Mason & Dixon
by Thomas Pynchon
Surveyors of the Enlightenment
A review by Rick Moody
[Ed. note: This review was originally published in the Atlantic Monthly, July 1997.]
The novelist Robert Coover, speaking of influences in American fiction, once remarked that apprentices of his generation found themselves (in the 1950s) grappling with two very different models of what the novel might be. One, Coover said, was Saul Bellow's realistic if
picaresque Adventures of Augie March; the other was William Gaddis's encyclopedic Recognitions. Writers my age (mid-thirties), however, don't have the luxury of a choice. Our problem is how to confront the influence of a single novelist: Thomas Pynchon.
Despite the reputation of Pynchon's magnum opus, Gravity's Rainbow
(1973), many of my contemporaries came to him through his earlier work. His
first novel, V.(1963), is mostly concerned with the search by one
Herbert Stencil for a woman -- or place, or concept -- referred
to in his father's journals simply by this initial. The action of the
novel -- which also takes up Stencil's father, a network of European
spies, and a Whole Sick Crew of American Navy wastrels -- goes as far
afield as turn-of-the-century Egypt, southwest Africa during the First
World War, and Malta after the Second World War, dealing along the way with
contemporary Americana up and down the Eastern Seaboard. V. is ripe
with the kind of dense, symbolic imagery we associate with poets --
with T. S. Eliot and Wallace Stevens (Gravity's Rainbow likewise
caroms off Rilke and Dickinson) -- and with the loose, improvisatory
language of beat writing. It is by turns hilarious, slow, and utterly
mesmerizing.
Portions of V. cannibalize the author's student work, particularly the two stories "Low-lands" and "Under the Rose." (Pynchon's later novel Vineland, published in 1990, opens dramatically -- with a character leaping through a storefront window -- in an image lifted from V.:
"Here [was] one potential berserk studying the best technique
for jumping through a plate glass window.") Repetitions haunt the entire
oeuvre, so much so that Pynchon's work seems to exhibit a sort of
"conceptual continuity," as the
composer Frank Zappa named it, wherein each work builds on thematic and formal
innovations -- and even the raw material -- of prior efforts.
Another example: The Crying of Lot 49 (1966), Pynchon's masterpiece in
miniature, like V. takes as its form a search. In Lot 49 the
quester is a woman with the unlikely name of Oedipa Maas, who, engaged as
executrix for the estate of Pierce Inverarity, a Hearst-like tycoon,
inadvertently begins to uncover an international postal conspiracy dating back
to Europe in the Middle Ages. Like V., Oedipa's story is rich with
symbolism and leitmotif, in an armature often having to do with an idea
practically trademarked by Pynchon: entropy, or the tendency of closed energy
systems to move toward disorder. Again this is a borrowing from an early story
by the author ("Entropy"); and it is reprised, in Gravity's Rainbow.
Whereas Pynchon's early novels are accessible, or at least crystalline enough
to permit readers to follow them to their ambiguous conclusions, Gravity's
Rainbow confounds readerly expectations utterly. The surrealism -- the
eruptions of odd, unforeseeable events and voices; the doublings, triplings,
halvings, and quarterings of characters; the chance procedures -- that
occasionally colors prior novels emerges in GR as the dominant strategy.
Pynchon's controlled third-person-limited point of view in Lot 49
becomes the fractal omniscience of GR. Primarily the narrative of
Tyrone Slothrop, a GI in London during the Second World War who has the ability
to predict imminent German bombing trajectories by erection, GR deals
tangentially with hundreds of other important characters, with Russians,
Germans, Africans, and Central Asians, and with settings such as Colonial
America, turn-of-the-century Africa, and the United States of the early
seventies before it dispatches Slothrop entirely, casting his fragmentary
consciousness around the remainder of the book. (He fails to appear
recognizably in the last fifty pages.)
What accounts for the perpetual hold Gravity's Rainbow has on the
consciousness of American writers and critics? What accounts for the myth that
has sprung up around it -- a myth that seems to have ensnared even the
facts of the author's life, or, at least, our idea of those facts? What
makes GR so crucial to the voyage of younger American writers? I'd
contend that it's Pynchon's style, not his subject. Whereas the prose in
V., Lot 49, and the early stories is occasionally inventive
and arrestingly lyrical ("For it was now like walking among matrices of a
great digital computer, the zeroes and ones twinned above, hanging like
balanced mobiles right and left, ahead, thick, maybe endless. Behind the
hieroglyphic streets there would either be a transcendent meaning, or only
the earth"), in GR it is more than dazzling -- it's uncanny. It
discards the usual limits on English and American prose. In fact, the
writing -- notwithstanding the physics and hard science in a novel
often fascinated with the intricacies of ordnance technologies --
seems to me the point of GR, its motivating force, especially as
this language elucidates Pynchon's febrile imagination. Take, for example,
the stunning opening page, with its nightmarish evocation of the London
Blitz.
