Death’s Secretary Tries to Forget on Cape Cod

Guest Post by Edward Curtin

We have come to Cape Cod for a few days to forget the man-made world that is too much with us. I have asked my forgettery to get to work. As my childhood friends used to say to me, “Eddy spaghetti, use you forgetty.” The adults had no idea what they meant.  Many still do not.

Here slowness reigns and forgetting seems possible, even if for just a few days.  In mid-May, the beaches are deserted except for the swooping gulls, the sandpipers prancing across the sand, and a few seals eyeing you from just off-shore.  An occasional frigate bird glides past. The wind rushes through your ears, making conversation almost impossible.

But no words are needed here, for the ocean speaks its own language and the tales it tells are deep.  You can only hear them if you shut up and listen. It utters reminders of the immensity of creation and the puniness of human aspirations. The sea dismisses with a roar the pretensions to power of the Lilliputians.

One minute it glistens in the bright blue sunshine and says all is well; then suddenly, as now, the sky and sea turn very dark and foreboding, the increased wind whipping the whitecaps into a maniacal threat.  There are limits, it wails, and do not try to exceed them, for if, in your hubris, you attempt it, you will discover that when you think you’re on the top, you’ll be heading for the bottom.

As the Greeks knew so well, Nemesis awaits your response.

If you stand on the forty mile long strand of the sandy outer beach and look out to sea, you realize that no matter how well you sail through life, and how deftly you tack your boat, you are not ultimately in control.  Those who seek to control others lack the spirit of the wind, the unseen mystery through which we move.

Henry David Thoreau stood on this beach looking out to sea and wrote:

A man may stand there and put all America behind him.

I wish it were so simple.  To forget the man-made world that is too much with us isn’t easy.  Ironically, it can only be briefly forgotten, for when we come to a beautiful and wild sea shore like Cape Cod when rarely a soul is around, the contemplation of its majesty implicitly draws us to compare it to human endeavors.  I look out across the wide Atlantic and see not just its wild power but the feeble pretensions of the Atlanticist countries that think they can still control the world.  Their illusions die hard as their sand castle empire crumbles before the incoming waves.

And here on this long stretch between bay and ocean, it is hard to forget that 10,000 years before the Pilgrims came ashore, the native peoples lived here and were eventually driven from their land.  Not far from where I stand sits the Nauset Light house, named for the Nauset original free people that once lived here.  You can travel all across the United States and even if you wish to forget, there are constant reminders of the genocide of the native peoples by the European settlers.  You bow your head in shameful remembrance.

Of course, to forget, it is crucial to remember to try to forget, and in doing so you are caught in the human web of thought.

We tell ourselves, let us go then, you and I, to contemplate the sea and sky, to let go of all the world’s woes and pack up our sorrows and give them to the elements as we vacate our minds.  Then – ouch! – we are jerked back by the sight of a dead sea gull on the sand or a plaque informing you that the long stretch of outer beach you walk with the ghost of Thoreau was preserved as the Cape Cod National Seashore by President Kennedy in 1961.  You find yourself walking with many ghosts: dead writers, sailors drowned in shipwrecks, ancient dead horseshoe crabs along the strand, and an assassinated president who loved this sea and land.  You realize that nature, while beautifully majestic, is also a cruel taskmaster, but not as cruel as humans, so many of whom seem to revel in killing.

You struggle to dismiss the thoughts associated with these aperçus, yet you immediately wonder if they are auguries of past events or harbingers of something else.  You feel you have been ambushed by another reality.  You hear Billy Joel’s words from his historical song, We Didn’t Start the Fire, “JFK blown away, what else do I have to say.”

You is I, of course, and although these words are addressed to those who might read them, I am also writing for myself, and I sense my word usage was a way to distance myself from what I sometimes find hard to accept: that for some reason of character or experience or both, it is my fate to be unable to escape for long from what my perceptions suggest to me.  Wherever I have gone on that strange word “vacation,” I have been trailed by thoughts that others may consider inappropriate for the occasion.  Un-vacation thoughts.  Wherever I have traveled I have always felt like William Blake as he wandered through each chartered street of London:

In every cry of every Man,
In every Infants cry of fear,
In every voice: in every ban,
The mind-forg’d manacles I hear

Is it a blessing or curse?  I don’t know.  Such knowing is overrated.  My father, an eloquent and brilliant man with deep religious faith, used to end his letters to me with the words: quién sabe (who knows)?

There is, however, another form of knowing that is vastly underrated; it is historical, a knowledge of history that illuminates the present.  I mentioned the Nauset people who lived on Cape Cod when the Pilgrims first temporarily dropped anchor in what is now called Provincetown Harbor.  The Nauset people’s story, like those of the other native people’s across the United States, is tied to the U.S. history of empire in significant ways.

