Part Six Peace Like a RiverMy Holy Satan
Postscript |
PEACE LIKE A RIVER
Alan Swallow, Denver, 1957 (316 pages)
The human mind has gone down
many strange byways in its time, but few so strange as that traveled by
the early Christian ascetics who went out into the deserts to "wrestle
with Satan." In this tenth novel of his Testament of Man, Vardis Fisher
brings us onto the dry, sun-seared sands of Egypt, where saints like the
renowned Hilarion wall themselves into doorless, windowless stone cells
under the blistering heat, entombed sometimes for years in their own sweat
and waste. Their only contact with the outside world is the passage of
bread and water through a narrow opening. Or like the blessed Agios, buried
to the neck in the sands for days on end, naked, without food or water
or covering for his blistering scalp. Others stand for days on one leg
with heavy stones hanging from their necks; or search out the nests of
wasps and mosquitoes to subject themselves to their stings. With all manner
of self-deprivation and castigation of the flesh do these primitive monks,
in bleak solitude or in small ill-organized communities, mostly men but
a few women, seek to atone for their sins and compete to achieve the greatest
feats of sanctity.
Into one such desert community
comes Hareb, a gaunt, dour, tormented man "struggling mightily against
his evil passions." He is accompanied by his meek and long-suffering wife,
by Mark, an affluent merchant and occasional ascetic, and by Helene, a
woman strong-minded and with a skeptical bent, fleeing the latest round
of persecution on the eve of the emperor Constantine’s conversion to Christianity.
Hareb soon declares that the
childish ordeals adopted by other monks are not for him: he will achieve
holiness and renown by challenging Satan on the very ground of his evil
power. And so he goes into the nearby city to purchase a night with the
most beautiful, the most seductive of harlots, Thais, whom no man, it is
said, has yet been able to spurn or resist. . . .
The principal impulse to early
Christian asceticism was to suppress the allurements of the world, and
especially of the flesh. The attraction and love between a man and a woman,
the taste of fine foods and wine, even beauty in Nature from the song of
the bird to the scent of the rose, were looked upon as part of the domain
and powers of Satan, to be used to seduce the soul. Hareb’s personal torments
about the evils of the body and the diabolical nature of women have been
fuelled by the obsession among many Christian sects that sex is the greatest
of sins and that woman is the cause of this evil. Hareb quotes almost all
the prominent Church Fathers in his justification for his views. What did
Tertullian say? Woman, you are the gate to hell. Clement had said: For
Eve’s deceit, the very Son of God had to perish. Cyprian: Woman is the
instrument which the Evil One employs to possess our souls. Such views
resulted in a condemnation of all sexual activity, even in marriage, an
exaltation of celibacy and self-denial. Origen had taken the ultimate step
by castrating himself. Ambrose was to declare, Let the race die rather
than propagate it with the sin of sexual intercourse. And into the mouth
of a desert monk, Fisher puts the later Augustine’s infamous comment about
birth: "Inter faeces et urinas nascimur."
Helene, speaking for all women,
expresses no end of amazement and indignation at men’s presumption. They
believe that Adam was created pure, in the image of God, only to be seduced
and corrupted by Eve, dragged down to her inferior level. "With war, torture,
slavery and whorehouses you men have corrupted the world, and now you try
to put off on women the shame and the wickedness." Men, she says, made
Jesus a celibate and required that he be born of a virgin; but she believes
that "only women understand Jesus, and of women, only mothers."
Fisher is taking as his main
focus in this novel one of the major themes of the Testament: what man
has done to woman over the course of history and the effects this has had
on society’s well-being. Out of fear of the God/father figure, men have
felt an impulse to castration, which is what asceticism is all about. They
have been led to denigrate the sexual impulse and consequently women as
its source. This has deprived society of the positive effects of women’s
sexuality and with it of many of their other virtues. The one which Fisher
continually focuses upon is women’s instinctual and practical nature, which
has so far been overridden by men’s compulsion to construct abstract principles.