They have begun to move. They pass in line, out of the main
station, out of downtown, and begin pushing into older and more desolate
parts of the city. Is this the way out? Faces turn to the windows, but no
one dares ask, not out loud. Rain comes down. No, this is not a
disentanglement from, but a progressive knotting into -- they
go in under archways, secret entrances of rotted concrete that only looked
like loops of an underpass ... and it is poorer the deeper they
go ... ruinous secret cities of poor, places whose names he has
never heard.
American research libraries swell with monographs interpreting Gravity's
Rainbow, and many of these monographs are taken up with the arcana of the
novel -- the physics, the statistics, the theory, the citations (of
Max Weber, of Gioacchino Rossini, of Pavlov). But if GR were merely
literature of ideas (in the limited sense that Nabokov so often decried),
we would think no more of this work than we do of Philip K. Dick's engaging
science fictions. Pynchon's accomplishment is that he has found the perfect
marriage of form and language for his rendering of Western
consciousness.
The Reagan-Bush years saw Pynchon's output dwindle. Other than the introduction
to his volume of apprentice stories, Slow Learner(1984), Pynchon
published nothing new during the eighties. However, his next novel,
Vineland, an anti-canonical comic romp, is set during that time of
substance abuse and leveraged buyouts. Largely dismissed by tenured Pynchonians
when it was first published, Vineland now seems to have been underrated.
Its narrative -- of the California student movements in the sixties,
and of Frenesi Gates, a student filmmaker turned FBI informant and
delinquent hippie mom -- is both funny ("The secret to Spinach
Casserole was the UBI, or Universal Binding Ingredient, cream of mushroom
soup") and sympathetic in ways that are rare in the Pynchon canon. Its
language, rather than its science and philosophy, is uppermost in the mind
of the reader (though there are of course passages of Pynchonian erudition,
as in the material on union organizing during the thirties), and this
language is controlled -- without the occasional awkwardnesses of the
early work -- and engaging.
Which brings us to Mason & Dixon. If you
accept the rumor-mongering on the World Wide Web and elsewhere, the author
has been at work on this particular monster for more than a decade. This is
easy to believe. At nearly 800 pages, Mason & Dixon is obviously
meant to quash the idea that Gravity's Rainbow was some sort of
fantastic lucky break. It is self-consciously intent on dealing with
American literature on the most ambitious scale imaginable. And it succeeds
magnificently.
The first electrifying difference about M&D is the astonishing voice
of its narration. Pynchon has elected to write his new novel in an
eighteenth-century English idiom. To say this is risky is to understate, and
yet the voice here is not only elegiac and credible but also powerfully moving
and unexpected, especially given the very contemporary language of the Pynchon
novels that have preceded it.
Eighteenth-century prose is the style because this is a historical novel about
the famous surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon -- mappers of
the border between Pennsylvania and Maryland that also made up part of the
dividing line between slave states and free states before the Civil War,
and globetrotters on a variety of scientific adventures in the later 1700s.
More than simply a period voice telling a tall tale of these two
anti-heroes, however, the narration is largely the first-person voice of a
singular character, the Reverend Wicks Cherrycoke, who tells most of the
story of M&D after dinner, for the entertainment of his family.
Thus we have an oral narrative, like Conrad's Heart of
Darkness -- the first such in Pynchon's output, and a form that
recalls an earlier time in the development of the novel. (As far as
conceptual continuity is concerned, the Reverend Cherrycoke seems to be
related to a minor character from GR, a psychic called Ronald
Cherrycoke -- and this perhaps accounts for the Reverend's ability to
relate events at which he was not present.)
The action of Mason & Dixon is refreshingly linear, compared with
the complexity of Pynchon's earlier work. Since it's shaped by the needs of
Cherrycoke's folktale (he was a member of two Mason and Dixon expeditions and
bases his yarn on inside knowledge), it provides many of the elements of a good
story: romance, Indian attack, and so forth. The tale opens with Mason and
Dixon meeting in about 1760 to embark, at the behest of the British Royal
Society, on a journey to the Southern Hemisphere to observe the Transit of
Venus -- the passage of that planet across the sun. Just as they set
sail from England, however, they are attacked by a French frigate and
several of the crew members are killed. This episode, which comes only
thirty pages into the book, sets the tone for the story to follow --
Action! Incident! Naval battle! I want to be clear on this point: Mason
& Dixon is a page-turner.
