The Ice Harp
By Norman Lock
4.5/5
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About this ebook
Ralph Waldo Emerson battles dementia while debating whether to intercede in a Black soldier’s unjust arrest
In 1879, toward the end of his life, the Sage of Concord has lost his words. Beset by aphasia and grief, Ralph Waldo Emerson is scarcely recognizable as America’s foremost essayist and orator. To the dismay of his wife, he frequently entertains the specters of his fellow transcendentalists, including Whitman, Thoreau, John Muir, and Margaret Fuller, and frets about the future of humankind and the natural world. Does the present displace the past? Do ideas always precede actions? What responsibility does each of us bear for the downtrodden, the preservation of liberty, and the Earth itself? These metaphysical concerns become concrete when Emerson meets a Black soldier accused of killing a white man who abused him. The soldier’s presence demands a response from Emerson, an action outside the parlors of philosophy and beyond the realm where language and logic hold sway.
The Ice Harp, the tenth stand-alone book in The American Novels series, is a poignant portrayal of a literary luminary coming to terms with the loss of memory, the cost of inaction, and the end of life.
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Reviews for The Ice Harp
10 ratings4 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5In and out of dementia memory ghost trope is carried on way too long and with too much confusion around who is a spirit and who still lives.It also took Emerson nearly the entire book to finally (geez, he's near death!)decide to protect the slave he is too long sheltering. Why didn't he just get him to Canada with Louisa's help?Emerson's early interactions with his wife drag down the plot as do Henry and Emerson's disgusting nose problems.Why his wife would leave him alone for days after he again nearly burned down the land and house again makes no sense.Lovely quotations from all the disappeared friends enliven the action even after Walt Whitmansurvives being poetic target.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The mythical "ice harp" is a powerful symbol Norman Lock employs in his fictional account of the memory loss and aphasia that accompanied Ralph Waldo Emerson’s latter years. His mind and voice, once capable of making the most transcendent music, now are freezing up. “Strange that the kind heavens” Emerson poignantly ruminates, “should keep us on earth after they have destroyed our connection with things.”Lock gives us an Emerson who is only a weak imitation of his former self. The “sage of Concord” is now frustrated by his physical losses and what he perceives as his failings in life. He no longer recognizes his own work and is often incapable of retrieving words. However, in rare moments of lucidity, familiar to dementia caregivers, Emerson meditates on his loss of faith and reverence for nature. He regrets his failure to be more active with respect to the preservation of liberty and responsibility for the oppressed. Much of this becomes concrete when a former slave and Union soldier appears at his gate. James Stokes has killed a white man following racial slurs. He is clear-eyed about his chances for a fair trial in America and thus is fleeing to Canada. Emerson feels compelled to act but much of the narrative concerns his dithering about whether he should and how he should go about it. When the Concord sheriff shows up to take Stokes into custody, Lock presents a resolution that is not only humorous but also imaginative because it demonstrates the counterpoint between Emerson’s ineffectual response and what it requires to really take charge in a crisis. With his protagonist, Lock masterfully portrays the realities of aging. Emerson’s dialogue reflects a person whose long-term memory seems reasonably intact. He has no trouble remembering puns and nursery rhymes from his youth, much of which is clever and often unintentionally profound. Cameos of famous ghosts from Emerson’s past also are particularly engaging because they highlight his thinking while providing historical context. This “Greek chorus” includes luminaries of the period like a lighthearted Thoreau, a rigid John Brown, a tragic Margaret Fuller, a nature loving John Muir, and the lesser-known Samuel Long, a runaway slave, who Emerson tried to help escape. The two living minor characters in the book are both strong women, a clear homage to feminisms. Emerson’s neighbor, Louisa May Alcott, is portrayed less as a thoughtful writer and more as a medical savior. Likewise, Lidian, Emerson’s dour second wife, is portrayed as energetic and imbuing tough love.The narrative is an imaginative blend of historical fiction and philosophical introspection. Lock gives his readers a view of Emerson that invites them to consider him in a new light. Through its carefully crafted prose, introspective pacing, and imaginative elements, Lock offers a thought-provoking and immersive reading experience, but may limit its accessibility for the average reader. While not bound by historical accuracy, the novel’s imaginative storytelling captures the spirit of Emerson's philosophy and his times while exploring the challenges of aging.