Cabot joins the techniques of modernism, its love of language
for its own sake, to an elemental, sometimes simple-minded romanticism
of the male. At its worst, Cabots treatment of the masculine recalls
the low points of Hemingway and Lawrence--once upon a time, men were men,
and lived off the land with a stoic wisdom and innocence warmed by the
pagan sun. Misguidedly dedicated to progress and economic well being,
modern society turns the sons of these men into decadent fools, and their
daughters into nags or helpmates who supply half-hearted nurturing. Even
if you find this nostalgic vision emotionally compelling, the set-up needs
lots of skepticism and/or irony to generate variations on the monotonous
theme. Unfortunately, both are in short supply.
The first novella, "Breath of the Earth," chronicles the
decline of the manly rapport with the good earth. Set in Italy, the tale
jumps from the lucky heroics of 1797, when a farmer defeats an invasion
of pirates by shooting off a cannon, to the farce of 1997, when the barren
land, now overrun by tourists, is tended by fragile old men. In between
a man talks about the joys and sorrows of a farmers life. Hard work
is leavened by delicious feast days: "We juggle hot shells in our fingers,
scoop out the meat with our knives, throw ourselves in the warm sand,
shielded from the dew of the fire, and our heels float up over our heads
in the fumes of the heavy wine." Sensations offer saving shocks of comfort:
"nightingales screeching, the squawk and thumping of a pheasant, the cuckoo
chucking like a chicken--the green smells of grasses and thistles hurrying
to flower before the summer death, frightened lizards and black snakes
twisting away."
Cabots prose is most impressive when physical impressions
jolt into language with a hedonistic rush, as when the moon rolls into
view "like a bruised overripe persimmon." But the narrator also has the
bad habit of breaking into purple philosophizing: "It is I now, looking
out through those solemn eyes at an ancient world of forest without man,
onto time, onto great distances. I see a world without words where the
owl and snake are at peace and are all-powerful, where their stillness
commands the sun and the sea." Cabot isnt content to let his super-charged
images do their work; the fresh prose of "Breath of the Earth" gets strangled
in its own descriptions of cycles of cultural rise and fall: "The present
is the past, the future has no meaning. I have been of the past. I have
the name of heroes. We are one through the seasons, the earth, the crops,
the winds, our songs, the stones of our village."
The sensibility behind the rape of the primal connection
is anatomized in "A Rat in the Boardroom." An aged mega-mogul is on his
deathbed, surrounded by mirrors (symbols of his narcissism) and sunk in
a mental funk of astonishing poverty: "And heaven is the parent, the power
to ignore and to be-better-than and to punish, the being right without
effort, the eternal seat of honor, punctual and orderly, with stern authority
reaching out in all directions to direct the proper course of mankind."
For Cabot, the blight of our civilization stems from the marriage of self-righteous
Puritanism to an unbounded secular passion for acquisition and control.
Not only is this critique antique, but Cabot takes more than ninety pages
to polish off his thoroughly dehumanized businessmen and his son: the
moguls son is dispatched by the selfish values that do in his dads
crabbed soul. The moralizing reaches a campy grandeur when, during a safari,
a woman is served roasted pigs testes. "Rat in the Boardroom" is
an ugly fantasy about having your enemies balls on your plate.
The final novella, "Touch of Dust," returns once more to
our alienation from primal forces, though the theme is given an aesthetic
twist. The narrator is an artist cut off from his deepest roots; he realizes
"that failure is not the end, that there is still sweet wine to be sipped
with joy, wine that holds the sun." Cabots descriptions of the natural
world are marvelously detailed: "High ripe hay, poppies--blood-red wounds
salved by the icy foam of the spittle fly--magentas of lupine and clover,
lavender-brushed white buds of the wild onion--plucked, its pungent smell."
His characters, however, especially the woman with whom the artist is
obsessed, were yanked from a petrified forest: "It is not you who failed
me. Joy is, in the end, solitary. I have lost mine, through weakness or
because I am woman and woman is somber and mortal, unable to walk for
long with your gods."? "I am woman and woman is somber and mortal"?