by Jeffrey Ford
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The Cosmology of the Wider World
Jeffrey Ford
For Derek, with all my love.
Dig this Frostbite …
An Introduction to the Cosmology of Jeffrey Ford
Jeffrey Ford is the kind of guy you can sit down with and have a beer and shoot the breeze about sports—or have a long, intricate conversation about some aspect of literary theory, or talk about the foibles of some long-dead eccentric. His comments are as likely to be pithy and unrepeatable as they are to be rather wise and lengthy.
I mention this fact because it pertains to his fiction. Ford’s short stories, novellas, and novels often seem to have a comfortable and laid-back aspect to them. The characters are ordinary guys whom readers can easily and quickly identify with and follow during the course of the story.
And yet … and yet … there’s also a surreal, serious, dreamlike, and eccentric quality to Ford’s fiction. In the quintessential Ford tale, we start somewhere strange but unthreatening and it becomes stranger, or we start with the familiar only to have our comfort level undermined in some way. The reader almost always comes to realize that the strangeness was there all along.
I find the effect close to the process by which divers avoid getting the bends by descending and ascending slowly, by degrees. (And yet, worth the wait—for when they reach the ocean floor, what marvelous oddities they find there.) What I love about Ford’s fiction is that, despite this facade of comfort, it rarely seeks, in the end, to be comforting. The comfort comes at the beginning, in the effortless voice, and the skill Ford has in finding a way into the story that allows the reader full access as well.
In his latest work, The Cosmology of the Wider World, Ford presents the reader with the tale of the minotaur Belius. The minotaur, of course, has a long and storied past. In Greek myth, Theseus, aided by Ariadne, slew the minotaur to stop King Minos’ yearly taking of tribute in the form of human lives. The minotaur lived in a maze called the Labyrinth on the island of Crete. As a creature that had citizenship in neither the animal nor human world, the minotaur came to be seen as a symbol of that which exists outside the conventional bounds of society.
In the 20th century, the Surrealists embraced the minotaur as representative of the West’s dual nature; one of the principal surrealist magazines, Albert Skeer’s review, Minotaure, which appeared from 1933 to 1939, used the minotaur as its central motif.
Ford’s Belius borrows from both the classic minotaur of Greek myth and the more surreal modern representations. Belius doesn’t live inside a physical labyrinth, but a mental one—haunted by his past and trapped in a maze of his own thoughts. He is his own monster.
As Ford takes us into and out of Belius’ past, the character, who seems mythic and strange, becomes more and more recognizable as one of us. The alienation and angst are just more extreme versions of what most of us go through at some point in our lives. Even the events that bring Belius to the Wider World are not so far removed from our own experience—certainly, each of us at some point has realized that but for fate or chance, our lives could have taken a very different turn. Belius’ quest to understand himself and the world he lives in is the same quest we all embark upon, taken to an extreme.
The core of the maze that is The Cosmology of the Wider World might be Belius, but that surreal Wider World is itself the maze, and part of the genius of the book. Ford’s striking depictions of talking animals such as Pezimote the tortoise and Vashti the owl are as adroit in their quick brushstrokes as is his more lingering characterization of Belius. I took much delight in the details of these depictions.
But, again, that delight becomes counterbalanced by the unsettling. The more we learn about this world of talking animals, and the ways in which its inhabitants try to help Belius, the more we realize we’re not in a Disney movie. The machinations of the old ape Shebeb and Belius’ relationship with a flea are the kinds of elements more usually found in the interstices of existential noir fiction. The animals’ final solution to Belius’ problems is odd and yet logical, but could have come right out of a Decadent-era novel. The ultimate fate of Belius’ half-finished manuscript “The Cosmology of the Wider World”—his attempt to find meaning in the world—could not be more fitting, or strange.
In short, it’s unlikely that you will have read anything quite like The Cosmology of the Wider World, with its mix of the familiar and the odd, the slapstick and the serious. Where else but in the mind of Jeffrey Ford could you find a suffering minotaur, a philandering tortoise, bestiality, a love story, multiple references to Dante and multiple references to drug culture, talking animals, the real world, and the Wider World? And where else would it all make sense?