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Ice Harp, Norman LockOften, I was tempted to give up reading this book. Each sentence required a double reading to get its meaning. As metaphors flew off the page, my lack of literary knowledge was exposed. I wished that I was more literate with regard to the authors Emerson spoke to, so colorfully, in his imagination. Nathanial Hawthorne, Henry Thoreau, Walt Whitman, John Muir are just some of the familiar and unfamiliar names that appeared as he conjured them up or actually engaged with them. John Brown and he debated about slavery. Louisa Mae Alcott appears and nurses his injured guest who is a runaway slave. Lidian, his second wife, supports women’s rights and the Underground Railroad. The history of the times is exposed through his ramblings. Even some of the vocabulary words required me to have a dictionary at hand, since I had no idea what promulge meant, or taphophobia, or defalcator, or aspergillum, to name just a few of the words that confounded me. Yet, I found the prose so brilliant, as Lock painted images on each page with his words, that I found that I could not give up on the book. Today one is hard pressed to find a book that is so well written, yet not dependent on politics, even though it appears throughout, not dependent on eroticism, though there are sexual innuendos, so not influenced by the “woke world”, though dysfunction existed then, as well as today. It was a welcome relief; so as hard as it was to read and comprehend, requiring extra time to reread and research some of the references and the language, it was one of the most positive experiences I have had in recent times. It restored my faith in the magic of good literature. Simply put, the author truly created a performance in the theater of my mind.The author described his version of Emerson’s descent into the darkness of the aging process as Alzheimer's/dementia, which he may or may not have truly suffered from, or succumbed to, took over his life. One cannot help but appreciate and commiserate with the victim who suffered the indignity and trauma associated with the failure of the mind. The loss of words was very painful to Ralph Waldo Emerson, a man who lived for his words, who put them down on paper and influenced everyone who read them. In this book, that imagines Ralph Waldo Emerson as a victim of hallucinations, his confusion and frustration are palpable to the reader. As he attempts to continue to function while he knows perfectly well that he is failing drastically in that effort, he is a catastrophe always waiting to happen. He starts fires, breaks windows, talks to strangers and to the friends in his imagination, some who are long dead. The tender and heartbreaking description of this brilliant man, as he falls deeper into a world without memories, feels very authentic. The author has deftly interwoven the political and social atmosphere of the day, and in one of Emerson’s final acts, he is conflicted about slavery and whether or not he should struggle actively against it, even if it is against the law to do so. There is humor and pathos, both, in this incredible illustration of a mind that is failing as a life nears its end. Because there are no defined chapters, there is little opportunity for respite in much the same way as Emerson’s decline is occurring. His discomfort becomes the reader’s discomfort.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5It is 1879, two years before the death of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Words escape him, hovering out of reach. He sees the ghosts of old friends, especially his dear friend Henry David Thoreau, but also Walt Whitman, John Muir, Margaret Fuller, John Brown, and his beloved first wife who died less than two years after their marriage. Emerson has interchanges with these people as he goes about his day, talking about their shared past and his current problems.Emerson has a decision to make. A former slave and soldier is fleeing to Canada. He has killed a man who abused him. Emerson had been a part of the Underground Railroad, supported John Brown. Does he harbor this fugitive, or turn him over to the law? It is a choice he wishes to avoid making, for abetting this man could mean a prison sentence, but not deciding is also a decision with consequences.Unable to rest, he walks through the night, visiting Thoreau’s cabin lake. It was here that he noted the sound made when he threw stones on the thin ice, calling it his ice harp.I am an old man alone in the dark and frightened for his mind’s sake.from The Ice Harp by Norman LockIn Emerson’s journey into the dark night of his soul he contends with the past and the future, considers his losses and looming death. Those who encounter him, like Louisa May Alcott, see his confusion and irrational behavior; she wraps him in a shawl and sends him home. His ghosts see him more clearly.Emerson’s dual reality is well portrayed. His interchanges with the living breaks into his dream-like interchanges with the dead. While his wife chastises him and tries to manage him, the ghosts hold forth conversations with greater insight into Emerson’s conflicted soul. Emerson needs their wisdom and advice to help him negotiate the decision he faces, and to help him cope with his awareness of lost abilities and coming death.Now that my mortal form has begun to dissolve, I can more readily believe that man is the master of nothing, except the mummery of his life.from The Ice Harp by Norman LockFacing death, Emerson feels the uselessness of his life, how little he knows or accomplished. Still, he harbors lofty dreams of a world of mercy, equality, and harmony with nature.In his Afterword, Lock write, “So we must choose to act–not once, at a crucial moment in our personal histories, but as many times as we are confronted by injustice or abuse.”Injustice continues to demand moral decisions, not once, but daily. Do we have the courage and conviction to risk doing the right thing?The Ice Harp is Norman Lock’s tenth in his American Novels series. Each book uses personages and events from the past to illuminate America of today. The past is a mirror revealing the American psyche.Thanks to the publisher for a free book.
