Archive for November, 2010
The Hollow Men
Thursday, November 4th, 2010
This is the first in a series inspired by science, sound, T.S. Eliot’s “The Hollow Men,” and armchair philosophers.
All the hollow men were walking, walking up the gently sloping grassy spire. We followed them, the hollow men, climbing, climbing higher up the wildflower slopes. We elbowed one another and winked. They knew but one of three cardinal points and saw not the purple poppy and watery-blue cornflower, knee-high grasses stirring in the breeze. We observed, we knew, we were aware.
At the top the spire ended in a cliff, and there the hollow men would topple, legs scissoring the air as if they still moved up. They hit with a crescendo of resonant clangs like bells struck at a dark lord’s portentous wedding. We stopped, patting ourselves on the back for averting the danger. But then, weeks or months passed, the same men returned, pointlessly climbing, climbing. Again they fell and hit with the clangs of a clock striking midnight.
Half of us–the bravest and the strong–volunteered to follow, for we the aware should learn more in the fall than these fools. The strong and the brave landed with a shower, a heavenly choir of tiny bells.
A year later one volunteer returned–perhaps the least insightful of the lot we sent forth–his form mangled almost beyond recognition. The others, he said, shattered while he alone remained. We, he suggested, were also hollow, just of different stuffing and stuff.
This we could not swallow: We were the aware, we the observant, we the knowing.
This is the first in the four-part Hollow Men series. Although this could be appreciated alone, three others have appeared (now revised): part II, part III and part IV.
Looking Up
Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010
I miss hearing my name, but not Dr. Helfinger’s elbow in my ribs. “Astrid! Get up!” he hisses in my ear. I stand and smile and shuffle across the stage to the podium. Without looking I pull my index cards from my lab coat pocket and launch into the speech. One of Turner’s, some rousing claptrap about our eternal quest to push back the frontiers of science. Even as I give it, I hear not a word. I am too busy waiting for him.
They say every great thinker does his best work when he’s young and unrestricted by experience. And then in the next breath they say I am the exception that proves the rule. Sixty-five years of steady work has brought me much: twenty-odd doctoral degrees in as many disciplines. Five noble prizes. Enough research funding to buy me a medium-sized country (say, France), not to mention an army of graduate students eager to run it for me. They all look up to me. Well, all but one.
As I finish, a sonic boom overwhelms the applause and a sudden whiff of ozone fills my nose. I turn my head. There he is, striding towards me, the applause changing to thunderous cheers. A smile automatically comes to my face and our arms reach for each other. Professor Astrid and Captain Formidable. As of last year, Eugene Eng, my former student. My greatest gift to the world, my greatest failure.
We hug, and every hair on my body stands up.
He was one of a hundred faceless students I had on the Project. We had calculated the way to break into the Sidereal Plane, the proper procedure to infuse its energies into a human body, and the experiment eighteen years in the making to test it. And then Eugene, distracted by a text, had stepped where he should not have when he shouldn’t have. The universe changed and he was remade.
Him.
The Dean awards him his honorary degree, the Ph.D. he had left incomplete. He shakes my hand and thanks me, as he has every time he sees me, and then he is gone with a flash, into the sky. And I am left like the rest.
Looking up.