Read The Biographer's Tale Online

Authors: A. S. Byatt

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Psychological, #Biographers, #Psychological Fiction, #Bildungsromans, #Coming of Age, #Biography as a Literary Form, #Young Men

The Biographer's Tale (20 page)

I am not quite sure in what order to recount the next few parts of my tale, as I find that my memory for exact sequences is faultier than I would wish. I feel a desire in myself—an aesthetic desire—to punctuate my assimilation of Destry-Scholes's shoeboxes (for I began to try to make sense of the photographs as well as of the cards, with some success, as will be seen) with my encounters with the Strange Customer. It shows at least that I was now leading two lives—three, if you count Ormerod Goode as separate from the card index. I had not told him of my latest discovery. I was saving it up. Four, in fact, if you count Fulla Biefeld, in Oxford. I cannot now remember how often I went back to Willesden. A feeling of panic—that I
must
get a record of the cards before Vera Alphage grew bored or resentful—was replaced by a calm rhythm of consecutive work, as I came to see that she enjoyed my presence there, and even looked forward to my visits. At around this time, Erik and Christophe took off for an exploration
of the northern islands of Japan. They left me in charge—I worked four, instead of two, days a week. This meant that my visits to Willesden took place in the evenings. Yes, that is how it was, at that time.

The Strange Customer asked me if I had favourite Web sites. I spoke of various useful travelling ones, hotel chains, art historical troves, etcetera. He said that was not what he meant. He said he would leave me a list of the ones he and Pym (or Pim) had found particularly helpful. I thanked him. He offered me a cigar. He had one of those curious little implements which nick a small hole in the top of a cigar. It had a very small, very sharp little pronging blade. I said I didn't smoke. Maurice Bossey said, levelly and expressionlessly, that I didn't do much, did I? I said I would try to help him if he would be a little more explicit about what he wanted. (Did I
really
say that? Yes, I did, I remember clearly, some memories ingrain themselves like light on photographic film.) He said he was glad that I intended to be helpful, or the reputation of Puck's Girdle might have been thought to be at stake. He smoked his fat cigar at me—burning cigar-tobacco has an element of
rot
in it, I find, an element of burning something already stale and decaying—and I asked him not to, as I am asthmatic. He referred to my “poor little lungs” and puffed more and closer, coils and clouds of dark, thick fume. (No, I am doing
too much writing
now. Cross that out? Leave it for the moment.) (Anyway, it
was
fume, and it was in coils.)

He opened his wallet and produced a very fine paper that contained nothing but a series of Web addresses.

“Try those,” he said, “as a stimulus to a sluggish imagination. Your dear employers are altogether quicker, I'm sure …” He considered me.

“There's not very much of you, is there? Do they take you along with them, ever? Are you part of the crew, so to speak?”

“I mind the shop,” I told him.

“Well, don't mind it with too tight lips,” he said. “Allow a few things to get out or go in. A smile, a chuckle, a bit of information, a snippet of gossip from time to time.”

I said I didn't know any gossip.

He said he was dreadfully afraid that might be true.

Cards 21–26 I called in my mind the “drowning and autopsy cluster.” Fulla Biefeld wrote back very promptly in answer to my queries, and said that the cards I had sent her were related to Linnaeus. One described his theory that swallows spent the winters under water, under the ice in deep lakes (a theory, she told me, very widespread at the time). The other was a contemporary description of the death of Peter Artedi, who had wandered into an unfenced canal in Amsterdam in an inebriated state, and had been identified in the mortuary by Carolus Linné. Artedi, Fulla Biefeld said, was a person of much greater intelligence than Linnaeus himself, and his classification of the
umbelliferae
, published by Linnaeus after his death, had been a model for much of Linnaeus's own work. His system was also thought of, by our own contemporaries, despite having known nothing (of course) about evolution, as an ancestor of cladism, the classification of species by phylogeny, in which each named taxon should have a unique evolutionary history. He was more rigorous and less fanciful than
Linnaeus, said Fulla Biefeld. His death at twenty-nine was a long time ago. What exactly was I trying to find out? Scientists could not understand people like me who spent their time on past errors and culs-de-sac, however amusing. She enclosed an article on the effects of the blanket use of pesticides and weedkiller in certain Californian orchards. Such studies
should
be being carried out in East Anglia, in Bavaria, in Spain, and they were not. She was happy to give me any more help I needed.

