MDMD(5)---Even Better, Clearer Copy----Chap 15 Plot Summary

Eric Alan Weinstein E.A.Weinstein at qmw.ac.uk
Sat Aug 2 20:27:03 CDT 1997


Chapter 15----Reason’s Translocation to The Other Side of Windward

One of Maskelyne’s academic interests, "The Attraction of Mountains", 
and his constant practical interest in his no-darn-good plumb line ("My 
career, my Life,--hanging from a damn’d Pin!") conspire to  have him 
and Mason shift over to the Other Side of the island, a position sane 
Waddington never would take up. This shall prove to be the chilling 
Other Side in several respects, for what the Wind does to people, or 
brings to people, is outside of Reason’s firm-seeming boundaries. [p158]

Between the Devil’s Garden and the Gates of Chaos lies the Pynchon Farm 
Bus, driven by three-eyed Johnny M, who seems to prefer this place to LA-----
{no,  I’m sorry, the peculiar atmospheres of this part of the island is
affecting my  perception most Strangely}------the British East India 
Company Fort at Sandy  Bay, "silent windward  side companion to the 
great Fort at James’s Town," [p159].

   Of this place, a ghostly German soldier (formerly) of John Company tells
Nevile:

"The Wind owns this island (
) What awful Pride, to keep a Station here.
Who would ever invade, by way of this mortal coast?" [p161] 

   The soldiers of the place seem to know this is a fool’s position, but they
 play their parts, firing guns into the wind, while taking massive bets upon
 each other’s rate of decline into madness.

   Nevile takes a walk among the Cliffs. Here he meets ghostly Dieter, who
at this
 point he thinks is a sad, disgruntled living soldier. Poor Dieter did not know 
what he was getting himself in for when he took  John Company’s £20.[160] 
Deserving sympathy, Nevile wishes to buy the poor boy out of service [162], 
but, alas, things will prove to be Other than they seem. 

  Upon telling Mason of the encounter, Charlie asks Nevile if 
Clive of In-di-a will pay, but it seems the answers Nevil offers
regarding Clive always end in No. Thus Charles has an elaborate 
day-dream about being back in London society, and receiving the 
thanks of Clive for the well-keeping of his brother-in-law.
This comes in the form of a beautiful envelope full of  'Thanks
 for Watching Nevile'. 

Mason also day-dreams what must be road runner cartoons of 
"Mishaps for Maskelyne, many of them Vertical in Nature." [162]

   Then comes Mason’s ghostly visitations. His beloved wife Rebekah
returns to him. He runs out of doors in the middle of the night, past 
Maskelyne’s oddly coloured Obs suit, "down onto  the floor of a 
ruin’d ebony forest, where among fog-wisps and ancient black logging
 debris polished by the Wind, (where) she accosts him." [p163]
But he seems to tell her more of his world to than she divulges 
of her (under-)world to him and us. Pity. However, we do learn 
that Rebekah calls her husband  Mopery, which is nothing I’ve 
yet knowingly  committed. [p165]

    The scence abruptly shifts to the time of Dixon’s
return. Mason confides to him about his Visitations in a way he could
not with Maskelyne. Dixon seeks to both confort Mason and to keep
a safe distance at the same time. Here we have an isnstance of
"approach and avoid" which is not just foolishness, but is near the 
essence of practical friendship. Dixon tries to listen and offer advice;
and thus encourages Mason to tell him of his wife, and how they 
came to be together. [p166]



   
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Eric Alan Weinstein
University of London
E.A.Weinstein at qmw.ac.uk






Eric Alan Weinstein
University of London
E.A.Weinstein at qmw.ac.uk








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