|
MICHAUX DEMPSTER
Review | Ursula,
Under, by Ingrid Hill
(Algonquin
Books of Chapel Hill, 2004)
An early chapter of Ursula, Under presents
a deaf, mute caravan lieutenant, trying to convince the master that his
wares will sell:
Object. Tells. Story. The master nods
even more soberly. You. Tell. Wonderful. Story. The master's
nod is almost imperceptible. . . . "Ah," he says . . . "You're
suggesting that what will fetch enormous prices for these . . . is
in essence to soak them in stories first . . ."
It does not take an English major to connect this
metaphor to the act of writing. What makes the comparison fresh, and
gives it and so many other images in Ursula, Under meaning,
is that it is connected to a character: two-and-a-half-year-old Ursula
Wong, who falls down a mine shaft not twenty feet away from where her
parents are watching. A dissipated socialite, who has carelessly and
unknowingly crippled the child's mother years before, sees the rescue
efforts on television and says, "All of that goddamn money and energy
. . . Wasted . . . On that goddamn half-breed trailer-trash kid." The
novelist's response, as with the caravan lieutenant's, is with the rich,
exotic stories, all connected to the child.
These begin with a Chinese alchemist in the third
century B.C., one of Ursula's oldest ancestors. The stories go on to
trace, with what seems to be perfect precision, an incredibly gorgeous
and painful lineage, over the past two thousand years. Of course, the
reader quickly realizes the trick that Ingrid Hill is playing—even
if we are not as unfeeling as the crass socialite, we begin to understand
that we, too, have underestimated the staggering importance of this child.
The more we read, the more we realize what a loss, what a waste it would
be if Ursula cannot be rescued from the mine shaft. If she does not come
back up alive, there will be no more stories, no more characters will
live and die with the majesty of the ones that we meet here.
The scope and artistic ambition of the novel alone
are remarkable. The list of characters and their places of origin is
like its own caravan of exotic goods: the ancient Chinese alchemist who
neglects his wives and concubines in order to search for the key to immortality;
a beautiful, deaf-mute Finnish girl who refracts a curse from a jealous
village hag in the eighth century C.E.; a caravan lieutenant who travels
the Silk Road in order to sell precious goods to the Finnish girl's father;
the royal Minister of Maps, seventeenth-century China; a mustard-grower
in gold-rush California; a Finnish miner's wife in nineteenth century
Michigan, who has given up a child and moved to America after the death
of her first husband, a college professor.
With titles like "The Alchemist's Last Concubine," "A
Foundling at the Court," "A Wastrel Killed by a Snail," and "The
Woman Who Married the Baker's Friend," these tales would be delightful
by themselves, a tribute to the painful and lovely fairy stories of Isak
Dinesen or A.S. Byatt. But they are not by themselves. Hill's ability
to connect these seemingly random elements to the main story of Ursula
and her immediate family, shows a control that makes us feel that we
are in exceptionally capable hands. One such connection appears in the
middle of a proposal scene in "The Caravan-Master's Lieutenant":
. . . in front of the fire he will make a betrothal
gift to Kyllikki, a pair of ivory girdle brooches gotten in Ch'ang-an,
which will become shoulder brooches for a merchant's daughter in the
south of Finland. They are the circumference of the top of a pop can
in Michigan over a millennium later, that Annie Wong set in the cup
holder in Justin's truck as they drove out from Houghton, and they
are carved of finest ivory.
Each of these faraway stories is liberally sprinkled
with connective references like these, to remind us of why these tales
are being told; they are also preceded and followed by chapters that
tell more of the main story—Ursula, her family, and the rescue
operation. These are equally engaging, helping us to know and understand
the people that are waiting for Ursula to reappear—her parents,
two grandparents, a member of the rescue team, and of course, the hateful
rich bitch mentioned above. In this way, Hill never lets the reader get
too far away from the urgency of the present moment. We are engaged in
the present, yet content to wait for its outcome, as another piece of
two-and-a-half-year-old Ursula's long history appears.
Hill's reputation for precise and enchanting language
was established with her earlier collection of short stories, Dixie
Church Interstate Blues (1989), a collection received mostly with
appreciation, and a few reservations; and in stories that have appeared
and been anthologized since that time. Many of these are set in the Deep
South, a place similar to those in Ursula, Under only in its
strange, otherworldly aura, and perhaps, too, in its ability to showcase
beauty and pain together. Hill's departure from her former subjects makes
her new work that much more impressive; her ability to evoke such unlikely
places with authentic details convinces us that she knows what she's
talking about. One passage describing gifts from the Catholic Church
to the Emperor of China accomplishes this with remarkable ease:
. . . a unicorn's horn (taken, oddly enough, a
decade before, from a rhinoceros on the African continent) . . . a
clavichord no one in the Emperor's court could conceivably play . .
. two different sand clocks . . . a tall, imposing clock in a fine
carved wooden cabinet, with weights and a pendulum . . . a small, delicate
gold-plated clock the height of a vase of spring flowers . . . no taller
than the upraised ears of a palace-garden rabbit . . . carried ceremonially
in the rosy gold light of dawn into the South Gate of the palace .
. . the bait that caught the Emperor, like a fat palace goldfish, its
diaphanous fins waving languidly, on Ricci's hook.
This disparity, as well as the vividness, of each
place and time makes the novel even more pleasing. There is nothing trite
or worn in the worlds that Hill creates, nothing that we have seen before.
Ursula, Under is a novel that does a rare
thing—delights and teaches. We are so caught up in the writing,
that we are largely unconscious of the lesson that comes through: that
lives are made more precious because of other lives, and that we access
these through well-told tales. Ursula, Under has had, up to
now, a rather quiet, if steadily growing, national reception. We hope
that readers who know a good thing when they see it—those who delight
in caravans of precious objects, in discovering the unexpected value
of things thought to be ordinary, will find their way into the lives
in this book. They will not be disappointed.
|
|