Line 691:  the attack

 

John Shade’s heart attack (Oct. 17, 1958) practically coincided with the disguised king’s arrival in America where he descended by parachute from a chartered plane piloted by Colonel Montacute, in a field of hay-feverish, rank-flowering weeds, near Baltimore whose oriole is not an oriole.  It had all been perfectly timed, and he was still wrestling with the unfamiliar French contraption when the Rolls-Royce from Sylvia O’Donnell’s manor turned toward his green silks from a road and approached along the mown-trop, its fat wheels bouncing disapprovingly and its black shining body slowly gliding along.  Fain would I elucidate this business of parachuting but (it being a matter of mere sentimental tradition rather than a useful manner of transportation) this is not strictly necessary in these notes to Pale Fire.  While Kingsley, the British chauffeur, an old and absolutely faithful retainer, was doing his best to cram the bulky and ill-folded parachute into the boot, I relaxed on a shooting stick he had supplied me with, sipping a delightful scotch and water from the car bar and glancing (amid an ovation of crickets and that vortex of yellow and maroon butterflies that so please Chateaubriand on his arrival in America) at an article in The New York Times in which Sylvia had vigorously and messily marked out in red pencil a communication from New Wye which told of the “distinguished poet’s” hospitalization.  I had been looking forward to meeting my favorite American poet who, as I felt sure at the moment, would die long before the Spring Term, but the disappointment was little more than a mental shrug of accepted regret, and discarding the newspaper, I looked around me with enchantment and physical wellbeing despite the congestion in my nose.  Beyond the field the great green steps of turf ascended to the multicolored coppices; one could see above them the white brow to the manor; clouds melted into the blue.  Suddenly I sneezed, and sneezed again.  Kingsley offered me another drink but I declined it, and democratically joined him in the front seat.  My hostess was in bed, suffering from the aftereffects of a special injection that she had been given in anticipation of a journey to a special place in Africa.  In answer to my “Well, how are you?” she murmured that the Andes had been simply marvelous, and then in a slightly less indolent tone of voice inquired about a notorious actress with whom her son was said to be living in sin.  Odon, I said, had promised me he would not marry her.  She inquired if I had had a good hop and dingled a bronze bell.  Good old Sylvia!  She had in common with Fleur de Fyler a vagueness of manner, a languor of demeanor which was partly natural and partly cultivated as a convenient alibi for when she was drunk, and in some wonderful way she managed to combine that indolence with volubility reminding one of a slow-speaking ventriloquist who is interrupted by his garrulous doll.  Changeless Sylvia!  During three decades I had seen from time to time, from palace to palace, that same flat nut-colored bobbed hair, those childish pale-blue eyes, the vacant smile, the stylish long legs, the willowy hesitating movements. 

 

A tray with fruit and drinks was brought in by a jeune beauté, as dear Marcel would have put it, nor could one help recalling another author, Gide the Lucid, who praises in his African notes so warmly the satiny skin of black imps.

 

“You nearly lost the opportunity to meet our brightest star,” said Sylvia who was Wordsmith University’s main trustee (and, in point of fact, had been solely responsible for arranging my amusing lectureship there).  “I have just called up the college—yes, take that footstool—and he is much better.  Try this mascana fruit, I got it especially for you, but the boy is strictly hetero, and generally speaking, Your Majesty will have to be quite careful from now on.  I’m sure you’ll like it up there though I wish I could figure out why anybody should be so keen on teaching Zemblan.  I think Disa ought to come too.  I have rented for you what they say is their best house; and it is very near the Shades.”

 

She knew them very slightly but had heard many endearing stories about the poet from Billy Reading, “one of the very few American college presidents who know Latin.”  And let me add here how much I was honored a fortnight later to meet in Washington that limp-looking, absent-minded, shabbily dressed splendid American gentleman whose mind was a library and not a debating hall.  Next Monday Sylvia flew away but I stayed on for a while, resting from my adventures, musing reading, taking notes, and riding a lot in the lovely countryside with two charming ladies and their shy little groom.  I have often felt when leaving a place that I had enjoyed, somewhat like a tight cork that is drawn out for the sweet dark wine to be drained, and then you are off to new vineyards and conquests.  I spent a couple of pleasant months visiting the libraries of New York and Washington, few to Florida for Christmas, and when ready to start for my new Arcady deemed it nice and dutiful to send the poet a polite note congratulating him on his restored health and jokingly “warning” him that beginning with February he would have a very ardent admirer of his for neighbor.  I never received any answer, and my civility was never recalled later so I suppose it got lost among the many “fan” letters that literary celebrities receive, although one might have expected Sylvia or somebody to have told the Shades of my arrival.

 

The poet’s recovery turned out indeed to be very speedy and would have to be called miraculous had there been anything organically wrong with his heart.  There was not; a poet’s nerves can play the queerest tricks but they also can quickly recapture the rhythm of health, and soon John Shade, in his chair at the head of an oval table, was again speaking of his favorite Pope to eight pious young men, a crippled extramural woman and three coeds, one of the a tutorial dream.  He had been told not to curtail his customary exercise, such as walks, but I must admit I experienced myself palpitations and cold sweats at the sight of that precious old man wielding rude garden tools or squirming up the college hall stairs as a Japanese fish up a cataract.  Incidentally:  the reader should not take too seriously or too literally the passage about the alert doctor (an alert doctor, who as I well know once confused neuralgia with cerebral sclerosis).  As I gather from Shade himself, no emergency incision was performed; the heart was not compressed by hand; and if it stopped pumping at all, the pause must have been very brief and so to speak superficial.  All this of course cannot detract from the great epic beauty of the passage.  (Lines 691-697)

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