The latter are more often than not life-denying because they have been
derived from life-denying fears and motivations. The pathological association
of sex with sin is merely the prime example.
In the final chapter Helene
emerges from the desert with Mark, and together they travel to Nicaea where
the newly converted emperor Constantine has convened a Council to settle
the doctrinal differences between the mainstream Christian sects. Gaining
seats in the public gallery of the Council chamber, they hear the assembled
bishops arguing over the dates of the Birth and Resurrection, questions
of clerical celibacy and the power of the bishops, and above all the doctrinal
matter of the relationship between the Father and the Son within the Trinity,
the great dispute between the Catholics and the Arians.
A profuse number of sects, often
with wildly different beliefs and practices, dotted the Christian landscape
of the first three centuries, and Fisher’s characters in Peace Like
A River are often bewildered by the wide variety of beliefs they
are confronted with. In all this tangled evolution, the question arises
as to what had become of the original Jesus. Even today, biblical scholars
still lament that he was lost in the welter of subsequent theology and
sectarian infighting, in the adoration of the kingly, risen Christ and
savior figure, an entity placed on an equal footing with God. Thus, whatever
benefit to humanity that might have been derived from the human, earth-trodding
sage of Galilee, whether he was man or myth, flesh or allegory, was soon
lost to the institutionalized, remote, heavenly Son that the medieval Christ
became.
Amid the Trinitarian wrangling
of the Nicean Council, Helene, in the final pages of Fisher’s novel, stands
to interject the question: "But I thought the Son was Jesus, and Jesus
was a Jew in Israel, wasn’t he?" The exchange continues:
"A Jew!" the deacon cried and
choked. "Do you call the Word a Jew? The Word that was in God and was with
God and was God?"
"But Jesus was a Jew, wasn’t
he?"
"Who is this wicked woman? Does
she belong with Arius?"
"No, damn it, I don’t belong
with Arius! I asked if Jesus was a Jew. Was he a man?"
The deacon appealed to his audience.
"A man, she says! The Word, the unbegotten Word, a man! A Jew!"
"But what about Jesus?"
"Come," said Mark, and took
her arm to lead her away.
"But what about Jesus," she
said. "Where does he come into all this?"
"I don’t know," Mark said. .
. .
*********************
MY HOLY SATAN: A Novel of Christian Twilight
Alan Swallow, Denver, 1958 (326 pages)
With this eleventh and final
historical novel, the Testament of Man reaches a shattering emotional climax.
The series has been about the history of ideas, especially religious ones;
and it has followed the Judaeo-Christian thread because it was central
to the history of the western world. After the conversion of Constantine,
the ideas of a thousand years and more were Christian ideas, but in choosing
his moment to set down within this long era of faith, Fisher has chosen
the early 13th century in southern France. For his focus will not be upon
the ideas and traditions of the Church per se, but upon how this establishment
which permeated every pore of medieval society upheld its ideas and ideals
against dissenting ones. This is the age of heresy and inquisition.
The world of the novel is mostly
the world of serfs. These tillers of the land are little better than slaves,
and the greater part of their toil is for the benefit of their local lord.
What little they own and produce is mostly eaten up by taxes and tithes.
Their lives are circumscribed by a host of proscriptions designed to protect
the wealth and privileges of the nobility. They live in filthy hovels,
in a mire of superstition, in appalling ignorance.
But serf and noble alike are
discouraged from the pursuit of learning, and most of what can be learned
is decreed heretical. From the bishops to the village priests, a policy
of imposed ignorance serves to keep society from the means or the temptation
to doubt the Church’s precepts, for "doubting is itself heretical." Did
not the Old Testament say, In much wisdom is much grief; and St. Paul,
If any man is ignorant let him be ignorant? This has been a major theme
through the entire Testament: that the development of humanity’s ideas,
its search for knowledge and truth, has always taken place amid determined
opposition, and that the greatest tyranny people have tried to exercise
over one another is tyranny over the mind.
