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Art
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Here's a
piece of fine reasoning and writing by Joan Didion on the
subject of Morality. I offer this excerpt here to encourage you
to buy her books and read her work:
On Morality
By Joan Didion
As it
happens I am in Death Valley, in a room at the Enterprise Motel
and Trailer Park, and it is July, and it is hot. In fact it is
119°. I cannot seem to make the air conditioner work, but there
is a small refrigerator, and I can wrap ice cubes in a towel and
hold them against the small of my back. With the help of the ice
cubes I have been trying to think, because The American Scholar
asked me to, in some abstract way about “morality,” a word I
distrust more every day, but my mind veers inflexibly toward the
particular.
Here are some
particulars. At midnight last night, on the road in from Las
Vegas to Death Valley Junction, a car hit a shoulder and turned
over. The driver, very young and apparently drunk, was killed
instantly. His girlfriend was found alive but bleeding internally,
deep in shock. I talked this afternoon to the nurse who had
driven the girl to the nearest doctor, 185 miles across the
floor of the Valley and three ranges of lethal mountain road.
The nurse explained that her husband, a talc miner, had stayed
on the highway with the boy’s body until the coroner could get
over the mountains from Bishop, at dawn today. “You can’t just
leave a body on the highway,” she said. “It’s immoral.”
It was one
instance in which I did not distrust the word, because she meant
something quite specific. She meant that if a body is left alone
for even a few minutes on the desert, the coyotes close in and
eat the flesh. Whether or not a corpse is torn apart by coyotes
may seem only a sentimental consideration, but of course it is
more: one of the promises we make to one another is that we will
try to retrieve our casualties, try not to abandon our dead to
the coyotes. If we have been taught to keep our promises – if,
in the simplest terms, our upbringing is good enough – we stay
with the body, or have bad dreams.
I am
talking, of course, about the kind of social code that is
sometimes called, usually pejoratively, “wagon-train morality.”
In fact that is precisely what it is. For better or worse, we
are what we learned as children: my own childhood was
illuminated by graphic litanies of the grief awaiting those who
failed in their loyalties to each other. The Donner-Reed Party,
starving in the Sierra snows, all the ephemera of civilization
gone save that one vestigial taboo, the provision that no one
should eat his own blood kin. The Jayhawkers, who quarreled and
separated not far from where I am tonight. Some of them died in
the Funerals and some of them died down near Badwater and most
of the rest of them died in the Panamints. A woman who got
through gave the valley its name. Some might say that the
Jayhawkers were killed by the desert summer, and the Donner
Party by the mountain winter, by circumstances beyond control;
we were taught instead that they had somewhere abdicated their
responsibilities, somehow breached their primary loyalties, or
they would not have found themselves helpless in the mountain
winter or the desert summer, would not have given way to
acrimony, would not have deserted one another, would not have
failed. In brief, we heard such stories as cautionary tales,
and they still suggest the only kind of “morality” that seems to
me to have any but the most potentially mendacious meaning.
You are
quite possibly impatient with me by now; I am talking, you want
to say, about a “morality” so primitive that it scarcely
deserves the name, a code that has as its point only survival,
not the attainment of the ideal good. Exactly. Particularly out
here tonight, in this country so ominous and terrible that to
live in it is to live with antimatter, it is difficult to
believe that “the good” is a knowable quantity. Let me tell you
what it is like out here tonight. Stories travel at night on the
desert. Someone gets in his pickup and drives a couple of
hundred miles for a beer, and he carries news of what is
happening, back wherever he came from. Then he drives another
hundred miles for another beer, and passes along stories from
the last place as well from the one before; it is a network
kept alive by people whose instincts tell them that if they do
not keep moving at night on the desert they will lose all
reason. Here is a story that is going around the desert tonight:
over across the Nevada line, sheriff’s deputies are diving in
some underground pools, trying to retrieve a couple of bodies
known to be in the hole. The widow of one of the drowned boys is
over there; she is eighteen, and pregnant, and is said not to
leave the hole. The divers go down and come up, and she just
stands there and stares into the water. They have been diving
for ten days but have found no bottom to the caves, no bodies
and no trace of them, only the black 90° water going down and
down and down, and a single translucent fish, not classified.
The story tonight is that one of the divers has been hauled up
incoherent, out of his head, shouting – until they got him out
of there so that the widow could hear – about water that got
hotter instead of cooler as he went down, about light flickering
through the water, about magma, about underground nuclear
testing.
