The title of
The Violent Bear It
Away comes from the Rheims-Douay
translation of the Bible, Matthew 11:12. The version is important because its
sense is different from most translations of this text. It is an enigmatic
sentence, open to widely differing interpretations. Some critics suggest this
violence – in and/or to Heaven – is undesirable, others that it
is
desirable, others still that it isn’t violence at all but rather a cherished
prize. Some think it is passive, some active. The particular version used by Flannery
O’Connor is suggestive that heaven can only be attained by force, and more than
that, by violence against one’s self. What O’Connor seems to mean by it in this
novel is that violence is a means of delivering spiritual awakening, of finding
one’s mission in life and one’s place with God. And if that truly is O’Connor’s
belief, then it is a worldview that is utterly repellent. As, indeed, is this
novel, despite being brilliantly written and containing a prose so pure and
perfect it is dazzling.
The Violent Bear It Away is
a religious allegory full of mysticism and Biblical resonances. It is a story of
prophets and baptism, of the struggle that is (apparently) inside us all
between the love of God and the love of man. It tells the story of three
generations: a mad prophet who dies early in the novel, plus his nephew,
Rayber, who has shunned his uncle’s extreme views, and his great-nephew,
Tarwater, who lives alone with the old man in the wilderness and whom the old
man is training to also become a prophet. There is also an important fourth
character, Bishop, the slow-witted son of Rayber, but it is Tarwater who is the
main character of the novel, and it is his journey, unwilling but inevitable,
that forms the basis of O’Connor’s bitter message.
The story begins with the death
of the old man, and his insistence, before he dies, that Tarwater must ensure
he is properly buried
and that there is
a cross over his grave. At this point, however, Tarwater first begins to hear
the voices that are initially described as those of a ‘stranger’ but which
gradually through the course of the novel become the ‘friend’. Margaret Earley Whitt
identifies correspondence from O’Connor in which she declares she ‘certainly’
intended Tarwater’s friend to be ‘the Devil’. On two occasions in the novel,
these voices take physical form: first in the form of Meeks, who seeks to take
advantage of Tarwater; and then, more horrifically, in the guise of the
‘lavender man’, who we will examine in more detail later.
At this early stage in the novel,
suddenly freed from the influence of his great-uncle, and under the sway of his
new ‘friend’, Tarwater is sceptical. He does not obey his great-uncle’s wishes
that he be buried and his grave given a cross, but instead sets fire to the
house, supposing (wrongly, as it turns out) that he is thus cremating him. He
then seeks out his uncle, Rayber, who has long since abandoned the old man as a
madman. At this stage one might consider that reason is prevailing, but
Tarwater, as his name suggests, is a boy in whom there is constant conflict.
Doubts remain. Throughout the novel there is a brooding tension over whether
Tarwater will obey the old man’s third stricture – that he should baptize
Rayber’s dim-witted son, Bishop. This conflict presents a striking symbol of
Tarwater’s internal struggle between the path of God and the road of man.
Given that, ultimately, it is the
view of the old man that prevails, one must assume this is what O’Connor wished
to promote in the novel. It’s worth looking at him in more detail, then. ‘“The
world was made for the dead,”’ he tells Tarwater and us, and we are later told
that: ‘He was a one-notion man. Jesus. Jesus this and Jesus that.’
His relationship with Tarwater is
complex. A stylistic tic, in the early part of the novel when they are the only
characters, is the use of repetition. Sometimes facts are reported first, then
we are given the same events as dialogue a couple of pages later. On other
occasions events are simply reported twice, in almost identical terms. This
gives a sense of the claustrophobia of their situation and, as you are reading,
it seems as though the message this is conveying is one of an abuse of power:
this is brainwashing. Nonetheless, the old man justifies himself. He tells
Tarwater: ‘“I saved you to be free, your own self!”’ But in the next breath he
adds:
“and not a piece of information
inside [Rayber’s] head! If you were living with him, you’d be information right
now, you’d be inside his head, and what’s furthermore,” he said,”you’d be going
to school.”
