M&D - Chapter 12 - pp 122-124
Mark Kohut
mark.kohut at gmail.com
Sat Feb 28 08:43:10 CST 2015
from Wikipedia on Time:
"Richard of Wallingford (1292-1336), abbot of St. Alban's abbey,
famously built a mechanical clock as an astronomical orrery about
1330.[32][33] Great advances in accurate time-keeping were made by
Galileo Galilei and especially Christiaan Huygens with the invention
of pendulum driven clocks.
The English word clock probably comes from the Middle Dutch word
klocke which, in turn, derives from the medieval Latin word clocca,
which ultimately derives from Celtic and is cognate with French,
Latin, and German words that mean bell. The passage of the hours at
sea were marked by bells, and denoted the time (see ship's bell). The
hours were marked by bells in abbeys as well as at sea."
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
Clocks in the West enabled the 'singling up of all lines' of natural
movements. Gave time frames for transported goods which were necessary
for the growth of global capitalism. Gave us the concept "clockwork
universe".
McLuhan, one of TRP's deep influencers did a lot of exploring, as have
many others, of the sense of time in different historical cultures.
Time is experienced all different if you do not measure it
numerically, seems to be a basic anthropological fact.
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 12:41 PM, Becky Lindroos <bekker2 at icloud.com> wrote:
> The last 3 pages of Chapter 12 -
>
> Page 122
>
> At the dock, the Sheldon Clock is curious about life in Cape Town so the Ellicott Clocks tries to enlighten "it". (Gender neutral - the clocks are "it" or "other" or "they," not "he" or "she.")
>
> "The air is ever moist, as you'd say."
>
> *But the Ellicott has only known the rainy season! - so what does that really say about human endeavors to generalize from incomplete bits of information? - Is our context for that info ever really complete?
>
> ** The the Sheldon Clock complains about its physical ailments. The Ellicott wants to know about the Dutch Clocks and getting along with them. Sheldon makes some observations including the "Dutch Stolidity of Character" and how they strike each quarter-hour. It seems Mason and Dixon have different responses to "unannounced Striking." There's some more M&D character info there - interesting - funny. The reader is getting to know Mason and Dixon as individuals through the eyes of the clocks. Dixon screams when he is startled by the clock's sudden striking - lol! -
>
> (And I'll bet the info on the difference between English and Dutch clocks is accurate.)
>
> "Wonderful chatting with you like this. Well! let's just tick these off once more,-- there're the Rains, the Rudeness of the native Clocks, the Mental Instability of the Astronomer 'pon whom I shall be depending utterly . . . any thing we've left out?"
>
> ** They're going to "tick" them off, eh? - lol -
>
> ** Sanity is an issue at the Cape, too.
>
> "The Gunfire at the Curfew, which has never once been on time,-- and might easily lead, in the uncaution'd, to a loss of Sanity."
>
> ** And the loss of sanity is a whole theme unto its own self here.
>
> ************************
> Page 123
>
> And the Ellicott tries to the Sheldon about insanity at St. Helena in folks other than Maskelyne but he's interrupted as it's time for the Sheldon Clock to be crated up and stowed aboard ship. The narrator comments on their relationship to the ocean, its "Wave-beats" and the attraction of "Synchrony." The Sheldon says he doesn't much care for ships.
>
> There's no time to talk about the Ocean - the big topic for them - and Ellicott doesn't much want to talk about it anyway. They don't quite know what it is but it surrounds them - an "undeniably rhythmick Being of some sort." - there's a metaphor there but ... the waves of time and space and synchronicity?
>
> ** Pynchon's personification of inanimate objects is hilarious and pointed (or mayhaps clocks are not really inanimate?). lol -
>
> The methods of measuring our world's space and time - anything else? (There's no real standard of measurement for madness.) How much more info or knowledge does more precision really give us?
>
> ************************
>
> Page 124:
> "When Dixon and the Sheldon Clock are alone at last..." Dixon talks to it - mentions his screaming in response to being startled, defends himself kind of. - lol
>
> ** Watch out for the Pox," Dixon in turn advises his Co-adjutor (Mason), just before stepping into the Boat. -
>
> "You thought the Cape was something,- this place . . . it's . . risky. A Fair of damned Souls, if that like."
>
> ** The ever-present danger of insanity - more here than at the Cape. Precarious mental conditions of Mason and Maskelyne.
>
> But Dixon won't criticize Maskelyne further, and the two wish each other well -
>
> They're "partners" now - "Jere" and "Charlie" - to be seeing each other "at Christmastide."
>
> ************
>
> I want to thank you ALL for your great contributions to the discussion - from the role of slaves and women in the book and the Narrator issues to Sisson Sectors and the Enlightenment and scientism stuff - there were links sent and even graphics and far more than that - the ambiance has been great. It's been fun.
>
> Becky
>
> -
> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
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