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American Pastoral

Page 55

by Philip Roth


  Actually it’s in Hillside, but the school across the street is in Elizabeth. And

  then our church, St. Genevieve’s. St. Genevieve’s, when it started, was a

  missionary church, you see, just a part of St. Catherine’s. Just a wooden

  church. It’s a big, beautiful church now. But the building that stands now—and I

  remember when I first went in it—”

  That was as trying as it ever got: Dorothy Dwyer prattling on

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  about Elizabeth as though this were the Middle Ages and beyond the fields tilled

  by the peasants the only points of demarcation were the spires of the parish

  churches on the horizon. Dorothy Dwyer prattling on about St. Gen’s and St.

  Patrick’s and St. Catherine’s while Sylvia Levov sat across from her too polite

  to do anything other than nod and smile but her face as white as a sheet. Just

  sat there and endured it, and good manners got her through. So all in all, it

  was never anywhere near as bad as everybody had been expecting. And it was never

  but once a year that they were brought together anyway, and that was on the

  neutral, dereligion-ized ground of Thanksgiving, when everybody gets to eat the

  same thing, nobody sneaking off to eat funny stuff—no kugel, no gefilte fish, no

  bitter herbs, just one colossal turkey for two hundred and fifty million people—

  one colossal turkey feeds all. A moratorium on funny foods and funny ways and

  religious exclusivity, a moratorium on the three-thousand-year-old nostalgia of

  the Jews, a moratorium on Christ and the cross and the crucifixion for the

  Christians, when everyone in New Jersey and elsewhere can be more passive about

  their irrationalities than they are the rest of the year. A moratorium on all

  the grievances and resentments, and not only for the Dwyers and the Levovs but

  for everyone in America who is suspicious of everyone else. It is the American

  pastoral par excellence and it lasts twenty-four hours.

  “It was wonderful. The Presidential Suite. Three bedrooms and a living room.

  That’s what you got in those days for having been a Miss New Jersey. The U.S.

  Line. I guess it wasn’t booked, so we got on board and they just gave it to us.”

  Dawn was telling the Salzmans about their trip abroad to look at the Simmentals

  in Switzerland.

  “I’d never been to Europe before, and all the way over everybody was telling me,

  ‘There’s nothing like France, just wait until we come into Le Havre in the

  morning and you smell France. You’ll love it.’ So I waited, and early in the

  morning Seymour was still in bed and

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  I knew we had docked and so I raced on deck and I sniffed,” Dawn said, laughing,

  “and it was just garlic and onions all over the place.”

  She had raced out of the cabin with Merry while he was still in bed, but in the

  story she was on deck alone, astonished to find that France didn’t smell like

  one big flower.

  * * *

  “The train to Paris. It was sublime. You see miles and miles of woods, but every

  tree is in line. They plant their forests in a line. We had a wonderful time,

  didn’t we, darling?”

  “We did,” said the Swede.

  “We walked around with great big bread sticks sticking out of our pockets. They

  practically said, ‘Hey, look at us, a couple of rubes from New Jersey.’ We were

  probably just the kind of Americans they laugh at. But who cared? We walked

  around, nibbling at the tops of them, looking at everything, the Louvre, the

  garden of the Tuileries—it was just wonderful. We stayed at the Crillon. The

  greatest treat of the whole trip. I loved it. Then we got on the night train,

  the Orient Express to Zurich, and the porter didn’t get us up on time. Remember,

  Seymour?”

  Yes, he remembered. Merry wound up on the platform in her pajamas.

  “It was absolutely horrendous. The train had already started up. I had to get

  all our things and throw them all out the window—you know, that’s the way people

  get out of the train there—and we ran out half dressed. They never woke us up.

  It was ghastly,” Dawn said, again laughing happily at the recollection of the

  scene. “There we were, Seymour and me and our suitcases, wearing our underwear.

  So, anyway”—for a moment she was laughing too hard to go on—”we got to Zurich,

  and we went to wonderful restaurants— smelled of delicious croissants and good

  pates—and patisseries everywhere. Things like that. Oh, it was so good. All of

  the papers were on canes, they were hung up on racks, so you take your paper

  down and sit and have your breakfast and it was wonderful. So from there we took

  a car and we went down to Zug, the center of the Simmen-tals, and then we went

  to Lucerne, which was beautiful, absolutely

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  beautiful, and then we went to the Beau Rivage in Lausanne. Remember the Beau

  Rivage?” she asked her husband, her hand still firmly held in his.