The word ‘information’ is
instructive, as is the warning of being sent to school, where he would be
merely ‘one of the herd.’ The message is clear: learning is dangerous. There is
only one word, the word of the prophet which is, in turn, the word of God. And
it must not be questioned. Again, from reading the early stages of the novel,
one’s sympathy would not be with the old man. And yet, as the novel reaches its
climax, the tragedy is that, ultimately, the author agrees with the old man and
this preposterous notion, and she manipulates her characters to make it so.
One of the key exchanges in the
novel comes between the old man and his nephew, Rayber. Rayber is symbolic, in
this novel, of detached man, someone who has fallen out of love and grace with
God. In O’Connor’s terms he is living a life of absurdity and pointlessness
because his existence is not rooted in God’s. He is, of course, merely a
cipher. As a character he is the weakest in the novel because he is not allowed
by his author to develop. His one fine speech comes in an exchange with the old
man which begins:
“You’re too blind to see what you
did to me. A child can’t defend himself. Children are cursed with believing.
You pushed me out of the real world and I stayed out of it until I didn’t know
which was which. You infected me with your idiot hopes, your foolish violence.”
That is clear and impressive, but
it is immediately followed by:
“I’m not always myself, I’m not
al…” but he stopped. He wouldn’t admit what the old man knew. “There’s nothing
wrong with me,” he said. “I’ve straightened the tangle you made. Straightened
it by pure will power. I’ve made myself straight.”
“You see,” the old man said, “he
admitted himself the seed was still in him.”
That seed is God, religion, the
sacred word. What we are being told here is that even with Rayber, the man who
has denied God, the seed remains inside him. It is his human frailty that is
preventing him from allowing it to germinate. And now we come to the real
symbolism of this novel. It is about God and man; Him and us; God with his
prophet, and man, represented by the weak Rayber and his dim-witted offspring,
a blank canvas who stands ‘dim and ancient, like a child who had been a child
for centuries.’
Of course Rayber loves his son,
and can we assume he loves humanity? Yes, O’Connor seems to grant him (and us)
that. We are told: ‘[Rayber’s] pity encompassed all exploited children – himself
when he was a child, Tarwater exploited by the old man, this child exploited by
parents, Bishop exploited by the very fact he was alive.’ But O’Connor can’t
help pointing out Rayber’s weaknesses. He is literally deaf in one ear, the
result of having had it shot at close range by the old man. And just in case
the reader is too slow to grasp the metaphorical meaning of that, a minor
character later asks him: ‘“Are you deaf to the Lord’s Word?’
We are told that once he tried to
drown his son. He explains to Tarwater that his inability to do so was ‘a
failure of nerve’. But his love for his son remains absolute, and it is the
love of mankind for mankind. It is a ‘terrifying love’ which he can control as
long as Bishop remains with him, but if he were ever to lose him then ‘the
whole world would become his idiot child.’
So, on one hand, we have mankind
as mute, dim-witted, helpless bearers of love and their equally helpless, weak
parents, involved in some form of dance of death, denying God even to the point
of their annihilation. And on the other hand we have Tarwater, the boy marked
out to be a prophet, the boy who carries the seed. It is to him we must look
for the final message in the novel. For this novel is about redemption and
salvation. Ironically, Tarwater thinks otherwise. He knows that the seed
remains in his uncle. He tells him: ‘“It ain’t a thing you can do about it. It
fell on bad ground but it fell in deep.”’ The uncle, he is saying, will not
ultimately have free will. But he, Tarwater, will. ‘“With me,” he said proudly,
“it fell on rock and the wind carried it away.”’
But it didn’t. Not in O’Connor’s
world.