Richard is a young serf who
manages to buy his freedom so that he can follow the dangerous pursuit
of learning, a lust for which fills his soul. He is befriended by Hillel,
a Jewish doctor who enjoys a shaky protection from the Church’s persecution
because of his value to the local baron’s health. With his writings on
medicine, Hillel represents the budding new branch of science and logic,
one struggling for life in an atmosphere of suspicion and condemnation
by the clerical authorities. The learned philosopher-monk Abelard, famed
for his love affair with Heloise, had a few generations earlier been stripped
of his position for claiming that all knowledge was good, and that the
key to wisdom was diligent and unceasing questioning. Abelard is Hillel’s
guiding light. Truth, and the freedom to undertake its search, has always
fought for its life, Hillel tells Richard. The list of those who have died
in the quest is long: Socrates, Seneca, Jesus, how many thousands? Death
has too often been the price of daring to think.
But Richard runs afoul of one
of the village priests, Father Luce, who seduces and then murders because
of her resulting pregnancy the young girl whom Richard has hopes of marrying.
(Fisher has based this on records of an actual case.) Father Luce—in contrast
to the other local priest, the kindly, pious and dedicated Father Raoul—represents
the dark side of the medieval clergy, that well-documented picture of corruption,
greed, carnality and fanaticism which produced so much condemnation and
disillusionment in society at large and led to numerous anti-clerical heresies
and eventually the Reformation. When Richard, seduced by the baron’s wife,
is suspected of a crime, Father Luce pounces. For his perceived heretical
beliefs, for his association with a member of the accursed race rather
than any criminal accusation, Richard is drawn into the clutches of the
Inquisition.
When he enters the dungeon,
the reader descends with him. Not even the renowned historian and historical
novelist on the Inquisition, Zoe Oldenbourg [see her novels Cities of
the Flesh and Destiny of Fire, and her history of the Albigensian
Crusade, Massacre at Montsegur], has created a scene so searing,
that so reduces the reader to a harrowed, helpless witness of naked fear
and despair. Richard struggles to maintain his sanity amid the suffocating
dark and silence and filth, against the descending blackness of the mind.
His horrible anticipations alternate with glimmerings of hope and determination,
as he draws strength from the fellowship he feels with the men of the past
"who had loved the dignity of man and the freedom of his mind more than
they had loved life."
With the interrogation by the
inquisitors comes Richard’s terrified struggle to remain faithful to his
pledge to truth. And because of his refusal to abjure and allow his soul
to be saved, he is led into the torture chamber. . . .
Fisher forces us to face a particularly
agonizing question. In one trembling moment in his cell, Richard comes
to a terrible awareness about human beings. He asks why some men so enjoy
the sufferings of their fellows. Such men, he realizes, have created a
God who in the Old Testament commanded the utter destruction of his people’s
enemies; who granted for the perfect felicity of the saved in Heaven a
window through which they could look down upon the tortures of the damned;
who, through scripture and leaders like Augustine, compelled the believer
to force the unbeliever into the fold, even if it required torture and
death. For all of Richard’s fears for himself, Fisher makes us realize
that the greatest despair one can feel is not over one’s personal fate;
it is a despair over the worth of humanity as a whole. That is the challenge
which history, even in our own day, is constantly presenting: how to find
hope in a record so abysmal. In the ambiguous but uplifting ending to My
Holy Satan and to his Testament of Man, Vardis Fisher tries to
instill in us that looked-for hope, a hope that the "light is breaking,"
that voices of reason and compassion can be raised and welcomed.