  And he did remember it. Never had forgotten it. Coincidentally enough, had

  himself been thinking of the Beau Rivage just that afternoon, on the drive back

  to Old Rimrock from Central Avenue. Merry at afternoon tea, with the band

  playing, before she’d been raped. She had danced with the headwaiter, his six-

  year-old child, before she’d killed four people. Mademoiselle Merry. On his own,

  on their last afternoon at the Beau Rivage, the Swede had gone down to the

  jewelry shop off the lobby, and while Merry and Dawn were out walking on the

  promenade to take a last look together at the boats on Lake Geneva and the Alps

  out across the way, he had bought Dawn a diamond necklace. He had a vision of

  her wearing the diamond necklace along with the crown she kept in a hatbox at

  the top of her closet, the silver crown with the double row of rhinestones that

  she had worn as Miss New Jersey. Since he couldn’t even get her to wear the

  crown to show to Merry—”No, no, it’s just too silly a thing,” Dawn told him; “to

  her I’m ‘Mom,’ which is perfectly fine”—he’d never get her to put it on with the

  new necklace. Knowing Dawn and her sense of herself as well as he did, he

  realized that even to cajole her into trying them on, the necklace and the crown

  together, in the bedroom, just modeling them there for him alone, would be

  impossible. She was never more stubborn about anything than about not being an

  ex-beauty queen. “It’s not a beauty pageant,” she was already telling people

  back then who persisted in asking about her year as Miss New Jersey. “Most

  people involved with the pageant will fight with anyone who says they were in a

  beauty pageant, and I’m one of them. Your only prize for Winning at any level is

  a scholarship.” And yet it was with the crown in her hair, the crown not of a

  scholarship winner but of a beauty queen, that he had imagined her wearing that

  necklace when he caught sight of it in the window of the shop at the Beau

  Rivage.

  * * *

  In one of their photograph albums there was a series of pictures he used to like

  to look at back when they were first married and

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  even on occasion to show to people. They always made him so proud of her, these

  glossy photos taken in 1949-50, when s
he’d held down the nfty-two-week-a-year

  job that the head man over at the Miss New Jersey Scholarship Pageant liked to

  describe as serving as the state’s official “hostess”—the job of accommodating

  as many cities and towns and groups as possible for every kind of event, working

  like a dog, really, and receiving in compensation the $500 cash scholarship, a

  pageant trophy, and the fifty bucks for each personal appearance. There was, of

  course, a picture of her at the Miss New Jersey coronation on the night of

  Saturday, May 21,1949, Dawn in a strapless evening gown of silk, stiff and

  scalloped at the top, very tight to the waist, and below, to the floor, a full,

  voluptuous skirt, thickly embroidered with flowers and sparkling with beads. And

  on her head her crown. “You don’t feel ridiculous in your evening gown wearing a

  crown,” she told him, “but you definitely feel ridiculous in your clothes and

  your crown. Little girls always asking if you’re a princess. People coming up

  and asking if the crown is diamonds. In just a suit and wearing that thing,

  Seymour, you feel absolutely silly.” But she hardly looked silly— wearing her

  very simple, tailored clothes and that crown, she looked stunning. There was a

  picture of her in a suit and her crown—and her Miss New Jersey sash, pinned at

  the waist with a brooch—at an agricultural fair with some farmers, another of

  her in her crown and the sash at a manufacturer’s convention with some

  businessmen, and one of her in that strapless silk evening gown and her crown at

  the governor’s Princeton mansion, Drumthwacket, dancing with the governor of New

  Jersey, Alfred E. Driscoll. Then there were the pictures of her at parades and

  ribbon cuttings and charity fund-raisers around the state, pictures of her

  assisting at the crowning in local pageants, pictures of her opening the

  department stores and the auto showrooms—”That’s Dawnie. The beefy guy owns the

  place.” There were a couple of her visiting schools where, seated at the piano

  in the auditorium, she generally played the popularized Chopin polonaise that

  she’d performed to become Miss New Jersey, leaving out clots and clots of black

  notes

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  to get it in at two and a half minutes so she wouldn’t be disqualified by the

  stopwatch at the state level. And in all of those pictures, whatever clothes she

  might be wearing that were appropriate to the event, she would always have the

  crown set in her hair, making her look, as much to her husband as to the little

  girls who came up to ask, like a princess—more like a princess was supposed to

  look than any of a whole string of European princesses whose photographs he’d

  seen in Life.

  Then there were the pictures taken at Atlantic City, at the Miss America Pageant

  in September, pictures of her in her swimsuit and in evening wear, which made

  him wonder how she ever could have lost. She told him, “When you’re out on that

  runway you can’t imagine how ridiculous you feel in that swimsuit and your high

  heels, and you know that when you walk a ways the back end is going to ride up,

  and you can’t reach behind you and pull it down….” But she hadn’t been

  ridiculous at all: he never looked at the swimsuit pictures that he didn’t say

  aloud, “Oh, she was beautiful.” And the crowd had been with her; at Atlantic

  City most of the audience was naturally rooting for Miss New Jersey, but during

  the parade of states Dawn had received a spontaneous ovation that bespoke more

  than local pride. The pageant wasn’t on TV back then, it was still for the folks

  jammed into Convention Hall, so afterward, when the Swede, who’d sat in the hall

  * * *

  beside Dawn’s brother, called to tell his parents that Dawn hadn’t won, he could

  still say of her reception, without exaggerating, “She brought the house down.”

