Pearl

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Pearl Page 2

by Mary Gordon


  But who am I? you may be asking.

  Think of me this way: midwife, present at the birth. Or perhaps this: godfather, present at the christening. Although of the three people with whom we are concerned, perhaps the most important, Pearl herself, was never christened. If not the christening, then, perhaps the naming. Present at the naming. At the speaking of the most important word.

  Perhaps you cannot bleach a certain criminal association from the word godfather. But I would ask you to consider that, for two of the people with whom we are concerned, the word godfather signified the protector of the child from the world, the flesh, the devil, long before Marlon Brando changed its meaning for people like you and me.

  I would, if I could, protect them, all of them, but I have learned that I cannot.

  Let’s get back to Pearl. The Irish government does not want to be seen using force against an American. The American government does not want force used against one of their own. The police could cut through Pearl’s chains. It would not be easy, she’s made sure of that, but it could be done. She has handcuffed herself, looped one medium-width chain through the handcuffs, looped a thick bicycle chain through that and around the American embassy’s flagpole on a tile pavement a few feet below street level on the Aylesbury Road. They are giving her a chance to free herself; for the moment they are only speaking to her. They will try other methods: unlocking the cuffs with their keys and, if that doesn’t work, cutting through them with something like gardening shears. The chances of hurting her, of wounding the delicate flesh of the underside of her wrists, is great if she resists.

  Pearl is, thus far, resisting. When the police have approached her she has thrashed and kicked. So for a while they are only talking to her. The Irish are a civilized people; the Dublin police are known to be humane. And she is on embassy ground; the embassy staff has been in charge. Doctors have been consulted, experts in the field, people who have had experience with this sort of thing. This is, after all, Ireland, and hunger strikers are not unknown.

  What is she doing here? is a question people keep asking. You may be asking it yourself. What are you doing here? Isn’t this always a hostile question? Doesn’t it always imply, You have no right to be here, you should be somewhere else? It would be very easy to say that both these sentences are true in relation to Pearl Meyers. Only, she is American. The embassy is technically her country, although it is in Ireland. You could say she has no right to chain herself to the flagpole on pavement that dips down a few feet from the high embassy ground. And if you said to her, You should be somewhere else, she would deny it. She would say, I am where I belong.

  . . .

  There are reasons. You may not believe there is any reason for a young woman like this to want to die. By which you would mean any good reason, a reason that would be good enough for you to understand. You may never have wanted death yourself. But Pearl experienced the desire for it as a kind of thirst. Do you remember, as a child, waking thirsty in the middle of the night? Getting up, walking into the kitchen, the air cool against your arms and legs, exposed except for the thin cotton of summer pajamas. Filling a glass from the faucet, carefully, right to the brim. The water running out of the spigot with a swoosh, tasting sweet. Because you were so thirsty. It was strange, wasn’t it? It was exciting, drinking water in the dark room. Strange to be drinking water in the darkness all alone.

  Her thirst for death has been like that, like the imagination of that water. As she began to starve herself, her weakness had a sweetness, her exhaustion was as desirable as the slaking of a thirst. To fail to live. To fail to live up to things. Simply to fail. A sweet exhaustion, like a bluish gas or a white fog. No longer to base your life on a series of actions, but to say that one action, in its absolute visibility, its absolute meaningfulness, is worth your life. The giving up of which is nothing but a lovely handing over. The delight of giving over, of giving up. To lie down in the snow or in the woods. In darkness. No longer to go on.

  But what, you ask me, could have been the source of such a thirst? She is a fortunate girl, you are telling me: beautiful, healthy, American.

  Perhaps we should begin with the document on the ground beside her. It is in a clear plastic envelope, transparent, secured by a device: a cardboard red circle, around which is looped a white string. Let’s call it a document, or perhaps it would be better to call it a statement. I don’t know what it really should be called. In any case, I offer it to you exactly as she wrote it. These are her words:

  I have not eaten in six weeks; I have drunk nothing in several days. I have decided to do this, to chain myself here, because of my conviction that the only important thing I can do with my life is to offer it in witness. I am doing this here, in Ireland, on what is officially American soil, because what I am doing is connected to the history of Ireland, even my method, and yet I am not part of the history of Ireland. I am American, and so I find it proper to do what I must do here on what is legally American soil. To be American is to be paid attention to.

  First and most important, I am giving my life in witness to the death of Stephen Donegan and to the goodness and importance of his life. Second, to show my support, my admiration for the peace agreement, and those who have worked toward it. Third, to mark the human will to harm.

  I am, in part, responsible for Stephen Donegan’s death. This is because in being caught up in an idea, I forgot a living person. He became, to me, invisible. This made it easy, even natural, for me to insult him. This insult was a form of violence. They said he died because of an automobile accident, but he died as a result of my insult. The death of Stephen Donegan was an event in history, a loss to the world.

  My insult was a private act, an act of private violence, and yet its source was the Troubles of Ireland. Stephen Donegan was a victim of the Troubles, but he is not being mourned as that. I insist by my death that he be mourned as a victim of the Troubles. And so, because I believe that nothing I could do with my life can be as powerful as the power of my death, I give my life in witness to the goodness of Stephen Donegan, and to the goodness of the peace agreement, and to protest the evil of continued violence.

