DINNER
ALONG THE
AMAZON
Timothy Findley
First published by
Penguin Canada
1984
The sound of screen doors banging, evening lamplight; Colt revolvers hidden in bureau drawers and a chair that is always falling over.
These are the sounds and images that illuminate this brilliant collection of twelve short stories from one of Canada’s finest writers.
The stories range from the powerful, haunting Lemonade, where a young boy’s world is shattered by his mother’s self destruction, to the title story, an unusual journey into the complexities of modern relationships, written especially for this collection.
“Thanks to this volume, some of the best of Findley’s stories are now spread glitteringly before us. His accomplishments in this exacting art are as proportionately large as his novels, as solid as they are brilliant”
—Toronto Star
“Each of its stories reveals the passionate intelligence of a major artist…Dinner Along the Amazon displays a rare gentleness in Findley’s chronicles of suffering. He portrays guilt and misery with such luminous understanding that even his most disturbing stories rarely seem depressing.”
—Macleans
“…in this astounding Dinner Along the Amazon, Timothy Findley restores an almost forgotten power to the art of fiction: the creation of a deep, coherent world in which we see our own.”
—Books in Cancan
DINNER ALONG THE AMAZON
Timothy Findley was born in Toronto and now lives in the country nearby. His novel, The Wars, was a winner of the Governor-General’s Award and a winner of the City of Toronto Book Award, establishing him as one of Canada’s leading writers. The book was acclaimed throughout the English-speaking world and has already appeared in eight translated editions. Findley wrote the screenplay for the film, The Wars, directed by Robin Phillips. Famous Last Words, his bestselling novel of gripping international intrigue, was published in 1981 to rave reviews, and in 1983 Penguin reissued The Last of the Crazy People, his brilliant first novel.
For Marian Engel
We will sit in a circle longing for the lights of Moscow. We will bite each other’s fingers, to see the blood. We will continue to clean our houses. We will make artifacts.
And the morning will come, and so will the night again. Won’t it?
The Honeyman Festival
Marian Engel
“Not that the story need be long, but it will take a long while to make it short.”
—Henry David Thoreau
Acknowledgements
“Lemonade” first appeared in Exile, in a slightly different form and titled “Harper’s Bazaar.”
“War” was read on CBC’s “Anthology.”
“About Effie” first appeared in The Tamarack Review, Autumn, 1956.
“Sometime - Later - Not Now” first appeared in The New Orleans Review, 1972.
“What Mrs Felton Knew” first appeared in Cavalier, April, 1970, under the title “E.R.A.”
“The People on the Shore” was read on CBC’s “Anthology.”
“Hello Cheeverland, Goodbye” first appeared in The Tamarack Review, November, 1974, in a somewhat different form.
“Losers, Finders, Strangers at the Door” first appeared in 75: New Canadian Stories, 1975, Oberon Press.
“The Book of Pins” first appeared in 74: New Canadian Stories, 1974, Oberon Press.
“Daybreak at Pisa” first appeared in The Tamarack Review, Winter, 1982.
“Out of the Silence” first appeared in Ethos, Summer, 1983.
Contents
Introduction
Lemonade
War
About Effie
Sometime—Later—Not Now
What Mrs. Felton Knew
The People on the Shore
Hello Cheeverland, Goodbye
Losers, Finders, Strangers at the Door
The Book of Pins
Daybreak at Pisa
Out of the Silence
Dinner Along the Amazon
Introduction
It came as something of a shock, when gathering these stories for collective publication, to discover that for over thirty years of writing my attention has turned again and again to the same unvarying gamut of sounds and images. They not only turn up here in this present book, but in my novels, too. I wish I hadn’t noticed this. In fact, it became an embarrassment and I began to wonder if I should file A CATALOGUE OF PERSONAL OBSESSIONS. The sound of screen doors banging; evening lamplight; music held at a distance—always being played on a gramophone; letters written on blue-tinted note paper; robins making forays onto summer lawns to murder worms; photographs in cardboard boxes; Colt revolvers hidden in bureau drawers and a chair that is always falling over. What does it mean? Does it mean that here is a writer who is hopelessly uninventive? Appallingly repetitive? Why are the roads always dusty in this man’s work—why is it always so hot—why can’t it RAIN? And my agent was once heard to moan aloud as she was reading through the pages of a television script I had just delivered: “Oh God, Findley—not more rabbits!”
