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Crushed in the Here and Now
George Orwell:
Keep the Aspidistra Flying
(Harcourt, Harvest Books, 1956)
Such a superbly Schopenhauerian sentiment should Orwell
express by having Woman – not an individual with any real thoughts and
desires, but a pure Eryineic force, a sort of organic .dll file – snare and
coerce poor Comstock into the bland swamp of job and fatherhood. Unlike
Roquentin, who, if allowed, would have leapt into the abyss of Annie’s bosom
(and he was not allowed because Annie was a free individual and not Woman),
Comstock never consciously or unconsciously desired his fate. Rather, he was
undone by hunger, incompetence and (This is where evil requires as much
courage as good) an unfortunate sense of duty.
Comstock was free to avoid that last flickering image
of himself as a helpless fish, wriggling in the paws of the social blob,
before the fade to black and the eternal night of the family. But he did not
possess the talents or imagination to free himself from want without
surrendering his freedom from others. He could have sold drugs or committed
larcenies or even persisted, absent mindedly and uncaring, in his agency
work for the paycheck alone (as long as he did not allow any of these
activities to become the time-consuming center of his life). Even if he were
to be caught in the pursuit of either of the former two activities he would
have free meals and lots of free time (but no sex – There are compromises
everywhere). Had he rejected Rosemary at the moment of her pregnancy (He
might have saved some face by insisting on an abortion, but, Woman - and
Orwell - would not hear of it), he would have been spit out by the blob as
incorrigibly evil. But he did not partly because the blob was already part
of him (For the call of duty came from nowhere but within) and partly
because, like a torturee, weakened by hunger, he was ready to confess to
anything.
A sequel to Keep the Aspidistra Flying, would
have had the utterly blobbed Comstock presiding over the family table of
boiled cabbage and Bovril toast, expressing his disdain, motivated obviously
by regret and rancor, for some recent bit of avant garderie before settling
down to his slippers and the Mirror (or the Sun, depending on
whichever utterly irrelevant political persona he might have chosen). This
sequel would have formed an admirable antiphone to The Way of All Flesh,
for the artificial (no less artificial for being primitive) and evil
concoction called the family is if anything harder on the father than on the
son.
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