“Sometimes
the
green
pasture
of the mind
tilts
abruptly.
The grazing
horses
struggle
crazily
for purchase
on the
frictionless
nearly
vertical
surface.
Their
furniture-fine
legs buckle
on the
incline,
unhorsed by
slant
they weren’t
designed to
climb
and can’t.”
The second
line recalls the Psalmist: “He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he
leadeth me beside the still waters.” Green signifies paradise, whether in the dry
Holy Land or America’s dry Holy Land, California. This mental paradise suffers
a seismic disturbance, a peculiarly geometric earthquake (again, California). The
mind’s content, poor horses, scramble and slip away. But I also thought of that
disputed line in Henry V. At the start of Act II, Scene 3, a character
named Hostess (probably Mistress Quickly from Henry IV) describes the
death of Sir John Falstaff:
“…after I
saw him fumble with the sheets and play with flowers and smile upon his
fingers' ends, I knew there was but one way; for his nose was as sharp as a
pen, and a' babbled of green fields.”
The final
phrase has been read as a mishearing of Psalm 23. Guy Davenport titled his 1993
story collection A Table of Green Fields. We know from Guy Davenport
and James Laughlin: Selected Letters (2007) that Davenport approved the
following passage for his book’s dust jacket:
“A constant
theme in this book is the transmission of the past as an imaginative act; hence
the title, Falstaff’s dying vision of `a table of green fields,’ probably a
mishearing of his recitation of the Twenty-third Psalm, corrected by editors to
‘he babbled of green fields,’ a symbol of all fiction, an
art that must be exact about the uncertain.”
There’s a
nice summing-up of Kay Ryan’s strategy: “an art that must be exact about the uncertain.”
1 comment:
Johnson called the emendation 'uncommonly happy', and I"m inclined to agree. Unlike 'a table of green fields', 'A' babbled of green fields' makes perfect sense, either as a mishearing of Psalm 23 (though the fields there are 'pastures') or as the dying Falstaff remembering the scenes of his boyhood. It's a beautiful passage anyway.
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