Monday, April 7, 2008

riot's indoor sister

from Thomas Pynchon, Mason & Dixon (1997)

"This way, Gentlemen," Mr. Chantry helpfully steering the Surveyors to the Alley and thro' a back Entry in the Coffee-House, where they find Tumult easily out-roaring what prevails outside. With its own fuliginous Weather, at once public and private, created of smoke billowing from Pipes, Hearths, and Stoves, the Room would provide an extraordinary sight, were any able to see, in this Combination, peculiar and precise, of unceasing Talk and low Visibility, that makes Riot's indoor Sister, Conspiracy, not only possible, but resultful as well. One may be inches from a neighbor, yet both blurr'd past recognizing,-- thus may Advice grow reckless and Prophecy extreme, given the astonishing volume of words moving about in here, not only aloud but upon Paper as well, Paper being waved in the air, poked at repeatedly for emphasis, held up as Shielding against uncongenial remarks. Here and there in the Nebulosity, lone Lamps may be made out, at undefin'd Distances, snugly Halo'd,-- Servant-Boys moving to and fro, House-Cats in warm currents of flesh running invisibly before them, each Boy vigorously working his small Bellows to clear a Path thro' the Smoke, meantime calling out Names true and taken.

2 comments:

Po Campo said...

"Oh, I'm getting verklempt. Here, I'll give you a topic: the coffeehouses of Jurgen Habermas's rational-critical public sphere were neither rational nor critical. Discuss."

Vintage Pynchon...at once historical and hysterical. Can you give me a page number?

the bres said...

i don't have my book with me at the moment (i've got enough huge tomes to lug around), but an amazon search says it's on 305.

tough to settle on a title for a pynchon post, as most of his paragraphs are stockpiled with incredible phrasings: "undefin'd Distances, snugly Halo'd," "House-Cats in warm currents of flesh," etc.