(urth) Short Stories 54-57: The Dark of the June, The Death of Hyle, From the Notebook of Dr. Stein, and Thag

Marc Aramini marcaramini at yahoo.com
Mon Nov 11 19:20:22 PST 2013



 
The Dark of the June,
The Death of Hyle, From the Notebook of Dr. Stein, Thag
This series of interlinked stories appeared in 1974 and 1975
in Continuum 1-3 and 5.  It is at this
point in Wolfe’s career that the Borgesian/metafictional play in the stories
becomes strongest, making the stories of the mid 1970s and 1980s a bit more
obfuscating on the surface, though in these particular stories it is still
clear “what happens”, it is less than clear if they are intended to be entirely
artificial such as “The Last Thrilling Wonder Story.” 
BRIEF SUMMARY: In 1997, Harry Boyce Nailer, a one-eyed
academic, has long ago lost his wife, May, and his daughter June has decided to
take an exit to everyday life that has become available thanks to the psychic
sensitivity of Laurel Baker (associated with a lantern lighting the way).  This escape from nature classifies those who
take it as nin (not in nature) and seems to involve some “bounce” between
reality and some other state of existence without a corporeal form, described
as a gain in potential energy the longer one has lived, thus making the
“bounce” from high to low energy more extreme.  He tries to intervene by going to the office on a long automated
walkway, but he is too late.  He manages
to break past the security long enough to speak to the 3V image of his
daughter, who is at home.  He beats up
the two policemen and escapes, to ask his daughter why she is leaving and to
reveal his fear of her dying, and his own gladness over the fact that he will
never have to see her die.  She winks
out, her jewelry falling, after explaining that she doesn’t want to see him die
and wants to flee his expectations.
 In “The Death of Hyle”,
Harry becomes our first person narrator and speculates on the nature of the
world, his eyes tricked by illusion, though he denies that he is a religious
person.  He has made himself young with
implants and surgery, and succeeds in going through with the discarnation, an
operation involving drugs and a procedure which may exist purely to compel
belief.  His body flashes off into the
sky, passing through a tree, but does come back.  He imagines himself walking into the sky and
throwing his own shark like face back at himself, from which he flees, before
meeting a woman tied to a lantern, Laurel Baker, who helps him find June in his
own navel, being led by a creature in scarlet and gold.  The three return to his house, where June
appears to only cry and moan of her fear of incarceration before disappearing.
In “The Notebook of Dr. Stein”, an alienist interviews the
possessed Donna W., who explains what has happened in the future with
disincarnation and the existence of the creature Thag, who is trying to use her
as an energy base.  When Dr. Stein uses
electroshock treatment on her, Donna dies.  
In the fairy tale “Thag”, the boy Eric has a bear skull made
by his great-grandfather “choking the bear with moonlight and filling his skull
with the cottony tales of rabbits, and the urine of shadows, and blck feathers
snached at great risk from the left foreleg of an eagle … The bear’s skull was
the home of Thag, as a beehive is the home of bees”.  Thag returns to the skull and Eric uses him
to take the kingdom of Charles the Wise and his dim wife.  After 30 years of fairy tale time, eventually
Laurel Baker, Harry Nailer, and June show up, and he mistakes them for Frigg,
Odin, and Freya respectively.  Thag
approaches as a headless bear waiting to be killed by Nailer, but he decides to
pin him to the floor with his spear instead, and charges Eric to never let him
go.  Eric lives happily ever after.
ANALYSIS OF VARIOUS DETAILS:
  THE ROOM: The actual
room is described as if it jumped from the pages of a newspaper unchanged since
May’s planning. Those who are nin (Not in Nature) return to the flat pages of
an ancient story, so it is perhaps not unusual to begin with this: real life
springing from the pages of a book, then jumping outside itself in a kind of
potential/kinetic energy based on the amount of time the human in question has
lived, ultimately returning to a low level energy state in a fairy tale.