Well. Yes…
More rabbits; more dusty roads. I’m sorry, but I can’t help it. I seem to be stuck with these obsessions and perhaps they simply go hand in hand with those other obsessions all writers have: the kinds of men and women they write about; the way they bring their people together and tear them apart; what sort of names they give their characters and whether they give them cats or dogs to live with. Or rabbits. More than likely, it is these obsessions which signal, as much as anything else, whose world you are in. In the world of Alice Munro, for instance, there tend to be a number of visiting aunts or aunts in residence or aunts “we’re just going to drop by and see.” In Chekhov’s gallery there are all those wonderful portraits of the doctor who fails his calling and who makes a profession of disillusionment. In Maugham, there is always Maugham—the perfect narrator, hovering at the story’s edges but never in the story’s way, (obsessed with being there—and nothing more). In Cheever there is always infidelity, which is always futile, always sad—always a part of the growing up process, the inevitable discovery that youth is not a gift for life. And yet, we never tire of Munrovian aunts, Chekhovian doctors, Maughamish Maughams or of Cheever’s wistful losers. Why? It strikes me the answer must be that we never tire of them precisely because the writer never tires of them, but finds them always freshly seething with possibilities whenever another aunt, another doctor or another man in love with his neighbour’s wife hoves into view.
When you come right down to it, the pursuit of an obsession through the act of writing is not so much a question of repetition as it is of regeneration. Each of Chekhov’s doctors begets another, whose tics may be reminiscent of his forebear, but whose person and condition are quite, quite different. And the regeneration surely is a sign, a signal that something remains to be done with this person, that the writer instinctively recognizes everything hasn’t been said about him: all the questions have not been put, including the most important question of all: why am I obsessed with you? One day this question—all the questions—may be answered and when this happens, the character disappears. No more disillusioned doctors. This is What happened with Chekhov. All those doctors in his stories—and in every full length play but one—his last, The Cherry Orchard. This suggests there may be hope—that all your obsessions do not track you to the grave.
On the other hand, writers are never through with the world they see and hear. Even in the silence of a darkened room, they see it and they hear it, because it is a world inside their heads, which is the “real” world they write about. Of course, this interio
r world is fed by the world we all share—the one we all move around in every day of our lives. But the writer tends to feed it selectively—a little of this, a little of that; none of some things and a lot of others. This process of feeding the world inside your head goes on from the moment you are first aware there are not only things to see and things to touch and things to hear—but also things to record. Don’t ask why. There isn’t any reason. It is simply something required of a person, the way you are required to go to bed at night and get up in the morning. Your body—or something in your body demands it: an obsession like any other.
The stories in this book are arranged chronologically, by decades. “Lemonade” (which was published as “Harper’s Bazaar”) got started in a flat which I shared with the actor, Alec McCowen, and was completed in an old hotel where I shared rooms with an actress, Sheila Keddy. Later, it was altered and finalized on the dining room table in the home of my agents, Stanley and Nancy Colbert. I don’t know how it has any unity at all, since my flat with Alec was in London, England and the old hotel where I lived with Sheila was in Washington, D.C. and the Colberts’ dining room table was in Hollywood, California. Needless to say, I was glad when I finally settled down.
Some of these stories, or incidents within them, are drawn from real life—either my own or the lives of others. This has no real importance, it seems to me, since all of the people would fail to recognize themselves—even Ezra and Dorothy Pound or Tom and Vivienne Eliot, who appear towards the end of the book. It was simply that something about them—about these real people—something overheard or spotted from the corner of my eye, caught at my attention and worried me until I had it on the page. The Eliot story is the best example of this. It is fairly safe to say that no such confrontation as the one depicted in “Out of the Silence” ever took place—and if it did, it more than likely only took place in Vivienne Eliot’s mind. What caught me—the thing with which I became obsessed—was the thought that two people could live together for so long, endure the same history and the same painful experience of marriage, and yet the same history and experience could produce madness in one of them and poetry in the other. It was also intriguing to me that Eliot had put so much of Vivienne into that poetry—that he had even put her there before he met her, before he knew her and married her. It was as if he had willed a fictional lady with whom he was obsessed to come all the way into real life. And what could that mean…?
This provides the perfect place for me to invite you into this book, and into the world with which I have been obsessed for so long.
Lemonade
For Ruth Gordon
Every morning at seven o’clock Harper Dewey turned over and woke up. And every morning he would lie in his tumbled bed (for he slept without repose even at the age of eight) until it was seven-thirty, thinking his way back into his dreams, which were always of his father. At seven-thirty he would get out of bed and cross to his window where he would stand for a moment watching his dreams fade in the sunlight until there was nothing in the garden save the lilac and the high board fence.
And the birds.
Robins and starlings and sparrows flowed over the smooth lawn in great droves, turning it into the likeness of a marketplace; and the raucous babble of their bargaining (of dealings in worms and beetles and flies) poured itself, like something distilled or dehydrated, from the jar of darkness into the morning air, which made it swell and burst. This enormous shout of birds at morning was always a delight to Harper Dewey.
Presently, over this sound, there would burst the first indication of an awakening household: Bertha Millroy’s hymn.
Bertha Millroy was the maid—and a day, to Bertha, wasn’t a day at all unless it began with a hymn and ended with a prayer.
