Babel—that man must fill the earth—would be eliminated. At that
moment it would again be possible for the whole earth to be of one
language and one speech. And if that were to happen, paradise could
not be far behind.
Just as Babel had been built 340 years after the
Flood, so it would be, Dark predicted, exactly 340 years after the
arrival of the Mayflower at Plymouth that
the commandment would be carried out. For surely it was the
Puritans, God’s newly chosen people, who held the destiny of
mankind in their hands. Unlike the Hebrews, who had failed God by
refusing to accept his son, these transplanted Englishmen would
write the final chapter of history before heaven and earth were
joined at last. Like Noah in his ark, they had traveled across the
vast oceanic flood to carry out their holy mission.
Three hundred and forty years, according to
Dark’s calculations, meant that in 1960 the first part of the
settlers’ work would have been done. At that point, the foundations
would have been laid for the real work that was to follow: the
building of the new Babel. Already, Dark wrote, he saw encouraging
signs in the city of Boston, for there, as nowhere else in the
world, the chief construction material was brick—which, as set
forth in verse three of Genesis 11, was specified as the
construction material of Babel. In the year 1960, he stated
confidently, the new Babel would begin to go up, its very shape
aspiring toward the heavens, a symbol of the resurrection of the
human spirit. History would be written in reverse. What had fallen
would be raised up; what had been broken would be made whole. Once
completed, the Tower would be large enough to hold every inhabitant
of the New World. There would be a room for each person, and once
he entered that room, he would forget everything he knew. After
forty days and forty nights, he would emerge a new man,
speaking God’s language, prepared to inhabit the second,
everlasting paradise.
So ended Stillman’s synopsis of Henry Dark’s
pamphlet, dated December 26, 1690, the seventieth anniversary of
the landing of the Mayflower.
Quinn let out a little sigh and closed the book.
The reading room was empty. He leaned forward, put his head in his
hands, and closed his eyes. “Nineteen sixty,” he said aloud. He
tried to conjure up an image of Henry Dark, but nothing came to
him. In his mind he saw only fire, a blaze of burning books. Then,
losing track of his thoughts and where they had been leading him,
he suddenly remembered that 1960 was the year that Stillman had
locked up his son.
He opened the red notebook and set it squarely on
his lap. Just as he was about to write in it, however, he decided
that he had had enough. He closed the red notebook, got up from his
chair, and returned Stillman’s book to the front desk. Lighting a
cigarette at the bottom of the stairs, he left the library and
walked out into the May afternoon.