However, Wolfe’s sensibilities in the mid-1970s are flirting
with the postmodern just a bit more, and it seems that in the span of these
four stories we have a good range of fictional mimesis, from representational
science fiction rooted in psychological realism to a directly mythical piece.
Is the entire series metafiction, aware of its own artificiality?  We will address this soon.
The state of Harry Nailer’s room is “Untouched by any change
of the last twenty five years, the Nailer living room continued to reflect
(like a lost photograph unexpectedly found between the pages of a book) the
tastes of Henry’s late wife, May Nailer … just such a room as May might have
seen in a newspaper the day she ordered the furniture.”
METAFICTION: The story is set in 1997, and the room hasn’t
changed in 25 years, and that line might very well have been penned toward the
end of 1972 or 1973, since the story was published in 1974, as the room really
does become unchanging once its description is penned.  
At the beginning of “The Dark of the June”, Henry Boyce
Nailer sits reading “An Incident at Krechetovka Station” by Solzhenitsyn.  In “Thag”, which is clearly intended to be a
“fairy story”, Harry Nailer asks, “Do the characters in the books you have here
ever read themselves? … In our world, you see, it would be quite possible for a
character in a book to sit peacefully before his fire reading the short stories
of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.”  (At this
point Thag appears in the form of a headless bear – more on the bear head
soon).  I do believe that this is an
important bit of detail: Harry Nailer has admitted through this detail that his
actions at the start, reading a book, are entirely possible in a story (as they
are in a story).  The room at the start
could have jumped from still pages because, of course, it has.  The story also plays with the relationships
between symbolic and mythic characters and “real” characters, and I believe
high and low energy states here simply resonate with the audience of fiction as
time passes, but when they are no longer read, their existence in the minds of
others “asymptotically approaches zero”.
More on this mysterious resonance is possible when we consider
the second story, “The Death of Hyle”:
 There is something
that I think must be defined, and that is the curious relationship to Hyle and
wood.
HYLE: “refers to matter or stuff. It can also be the
material cause underlying a change in Aristotelian philosophy. The Greeks
originally had no word for matter in general, as opposed to raw material
suitable for some specific purpose or other, so Aristotle adapted the word for
"wood" to this purpose. The idea that everything physical is made of
the same basic substance holds up well under modern science, although it may be
thought of more in terms of energy or matter/energy.”
This idea is philosophically important, especially in light
of the strange resonance between change, matter, and wood.  Also in this story, we get the rather strange
ability of wood to communicate, and trees also seem to be the transitional
state through which Nailer travels (though this is complicated by reference to
Madagascar … hmmm).
Wood of course does ultimately make the paper that seems to
be the lowest energy level that these ideas can attain approaching immortality,
so that the final words can come true, living “Happily, Ever, After.”
CLOTHING: The clothing of the 1990s of the story, emphasized
by June’s diaphanous gown and neon jewelry, is extremely exposed; even bare
breasts are not taboo.  This style seems
consistent with the revealing, wild wardrobe of his other near future dystopias
of the early 70s like “Remembrance to Come.”
THE CHARACTERS AND REFERENCES:
HENRY BOYCE NAILER/WODEN: He makes himself artificially
young to disincarnate with his daughter, but when he actually finds her, it is
inside himself.  There is an odd scene
where his own cruel, sharklike face is thrown at him, from which he flees.  He is left handed like Gene Wolfe, and
decides not to kill Thag, but nails him to the floor with his spear, trusting
Eric to keep him and use his powers to his own advantage.  He becomes his name, a hairy nailer.
JUNE NAILER/FREYJA: June claims that she is leaving so that
she would never see her father dead, and “All you expected of me, a little.
And…”  She is cut off before giving her
final reason, but her jewelry bounces to the ground – Nailer “saw the twinkle
of her bracelet and earring under the willow; then the little lights winked out
one by one,” ending our first tale. In Norse mythology Freya cries tears of red
and gold for her husband, Or. There is some conflation between Odin/Wotan and
Or, and between Freya and Frigg, which is ultimately confusing.  Both Freya and Frigg exchange sexual favors
for jewelry, perhaps echoing the fall of the jewelry and her unfinished “and”
at the end of the first story. 

