Plots and Stories
Time returns me to the blog. It is there that I begin to work out ideas that have their origin in my day and that compose the substance of my dreams.
At the end of Canto IV of Dante’s Inferno I find these lines spoken by Virgil. He is at the moment in Limbo and there sees the great spirits of the past who, born before the Christ have not been baptized and cannot therefore enter Paradise: the Trojans, the Greeks and fabled figures of early Rome; then Virgil sees the philosophers, scientists, mathematicians and doctors, and the Moorish scholar, Averroës But Virgil bemoans that he “cannot enumerate them all fully;/my long theme so drives me on that many times/my words fall short of the facts.” That is, Virgil must abandon the telling of the facts so that he can narrate his story. The story exceeds the facts. In Daniel Kehlmann’s novel, Measuring the World, Alexander von Humboldt says “a renowned traveler was only renowned if he left good stories behind.” Though Humboldt believed that by his physical measurements the “cosmos would be understood, all difficulties pertaining to man’s beginnings, such as fear, war and exploitation, would sink into the past,” but he seems to be also aware that the measurements must be a source of the story in which the measurements are embedded. Outside of a story the measurements lack meaning. Isn’t this about what Virgil complains,that there are too many facts and he must continue the story. In Kehlmann’s novel Carl Gauss avers, that “the world could be calculated after a fashion, but that was a long way from understanding it.” The measurements were the facts that required a story to mean anything. And then the measurements fade into the story.
Maybe the measurements were simply the plot. In George Gissing’s New Grub Street, the novelist Edwin Reardon suffering from a version of writer’s block and trying desperately to produce something that he can sell for publishing complains that he must now “put aside his intellectual work and begin again once more the search for a ‘plot.’” That is, he would rather have a story and not a plot, the latter an ordered narrative of events that might drive forward what will become the story. Story explores the motives and consequences of the actions narrated by the plot. Yes, Joyce’s Ulysses plots the movement of Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom through the streets of Dublin, but the story wonders about their character and the motives for their journeying and the thoughts and emotions that arise in their movements and charted meetings along the way. The story arises out of and includes the plot. The narrator of Orley Farm says the “I will not attempt to report the words that passed between [Lady Orme and Lady Mason] for the next half-hour, for they concerned a matter which I may not dare to handle too closely in such pages as these . . .” This narrator acknowledges that the plot might be in the words but that the story exists in the silence. And in Kehlman’s novel, Carl Gauss, when asked what science was responded “If such a man didn’t give up before he reached an understanding, that, perhaps was science.” Science was the story. I recall a statement by Neils Bohr, a physicist whose work helped develop the atomic bomb: “Science was the result of experiments and not reality.” The story arose out of the plot.
I think I have spent a good part of my life in stories, both those that I have read and those that I have been told. I have narrated not a few stories myself; I am constantly in the process of storying my life. It is the only way I can know my life. I do act in the world throughout my days, measure it as it were, but those actions lack meaning outside of the story I can narrate about them. I sit writing since 6:30 am and paused only to go to the bathroom, but what and why I am writing, where does it all come from is the story. In James McBride’s novel, The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store, Newspaper, whose nickname is Paper, narrates the news to the community that cannot (or will not) read. But her listeners insist that she make the news be a story. Rusty, one of her listeners, says to Paper, “C’mon Paper . . . story it up like you know how. Put a little pop in it, a little scoop.” Why should she do so, Paper asks, and Rusty answers, “’Cause if you tell it any other way, it’ll sound like a lie.” Unless there is a story all that would exist would be the facts, and the facts are empty and meaningless outside the context from which they were first embedded and from which they are drawn. We demand context for sense, and the narration of that context provides the story. The Stage Manager in Wilder’s Our Town says, “In our town we like to know the facts about everybody,” and though the play displays the facts, that is not the story that the play depicts: it is the lives that Emily comes to understand that are imperfect without the story. Emily says, “They don’t understand much, do they? . . . That’s all human beings are!—Just blind people.” To see only the facts is to miss life. Thus, we narrate, and “story it up . . . put a little pop in it, a little scoop.” The story narrates our life. The narrator of José Saramajo’s novel, Blindness, says, “All stories are like those about the creation of the universe, no one was there, no one witnessed anything, yet everyone knows what happened.” Nevertheless, we tell a story so that we might know what happened, and until we narrate the story, we don’t know what happened.
So, too, is that the idea in Ann Patchett’s novel Tom Lake. Patchett’s Emily narrates to her adult daughters the story of her summer affair with the television and movie star, Peter Duke, a passionate affair that had ended when Duke had taken up with the actor who had replaced Emily in the play and in life when Emily’s Achilles heel became torn. In modern parlance, Duke ghosted Emily: he stopped all communication with her. Hearing this story, Emily’s daughter, Maisie, responds with anger, but Emily says, “The rage dissipates along with the love, and all we’re left with is a story.” She is narrating that story to her daughters. At the end of the day (and even of a life) the story tells what it all felt like and even what it all might have meant. But, of course, it is only a story. In James McBride’s novel, The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store “somebody’s up late and talking” at the livery stable. They are telling a story. All we ever have is the story. We define ourselves by the stories we tell. We know others from the stories they tell. Fatty, in McBride’s The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store, had learned that the Nate Timblin he has come to known now was not the same Nate Timblin who had served time in prison. “Rather, he was a story, a wisp, a legend, a force, a fright.” I think the same might be said of us all: we are stories, and our storied lives are the stuff of our dreams.
Thoreau complains in his journal that he prefers the company of wood nymphs or wood gods because the men “did not inspire me. One or another abused our ears with many words and a few thoughts which were not theirs.” Conversation here was all plot and there was no story. Perhaps we search the world not as did Demosthenes carrying a lantern in search for an honest person but as writers with their metaphorical pens looking for the story.