  The idea of the peace agreement and its reality will bring about a cessation of some death. I know it to be true that the diminishment of the possibility of violent deaths is an entirely good thing. I know too that the peace process is in danger because of those who love violence and death more than peace. I understand this impulse to violence because of the violence of insult I committed against Stephen Donegan. And I see this impulse—in myself and in those who would put the peace process in danger—as part of a larger impulse, which is true, I believe, of human beings: they possess the will to harm. And my witness to this impulse, my desire to mark its strength, is the third reason for my decision to be here as I am.

  I believe it is a good thing to offer my life in witness to these things I know to be true. My death will be a far more powerful witness than my life or anything that could be accomplished by a life such as mine. I act in perfect freedom and in certainty that what I am doing is right. No one has influenced me in this choice.

  Pearl Meyers

  In the large transparent envelope, along with the document, there were two smaller, ordinary envelopes, one addressed to her mother, one to Joseph. She addressed the one: For my mother, Maria Meyers, Personal and Confidential. And the other: Mr. Joseph Kasperman, Personal and Confidential. Was she aware that she used the intimate form for her mother, the official one for Joseph? Perhaps because there was no name for her relationship to him. Or perhaps because she could not think of Maria Meyers in any other way except: my mother.

  Here are the letters. I call them letters, as opposed to the other words she wrote, which I call a statement, unsealed, unaddressed, its envelope transparent: inviting anyone’s attention, everyone’s. We might as well begin with her mother’s. It doesn’t matter, really, but a letter to one’s mother would seem to take pride of place. This may not be correct, but it would
seem most ordinary.

  Mother:

  Try to call on the values you have given me: a love of justice, a need to bear witness to the truth. I am doing this in the name of justice, in witness to the truth. I am marking a wrongful death, for which I was responsible, and other public wrongs that will lead to death and more death.

  I have considered, of course, the sorrow this will cause you. Yet I know that you are a person of hope, a person at home in this world, and that you will go on. Try to understand that I am not a person of hope and I am not at home in this world, which I believe to be a place of harm. And though I am a person of no force, I have learned that I am capable of harming. This consideration has led me to believe that it is best that I remove myself from this life and my own life and become, rather, a witness. Also, having seen the possibility of harm within myself, I have become more convinced than ever that the darkness is stronger than the light. At least it is stronger than I am. I know what you would say: Focus on the light, focus on what can be changed. I believe that I can change nothing by my life, but that my death has the possibility at least of shedding some light. I have not said these things in the statement I have left on the ground here at the embassy. What I believe about the nature of the world is not for the eyes of the world but for yours and Joseph’s. You will be witness to this thing that I believe. You, a person of greater force, can use your force, perhaps, in some way I cannot imagine.

  I know that you love me. Please know that I have loved you. You may think I should live for you, to keep you from this sorrow, but I cannot. It is better that I am not in this life.

  Please understand that this has nothing to do with you. There is nothing you could have done.

  Your loving daughter Pearl

  And here is what she wrote to Joseph:

  Joseph:

  I believe that of all people you will understand this best, will comprehend most fully the decisions I have made. A boy died because of me. Because I rendered him as nothing in my self-righteous blindness in the name of an idea. I made a thing of him. I stole his faith and hope.

  I know about some things that you and my mother never told me: faith, hope, and love. I have never been naturally a person of hope. Nor, I believe, are you. I have lost my faith in the goodness of life. Replacing that belief: a belief in malignity. In the will to harm. And the dismay that this impulse is in myself.

  Still, I know some things are better than others. The peace agreement will lead to things better than endless violence. I give my life, however ludicrous it seems, in witness to this. And in witness to the commonality of the impulse to harm.

  Take care of my mother and yourself.

  Thank you for years of love and care.

  You have done nothing but good to me. When I think that there might be one person in the world free of the impulse to harm, it is you. For this, I honor you.

  I know you understand what I am doing. You have always understood me. This has been a gift I am more grateful for than I can say.

  Take care of my mother and yourself.

  Your loving

  Pearl

  Now what do these explain—the statement, the letters? They sound rather different in some ways, don’t you think, one from the other? The statement is quite cool; you may find it confusing in the way it mixes categories: terms. The letter to her mother is protective—or does she want to keep her mother at arm’s length? I think she must have been farther along in the process of starvation when she wrote to Joseph. She repeats herself; she must have begun to lose control. What do these words tell you about this young woman with a thirst for death? You can see she is serious, intelligent, thoughtful, but tormented in her seriousness. She believes she has done wrong. She believes her life is nothing. This is what these words say: that her life is no use of itself, only as witness.

  Do these words help you to understand why a young woman, a healthy, fortunate American woman, would do what she has done: starved herself to the point of death and chained herself to a flagpole at the embassy?

