The Golden Notebook: A Novel (Perennial Classics) by Doris Lessing
Author:Doris Lessing [Lessing, Doris]
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Publisher: HarperCollins
Published: 2013-05-14T00:00:00+00:00
Free Women: 3
TOMMY ADJUSTS HIMSELF TO BEING BLIND WHILE THE OLDER PEOPLE TRY TO HELP HIM
Tommy hovered for a week between life and death. The end of that week was marked by Mollyâs use of these words; her voice very far from its usual note of ringing confidence: âIsnât it odd, Anna? Heâs been hovering between life and death. Now heâs going to live. It seems impossible he shouldnât. But if he had died, then I suppose weâd have felt that was inevitable too?â For a week the two women had sat by Tommyâs bed in the hospital; waited in side-rooms while doctors conferred, judged, operated; returned to Annaâs flat to care for Janet; received letters and visits of sympathy; and called on their reserves of energy to deal with Richard, who was openly condemning them both. During this week, while time stopped, and feeling stopped (they asked themselves and each other why they felt nothing but numbing suspense, although of course tradition authorised this reaction), they talked, though briefly and in shorthand, so to speak, since the points in question were so familiar to them both, of Mollyâs care of Tommy, Annaâs relationship with him, to pinpoint the event or the moment when they had definitely failed him. Because Molly had gone away for a year? No, she still felt that was the right thing to have done. Because of the formlessness of their own lives? But how could they have been anything different? Because of something said or not said during Tommyâs last visit to Anna? Possibly, but they felt not; and how was one to know? They did not refer the catastrophe to Richardâs account; but when he accused them, replied: âLook, Richard, thereâs no point in abusing each other. The thing is, what to do next for him?â
Tommyâs optic nerve was damaged; he would be blind. The brain was undamaged, or at least, would recover.
Now that he was pronounced out of danger, time established itself again, and Molly collapsed into hours of low and helpless weeping. Anna was very busy with her and with Janet, who had to be shielded from the knowledge that Tommy had tried to kill himself. She had used the phrase: ââhad an accident,â but it was a stupid one, because now she could see in the childâs eyes the knowledge that the possibilities of an accident terrible enough to lay one flat on oneâs back, permanently blinded, in hospital, lurked in the objects and habits of an every day. So Anna amended the phrase and said Tommy had accidently wounded himself cleaning a revolver. Janet then remarked that there was no revolver in their flat; and Anna said no, and there never would be, etc.; and the child came out of her anxiety.
Meanwhile Tommy, having been a silent shrouded figure in a darkened room, ministered to by the living and helpless in their hands, moved, came to life, and spoke. And that group of people, Molly, Anna, Richard, Marion, who had
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