LAUREL BAKER/FRIGG:  The name Laurel is
associated with the laurel tree.  She is
associated with Frigg in the final story, with her dark hair and the white
swath, and carries a lantern in the “between” world.  Frigg is Odin’s wife, but oddly enough, it is
unclear whether Freya and Frigg stem from a common goddess.  She was a medium who was one of the first to
cross over and disincarnate.
Dr. STEIN: He identifies Thag’s movements as those of a bat,
but there is a slight anachronism here.  Cerletti and Bini will first use ECT on a human in 1938, and Dr. Stein
here insists that it is 1935.  In
addition, he mentions Dr. Huer of Buck Rogers, and this at least would be
possible, as he was first published in 1928.
ERIC: In Nine Men’s Meadows, Eric uses Thag as his father
before him did.  Nine is a special number
in Norse mythology, relating to the worlds across Yggdrasil and several other
mysteries.  Eric is a very common name in
Norse stories.
GNIP, ERIC’S RAVEN: it is possible that his name merely
means to nip at something, but when Thag shows up again, Gnip proclaims
mystery.  It seems that in light of all
the other Norse references here, we should mention Gnipa, the cave that gives
entrance to the underworld or world of the dead governed by Hel, where Garm
howls chained, waiting for Ragnarok.
CHARLES THE WISE – the king with his “womanly” but vapid
queen and son Prince Robert, who seems to have little to do with either the
Holy Roman Charles or the French one.
THAG: WHAT IS THAG?: Could he be Freyja’s red and golden
tears at the loss of her desire? In light of the despair in the young of the
1997 setting, who feel they must escape nature somehow, even though it means
that they are to all intents and purposes dead to those they leave behind, the
central mystery is of the identity of Thag … who, when he appears as a man,
wears scarlet and gold.  In light of June’s
eventual association with Freya in the final story, we should consider this:
“indeed I saw her over the woman’s shoulder, led by a tall, swaggering being of
scarlet and gold … and then we three – but not the man in scarlet and gold –
were standing beside the furnace in the basement of our own house.  But June .. would only cry, and tell us that
her father the king would allow no one to mock her, and scream for fear the old
man in the picture above the mantel would imprison her in the Piombi with
Casanova. … ‘She has broken; we all break to some extent, and you have brought
the wrong fragment.’  (The man over the
mantel is the Doge of Venice, Lorenzo Loredano, who lived more than a hundred
years before Casanova, who is famous for his escape from the Piombi as well as
womanizing.)
Later (in 1935), the possessed Donna W. responds that there
are “three unless you count the other one” inside her, to which our doctor
formulates “you wish me to believe you have multiple personalities.”  In both of these scenarios Thag is present but
the count of individuals is still presented as three.
This telling scene resonates with not only Norse but
Christian symbolism: “Frigg whispered to Freya, ‘There has to be a world that
corresponds to each of our fictions, dear, since what never was nor will be is
inconceivable.  Still, I wonder what Thag
really is.’  And the bear became a snake
pinned by the tail and struck an inch short of her heel.”   The serpent is of course the biblical
serpent here, forever aiming at the feet of womankind, who will try to trample
it, but it is indicative to of that original sin, and I think in some small
part this Thag that leads June is a part of her, The Dark of the June, that
stains her life and is the unfinished “and –“ reason for her departure and
disincarnation from life, though later she mentions Casanova and the red and
gold tears of Freya are for a lover who is always gone in Or.  Thag wishes to be killed here so that he can
escape elsewhere or elsewhen, but Nailer decides to trap him instead in this
fairy tale. 
In “From the Notebook of Dr. Stein”, it is speculated that
“He may be a creature from a different sphere, or a spiritual survivor of a
prehuman race” and he exhibits bat like movements, but he doesn’t seem large or
menacing enough to be the Midguard Serpent – the Christian one seems more
appropriate, though something is still missing there.