My next definitive cluster—starting with card 42, but with some gaps this time, and some uncertainties of classification, might be called “hybrids and mixtures.” It begins with the Hydra of Hamburg.

Card no. 42

The seven-headed hydra belonged to the Burgomaster of Hamburg. It had been looted by Count Königsmark in 1648, after the Battle of Prague, from the altar of a local church. Albert Seba, Artedi's patron, published a drawing of the hydra or seven-headed serpent in the first volume of his Thesaurus of Natural History. CL, taken by Kohl to see the creature, at once detected the fake. He found that the jaws and clawed feet were those of weasels, and that the body had been covered with snake-skins neatly joined and glued. That the creature had seven heads was in itself enough, in his opinion, to establish the fraud. “Good God,” he cried, “who never put more than one clear thought [
tanke
] in any of Thy
created bodies!” He presumed that the hydra had been manufactured by monks as a representation of an Apocalyptic beast, and makes no mention of Greek mythology.

The Burgomaster had for some time past been trying to sell his hydra and had at first asked an enormous sum for it. It was said that the King of Denmark had made an unsuccessful bid of 30,000 thalers; but latterly the price had been steadily dropping, and when L tactlessly made public his discovery, it fell to nothing at all. Fearing the vengeance of the Burgomaster he thought fit to leave Hamburg forthwith. On 16 May 1735 they went to Altona, from where they embarked in a small two-masted ship for Amsterdam (one ducat per head).

Card no. 43

When CL was visiting the Jussieu brothers in Paris in 1737 he accompanied them and their students on botanical hunts. One of the brothers constructed a spurious flower out of fragments of various other specimens, and asked him to name it. He, sharp of eye and quick of wit, was not at all deceived by what was, after all, a common enough student pleasantry. He answered urbanely that the student should consult Jussieu—“since only Jussieu or God could name the plant.”

Cards 44 and 45 were both in Swedish. I sent copies of these, too, off to Fulla Biefeld. I give her answers now, since I am not writing to any strict consecutive chronology, and since they reinforce my decision to call this the “hybrid” cluster.
The first turned out to concern Linnaeus's experimental creation of the first fertile plant hybrid—
(Tragopogon pratensis x T. porrifolius)
and his description in
De Sexu Plantarum
(1760) of his manipulation of the flowers of
Mirabilis, Cannabis
and other species, by cutting off the stamens, binding paper round the pistils, etc. in order to confirm the basic principle of botany—that pollination—pollen on the stigma of the pistil—was necessary if the seeds were to ripen.

Fulla Biefeld added, on her own initiative, that many of the plant hybrids identified by Linnaeus were nothing of the kind. He believed, she told me, that both animals and plants consisted of two substances—pith (or marrow) and bark,
medulla
and
cortex
, of which the pith/marrow was inner, the bearer of vital and generative powers, whilst the bark stood for the “outer,” primarily the nutritive faculty. The pith/marrow stood for the female in reproduction (the pistil in plants), the bark corresponded to the “male principle” (the stamens).

Fulla Biefeld was scornful (or perhaps simply dismissive) about these theories. Linnaeus had come, she said, to tell his disciples that the
will
resided in the female principle, the ability to expand and contract. In this context he cited the one-celled amoeba, the “lowest of all creatures”
(Volvox Chaos dicta)
, which was “pure marrow” and hence could assume all conceivable shapes.

False analogy, said Fulla Biefeld, and the desire to construct a theory of everything from received ideas close at hand, were very dangerous. But you had to admire his inexhaustible ingenuity.

I wrote back—she tempted me into writing back—that in terms of false analogy I was, so to speak, metaphysically baffled
by the bee orchid and the eyes on butterfly wings. I understood the argument (Darwinian) for the production of these solid living analogies, I
understood the argument
that a resemblance could be perfected over millennia by a flower, or the scales on a wing, by natural selection—but I couldn't really
believe
it. It still had a quality of designed poetry that left me baffled. I said I wasn't answering
her
point, I was adding one of my own.

