…sheltering under some blackened tree, I would pass the midday hours too dazed to eat or think, and waited for the flailing sun to cross the meridian.Grant we meet not the Dryads nor Dian face to faceNor Faunus, when at noon he walks abroad.Thus Ovid, on the “Weirdness of Noonday”, the hush and pause of nature feared by the ancients, and by remote peasants still. Then Pan walks abroad, and the nereids grow harmful. Even the cicadas cease to drill their dry, insistent nothingness. Time stops. The day is held breath.--Colin Thubron, Journey into Cyprus (1975), p. 245
In some readers’ minds, Arthur Machen
is so strongly associated with the rare and the esoteric that the
importance, for him, of literature once widely known and readily
available, may be missed.
In this and subsequent articles, I’ll
show a few examples of how consulting such books may enhance our
understanding of the meaning, and the horror, of several of Machen’s
most famous stories.
The possible allusions I will point out
may have been noticed by readers whose comments I haven’t seen.
Much of what I’ll be saying was reported by me in an article
published in 1991, in the Spring issue of Avallaunius, the
journal of the Arthur Machen Society. I suppose that “Clarke’s
Dream in ‘The Great God Pan’: Two Classical Allusions” is
almost impossible to come by now, and that my article is unknown to
some readers who would be interested in its content.
To proceed.
Just before Dr. Raymond operates on his
ward, Mary, in the first chapter (“The Experiment”) of “The
Great God Pan,” his friend Clarke dozes off and dreams of a hot day
and walking on a path in a Mediterranean wood:
…suddenly, in place of the hum and murmur of the summer, an infinite silence seemed to fall on all things, and the wood was hushed, and for a moment of time he stood face to face there with a presence, that was neither man nor beast, neither the living nor the dead, but all things mingled, the form of all things but devoid of all form.
The dream-Clarke has come into the
presence of Pan. Perhaps Clarke had studied Ovid in school or at
university, and read the following passage from the famous Latin
poet, specifically from the Fasti, which concerns itself with
the Roman festivals. From Book IV, lines 761-762:
nec Dryadas nec nos videamus labra Dianae,nec Faunum, medio cum premit arva die
which Frazer, in the 1931 Loeb
Classical Library edition, translates as “May we not see the
Dryads, nor Diana’s baths, nor Faunus, when he lies in the fields
at noon” (pp. 244-245). Frazer’s note adds, “It was dangerous
to disturb Pan (Faunus) at midday.” The passage quoted is from a
prayer to be offered to Pales, a deity of shepherds whose festival
was in April, the subject of Ovid’s fourth book.
Machen’s reader will have understood
that Clarke encountered Pan, whether or not the Ovid passage came to
mind, but it seems likely that Machen expected his better-educated
readers to perceive an allusion that underscores the heat, the
breathlessness, and the dreadful peril of such a moment.
The passage is a prayer, a
prudent supplication not to see that contrasts with the
eagerness of the scientist that his hapless ward will “‘see
the god Pan.’” Raymond lacks a proper fear of Pan and also lacks
a due reverence for a human being; he regards Mary as his to do with
as he pleases since he rescued her from the “gutter.” All the
terrible things that happen after the “experiment” result from
his unrestrained curiosity, ambition, and, above all, impiety.
“The Experiment” implies that one
cannot derive ethics from the scientific method. This is true. One
can only bring ethics to the laboratory – or not, as with Imperial
Japan’s Unit 731.
The second chapter of “The Great God
Pan,” called “Mr. Clarke’s Memoirs,” introduces Clarke’s
private notebook. He calls it “Memoirs to prove the existence of
the Devil.”
Machen thus introduces a specifically
Christian element into the story, to which he returns at the end of
the chapter. Having heard and recorded Phillips’s account of the
tragic fates of two children who knew the fatal Helen Vaughan, Clarke
added a Latin inscription that is an obvious parody of part of the
Nicene Creed. It means, “And the devil was made flesh, and was
made man.”
Depicting the devil as Pan isn’t
biblical; in the Bible, the devil is associated with a serpent, a
dragon, and a falling star, and is said to be able to appear as an
“angel of light.”
But the “iconographic influence of
Pan upon the Devil is enormous,” says Jeffrey Burton Russell.
Early evidence for this seems, from his book, to date to several
centuries after the writing of the New Testament documents. Russell
reproduces a Coptic ivory carving, 6th century. The iconographies
“of Pan and the Devil here coalesce: cloven hooves, goat’s legs,
horns, beast’s ears, saturnine face, and goatee” (The Devil:
Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primitive Christianity, pp.
125-126).
Machen worked with both in this
novella. The novella might not cohere thematically.
“The Great God Pan” didn’t come to Machen as one whole. “The Experiment” was published by itself in The Whirlwind in 1890. Years later, in an introduction to the 1916 Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co. edition of The Great God Pan, Machen confessed that “I had no notion that there would be anything to follow this first chapter.”
“The Experiment” recalls the
brooding stories of Hawthorne, with his cold-hearted observers of
humanity and the women who are their victims.* Poor Mary is a
sacrificial victim shattered by a vision of sublimity. In
Apuleius’s Metamorphoses, Psyche erred
in listening to her sisters’ urgings to disobey the god and shine a
candle on his divine beauty. Mary agreed to the “experiment”
permitting her to see what her “father” could not see for
himself, and her sufferings were worse, though briefer, than those of
Psyche, and cost her her life.
With the rest of the novella, we leave
myth for a melodrama about amateur detectives and the villainess
Helen Vaughan, who arrives in London, drinks coffee, has one foot in
the underworld and one in respectable society, finagles money and
spends it, and leads several Londoners of good name into activities
of which they feel so ashamed that they choose painful methods of
suicide. At last Clarke, Villiers, and Dr. Matheson sternly give her
a choice: either the police will be called (with the implication of
inevitable public exposure), or she can kill herself with the rope
they have brought. She chooses the latter. When Machen described
the revolting metamorphosis of her body, he may have been trying to
return to the more mythic level of the first pages. I don’t quite
find it artistically convincing.
*I’m thinking of “The Birthmark”
and “Rappaccini’s Daughter.”
(c) Dale Nelson
Thanks for the interesting writeup.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm glad to see that my opinion is in accord with yours -- the original story is striking, the rest of the book a pallid paste-up. The brilliance of "The Experiment" is the shiver of horror we feel at the end -- not at the great god Pan, but at Dr. Raymond.
ReplyDeleteplease where can i read the introduction to the 1916 Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co. edition of The Great God Pan? this is really important to me 😭😭
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