While in 1935 it is clear Dr. Stein believes that the
problem might be internal to Donna, it seems to me that this is a conceivable solution
for Thag’s presence – a girl’s shattered psyche … but not this girl’s. The
problem is in June’s grief: seeking to escape life, this thing leading her,
echoing the scarlet and gold tears of Freya, might indeed be a part of her
instead of Donna.  Why  has June latched onto this thing, that
reaches into the past to feed off of agitated energy states?
THE DARK OF THE MOON:  Astrology and the Moon are associated with the triple goddess, mother,
maiden, and crone.  The relationship
between Frigg and Freyja, Aesir and Vanir, is interesting in that they are
counterparts but it isn’t clear if they are one and the same or distinct deities,
so they may make up a component of the triple goddess.  The dark of the moon symbolizes its absence
from the night sky, death before renewal.  For though the text insists that escaping nature frees them from death
and age, eventually they simply reach that “zero” energy level.  
Molly Hall’s essay “The Dark Moon” identifies this time as “Also
known as the "dead" Moon, this is the time when there is no solar
reflection, leaving the lunar face in darkness. The dark lasts about three days
before the new crescent appears.” 
She also states, “The dark of the Moon is the most powerful
time psychically” and represents extreme introspection. This is also related to
the monthly cycle of a woman in menstruation, and it is no coincidence that the
females in Harry Nailer’s life are named after successive months: May and June. 
Grief and death and cyclical renewal are implied in the dark
moon phase.  
As Hall writes, “In our own lives, there's a dark Moon phase
toward the end as we prepare to enter the mystery of death. . a separate plane
where the dead and almost born are together …The Moon is associated with women,
and many Goddesses like Hecate, Kali, Lilith, represent her dark aspect. The
dark Moon reminds us of nature's cycles of death and rebirth. The grave and the
womb become the same place, a transition when you're held in the mystery beyond
physical existence.”
The triple nature of Hecate and the presence of Freya and
Frigg in our story summon up that moon imagery as well, but one female is
missing – maiden, mother, and crone … which one? June does seem to be the
maiden to some degree.
MYTH, FICTION, AND HUMANITY:
While these four interlocked stories do seem to take a
slightly different approach to genre, with one being a sad memoir of loss, one
a physician’s journal, and the last a fairy tale, I think that the overall
theme is metafictional: that outside of nature, the immortality of men and
women is found in memory and in stories, whether they be mythic or realistic,
but that in that form, identity becomes malleable, such that a character like
Harry Nailer can be created with Odin like features, knowing that Odin might
very well be based on the features of a real man somewhere in history, such
that these stories echo.  I do think that
the bounce referenced as potential vs. kinetic energy like a ball descending to
a lower energy state is “really” about relevance and obscurity in memory –
stories that are read, that have greater presence, take longer to be forgotten
and can impact the world of the living.  Living things change, the written word is more or less immutable … thus
“The Death of Hyle” – matter, change, and wood – when it is killed, that wood
might very well be used to print things, even to print the newspaper that
inspired Harry Nailer’s immutable room.
Nailer describes his eyes as enchained by Maya, and
specifically gives a time frame of four thousand years for this illusory
understanding of reality on the part of humanity. Maya at one time meant wisdom
and extraordinary power, but “the word came to mean illusion, fraud, deception,
witchcraft, sorcery and magic.”  I really
want to spend a fair amount of time on Nailer’s description of his world after
he leaves nature: “I am tempted by the rooted course of our language to say
that I had the feeling then that the room around me, tole box, pencil, the
brass inkstand with its devil face, desk chairs, books, walls, my bronze bust
of Hogarth, had become unreal as the angel faces seen in the clouds. … I knew
that I had lived my life among the shadow of shadows, that I had worked for
money as I might have labored for fernseed, and spent my gains for the
watermarks on paper, paper in a picture, the picture in a book seen lying open
in a projection from a lens about to crack in an empty room of a vacant house.”