This tension reaches its
inevitable conclusion when Tarwater, Rayber and Bishop have a day out and
Tarwater takes the child for a boat trip. At this point the constant references
to baptism, and to Tarwater’s duty to ensure that Bishop is properly baptized,
reach a climax. And here the carefully arranged narrative starts to become
utterly constricting, as O’Connor’s plot is wrapped ever tighter around her
messianic theme. Tarwater, the central character, isn’t allowed the luxury of
free thought, not in the end. Right at the start of the novel, when his
great-uncle explains that the responsibility to baptize Rayber’s son will fall
to him if he, the uncle, dies without having achieved it, Tarwater replies:
‘“Oh no it won’t be…He don’t mean for me to finish up your leavings. He has
other things in mind for me.”’ But, of course, that is exactly what happens,
because O’Connor is telling us that mankind has no free will.
Therefore, Tarwater does what is
expected of him, but in the course of baptizing Bishop he drowns him. Is this
killing an evil act? O’Connor is highly ambiguous on this point. It is never
quite clear whether it was an accident or intentional. And yet, in an exchange
immediately prior to the death, a hotel worker says to Tarwater: ‘“Whatever
devil’s work you mean to do, don’t do it here.”’ So, clearly, we’re being
directed towards this being deliberate, an evil act. Yet in the description of
the baptism and drowning itself, we are told that ‘in a high raw voice the
defeated boy cried out the words of baptism.’ Defeated is a very precise
description. Classifying this as the crux of the novel, Whitt calls Tarwater
‘broken’ and suggests 'he has capitulated to a power he cannot understand. He
has done the deed that the old man ordained him to do.'
Violence thus resides in
Tarwater, whether the drowning was intentional or not. Later, in a highly
curious passage with the ‘lavender man’ who is the devil incarnate, Tarwater
seems to admit the death was intentional, and it was the baptism that was an
accident. Indeed, the baptism appears to affect him more than the death itself:
“I baptized him.”
“Huh?” the man said.
“It was an accident. I didn’t
mean to…it didn’t mean nothing. You can’t be born again… I only meant to drown
him,” the boy said. “You’re only born once. They were only some words that run
ot of my mouth and spilled in the water.”
However, this act of violence is
only the dress rehearsal for the real violence that is presaged by the book’s
epigraph and title. That comes next. The lavender man picks up the fleeing
Tarwater and plies him with ‘strange’ cigarettes and alcohol. He rapes him and
leaves him naked and bound in a clearing in the woods. When he comes to,
Tarwater, in a rage, burns the clearing, removing every vestige of what
occurred. We are told: ‘He knew that he could not turn back now. He knew that
his destiny forced him to a final revelation.’
And this, incredibly, is the
ultimate message of the novel. Through this act of wickedness, Tarwater is
resolved with his God. Through violence he finds a spiritual awakening. He
returns to the burned out house, to discover that a kindly Negro neighbour had,
in fact, buried the old man. The hunger he has increasingly felt throughout the
novel, without any means of satisfaction, is finally sated as, with the old man
and a multitude of the dead, he is fed the bread of Christ. He is free to move
on to the ‘fate that awaits him’.
Meanwhile, Rayber, the man
who believes in man and not God, and is rewarded for that by having a retarded
son who dies violently, is shown to be living a futile
existence. This is the choice O’Connor leaves
us with. As Whitt explains:
The Violent Bear It Away delivers
two symbolic alternatives for the reader: choose the way of Tarwater, which is
less choice than a violence racked upon its chosen, or the way of Rayber, the
ultimate torture because it yields only nothing disguised as free will.
This strikes me as so perverse as
to be close to evil. To suggest that man can find salvation and harmony through
the violence of rape is profoundly disturbing. To suggest that the glory of
heaven should be predicated on such violence is surely contrary to any sane
understanding of the Christian religion. This book delivers a terrible and
repulsive message, one which can only be understood as a deep loathing of
humanity. To suppose that a deity would exact this sort of duty from his
followers is to create a deity who is not worthy of an iota of humanity’s
compassion or consideration.
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