Book preview
The Ice Harp - Norman Lock
I
Every mind must make its choice between
truth and repose. It cannot have both.
—R. W. Emerson
"What is this crumblesome thing?"
Toasted bread, Mr. Emerson. And will you please stop poking at it?
Tastes like straw.
What a mess you’re making! And I just put away the broom.
And Pharaoh said to his overseers, ‘Ye shall no more give the people straw to make brick, as heretofore: let them make brooms.’
Whatever are you going on about now?
What rots, neglected in the rain and ricks.
Mr. Emerson, eat your breakfast.
What is this implement?
It’s a spoon, dear.
Spoon. Lovely in the mouth—word and thing of the word when jammed with mulberry or quince.
Husband, don’t play with your food.
Neither quince nor mulberry nor yet the common apple. It sits lumpishly on my tongue.
Pease porridge, if I do not mistake.
Pease porridge hot, pease porridge cold,
Pease porridge in the pot nine days old;
Some like it hot, some like it cold,
Some like it in the pot, nine days old.
I scoop out the heart of the porridge; I agitate it to beat all; I give it a proper dashing!
"How sweet the words used to be! Not that I ever spoke with the fire of Webster, Father Taylor, Clay, or even gasbag Whitman! I should never have sent him my greetings at the start of a great career. I begged him to get rid of the sex in Leaves of Grass. Naturally, he wouldn’t."
Wife removes a tub of boiling water from the stove and sets it in the sink.
Ride a cock-horse
To Banbury Cross,
To see what Tommy can buy;
A penny white loaf,
A penny white cake,
And a two-penny apple-pie.
The man’s nothing but a gabbing, loafing prick in a slouch hat!
Anymore you talk like a hooligan! I won’t have it!
Will you wash out my mouth with soap, Lidian, old girl? Oh, not the lye, spare me it!
I strum the airy lyre. I stick out my tongue waggishly.
Syllables may not have tripped lightly on my tongue, but on the lecture platform, I was smoldering. The ladies adored me. They hung on my every word. I held them in my hand. This woman’s hands are floury.
The ladies adored me, Lidian, as I stood beside the philodendron leaves and orated. My words took whinge.
Not whinge, surely, Emerson, old fool!
What fiddle-faddle, Mr. Emerson!
In the water boiling on the stove, Lidian stirs dirty dishcloths with a thing whose martial-sounding name chimes pleasingly with faddle … paddle…. Pshaw, Waldo, you’ve become a postman chasing fare-thee-wells blown from his bag of wind. I speak of words a-going, if not yet gone—not quite, only out of reach, just, and justing toward silence, which the dear one keeps. How I could joust, once upon a time!
I was a veritable Lancelot in the lists, my dear.
Imperturbable Walt and his lists interminable! How tiresome he’s become!
Has he come, Queenie?
An endearment that befits her dignity.
Has who come?
The village postman with his leather bag! I’m expecting a poem from old fart Whitman, ‘singing the phallus / Singing the song of procreation.’
Language, Mr. Emerson!
My ineffables are buttoned up.
How the ladies used to flatter me! Had I not been a moral philosopher, I’d have plucked them.
One of the San Francisco papers said of me that ‘I was tall, straight, well-formed, with a head constructed on utility rather than the ornamental principle … but ‘refreshing to look at.’
I look outside the steamy window. On the branch of the elm tree in the yard, a bird sits. Your wings are broken, Emerson, old bird, and so is your memory. Something in the kitchen air stings; I give my nose a good snuffle.
Mistress of the house, my nose is looming.
All the better for sniffing out hypocrisy. Isn’t that what you used to say?
I bat my nose with a finger; I do battle with my proboscis.
Battledore—that’s the thing Queenie stirs the dirty laundry with! And there, professor, is one more word, thought lost forevermore, pulled up from the muck. Muck of ages, cleft for me.
Mrs. Emerson, it’s a Hebrew nose. My pound of flesh.
You know very well you have the Haskins nose.
I peer down its length till my eyes cross.
It casts a large shadow.
I sniff the heated air. The lye stings!
Will you try to write today?
What’s in a nose? I lay a finger aside my own.