  Certainly, of the five other former Miss New Jerseys at their wedding, none

  could compare to Dawn in any way. Together they constituted a kind of sorority,

  these former Miss New Jerseys, and for a while there in the fifties they all

  attended one another’s weddings, so that he must have met up with at least ten

  girls who had won the state crown and probably twice as many who’d become

  friends of this or that bride during the days of rehearsal for the state

  competition, girls who’d gotten as far as being Miss Shore Resort and Miss

  Central Coast and Miss Columbus Day and Miss

  · 406 ·

  Northern Lights, and there wasn’t a one who could rival his wife in any

  category—talent, intelligence, personality, poise. If he should ever happen to

  remark to someone that why Dawn hadn’t become Miss America was something he

  would never understand, Dawn always begged him not to go around saying that,

  because it gave the impression that her having not become Miss America was

  something she was embittered about when, in many ways, losing had been a relief.

  Just getting through without humiliating herself and her family had been a

  relief. Sure, after all the buildup the New Jersey people had given her she was

  surprised and a little let down not to have made the Court of Honor or even the

  top ten, but that, too, might have been a blessing in disguise. And though

  losing would not be a relief for a competitor like him, not a blessing of any

  kind, he nonetheless admired Dawn’s graciousness—gracious was how the folks over

  at the pageant liked to describe all the girls who lost—even if he couldn’t

  understand it.

  Losing allowed her, for one thing, to begin to restore the relations with her

  father that had nearly been ruined because of her persisting at something he so

  strongly disapproved of. “I don’t care what they’re giving away,” Mr. Dwyer said

  when she tried to explain about the pageant scholarship money. “The whole damn

  thing,” he told her, “is about being ogled. Those girls are there to be ogled.

  The more money they give for it, the worse it is. The answer is no.”

  That Mr. Dwyer agreed finally to come down to Atlantic City had been due to the

  persuasive skills of Dawn’s favorite aunt, Peg, her mother’s sister, the

  schoolteacher who’d married rich Uncle Ned and taken Dawn as a kid to the hotel

  in Spring Lake. “It would make any father uncomfortable seeing his baby up

  there,” Peg had told her brother-in-law in that gentle, diplomatic way Dawn

  always admired and wanted to emulate. “It brings certain images to mind that a

  father would just as soon not have associated with his daughter. I’d feel that

  way if it were my daughter,” she told him, “and I don’t have what it is that

  fathers naturally feel for their daughters. It would bother me, of course it

  would. I would think that what you feel is the case with a lot of dads. They’re

  really proud, their buttons

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  are popping and all that, but at the same time, ‘Oh, my God, that’s my baby up

  there.’ But Jim, this is so clean and beyond reproach there is just nothing to

  worry about. The trashy ones get sifted out early—they go on to work the

  truckers’ convention. These are just ordinary kids from small towns, decent,

  sweet girls whose fathers own the grocery store and
don’t belong to the country

  club. They get them up to look like debutantes but there is nothing big in their

  backgrounds. They’re just good kids who go home and settle down and marry the

  boy next door. And the judges are serious people. Jim, this is for Miss America.

  If it were compromising to the girls, they wouldn’t allow it. It is an honor.

  * * *

  Dawn wants you there to share in that honor. She will not be very happy if you

  are not there, Jimmy. She will be crushed, especially if you are the only father

  who isn’t there.” “Peggy, it’s beneath her. It’s beneath all of us. I’m not

  going.” So that’s when she laid into him about his responsibility not merely to

  Dawn but to the nation. “You wouldn’t come when she won at the local level. You

  wouldn’t come when she won at the state level. Are you now telling me that you

  are not going to come if she wins at the national level? If she is awarded Miss

  America and you’re not there to walk up on the stage and hug your daughter with

  pride, what will they think? They’ll think, ‘A great tradition, a part of the

  American heritage, and her father isn’t there. Photographs of Miss America with

  her family, and her father isn’t in a one of them.’ Tell me, how’s that going to

  go down the next day?”

  And so he humbled himself and he did it—against his better judgment, consented

  to come for the big night to Atlantic City with the rest of Dawn’s relatives,

  and it was a disaster. When Dawn saw him waiting there in his Sunday suit in the

  lobby with her mother and her aunts and her uncles and her cousins, every last

  Dwyer in Union and Essex and Hudson counties, all she was allowed to do by her

 

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