After beseeching the Royal Society to allow them to abandon their sea passage
(the society responds by threatening them with legal action), the pair proceed
to Cape Town, South Africa, to observe the Transit, in a portion of the book's
opening section ("Latitudes and Departures") that is luminously rendered,
replete with the slave culture of the Dutch colonies in South Africa and
liaisons between the astronomers -- Dixon, whose sunny romantic nature
is in stark contrast to the gothic-melancholic Mason, is elsewhere more
often the culprit, but here Mason gets into the act -- and various women of the
Cape. After the Transit, Mason sails for St. Helena, in the south Atlantic,
to take further observations with a Royal Society chronometer. "Latitudes
and Departures" winds down with Mason and Dixon back in England, in
disquisition mainly upon family history and British calendar reform.
In accepting a commission to survey the border between Pennsylvania and
Maryland, Mason, the expedition's leader, retreats from the hard science of the
Transit of Venus (a retreat made more poignant by his failure to be elected to
the Royal Society), and the book returns to the virtuosic patch of analytic and
geophysical writing that colors the first 250 pages (though an abundance of
detail and arcana remains for hard-core Pynchon decoders), such that the
section called "America" begins to indulge in the metaphysical, moral, and
political struggles of the New World. For example, Mason and Dixon land first
in Philadelphia, and Benjamin Franklin is among their initial acquaintances:
"The Geometers have encounter'd the eminent Philadelphian quite by chance, in
the pungent and dim back reaches of an Apothecary in Locust-Street" (wherein
Dixon is about to buy a wagonload of laudanum for their journey). Franklin is
of course given to quips: "'Strangers, heed my wise advice, -- Never
pay the Retail Price.'" Not long after, George Washington is their host in
Virginia: "If the Colonel serves not as a Focus of Sobriety, neither is he
quite the incompetent Fool depicted in the London press."
Pynchon's preoccupation with conspiracy is well
documented. It haunts all the books, from Lot 49, with its
postal conspiracy, to Vineland, with its FBI infiltration of the
student movement, and it gets ample play in Mason & Dixon as
well. Initially, during the Transit of Venus expedition, the conspiracy
resides in the East India Company, in whose pocket (by relation) Mason
finds Nevil Maskelyne, the future Astronomer Royal, who perhaps thwarts
Mason's election to the Royal Society. On the shores of America the
surveyors find a sinister new force at work: the Jesuits. Yep, the Society
of Jesus, which invented its own "Telegraph," tried to wipe out the Chinese
practice of feng shui, founded a libertine community of nuns in
Quebec called the Widows of Christ, and bankrolled a group of "Jesuits on
horseback, in black riding-Habits with divided Skirts," who patrol the
streets of Canada reinforcing doctrine, decorated in their fiendish
insignia: an upside-down five-pointed star.
Against this backdrop of conspiracies political and religious, Mason and Dixon
retreat into the wilderness, into a kind of folkloric and parabolic warp, among
a coterie of axmen and Indian guides and Presbyterian assistants. They move
first south and then west, surveying the boundary line and its tangents, and as
they go, the Enlightenment replaces the Gothic and Renaissance wisdom of
Western culture, with Mason and Dixon moving in and through and around the
Enlightenment's articulations. As Cherrycoke puts it,
As God has receded, as Deism has crept in to make the best of
this progressive Absence, more and more do we witness extreme varieties of
human character emergent ... Illuminati, Freemasons, Elect Cohens,
many of whom, to my great curiosity, have found their way into
Pennsylvania.
This is the America that Mason and Dixon voyage into, and it is where they
encounter, among others, the Redzingerites, whose "view of Baptism does not,
need I say, stop at Total Immersion"; and, during winter layovers in New York,
the Sons of Liberty, bent on overthrowing the British oppressors; and the
Sadean inhabitants of Lepton Castle; and Professor Voam and his pet electric
eel; and Armand Allegre, France's greatest living chef, who has come to
the Colonies to try to escape the amorous attentions of a "mechanickal Duck"
created by the immortal French scientist Jacques de Vaucanson; and Zepho Beck,
who metamorphoses during the full moon into a giant beaver; and Captain Zhang,
a feng shui master and refugee from the Jesuit conspiracy; and
perpetrators of Indian massacre (in Lancaster, Pennsylvania) and rebellion and
backwoods barbarism. Along the way there is of course the work to do, in which
chain lengths are extended, sometimes through the middle of properties, on one
occasion right through a house (with the inhabitants arguing over which state
to reside in), and trees are felled, and a broad swath of civilized clearing is
extended into the pristine continent.