The power of this novel would
be difficult to exaggerate. Fisher has plainly poured the blood of his
convictions into it, and between the lines one can sense that the writing
of the final scenes must have been a dreadful drain upon him. Like most
writers, Fisher was sensitive to the censorship of ideas and the suppression
of people’s minds, and few institutions in human history have been more
guilty of such practices than the medieval Christian Church. What is most
chilling about this suppression is that it was conducted with the best
of intentions; apologists for the Inquisition are always at pains to point
this out. The separation of body and soul had become so complete in religious
philosophy, a kind of Platonism gone mad, that any horror—torture, entombment
for life, death by fire—could be visited upon the material temporal self
in order that the spiritual eternal self might be saved from a damnation
conceived of as infinitely worse. Correct belief was vastly more important
than moral behavior. Richard comes to realize that the implacable, closed-minded
inquisitor is not really an evil man. He is simply convinced that his task
is to save souls, and to protect other souls from heretical infection.
He employs torture not only to gain confessions and to extract information
which will lead him to other heretics, he uses it to force the confessed
heretic to abjure his heresy and thereby be absolved of his sins before
being executed.
The true horror of all this,
as Fisher conveys it, is that the suppressors are themselves victims of
the same suppression. And when their power reaches into every crevice of
society’s mind, into its political and social structures, into its religious
beliefs and superstitions, its fears of ever-present death, demons and
the afterlife, the system becomes extremely powerful, self-perpetuating
and long-lasting. Such a system came together, as at no other time in history,
with the advent of a strong and dogmatic institution like the Christian
Church during a period when it offered the only stable foundation amid
the decay and lawlessness which followed the collapse of the western Roman
empire.
History is popularly conceived
of as a more or less steady progression of knowledge, enlightenment and
technology. But just as the Middle Ages lost so much of the ancients’ learning
in science, medicine, geography, their theories about nature and the universe,
so too it regressed appallingly in the freedom of the mind and the spirit
of inquiry. Historians of the Middle Ages tend to follow two tendencies.
There are those who like to portray medieval society, despite its more
unpleasant aspects, as a vital, productive system, generating a beneficial
conformity of belief and morality, networks of trade and social interaction,
the erection of great cathedrals. Others see it in decidedly darker colors.
For them it was an age when few but the clergy (and by no means all of
these) could read or write, sanitation and personal cleanliness was at
its nadir, protection from the whims and exploitation of the powerful,
or the tyranny of official dogma and those who wielded it, was non-existent.
Superstition reigned; poverty was crushing; warfare, persecution and disease
could decimate populations. Cruelty surpassed almost anything in ancient
times. In the average mind "Satan was Prince of the world," and life could
be summed up as "War, Famine and Plague."
Fisher, drawing on some of the
most progressive scholars of his day, comes down firmly on the latter side,
and generally speaking the majority of historical novelists after him have
followed suit. But have any of them gotten so thoroughly inside the superstitious
mind: like that of the woman who eats her fingernail parings and hair cuttings
because it was believed that witches could do horrible things if they got
hold of them? Or conveyed so gruesomely the filth of home and body, whether
of the serf in his hovel or the baron in his castle? This reluctance to
wash (and many of the great saints were renowned for it) was influenced
by the clerical condemnation of bathing as a sensual indulgence, and by
the philosophy of men like St. Jerome who claimed that "if a Christian
had washed in the blood of the Lamb [i.e., Christ] he need not wash again."
As for the much-vaunted Courtly Love, has anyone so ruefully punctured
its fraudulent inanities? People believed in the efficacy of a multitude
of holy relics, in a great population of malevolent demons, led by a Devil
who could visit young women and lie with them (sometimes producing in his
impish cunning and powers of impersonation a baby who resembled the parish
priest). They lived in constant fear of the chance word or action which
could label one a heretic or lead him on the many paths to Hell. In this
life or the next, most men and women literally felt themselves doomed.
Fisher paints a numbing picture of a society whose "devotion to God plunged
it into continuous sorrow and frantic prayers."
The struggle to throw off this
cloak of darkness began in the late 11th century, and it was met in most
quarters by a fierce resistance. All science, material advancement, cures
for disease—which was regarded as just punishment by God for sin—tended
to be condemned as works of Satan. No questioning of scripture or ecclesiastical
authority could be tolerated. The Inquisition, begun in the early 13th
century, institutionalized this resistance. (On this and other subjects,
Fisher’s appended Notes quoting his scholarly sources make for chilling
reading.)