This country was conceived in the blood of all the original free peoples who lived here for eons.  They were massacred to make way for the white technologists who sent their iron horses west as they slaughtered the horse riding nations – including the Pueblo, Pawnee, Comanche and Lakota – and other natives who went by shanks mare.

This history is crucial knowledge, for without it one cannot grasp the demonic nature of today’s U.S. wars throughout the world.  The history has always been demonic.  Nemesis is surely watching now, for what began in the blood of others, has a tendency to blow back on those who first unleashed the fire.  Those of us alive today might not have started the fire, but if we don’t know and recognize its long-term spiritual effects, we can’t understand today’s U.S. provoked war against Russia via Ukraine or much else.

If you wish to praise the American Revolution, you should be sure to emphasize its demonic side.  The mythology of the shining city on the hill needs to be abandoned.  American exceptionalism needs to be jettisoned together with reminders of Washington and Jefferson, both rich slave holders. There are no exceptional countries.  The Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution read beautifully on paper as ideals, but those who promoted them were far from it.

Is it exceptional to massacre the native peoples and steal their land?

Is it exceptional to have built an economy on the backs of slaves kidnapped from Africa?

Is it exceptional to plunder foreign lands and make them part of your own?

Is it exceptional to wage endless foreign wars, assassinate at will, and steal the resources of other people to fuel a deranged consumer society?

Is it exceptional to grant full freedom to criminal corporations to pollute the land and water?

Is it exceptional to create endless crises and use propaganda to transfer vast sums of wealth from regular people to the super rich?

Exceptional perhaps, but only in the sense that other past empires considered themselves god-like and immune to Nemesis’s warning of retribution for such crimes?

A dark wind is blowing across the beach now.  The sand stings.  I see a storm coming, so we will leave for now and go to the nearest restaurant where we will order a dozen oysters for a buck a piece and drink some wine to enjoy our last day here.  When the dozen are gone, perhaps another dozen will taste even better.  All will be well for a small slice of time.  I will remember to forget.

I might later remember a photo of Gabriel García Márquez’s face, the look of a bon vivant who told stories to preserve the mystery of our ordinary, extraordinary lives.  The fierce journalist who exposed the mystifications that are used by the powerful to deny regular people their democratic rights.  A man who could enjoy life and oppose oppression.

If you can believe it, I will remember that he spoke of “the mission assigned to us by fate.”  And that the great English essayist John Berger says of him, when comparing his face to that of Rembrandt’s blind Homer:

There is nothing pretentious in this comparison: we, Death’s secretaries, all carry the same sense of duties, the same oblique shame (as we have survived, the best have departed) and the same obscure pride which belongs to us personally no more than the stories we tell.

Berger adds that Death’s secretaries are handed a file by Death that is filled with sheets of black paper which they can somehow read and out of which they make stories for the living.  No matter how fantastic they may seem, only one’s incredulity blocks one from entering their truths.

JFK had a secretary named Lincoln, Evelyn Lincoln, who late one night when tidying up his desk, found a slip of paper in his handwriting on the floor.  It wasn’t black.  On it was written a prayer Kennedy loved.  It was a message from Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln: “I know there is a God – and I see a storm coming.  If he has a place for me, I believe that I am ready.”

It’s worth remembering that was soon after the Bay of Pigs when Kennedy said he wanted “to splinter the CIA in a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds,” and that he had just returned from a meeting with Nikita Khrushchev where he was shocked by Khrushchev’s apparent insouciance to an accelerating threat of nuclear war.

Death’s secretary can’t forget.

And yet those oysters.  Their taste upon the tongue!  So exquisite!  The sea’s sweetness in every swallow.

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10 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 30, 2023 7:13 am

Beautiful. Poignant, thoughtful and inspiring.

flash
flash
May 30, 2023 7:16 am

Why the melancholy, bruh…take a break and pick up a history book and learn some real injun truth. Injuns lived in a constant state of war against each other . Injuns killed more injuns with stick , stones and bones than cracka could with an army of cannon. Mass murder, rape and torture of other tribes, including cannibalism was simply their way of life, but the cracka couldn’t abide … History, get some eddyfoggetty.

Comanches: The History of a People
https://libgen.is/book/index.php?md5=D7C678939EB41B78D651C7613E3C00F5

But, don’t wallow to much in your self-inflected despondency , eddy ….take heart …. time heals all.

“There is no antidote, he writes, against the opium of time. The winter sun shows how soon the light fades from the ash, how soon night enfolds us. Hour upon hour is added to the sum. Time itself grows old. Pyramids, arches and obelisks are melting pillars of snow. Not even those who have found a place amidst the heavenly constellations have perpetuated their names: Nimrod is lost in Orion, and Osiris in the Dog Star. Indeed, old families last not three oaks. To set one’s name to a work gives no one a title to be remembered, for who knows how many of the best of men have gone without a trace? The iniquity of oblivion blindly scatters her poppyseed and when wretchedness falls upon us one summer’s day like snow, all we wish for is to be forgotten.”