Card 45, she told me, was Linnaeus's endorsement of Réaumur's account of the hatching of a chicken covered with hair, after the crossing of a rabbit and a hen.

Card no. 46

All the Darwin rabbit letters that have survived are those which
followed
the publication of Galton's paper “Experiments in Pangenesis by Breeding from Rabbits of a pure variety, into whose circulation blood taken from other varieties had previously been largely transfused.” This was read at the Royal Society on March 30th 1871. These letters refer to a continuation of the experiments, also with negative conclusions … Those who read the letters below cannot doubt that Darwin knew the nature of the experiments, and knew that Galton was assuming that the “gemmules” circulated in the blood. The whole point was to determine whether the hereditary units of a breed A could be transfigured by transfusion of blood to members of a breed B and would “mongrelise” the offspring conceived later by B.
Was the “blood” indeed as supposed in folk-language all over the world a true bearer of hereditary characters?

Card no. 47

Dec. 11. 69. My dear Darwin, I wonder if you could help me. I want to make some peculiar experiments that have occurred to me in breeding animals and want to procure a few couples of rabbits of marked and assured breeds, viz:
Lop-ear
with as little tendency to Albinism as possible.
Common rabbits
, ditto.
Angora albinos …
Pray excuse my troubling you; the interest of the proposed experiment—for it is really a curious one—must be my justification …

March 15, 70.

My dear Darwin,

I shall hope in a week from now to give you some news and by Saturday week definite facts about the rabbits. One litter [?doe] has littered today and all looks well with her … I grieve to say that my most hopeful one was confined prematurely by 3 days having made no nest and all we knew of the matter was finding blood from the cage and the
head
of one of the litter. She was transfused from yellow and the buck also from yellow. Well the head was certainly much lighter than the head of another abortion I had seen, and was certainly
irregularly
coloured, being especially darker, about the muzzle, but I did not and do not care to build anything upon such vague facts and have not even kept the head. As soon as I know
anything
I will
write instantly and first to you. For my part, I am quite sick with expected hope and doubt …

Card no. 48

Letter of Charles Darwin in
Nature
, April 27, 1871

“Pangenesis.” In a paper, read March 30th 1871 before the Royal Society, and just published in the Proceedings, Mr. Galton gives the results of his interesting experiments on the inter-transfusion of the blood of distinct varieties of rabbits. These experiments were undertaken to test whether there was any truth in my provisional hypothesis of Pangenesis. Mr. Galton, in recapitulating “the cardinal points” says that the gemmules are supposed “to swarm in the blood.” Now in the chapter on Pangenesis in my “Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication,” I have not said one word about the blood, or about any fluid proper to the circulating system. It is, indeed, obvious that the presence of gemmules in the blood can form no necessary part of my hypothesis; for I refer in illustration of it to the lowest animals, such as the Protozoa, which do not possess blood or any vessels; and I refer to plants in which the fluid, when present in the vessels, can not be considered as true blood … I have said that “the gemmules in each organism must be thoroughly diffused; nor does this seem improbable, considering their minuteness and the steady circulation of fluids through the body.” But when I used these latter words and other similar ones, I presume that I was thinking of the diffusion of the gemmules through the tissues, or from
cell to cell, independently of the presence of vessels—as in the remarkable experiments by Dr. Bence Jones, in which the chemical elements absorbed by the stomach were detected in the course of some minutes in the crystalline lens of the eye;… Nor can it be objected that the gemmules could not pass through tissues or cell walls, for the contents of each pollen grain have to pass through the coats, both of the pollen tube and embryonic sac. I may add, with respect to the passage of fluids through membrane, that they pass from cell to cell in the absorbing hairs of the roots of living plants at a rate, as I have myself observed under the microscope, which is truly surprising.

When, therefore, Mr. Galton concludes, from the fact that rabbits of one variety, with a large proportion of the blood of another variety in their veins, do not produce mongrelised offspring, that the hypothesis of Pangenesis is false, it seems to me that his conclusion is a little hasty …

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