Jeff Vander Meer
July, 2005
Beneath a yellow sky that fizzed like quinine, staring out to sea from the crenellated tower of his own construction, stood Belius, the minotaur, shedding globes of water from his eyes. Life germinated inside these transparent spheres, civilizations rose and fell in clouds of war, colors of love grew vibrant and then washed away. A million seasons raced round within the see-through boundaries, until, rolling off his snout, they smashed against the ledge and shattered.
He lowed in a tone more of creature than man, and that sound flew out toward the horizon. Upon losing speed, it dropped with a splash into the deep ocean and sank, frightening lamprey, scattering herds of sea horses, to eventually settle on the sandy bottom. As Belius wiped his eyes clear, the egg of a bubble his voice had made cracked open, giving birth to the exact sound that had formed it. The sad moan vibrated in every atom of green water for miles around.
Pezimote, the tortoise, was awakened by the racket from his slumber beneath the mud. He struggled up out of sleep, out of the warm ooze, and started slowly swimming toward shore. His shell was orange and black, and he snapped his beak peevishly, because his anatomy did not allow for grumbling. “I am coming, Belius,” he thought, and Belius knew instantly that he was coming.
Shuffling and tapping from human foot to hoof, across the cobblestones of the turret, the minotaur reached the side that gave a view of the woods. He rested wearily on the ledge for a moment, but when the frustration that gripped his heart became too much to stand, he struck his horns against the facade, drawing sparks from the cold stone. Another cry went out, this one splitting the sky above the distant trees. Only Vashti, the owl, knew what the strange call meant. She lighted from her branch with graceful wing thrusts that roiled the leaves. “I am coming, Belius,” she screeched. Once above the trees, she used her lantern eyes to pinpoint the minotaur’s lonely figure on the tower.
After summoning his friends, he took the winding stairway down inside the tall structure. He dressed in formal attire; swallow tail jacket and striped pants. In the kitchen, he brewed cinnamon tea and prepared finger sandwiches with his hooves. He put his books away, rolled up his charts and maps and shooed his pet cat from the study. The niceties he performed for his guests’ arrival were all done rather out of habit than conscience. Since the first pang of his malady, nothing made sense; no task seemed worth the effort.
Pezimote sat on the divan because the chairs would not accommodate his giant shell. Having no articulated digits, for every finger sandwich he ate, it was necessary to utilize both of his stumpy appendages. Vashti, perched on the marble bust of Belius, swooped down every now and then and snatched a dainty off the silver platter. Cinnamon tea was not to her liking, so instead Belius had broken into his private liquor cabinet and poured he
r a glass of dandelion wine. He then stuffed his pipe with the dried petals of the digitalis and lit it. A sweet blue cloud grew around the company. He coughed with vigor and passed the smoldering drug to his companion from the sea. The owl could not take the blue smoke directly. The first and only time she’d tried it, she went stiff as a stone and dropped to the floor. It was enough for her just to breathe their exhalations.
When the group ‘tuned down,’ as they had grown to call the state of intoxication the flower gave them, Belius uncrossed his legs and sat forward.
“I’m poisoned,” he told them, waiting for their reactions.
Their silence was a lure to draw him out.
“My heart is a snowball, my mind a cracked peach pit,” said the minotaur, leaning further forward, his heavy head sinking down as if in exhaustion.
“I see,” said Pezimote. “And to what do you attribute this malady?”
“I’m poisoned. I feel as if I am soon going to …”
“To what?” asked Vashti, who was now perched on the huge globe of the wider world.
“To perish, of course,” Belius cried, losing his patience. At the utterance of these words, three large volumes jumped off the book shelf across the room and fell to the floor.
“Now, now,” said Vashti, her feathers ruffled by the physical implications of his anger.
