Pan by Paul Robichaud
Author:Paul Robichaud
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Reaktion Books
As âAllâ, Pan is what cannot be apprehended by the physical eye â the totality of everything. Only the mysterious power of our âthird eyeâ, which Cartwright identifies with âdarknessâ, can perceive Pan within things. When Lou asks if Pan could be seen âin a horse, for exampleâ, Cartwright tells her, âEasily. In St Mawr!â Louâs mother suggests that âit would be difficult . . . to open the third eye and see Pan in a man.â Cartwright agrees, suggesting that in a man all that is visible is âthe old satyr: the fallen Panâ. His comments develop Lawrenceâs contrast between an original, formless Pan and his transformation into the goat-footed god.
In private, Mrs DeWitt expresses her frustration to Lou, who agrees that Pan is not to be found in modern men, picking up another theme from Lawrenceâs essay. Lou can find Pan easily enough in St Mawr, where he is a frightening presence for Mrs DeWitt, but confesses, âWhen I look at men with my third eye, as you call it â I think I see â mostly â a sort of â pancake.â49 Modern men are pancakes compared with the dangerous and primordial splendour of the living Pan. Mrs DeWitt despairs of finding âthe unfallen Panâ in any man she has met in the last fifteen years, including Cartwright: âIsnât it extraordinary, the young man Cartwright talks about Pan, but he knows nothing of it at all. He knows nothing of the unfallen Pan: only the fallen Pan with goat legs and a leer â and that sort of power, donât you know.â50 Modern men can be lecherous seducers, but such sexual power is merely the fallen form of the deeper and more authentic power to enchant that Lawrence identifies in his earlier essay.
For the rest of St Mawr, Pan is evoked symbolically rather than directly. His most powerful symbol is the horse itself, which nearly kills Rico on an expedition to a Shropshire landmark called the Devilâs Chair, suggesting the Christian conflation of Pan with the Devil. Lawrence describes it as âone of those places where the spirit of aboriginal England still lingers, the old savage England, whose last blood still flows in a few Welshmen, Englishmen, Cornishmenâ.51 None of the characters is able fully to inhabit âthe living universe of Panâ, although Lewis, the Welsh groom, and Phoenix, Mrs DeWittâs half-Mexican, half-Navajo servant, come closest.52 As in âPan in Americaâ, Indigenous people are more symbolic than real for Lawrence in St Mawr, and his portrayal of Phoenix is marred by the racialized thinking typical of early twentieth-century writers. Both Phoenix and Lewis embody Lawrenceâs idea of âaboriginalâ races, being darker and closer to the earth, and therefore to Pan. Lewis, for example, is described as âwalking his horse alongside in the shadow of the woodâs-edge, the darkness of the old Pan, that kept our artificially lit world at bayâ.53 They have an innate understanding of the âPan-powerâ embodied by St Mawr, who ultimately finds freedom of a kind on a ranch in the American Southwest, where he is brought by Lou and Mrs DeWitt.
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