Stranger in a Strange Land(188)
By: Robert A. Heinlein“What’s that got to do with it? Does that make me blind and deaf to fundamental human emotion? I was saying that the crummiest painted plaster crucifix or the cheapest cardboard Christmas Crèche can be sufficient symbol to evoke emotions in the human heart so strong that many have died for them and many more live for them. So the craftsmanship and artistic judgment with which such a symbol is wrought are largely irrelevant. Now here we have another emotional symbol—wrought with exquisite craftsmanship, but we won’t go into that, yet. Ben, for almost three thousand years or longer, architects have designed buildings with columns shaped as female figures—it got to be such a habit that they did it as casually as a small boy steps on an ant. After all those centuries it took Rodin to see that this was work too heavy for a girl. But he didn’t simply say, ‘Look, you jerks, if you must design this way, make it a brawny male figure.’ No, he showed it . . . and generalized the symbol. Here is this poor little caryatid who has tried—and failed, fallen under the load. She’s a good girl—look at her face. Serious, unhappy at her failure, but not blaming anyone else, not even the gods . . . and still trying to shoulder her load, after she’s crumpled under it.
“But she’s more than good art denouncing some very bad art; she’s a symbol for every woman who has ever tried to shoulder a load that was too heavy for her—over half the female population of this planet, living and dead, I would guess. But not alone women—this symbol is sexless. It means every man and every woman who ever lived who sweated out life in uncomplaining fortitude, whose courage wasn’t even noticed until they crumpled under their loads. It’s courage, Ben, and victory.”
“‘Victory?’”
“Victory in defeat, there is none higher. She didn’t give up, Ben; she’s still trying to lift that stone after it has crushed her. She’s a father going down to a dull office job while cancer is painfully eating away his insides, so as to bring home one more pay check for the kids. She’s a twelve-year-old girl trying to mother her baby brothers and sisters because Mama had to go to Heaven. She’s a switchboard operator sticking to her job while smoke is choking her and the fire is cutting off her escape. She’s all the unsung heroes who couldn’t quite cut it but never quit. Come. Just salute as you pass her and come see my Little Mermaid.”
Ben took him precisely at his word; if Jubal was surprised, he made no comment. “Now this one,” he said, “is the only one Mike didn’t give to me. But there is no need to tell Mike why I got it . . . aside from the self-evident fact that it’s one of the most delightful compositions ever conceived and proudly executed by the eye and hand of man.”
“She’s that, all right. This one I don’t have to have explained—it’s just plain pretty!”
“Yes. And that is excuse in itself, just as with kittens and butterflies. But there is more to it than that . . . and she reminded me of Mike. She’s not quite a mermaid—see?—and she’s not quite human. She sits on land, where she has chosen to stay . . . and she stares eternally out to sea, homesick and forever lonely for what she left behind. You know the story?”
“Hans Christian Andersen.”
“Yes. She sits by the harbor of København—Copenhagen was his home town—and she’s everybody who ever made a difficult choice. She doesn’t regret her choice, but she must pay for it; every choice must be paid for. The cost to her is not only endless homesickness. She can never be quite human; when she uses her dearly bought feet, every step is on sharp knives. Ben, I think that Mike must always walk on knives—but there is no need to tell him I said so. I don’t think he knows this story . . . or, at least, I don’t think he knows that I connect him with it.”
“I won’t tell him.” Ben looked at the replica. “I’d rather just look at her and not think about the knives.”
“She’s a little darling, isn’t she? How would you like to coax her into bed? She would probably be lively, like a seal, and about as slippery.”
“Cripes! You’re an evil old man, Jubal.”
“And getting eviler and eviler by the year. Uh . . . we won’t look at any others; three pieces of sculpture in an hour is more than enough—usually I don’t let myself look at more than one in a day.”
“Suits. I feel as if I had had three quick drinks on an empty stomach. Jubal, why isn’t there stuff like this around where a person can see it?”
“Because the world has gone nutty and contemporary art always paints the spirit of its times. Rodin did his major work in the tail end of the nineteenth century and Hans Christian Andersen antedated him by only a few years. Rodin died early in the twentieth century, about the time the world started flipping its lid . . . and art along with it.