Sunday, November 28, 2010

The Adoration of the Body & The Official Version.

In these two chapters, we revisit many of the dramatic events from the last couple of chapters. We learn that  it was in fact James that destroyed the scarecrow after he found the drowned baby with Frances. We also learn that a distraught Maternia visited Mrs. Luvovitz shortly after Kathleen died. James continues to unravel after Kathleen's funeral. Back into present day, Spanish Influenza has taken over the town. Fearing that a sick baby Lily will die, James gets the priest to attend a baptism of the young baby, not knowing that Frances already did the deed. Here, Mercedes is named Godmother. The two young girls pray for Lily, who miraculously gets better. James buys Mercedes a doll after Lily recovers. We also get a flashback into the New York life of Kathleen, and her first sexual experience that ended up in her pregnancy.

When James discovers Frances and the two babies (one alive, one dead) in the creek, the narrator compares it to the war that James came back from: "There is a water filled trench. There is an unhappy man with bleeding hands. There is the body of a boy" (MacDonald 158). To me, this metaphor says that life is always a war. There is always a battle to be fought, and a greater evil to kill. I feel like the depressed and unhappy James is realizing this currently in the plot.

There is a lot of tree imagery in this section, which creates several different effects. On the night after Kathleen and Ambrose die, a shadow is said to have appeared from a tree: "It's a figure that comes out from under the branches and onto the street. It stops, drifting in place like a plant on the ocean floor. Then it travels again all the way down the street to the graveyard...It looks straight out to the sea that stretches four thousand miles and sings" (MacDonald 161). I feel as if this particular tree/plant image represents the dying Maternia. Later in the section, Frances experiences a moment of weakness over the death of her mother, "She turned her limbs into strong little tree branches. She made her spine into a springy switch and her skin into new bark" (MacDonald 174). There is a contrast between the new, strong tree of Frances and the old ghostly tree of Maternia.

An insight to Maternia's mental state is given when she returns to the Luvovitzes' house one final time. Maternia is broken and helpless, much like the child she was and probably always has been. MacDonald adds that Mrs. Luvovitz "Washes her gently, as though Maternia was a newborn" (MacDonald 162). Maternia is not so different from the helpless, naked babies that Kathleen gave birth to. the reader feels an extreme amount of pain for Maternia, for she is a passive, likeable character, that meets her untimely death, simply because she is not an overtly strong person.

In The Official Version the theme of truth is extended. MacDonald plainly states that "One child was born" (MacDonald 165). There is no truth to this of course, as the Piper's had another child. The reader sees that truth is a powerful thing: It can alter perception dramatically, and it can completely erase the history of a person, specifically, baby Ambrose. The idea that seeing is not always believing has been fuelling this story (which is completely based on the recounting of the narrator,) and is present again in this chapter. It is unsettling and upsetting that the truth is hid so easily and without guilt.

Most importantly in this section, is the transformation of Mercedes from young girl to mother in a very short amount of time. After each death in the family, James summons Mercedes: "'I need you to be a big girl, Mercedes'" (MacDonald 163). These exact lines are spoken every time that James discovers a death. This repetition makes the reader understand the amount of emotional and physical responsibility that is being placed in the head of a very young girl. When Lily is being "officially baptized," Mercedes becomes the Godmother: "Thus, along with her father, and at the age of almost seven, Mercedes assumed the responsibility for the soul of Lily Piper" (MacDonald 171). Mercedes also later tells Frances that she is her mother now. This makes the reader wonder how Mercedes's character will be defined by her role as a seven year old mother, and how it could possibly effect our plot.

Water plant imagery is used in almost every metaphor in Fall on Your Knees. As we journey back into Kathleen's life in New York, MacDonald describes the act that ended up in her pregnancy: "The invisible ocean holds the room and the bed and the lovers suspended and treats them like aquatic plants" (MacDonald 176). Aquatic plants move themselves, but are fixed to a single location. I think this is a metaphor for how Kathleen tries very hard to remove herself from her situation at home, but home will always follow her, and she will always be reminded of Cape Breton and all its given and taken away from her.

A quote I really liked from this section is observed by James: "Men equal parts monster and martyr" (MacDonald 170). This is how James describes himself and others like him. I think it suits him perfectly. He is truly a monstrous character, however, he gives a lot of himself for the better of his daughters, even when his intentions aren't so honourable. We see that James feels guilt after the death of Kathleen, Ambrose and Maternia. Could his character change once again?

The curse, real or imagined, placed on Maternia by her father and mother has been fulfilled. If one believes in heaven and hell, one must wonder where the three dead characters are now...

Interesting Vocabulary
Irredeemable: Not able to be saved; James's guilt was such, but he remained strong.
Motley: A diverse mixture; Frances thoughts about her mother were a huge motley.
Reverently: To show deep solemn respect in this way; Frances treats Mercedes doll reverently, while she wishes to take it apart out of curiosity.
Unassailable: Unable to be attacked or defeated. Kathleen believes her life in the new world is unassailable to the old world of Cape Breton. How wrong she was.



1 comment:

  1. Does Frances's baby die? or is he still alive? I'm confused.

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