  I want you to understand that although you may think of her death as a suicide it is also more than that. She wanted to die to be out of this life, but she also wanted to use her death. Her death was the vessel of her hope. She could use her death as she could not use her life. Her death would be legible, audible. Her life, she believed, was dim and barely visible; her words feeble whispers, scratches at the door.

  As she gave up eating, this sense of purpose, the joy of pure statement, pure act, took her over. She felt at rest. In emptying herself, she was turning from body to idea, the idea that a chosen death could serve as a marker for a wrongful death. The idea that, like the Irish hunger strikers of the 1920s and the 1980s, she was giving her life in witness to a good much larger than her own survival on the earth—where, living, she would make no mark.

  And yet you will say she is different from the hunger strikers who went before her in Ireland. The hunger strikers hoped against hope that they would be stopped, that they could stop before their death. Pearl doesn’t want to stop; she wants her death for its own sake, as a release from being overwhelmed. Her death is desirable to her: a glass of water in the darkness. This act is full of contradictions, you might say. What is it: suicide or hunger strike, private act or public statement?

  She would say to you, proud of the economy of her death: It is all of these.

  All right, all right, you might be saying to me. But what about Stephen Donegan? Who is this boy and what were the circumstances of his death?

  You have to trust me: it will all come later.

  Pearl isn’t thinking about him now, and we must proceed as she proceeds. We must follow Pearl, follow the pattern of her mind. She is starving; she moves from clarity to blankness: there are moments of hallucination, flashes of what she thinks of as pure darkness, then pure comprehension.

  Suppose we are standing on a pier. It is early morning; we are in some warm climate, maybe Florida. We are looking down from where we stand on the pier, down into the water. A school of fish swims by, smallish but colorful. Then, appearing as if from behind a cloud—but there are no clouds, only distance—a bird swoops down, sensing the far school of fish. He dives, lands in the water; the school of fish gives up form and cohesion, scatters. Dark gaps of water appear between clusters of fleeting color. The new form disappears into the darkness under the pier. If we wait, the form will re-cohere. Will it be the form we first saw or will it be a semblance of itself? No matter: it will be distinguishable to us as one cohesive whole.

  This is how it is with Pearl. The beak, the wingspan of her anguish flies at her, scatters her thoughts, breaks up the center. First there is a cohesion, then descending wings, then clusters; then the clusters re-cohere. To understand now we must follow the new form: clusters that come together, and separate, and then come together again.

  In her clear moments she sees faces—her witnesses, she calls them—hears voices telling her their stories, telling her she is right to do what she is doing. The faces come to her, hover in the air before her eyes, then fade and disappear. Faces in frames, faces surrounded by blue air. A blue that appeared when the darkness that surrounded her began to lighten, when she felt she was truly in the place of rest.

  The faces and figures (they are torsos only; she never sees their hands) are cut out of bright air, as with a knife: cut with extreme precision and then pasted with the same precision back into the air. So they are at once separate from their background and a part of it. One shoulder perhaps shading off into a darkness only the width of a pencil line, the shadow of a greater darkness. The faces are illumined, particularly the air, by a light whose source she cannot see, a light that strains their eyes and makes them tighten their mouths. She begs them to stay until the time when she will understand.

  We all like to believe that before death there is a moment of great clarity: what we call understanding. But suppose there isn’t, only a series of shadings-off? A set of increasing vaguenesses, then darkness,
and then nothing at all?

  It is possible.

  She doesn’t see Stephen Donegan’s face: Stephen Donegan, whom she calls Stevie. When she says his name, only a shape appears: dish-shaped, featureless, white. She sees other faces. Faces she thinks of as witnesses telling her that she is right to do what she is doing because it is too much for her to live with. Because the most truthful thing to be said about human beings, the most common thing about them, is that they will do harm. And she too has the will: what she has done to Stevie shows that she is one of them, one of the crowd with stretched lips, bloody eyes, the vacant patient stare that with its blankness can erase the world.

  Perhaps you are thinking that if you knew more of Pearl’s background you might understand why she is doing what she’s doing, why she is where she is. But what do we mean by background? If we knew what we meant by background, would it help us to say more clearly what the nature of the foreground is? A painter might spend far more time considering the background of her work than what is nearest to the eye. Let’s imagine we’re looking at a Romantic painting. There is a blackish-purple sky, tall thin-leaved trees; through a gap in the trees a white full moon surrounded by a haze of cloud. In the front, three small figures stand, bent, their backs to us, looking at something on the ground, trying to see something in the moonlight, something that absorbs them but that we can’t begin to discern. Of what use is it to say that the sky, the trees, the moon, must be known as the background? Would it mean that the figures are more important than the sky?

  So what could I tell you about Pearl’s background that would be of use in answering the question What is this woman doing here? By which you would mean starving, chained, lying on the ground in front of the American embassy in Dublin. If I told you that Pearl’s grandfather was a Jewish convert to Catholicism, that her mother is the supervisor of several day-care centers in the Washington Heights section of New York City but had a history of involvement in radical politics during the Vietnam war, that her father was a Cambodian who disappeared into his own country before her birth, would that explain anything about why she is where she is on Christmas Day of 1998?

 

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