The Church’s unyielding stance
produced not only an anti-clerical and anti-Roman reaction; there arose
across Europe a mix of humanist outlook and a new type of religious philosophy,
divorced from Roman authority. Scholars began to praise the humility and
liberty of the intellect, the pursuit of knowledge under God. Hillel and
Richard are convinced that "God reveals himself to those who inquire, and
those who are afraid to inquire he leaves to their folly." In his cell,
Richard dreams of a smiling Jesus who says, Suffer all truth-seekers to
come unto me. And in keeping with Fisher’s tendency to cast Christian elements
in mythically symbolic terms, Richard declares that Jesus represents all
good men who come to teach and die for their efforts. The Jesus myth is
still alive and vital, serving humanity’s ever evolving needs.
The great drawback which Fisher
sees in all institutionalized religions is represented here. Myth degenerates
into sterile doctrine. The spirit is stifled by the letter. In a never-ending
cycle, today’s heresy becomes tomorrow’s dogma. In its need to impose and
control, in becoming a worldly, bureaucratic institution, the medieval
Church lost sight of the Jesus idea. For the Church, it was Satan who became
the personification of independent thought. If so, such a Satan was "Holy."
Fisher’s Testament is a paean to the holiness of independent thought and
free inquiry. To Richard, Hillel declares: "Only those can be religious,
I sometimes think, in whom the faculties of imagination and intelligence
are highly cultivated." Though they are the product of an atheist and humanist,
this credo gives Fisher’s novels a kind of quasi-religious atmosphere of
their own. Fisher sees in the flesh-and-blood events and ideas of the past
the myth of questing humanity, and the engine of that quest as the deep,
psychological, ill-understood forces which drive the ‘soul.’ For him, the
essence of future evolution must be one of understanding, so that the soul
can progress from fear to courage, from neurosis to sanity, from ignorance
to knowledge. Vardis Fisher devoted a good part of his life to the Testament
of Man in the hope of making a contribution to that "great task."
*********************
Postscript
After he completed My Holy
Satan, Fisher went on to revise a tetralogy of autobiographical
novels which he had written prior to the Testament and which had brought
him considerable renown. Having completed his vast investigation of history,
he felt that he better understood his own life experience in the light
of the past, and by extension that of modern society. The original four-novel
opus was trimmed to a single book, Orphans in Gethsemane;
and he concluded it with the story of the research and writing of the Testament
itself and the difficulties which the project brought to his life. Reading
Orphans after the Testament gives one a further fascinating
insight into many of the latter’s ideas and their sources, as well as the
workings of Fisher’s own mind.
It is a tribute to Fisher’s
integrity and to that of his sources that most of the content of the Testament
is as potentially valid today as it was at the time of writing. Some emphases
have changed and certain ideas have become more complex, but few of his
theses have been undermined and probably none discredited. In many of the
Testament’s ideas Fisher was ahead of his time. As he faced the antagonisms
and frustrations over publishing, he consoled himself by saying that he
was writing for the long term. He may not have been far wrong. Many elements
in society are still anti-intellectual and would rather suppress ideas
than examine them. We still need the refreshing audacity of Vardis Fisher’s
Testament of Man and its fearless attempt to explore our heritage.
*
[Copies of Vardis Fisher's novels in the Testament
of Man are difficult to come by. All are out of print. Few libraries have
them, and rarely in a complete set. Used bookstores are usually equally
deficient. Library archives are more promising, and it may be that your
local library would have access to them through Inter-Library Loan programs.
Some used book dealers on the Internet offer complete or partial sets,
but they tend to be expensive. It is only to be hoped that the Fisher estate,
in conjunction with some enterprising and enlightened publisher, will one
day see the value in reprinting and promoting this unique literary creation
and place the Testament of Man in its well-deserved position in our cultural
firmament, a signpost along the lengthy and difficult road in the history
of ideas.]
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