Here we have representations of devils and angels that are
ultimately just as real (or false) as the world of Harry Nailer, and his entire
world here becomes overtly PAPER - and all his life written on that
canvas.  This brings us back to the
title: “The Death of Hyle” – all that matter, written on dead wood and
artificial in nature.  He claims that
objective reality is just a fiction, “the creature of the very radiation by
which we gauge it”
THE TREES: There is something odd about the trees in this
one, too: “I ducked and ran, lost at once until I met a tall, self contained
personage who was a tree, though I did not realize it until I had been with him
for some time.”  After his little
disincarnation, “When I was coming up my own front walk … the whole world began
to rise, pivoting (I think) on Madagascr so that I fell off the surface and was
caught for a moment in the green arms of a neighbor’s tree, and then, falling
through them like rain, but upward, tumbled sidewise into the sky.”  I do feel like this mystical association
between hyle, wood, and paper as the fabric of reality is the dominant motif of
the stories.  In the fairy tale, Thag
allowed Eric’s father to make “the trees to dance down the high road, and built
a great hall of glass on Nine Men’s Meadow through whose dome the stars could
be seen by daylight, and forced certain rich men in the town to disgorge a part
of what they had won by law”.
UNANSWERED QUESTIONS: Is there something a bit … unnatural
about the relationship between Harry Nailer and his daughter June?  There is the scene where he imagines the girl
on the beltway, “he imagined himself escorting a much younger woman into a restaurant
– they would be father and daughter until the other diners saw their hands
clasped beneath the table”. Is this the reason their relationship seems a bit
strained?  What did he expect of her, and
why is she so broken? Sexual abuse? 
Why is Madagascar the pivot point?  Does it have something to do with its large
percentage of unique life, isolated from other natural creatures?
Is there a relationship between the 30 years Thag spends in
the realm of Charles the Wise during which Eric doesn’t age and the 30 year age
limit on those subjected to the nin treatment?   Is there any importance to the statement “we, every one of us, feel
crushed beneath the dictum that one thousand less nine hundred thirty is
seventy, and tortured by the implacable commandment to destroy the thing we
love, while the solid fact (as we call it) that Madagascar is off the eastern
coast of Africa affects us not at all.” 9 is important to the Norse mythology,
and 30 the duration of time Thag stays in the past before he finds him, and the
arbitrary age limit of those who can discorporate – why subtract 930 from
1000?  Has he destroyed the thing he
loves in June and May?
What does Laurel mean when she says that June is broken and
that Harry has “brought the wrong fragment?” 
CONNECTION WITH OTHER WORKS: Wolfe’s rather dystopian “close
to realistic stories” of the early 70s resonate strongly with this one,
especially those that involve radical clothing styles with excessively exposed
flesh such as “Remembrance to Come”.  While I am less confident in ascribing this cycle of stories to the
timeline of “Blue Mouse”, “Silhouette”, “Remembrance to Come”, “Sonya, Crane
Wessleman, and Kitty”, “Paul’s Treehouse”, and “Operation Ares”, I still feel
that there is some relationship between many of these stories that is more than
thematic (the phonetic voisriit technology mentioned in “Blue Mouse” and
“Sillhouette”, for example, or the riots from “Paul’s Treehouse” possibly
having a more overt description of who was actually rioting in Operation Ares).  The need to become other than we are is
reflected from the other side in “The Hero as Werwolf”.
Despite the ambiguity in Fifth
Head of Cerberus or the ending of “The HORRARS of War”, both of which I
found to be ultimately “scrutable” through the application of symbolic
meanings, this work seems to hang much more ambiguously between metafiction and
realistic science fiction, when the text seems to be saying that ALL reality is
text, that mythic characters are based on real ones, and real ones based on
mythic ones, and that immortality might involve fleeing into a subjective text
or tale … and that reality itself might be just one of those tales from a
perception beyond our own.
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