They’re looking at the name on a portrait in an old book, and she wonders to herself, who was he?
“Who
was he, who was he? Did he labour under the whip of his father, or was
he treated with gentleness and respect? Names, names, all passed away,
forgotten, mere birdsong in the bushes of things.”
What
an image to characterize the ephemeral existence of a human being -
"mere birdsong in the bushes of things." Such word magic caused me to
sit up in bed and wonder in awe - both at the meaning of the image and
at the mind of the writer.
Roseanne McNulty lives in an Irish asylum. She thinks she may be 100. Sebastian Barry's
The Secret Scripture
paints her portrait using peripheral vision, with shadows and
reflections, with the movement of curtains in the wind, with the ripples
on the water.
Barry sees Roseanne and the people
around her in ultra slow motion capturing the signals, invisible to most
people observing at normal speeds, that, like pieces of bone to
archeologists, reveal their souls. It’s so slow. So powerful. So
unlike the superficial flash we’re used to.
Writing, through the eyes of Roseanne, about Dr. Greene, who looks after the patients in the asylum . . .
Then
he sat there in his own version of silence for a long while. He sat so
long he was almost an inmate of the room! As if he lived there
himself, as if he had nowhere to go to, nothing to do, no one to
attend.
He sat in the chill light. The river,
drowned in its own water, and drowned a second time in the rains of
February, was not in a position to throw its light. The window-glass
was severely itself. Only the still grass of winter lent it a slight
besmirch of green. His eyes, now much clearer somehow and more distinct
without the beard, were looking forwards as if at an object about a
yard away, that stare that faces have in portraits. I sat on the
bed and without the slightest embarrassment watched him, because he
wasn’t watching me at all. He was looking into that strange place, the middle distance, the most mysterious, human, and rich of all distances. And from his eyes came slowly tears, immaculate human tears, before the world touches them. River, window and eyes.
Wow! "
[T]hat stare that faces have in portraits." "[
T]he most mysterious, human, and rich of all distances." Barry sees the invisible. How much of life am I missing?
Over
and over again he daubs images onto the page and I think, where did
that come from and what’s it doing here? And then he pulls it all
together - “River, window and eyes.”
Here's another one. Roseanne reflects about her husband who fished for salmon.
Most
of the time, he stood by the lake, watching the dark waters. If he saw
a salmon jumping, he went home. If you see a salmon, you will never
catch one that day. But the art of not seeing a salmon is very dark
too, you must stare and stare at the known sections where salmon are
sometimes got, and imagine them down there, feel them there, sense them
with some seventh sense. My husband Tom fished for ten years for salmon
in that way. As a matter of record he never caught a salmon. So if
you saw a salmon it seems you would not catch one, and if you did not
see a salmon you would not catch one. So how would you catch one? By
some third mystery of luck and instinct, that Tom did not have.
Dark
waters. Barry paints with dark waters. With "some third mystery of
luck and instinct." Where is this going, I’m thinking, and then I read
on:
But that was how Dr. Greene struck
me today, as he sat in silence in my little quarters, his neat form
stretched out on the chair, saying nothing, not exactly watching me with
his eyes, but watching me with his luck and instincts, like a fisherman
beside dark water.
Oh, yes, like a salmon I felt,
right enough, and stilled myself in the deep water, very conscious of
him, and his rod, and his fly, and his hook.
The
patient's view of the doctor! It’s with these tiny brush strokes that
Barry paints his portraits. I’m not reading a book as much as watching a
painter starting with a blank canvas. He mixes his paints, he draws
some lines on the canvas. Slowly daubs marks here and there. Slowly,
slowly the thin pencil lines gain dark color and richness and the souls
of people are revealed.
This isn’t a book for
everybody. It's too slow. We aren't use to paying painfully slow
attention to amorphous signs. To looking without looking. I’d once
recommended
Yasunari Kawabata’s Snow Country
to a good friend. He couldn’t finish the short novel. His verdict,
“Nothing happens.” It’s inside that nothing that everything happens.
The same in
The Secret Scriptures.