If the action sounds picaresque, that's because it is. The 450 middle pages of
Mason & Dixon most resemble the great picaresque novels of Fielding
or the metaphysical comedy of Voltaire's Candide. What makes M&D
modern (besides uncanny similarities between the Enlightenment and the
millennium, besides sly references to contemporary culture -- to dope
smoking, to popular music: "'Is it not the very Rhythm of the Engines,
... the Rock of the Oceans, the Roll of the drums in the Night'") is
the tremendous intellection spun into its episodic action: Charles Mason's
ambition (which is matched only by Dixon's refusal to be ambitious at all,
except in womanizing, drinking, and fishing) is to understand the invisible
forces behind the physical laws that make up his work during the
Enlightenment. Like
Vineland, in which scarcely a character escapes without being described
as a ghost, and like GR, with its cast of revenants, Mason &
Dixon dwells frequently on what is hidden. At times this absence seems to
refer to the astrophysics of the twentieth century ("'Time is the Space that
may not be seen'") -- out of reach for Mason and Dixon, and yet
implied in their endeavors; at times it refers to the divine ("Surely, at
the end of the day, we serve no master but Him that regulates the movements
of the Heav'ns, which taken together form a cryptick Message," Mason says),
and therefore to the degraded aspect of deism during the Enlightenment. At
times what's hidden in M&D is the hibernating bear of
Colonial politics ("Does
Britannia, when she sleeps, dream? Is America her dream? -- in which
all that cannot pass in the metropolitan Wakefulness is allow'd Expression
away in the restless Slumber of these Provinces, and on West-ward, wherever
'tis not yet mapp'd, nor written down, nor ever, by the majority of
Mankind, seen").
Whatever the identity of this hidden force, it leaves its mark on the book, and
on us, in an M&D refrain: "As above, so below."
Mason and Dixon complete their line in 1767, and spend much of the following
year surveying a degree of latitude also contracted to them by the Royal
Society. The novel provides two separate and completely opposed endings to this
section of the book. In the first ending the surveyors are unable to cross the
Native American Warrior Path, west of the Alleghenies (the path is patrolled by
the violent Delaware and Shawnee tribes), and so turn back toward civilization.
In the second (false) ending they continue for a while west, into the dusk,
into the herds of buffalo, into the prairie, away from the civilization of the
Enlightenment. This ending is an example of the kind of dream logic that
overtakes the book in the wilderness (in this regard Cherrycoke frequently
likens his tale to the works of the great Baron Munchausen); in truth the
surveyors return to England after completing their assignment. Mason undertakes
a second and final observation of the Transit of Venus in 1769 (the closing
section of the book is called "Last Transit"), this time from northern Ireland,
while Dixon makes observations from an island near the North Cape.
Toward the end the surveyors' remorse about the Mason-Dixon Line emerges: it
was not a fitting monument to their careers, it was piecework for a corrupt
organization (the Royal Society), it denuded a wilderness that should not have
been denuded, it created a division between communities which would only come
to cause harm. "Mason groans. 'Shall wise Doctors one day write History's
assessment of the Good resulting from this Line, vis-a-vis the
not-so-good? I wonder which List will be longer.'"
Then time runs out. Dixon's gout disables him. Mason's melancholy takes on a
desperate and irremediable hue. The last thirty pages of Mason & Dixon
concern the indefinite state of this twinned pair, of this fractious
marriage, in twilight years. These pages are evocative and terribly sad.
Mortality has often been Pynchon's theme. As M&D concludes with
Mason's deluded insistence (after Dixon's death) upon taking his second wife
and family back to America, it becomes clear that the novel's attention to the
mechanisms and technologies of time and space finds its most poignant
articulation in the simple inevitability of death and decay. Pynchon seems to
have learned even more about these subjects as he has gotten older. It's hard
not to read of Mason's passing, and of his son's rhapsodic but sadly ironic
depiction of an American continent in which "the Fish jump into your Arms,"
without being both moved and remorseful about the dwindling promise of our
American enterprise -- which dwindling, in Mason & Dixon,
begins at the outset of the forcible colonization of our continent, at the
very moment we survey this land.
This is just the kind of truth that we often encounter in Pynchon: not simply
what it means, finally, to be American -- kith and kin of slaveholders and
abolitionists, racists and liberals, the powerful and the powerless, the
dispossessed and the rapacious, the oppressed and the oppressors --
but that the boundary lines that have been surveyed to separate our
American dichotomies, the boundaries of rhetoric and philosophy, are
arbitrary, tentative, unwritten in human nature. Pynchon's chthonic,
powerfully symbolic language in M&D gets us beneath the rhetoric
of our pretensions to the raw, unconsoling paradoxes of
consciousness -- with all fancies and hallucinations and regrets
intact. And that's why artists as diverse as William Gibson, Don DeLillo,
Laurie Anderson, Steve Erickson, David Foster Wallace, James Cameron,
Jonathan Franzen, and Salman Rushdie seem to have schooled themselves in
the Pynchon academy of myth and language. With Mason & Dixon
we're again in the generous hands of one of American literature's true
masters.
Rick Moody's most recent work is Right Livelihoods, which will be released in trade paper next month.
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