That is the
tone stories take out here, and there are quite a few of them
tonight. And it is more than the stories alone. Across the road
at the Faith Community Church a couple of dozen old people, come
here to live in trailers and die in the sun, are holding a
prayer sing. I cannot hear them and do not want to. What I can
hear are occasional coyotes and a constant chorus of “Baby the
Rain Must Fall” from the jukebox in the Snake Room next door,
and if I were also to hear those dying voices, those Midwestern
voices drawn to this lunar country for some unimaginable
atavistic rites, rock of ages cleft for me, I think I
would lose my own reason. Every now and then I imagine I hear a
rattlesnake, but my husband says that it is a faucet, a paper
rustling, the wind. Then he stands by a window, and plays a
flashlight over the dry wash outside.
What does it
mean? It means nothing manageable. There is some sinister
hysteria in the air out here tonight, some hint of the monstrous
perversion to which any human idea can come. “I followed my own
conscience.” “I did what I thought was right.” How many madmen
have said it and meant it? How many murderers? Klaus Fuchs said
it, and the men who committed the Mountain Meadows Massacre said
it, and Alfred Rosenberg said it. And, as we are rotely and
rather presumptuously reminded by those who would say it now,
Jesus said it. Maybe we have all said it, and maybe we have been
wrong. Except on the most primitive level – our loyalties to
those we love – what could be more arrogant than to claim the
primacy of personal conscience? (“Tell me,” a rabbi asked Daniel
Bell when he said, as a child, that he did not believe in God.
“Do you think God cares?”) At least some of the time, the world
appears to me as a painting by Hieronymous Bosch; were I to
follow my conscience then, it would lead me out onto the desert
with Marion Faye, out to where he stood in the The Deer Park
looking east to Los Alamos and praying, as if for rain, that it
would happen: “… let it come and clear the rot and the stench
and the stink, let it come for all of everywhere, just so it
comes and the world stands clear in the white dead dawn.”
Of course
you will say that I do not have the right, even if I had the
power, to inflict that unreasonable conscience upon you; nor do
I want you to inflict your conscience, however reasonable,
however enlightened, upon me. (“We must be aware of the dangers
which lie in our most generous wishes,” Lionel Trilling once
wrote. “Some paradox of our nature leads us, when once we have
made our fellow men the objects of our enlightened interest, to
go on to make them the objects of our pity, then of our wisdom,
ultimately of our coercion.”) That the ethic of conscience is
intrinsically insidious seems scarcely a revelatory point, but
it is one raised with increasing infrequency; even those who do
raise it tend to segue with troubling readiness into the
quite contradictory position that the ethic of conscience is
dangerous when it is “wrong,” and admirable when it is “right.”
You see I
want to be quite obstinate about insisting that we have no way
of knowing – beyond that fundamental loyalty to the social code
– what is “right” and what is “wrong,” what is “good” and what
“evil.” I dwell so upon this because the most disturbing aspect
of “morality” seems to me to be the frequency with which the
word now appears; in the press, on television, in the most
perfunctory kinds of conversation. Questions of straightforward
power (or survival) politics, questions of quite indifferent
public policy, questions of almost anything; they are all
assigned these factitious moral burdens. There is something
quite facile going on, some self-indulgence at work. Of course
we would all like to “believe” in something, like to assuage our
private guilts in public causes, like to lose our tiresome
selves; like, perhaps, to transform the white flag of defeat at
home into the brave white banner of battle away from home. And
of course it is all right to do that; that is how, immemorially,
things have gotten done. But I think it is all right only so
long as we do not delude ourselves about what we are doing, and
why. It is all right only so long as we remember that all the ad
hoc committees, all the picket lines, all the brave signatures
in The New York Times, all the tools of agitprop straight
across the spectrum, do not confer upon anyone any ipso facto
virtue. It is all right only so long as we recognize that the
end may or may not be expedient, may or may not be a good idea,
but in any case has nothing to with “morality.” Because when we
start deceiving ourselves into thinking not that we want
something or need something, not that it is a pragmatic
necessity for us to have it, but that it is a moral imperative
that we have it, then is when we join the fashionable madmen,
and then is when the thin whine of hysteria is heard in the
land, and then is when we are in bad trouble. And I suspect we
are already there.
1965.
From the book
Slouching Towards Bethlehem, a collection of
essays by Joan Didion.
Read other works
by Joan Didion:
Slouching Towards Bethlehem
The White Album
Play It As It Lays: A Novel
After Henry
A Book of Common Prayer
Run River
The Last Thing He Wanted
Democracy
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