Smut, likely.
Tsk, tsk.
I remember how Henry Thoreau would turn his face away, pinch his nostrils, and blow the snot from his snout. Disgusting habit! I rebuked him once; he laughed and said why spoil a linen handkerchief when nature’s hem will do just as well. He was no gentleman.
I say, Henry T. was no gentleman.
"You’re too fastidious, Waldo."
Henry walks through the door that Lidian opened to rid the kitchen of steam, which has made my eyes water and my nose run. His hair is tousled, his beard patriarchal.
Good morning, Henry. Did you sleep well?
I would have if the carpenter had left me room to stretch my legs.
Henry stretches one leg, then the other, like Lidian’s cat Jeoffry, which can tread to all measures upon the music.
You never seemed to know what to do with them; they gangled so!
They were made for walking.
Giving them a critical squint, he lets out a woebegone sigh of discontent. I admit they were not made for dancing.
I did enjoy your mad capering.
In livelier days, I was said to cut a clownish figure.
He does so now for my amusement.
You danced as though you’d caught fire.
Not quite the thing for the parlors of Scituate.
He shows his leg, tendu, like the foppish Osric of the Danish court.
Did you never get over your Miss Sewall?
She’s safely married.
Safely for her?
"For me, old philosopher. I wear my dirty boots in the house as I please."
Sing me your soles.
Being nothing stingy, I’ll sing you an entire scale: Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la—
Henry, show me the bottom of your clodhoppers!
Treating me once again to the boyish smile of his former days, he tucks one leg up behind him for my inspection of the article in question, sets it down, and, with the other, does the same. I think that he resembles a scarlet ibis gawking by the river Nile and congratulate myself on the metaphor.
Hallelujah! You remembered to use the boot scraper. I’d have been given the fatal asp by the Concord Cleopatra had you muddied her floor.
"Mr. Emerson, what are you staring at?"
The floor, Queenie. It’s vermiculate.
I say nothing of the crumbs of toast, lest she turn her broom on me.
"You mean immaculate."
I do indeed. Why, I’m no better than Mrs….
Malaprop.
The same. Remember, Queenie, the night we saw Macready play Captain Jack at the Melodeon?
Henry takes a straw from his mouth, with which he has been picking his teeth.
I prefer the ‘tongue slippers’ of Constable Dogberry. Sheridan can’t hold a candle to the divine Will.
"It was at the Boston Theatre, on Washington Street, where we saw The Rivals, but Mr. Macready had no part in it. He played the Danish prince in Hamlet. I remember his performance vividly, since you sneezed just as he discovered Gertrude at her prayers. The poor man forgot himself and glowered across the footlights to see who could have been so outré as to honk at such a moment."
Sometimes, Lidian, you make me feel like a schoolboy waiting for the knuckle rapper for having misconstrued his Latin.
Henry cracks his. I fume. Lidian bites her tongue, as the saying goes.
Mr. Emerson, do you feel able to set down your thoughts this morning?
Her voice is kind, but my thoughts lie helterskelter, like bricks spilled from a hod. To think that straw should have been the binding part!
I address myself to my lanky friend: I suppose you find the next life dull.
I was given a bean field to hoe, although for the life of me, I don’t know why, since we neither hunger nor thirst.
You mustn’t grumble. God knows men, and men, even dead ones, need to be occupied.
Punished, more likely, as I am denied the harvest. My beans ripen and cannot rot on the vine, nor can I pick them—no, not a single blessed one. It’s considered a great sin to interfere in perfection.
So there is sin in heaven, too.
"It exists in potentia, as it did for Lucifer before his headlong fall over the banister of heaven. How I detest the idea of eternal life!"
Eternity is a human idea, and time is what passes in the mind.
Good Lord, Waldo, didn’t my mind have enough of beans, and beans of it? It would rather that I played my flute or took soundings of the ponds.
Ponds, you say! How nice for you. How’s the fishing?
Not ideal, because the fish disdain the worm.
Queenie, I would like a fish for supper.
What kind of fish?
She is wiping her soapy hands on her apron.
Oh, you know, one that swims, or did swim when it was in its native element.
Memory, hither come,
And tune your merry notes;
And, while upon the wind,
Your music floats,
I’ll pore upon the stream,
Where sighing lovers dream,
And fish for fancies as they pass
Within the watery glass.
I think you’d finish your breakfast before worrying about supper!
Henry fingers the Adam’s apple underneath his beard.