“Who, may I ask, has poisoned you?” said the tortoise, reaching for a deviled ostrich egg the size of a cantaloupe.
Belius shook his head.
“Perhaps you suspect one of us?” said Vashti.
“No, no. You’re my closest friends.”
“Who then?” asked Pezimote.
“Maybe,” said Belius, “it’s someone who doesn’t want me to complete my Cosmology.”
“You’ve been working on that book, Belius, for years and years. Why now? Most creatures have little interest in reading books and less faith in their messages.” The tortoise feared this revelation might wound his friend’s pride, so he leaned across the coffee table and stumped him lightly on the knee.
“Look to yourself,” said Vashti. “You’ve poisoned yourself somehow.”
“What?” said Belius, straightening up in his chair with a look that as much as said, Absurd! “I’m no weeping willow, Vashti. If I don’t mind saying, this tower we sit in was built by these two hooves alone. Each block of coral, I cut myself from the barrier reef and placed with an exactitude that nearly made this chaotic universe reel.”
“Yourself,” said Vashti, “look to yourself.”
“I must agree, Belius,” said Pezimote, finishing off the last morsel of egg and eyeing up another. “Your condition reminds me of my wife’s, Chelonia’s, unfounded lamentations when the children don’t visit for a time.”
“Chelonia has other reasons for lamenting, Pezimote,” said Vashti, turning her head 180 degrees to face away from the tortoise.
“A cruel cut,” said Pezimote, feigning astonishment in the face of the subtle charge.
“So you agree,” said Belius. He hoisted himself out of his chair and crossed the room to where a full-length mirror was mounted on the wall. Staring into it, he searched for clues to his own undoing. All looked as it ever had, except for the heavy rings beneath his eyes. His color was good; a creamy, speckled blue that showed no blush of fever nor pallor of weakness. His horns were sharp. His snout was firm; his teeth, white and strong. Sticking out his tongue, he inspected every foot of it with great care. He then turned profile to the glass and peered from the corner of his left eye. “Nothing but handsome,” he thought.
“I see nothing wrong,” said the Minotaur. But then his eye looked deeply into itself and something toppled his confidence. “And then again …” he said and drew closer to the reflection. All was silent but for the sound of Pezimote munching. “And then again …” In the dark iris at the center of his left eye there was a minute but conspicuous absence. The light of the lamps did not produce a gleam there as they should have. There was a tiny mote of darker darkness that seemed to consume the light instead of offering it back to the world.
“Wait,” said Belius, “I see a black spot within me.”
Vashti flew off the globe and came to rest on the minotaur’s shoulder. Pezimote rose from the divan and sidled up next to his friend, draping an arm around his wide back. Together they looked into the mirror, into the eye, into the dot of definite nothing.
For the hundredth time that day, the tears came from Belius; big and round as soap bubbles. A moan escaped from somewhere in his third stomach and the sharp self-pity of the sound cracked the glass suddenly as if it had been hit by a rock. The three jumped back. A rough wind entered the room and swirled the smoke of the digitalis into a visible cyclone. Papers were caught up in the storm. Furniture was tilted over. The tray of food flipped onto the floor. The three companions huddled together as books and knick-knacks, fossils and tea cups, flew through the air. The tighter the group held onto each other, the weaker became the power of the gale. When at last they had each other in a knot of strangle holds, the danger dissipated into a light breeze. They broke apart, and Belius stumbled backward against the wall, clutching his head with both hooves.
“Time to be going,” said Pezimote, bringing his head slowly out from within his shell. He spoke as he moved toward the door, his voice, as well as his leathery skin, quivering with fear. “I suggest that tomorrow, bright and early, we pay a visit to the ape. Your condition is serious … not to mention dangerous.”
“Agreed,” said Vashti.
Belius nodded, unable to speak for the throbbing behind his eyes.
“Get some sleep,” said his visitors in unison. Then Vashti flew through the open window and Pezimote ambled out the door and down the winding steps.