She lived—Bertha—in the attic, in a small room directly above Harper’s room and she sang her hymn from the window which opened over his head. When it was finished she would say the same thing every morning—“Amen” and “Good morning Harper.” Then they would race each other to the landing on the stairs. Harper never cheated, although he could easily have been dressed long before Bertha if he had chosen to be, because he was always awake so much earlier than her. But this every morning race had never been specifically agreed upon and if Harper had ever said to Bertha at the window “Let’s race,” or if Bertha had ever said to Harper below her “Beat you downstairs,” the whole procedure would have been off. Neither of them could remember when this habit had started—it just had.
Well, one morning early in the summer, (in fact it was hardly more than late spring), Harper and Bertha met on the stairs’ landing—Bertha won—and after they had scanned the note they found there, they looked at each other and then quickly looked away. They descended to the first floor in their usual fashion—Harper going down the front stairs to collect the paper from the front porch—and Bertha going down the back stairs to light the stove and to bring in the milk.
This morning, Harper didn’t open the paper, although he usually read the comics sitting on the porch step. Instead he returned inside, letting the screen door clap behind him and leaving the big oak and glass door open so that the air could come through, into the still house. He went straight out to the kitchen and sat down at the table, slipping the still folded paper onto the breakfast tray which was laid out for his mother.
In the kitchen, Bertha Millroy behaved in the same morose fashion, as though touched by the same hand. And indeed their mutual despondency was based upon a kindred misgiving. And Mrs Renalda Harper Dewey was the instigator of that misgiving.
Mrs Renalda Harper Dewey, widow of Harper Peter Dewey the First (killed in the battle for Caen, August 1944, the year after Harper P. Dewey the Second’s birth) was a lady who lay in bed till nine o’clock every morning because of the night before. It used to be that she would lie abed until eight and then it became an occasional night before—but now the lie-abed was until nine and had ceased to be occasional.
This morning there had been a note on the flat top of the balustrade on the landing. On the note were written the words “Ten o’clock—thank you” in rather indistinct watery blue ink. “Ten o’clock, thank you” and that was all.
Bertha put on the kettle.
“I don’t want any tea,” said Harper Dewey.
“You don’t drink morning tea because you want to, Master Harper Dewey,” said Bertha Millroy in her flat voice, “you drink it to assist nature.”
The kettle boiled.
Bertha warmed the teapot.
They were silent.
Bertha threw out the water into the sink and put tea leaves in the pot.
The robins moved across the lawn outside the kitchen window.
Harper watched them.
Bertha poured boiling water over the tea leaves, turned off the stove and put the lid on the teapot. One, two, three, and sat down.
“Ten o’clock indeed,” she muttered—and then she poured tea into their cups.
One of the robins was listening to a worm under the dew. Harper watched. The robin’s head was cocked to one side as it listened. Then it ran a few steps on tiptoe and caught the worm noise again—this time nearer to it. The robin waited. Harper waited—Bertha Millroy waited—and then the robin stabbed the ground with its beak—caught the worm and tossed it into the sunlight. Harper shivered.
“I don’t want to assist nature,” he said, and he pushed his teacup away.
The thought of having to wait until ten o’clock to see his mother was unbearable to Harper. He had never had to wait that long on any other morning that he could remember.
There was a procedure—one which took place every day—which they followed, commencing with the preparation of Mrs Dewey’s breakfast tray. Bertha would serve up the eggs into the plate and pour coffee into the silver thermos bottle and Harper would butter toast. Then Bertha would take the tray and Harper would take the paper and they would mount the stairs to the second floor. Outside his mother’s door Harper had placed, long ago, a small
chair with a cushion on it, where, at this stage of the procedure he would sit, while Bertha went into the bedroom to awaken his mother.
Then he would listen to all the sounds which came from his mother’s room. First of all Bertha Millroy pulled the curtains after which, every morning, she would say, “It’s nine o’clock, Mrs Dewey,” (this morning she would say “ten o’clock”)—and Harper’s beautiful mother would reply in a sleepy voice, “Thank you Bertha, let me have my wrapper.”
After this he would count to himself the various stages of her awakening which he had trained his ear to recognize, although in his whole life he had never witnessed them.
First of all his mother rolled over from her side onto her back. Then there was the sound of Bertha mincing to the bedside. The sitting up came next. This was a combination of three sounds. The plumping of pillows, a slight voiceless sound which his mother uttered as she was helped into a sitting position (simultaneously there would be a grunt from Bertha)—and finally Bertha saying pleasantly “There.”
After the sitting up came a pause. “Now,” Bertha would inevitably say, “here we are.” And she could be heard mincing across the room to where she’d lift the breakfast tray and mince back again to the bed, accompanied on the return journey by the tinkle of ice against the walls of the orange juice glass and sometimes a harsh clank when the coffee thermos hit the plate of eggs. “Thank you” followed that and then silence.
Next, coffee being poured and the paper being opened and Bertha stepping to the dressing table to get the brush and then, sometimes but not always, a few listless strokes of the brush through his mother’s hair.
Then Bertha would emerge from the room, somewhat triumphantly, and she would say as she appeared, “Call if you want—don’t if you don’t,” and then she went downstairs.
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