W. G. Sebald The Rings of Saturn

Ginger
Ginger
  flash
May 30, 2023 7:35 am

Don’t forget Evan S. Connell’s ‘Son of the Morning Star: Custer and the Little Big Horn’.
https://archive.org/details/sonofmorningstar00conn

This book is one of the ten books to have on a deserted island or beach. It never gets old.

Wonder if while reflecting on the road built by kidnapped African slaves (whew boy) going to eat some oysters (hope it was a month that contains an ‘r’) he thought his vehicle just might be powered by oil stolen from the bombed out people of Syria or Libya.

flash
flash
  Ginger
May 30, 2023 8:33 pm

Thank for the rec… here’s a downloadable format of the book.

https://libgen.is/book/index.php?md5=BBB301C013BB369BB71BC3BD0B0C48A6

Anonymous
Anonymous
  flash
May 30, 2023 7:49 am

They also had no horses.
But… muh noble savage!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
May 30, 2023 8:30 am

The difference between Indians and negros, and what to do about it:

Six Feet Undergroundhog Day

Oh, plus the border and its invaders.

flash
flash
  Anonymous
May 30, 2023 10:46 am

After 400 hundreds of earnest White European attempts at civilizing the “entitled” Comanches , all they got in return was ridicule, rape, robbery and murder, and then came the US calvary to put a stop to all their madness. How long before African ” entitlement” becomes too much for the sons of Europe to bear ?

Example of how Clown World, in their infinite wisdom is the same as it ever was. The US government, because injuns hungry, gave them thousands of new repeating rifles, while the US Army’s main personal defense weapon remained the single shot … nobody could have known what happened next….reeeeeee

flash
flash
  flash
May 30, 2023 10:58 am

Diversity is our strength. Are we strong enough yet? How diversified is Cape Cod, eddy?

Forty Teens Savagely Beat Down Three Marines On Southern California Beach (VIDEOS)

Forty Teens Savagely Beat Down Three Marines On Southern California Beach (VIDEOS)

Crowds scramble as 9 injured in shooting along Florida beach
6 adults, 3 children wounded at Hollywood Oceanfront Broadwalk

https://www.clickorlando.com/news/local/2023/05/30/crowds-scramble-during-apparent-shooting-along-hollywood-beach-broadwalk-video-shows/

Ghost
Ghost
May 30, 2023 7:40 am

Another wonderful essay by a gifted mind guiding a talented hand.

I live within an hour’s drive of a Trail of Tears marker and a bit up the road is a big memorial park riverside, which I’ve never visited but will next visit from my Indian friend from Oklahoma. I personally believe the tribes that have held themselves intact and refused to assimilate into our increasingly decadent culture (the Zuni and Pueblo tribes come to mind) will retake the land after the desolation of this ongoing invasion takes its toll on what is left of the so-called American Dream.

My 60-year-old cousin, first friend of childhood, just died of being a child of our era. He was obese from his early adult-hood, transitioning to walker and then wheelchair by the time he was 50 and 400 lbs. He got the flu, refused to go to the doctor and ended up dying in the emergency room a few days later when his sister found him unresponsive in her basement where he lived.

I will do my forgetting at my grandmother’s grave in a little cemetery tucked away on a hillside at the edge of a cow pasture just a few miles from the Trail of Tears, which reminds me to forget the demonic ideals that compose our country’s history because there is an historic marker there.

My cousin and I once played Red Light/Green Light in our grandmother’s side yard until the fireflies began to flicker and entice us to gather them in Mason jars to use as glow lights as we told ghost stories in a dark corner of the yard until Grandma called us all inside and tucked us into makeshift beds on couches, recliners and the floor, unwashed and fully dressed because we would eat our sausage and eggs and be right back out to play Hop Scotch on the dirt drive in the front of the house. My grandmother married her second cousin when she was 14, eventually having eleven children, seven of them in a two room shanty with the other sharecroppers in the region.

And, if you know the history of the sharecroppers, then you know what happens when people are replaced by machines. Not good things.

But, like the author suggests, the time for forgetting is upon us. I will plant daisies on my Granny Fannie’s grave and forget while I can.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Ghost
May 30, 2023 7:53 am

My oldest son was reminiscing about fireflies yesterday while we did chores. He said it was one of the most rreasured memories of his childhood. I told him I held the same meories from mine, that we collected them in the same field.

I doesn’t matter if we are remembered, it only matters that there will always be memories.