As soon as he was alone, Belius reached for the bottle of dandelion wine. With one mythic gulp, he drained it. His headache lay stunned, barely able to breathe. Packing his pipe with a bolus dose of petals, he lit it. The digitalis was a stake through the heart of his pain. Its frustrated life eased away as he sat back in his chair puffing, too tired to think of sleep. From where he sat, he could see his whole figure in the cracked mirror. He smoked and stared, studying the queer mosaic.
Phantom thoughts skittered through the Minotaur’s mind, conjuring no real images or memories and leaving only the vaguest of impressions that he had been thinking at all. From the time his friends had left at dusk, he had remained in his half-stupor, staring straight on and breathing deeply to keep the anguish to a dull ache.
In the mean time, night had come to that hemisphere of the Wider World. As the first waves of darkness rolled across the forest, Siftus the mole put on his snake skin vest and took up his walking stick. He nosed his way up out of the burrow, which had been his home from birth, and sniffed with delight the rising tide of shadows. He set forth that evening to dine on grubs and the dew drop liqueur of honey suckle.
The raccoon brothers stole, as they always did, into Belius’ garden, but when he was not there to toss rocks at them, they lost their appetites and made off, each with only one ear of corn. After dipping their heist in the ocean for seasoning, and gnawing through a few rows of kernels, they agreed that the ears’ mealy taste meant something was wrong with the minotaur.
The ants that lived among the stones of the tower bedded down with atoms of bread crust and pin prick dreams. The moths flapped out of the bushes and went to work on the cloth of Belius’ old coat, which, for the past few months, had been the new personality of the garden scarecrow. Creepers sang a magnificat in a round of ten thousand voices, while bats flew toward fruit they could hear ripening. The fox, the lynx, the weasel, each came awake, as all of the creatures of daylight drew toward sleep.
Belius’ cat, Bonita, slipped away from her master’s feet, taking the spiral staircase to the wine cellar, where it was a certainty that some rodent would have been dabbling in the stream of a leaky cask and would be too drunk to run. And way off, in the middle of the forest, perched
on the uppermost branch of the tallest, most ancient tree, sat Vashti. “Who?” she asked, and as always there was no reply. She flapped her wings and a breeze rolled outward to rustle leaves, bend flowers and push a firefly through the open window of Belius’ study.
The insect perched on the tip of the minotaur’s snout and worked its electro-chemical trick because it didn’t know how not to. Belius was dragged out of his daze by the tiny flash, believing it to be the lost gleam returning to fill the void in his iris. Soon enough, he saw his mistake and brushed the impostor into flight. He rose from his chair with great effort and looked around at the mess his manifest bad feeling had caused. He would have groaned had he not been so weary. Instead, he sighed heavily, causing a hairline fracture in the last unbroken tea cup of the service. Waving his hooves at the shambles, he decided to straighten up in the morning. With hoof-tap and foot-slap, he made his way up the spiral staircase to his bedroom.
He sloughed the swallow tail jacket and striped pants, letting them drop to the floor where he stood. He chose from his armoire the green silk pajamas. All of his sleeping apparel had a good size rock sewn into the collar, which kept him off his back while he slept. Without the rock there, he would roll over, flat out, and begin snoring so ferociously that even the solid structure of his tower was in danger of caving in.
He passed up the book that lay at the foot of his bed, a treatise written by the Sphinx, entitled, “Riddling Men For Glory and Sport.” The fact that he had paid out three casks of his oldest dandelion wine for it meant nothing to him now. He pulled back the quilt of his bed; a massive four poster, its headboard scarred from the violence of his horns due to recent nightmares. He blew out the candle and then lay down on his side. Trying to corral his thoughts so they would not wander wastefully as they had all day, he concentrated on the bright sliver of moon that hung outside his window. Sleep, he knew, would not come, so he snagged his memory on that hook of a satellite and thought back and back to his earliest days in the lesser world, searching for some insignificant incident that might have planted the seed which had latently germinated and blossomed into the evil flower of his present discontent.