We hook ourselves, as we did in life.
It may be hell after all—the place, old friend, where you fetched up, though I’d hate to have the priggish Calvinists proved right.
Maybe so, Waldo, maybe so.
Musing, he chews on his piece of straw.
Henry, is there much talk of the future where you come from?
Having none ourselves, only a few of us take an interest in yours.
He pretends to see the future through a telescope formed by the O’s of his encircling fingers. Dirty and ragged, his nails are quite out of keeping with a state of bliss, I think, until I remember that he labors in other fields than those where lilies grow. Evidently, heaven is arranged according to the principles of Marx and Engels.
My voice catching in my throat, I ask him, Will it be as you feared?
Humankind’s future is a dismal place of sooty train sheds and grindstones on which human noses grow forever shorter. I don’t recommend it.
With a clap of his hands, the make-believe telescope folds up and vanishes.
I pull my lower lip pensively before shaking off the grim forecast.
How I miss the days when Bush was noisy with onions and controversy!
Strong opinions, like onions, will keep the crowd at bay. And for that reason, I like them both.
Henry, do you see any of the old contrarians?
The dead ones, mostly.
I look at my palms, as though I might see the dear faces imprinted there: that of Bronson Alcott, Theodore Parker, the Ripleys, brave Margaret Fuller, whom the world deemed immoral, Jones Very, who got drunk on the Holy Ghost and spent a month, insane with God, at the McLean Asylum, writing a penetrating essay on Hamlet and his problem. Gloomy, silent, and watchful, Hawthorne would join us, on occasion, as did Henry, who preferred to listen to wind and water and birds than to the high-flown sentiments of men. What a gathering of genius that was! The Transcendental Club was the granite on which our soaring thoughts found bedrock, if only for a time.
Do you remember the exultation of those days?
I sigh, a sound expressive of regret in all the languages of men. This morning, in my shaving mirror, I saw a moist, cold element.
When I see my face reflected in a slab of polished granite, I think of Jeremiah crying for Jerusalem.
Henry tosses his head, so that his long hair flies wildly about him.
Your hair is spectacular!
It grows apace in the rarified air of what the slothful call heaven. What’s more, it does forever, or so I’m told.
As long as that! And do a man’s brains also grow?
Mine are still pickling. And for your information, Waldo, the next world is peopled by women, too.
I pray that God has given them the vote, for men will never do so. Have you any news of Margaret Fuller?
Feeling my face flush, I turn my head from Henry’s gaze, forgetting that he has acquired a measure of omniscience. He can see through me to my back collar button.
You old dog, Emerson; you ancient roué!
I color even more, until Henry is moved to relieve me of my embarrassment.
She’s in the neighborhood, though the self-righteous shun her.
She got over her drowning, then.
We all get over the manner of our dying, Waldo. We inhabit the next phase in perfect equanimity.
That ought to please the randy old cock Whitman. God spare me from an eternity of his barbaric yawping!
"Like everything else, his Leaves will have their season till they, too, fall into obscurity."
Thinking of the dying leaves and of the Edenic couple, which paradise shed, I sing:
We long to see Thy churches fall,
That all the chosen race
May with one voice, and heart and soul,
Sing Thy redeeming grace.
Lidian shakes a hostile finger at me. "Thy churches full."
I love the fall. To be abroad in it … out and about.
There’s plenty needs doing in the yard, Mr. Emerson. You can start by dismantling the cucumber frame; the wood is rotten.
I recall the afternoon Henry built it.
It wasn’t me.
"It wasn’t I. Nominative case."
Still the same old pedant, Waldo!
Grammar is gravity, without which words would become nonsensical, like a clockwork planetarium gone mad.
It was Samuel Long, the runaway slave, who built the cucumber frame,
says Lidian, whose mind is less moth-eaten than my own. Henry Thoreau was responsible for the Alcotts’ preposterous summerhouse.
‘Tumbledown Hall!’ I can smell the cedar shavings curling from his plane.
It embodied, in wood, the universal principle of impermanence.
Queenie, whatever happened to Samuel?
The last I heard, he was in Philadelphia, working for Elijah Weaver’s paper.
I’d forgotten all about him.
I’m certain he hasn’t forgotten you, husband.
The kitchen has turned tropical; the windows drip with steam; I wipe my sweaty brow. My dear, do you imagine yourself in the hell promised by your Calvinist parents during a childhood when every lightning seemed the beginning of the conflagration and every noise in the street the crack of doom
?
"Samuel