distribution
and equilibration in stein’s three lives
by Douglas
Messerli
Gertrude Stein Three
Lives (New York: The Grafton Press, 1909) (Los Angeles: Green Integer, 2004)
Most commentaries of Three Lives
have centered on the present-tense narrational structure of the tales using Stein’s
own comments from a lecture twenty years after writing these pieces,
“Composition as Explanation (1926),” a work seemingly centered on Stein’s ideas
of the definition of character as beings in action, which, for this author, is
related to her concept of behavioral repetition slightly altered each time it
is repeated:
The composition is the thing
seen by every one living in the living they
are doing, they are the
composing of the composition that at the time they
are living is the composition
of the time in which they are living. It is that
that makes living a thing
they are doing. Nothing else is different, of that
almost any one can be
certain. The time when and the time of and the time
in that composition is the
natural phenomena of that composition and of
that perhaps every one can be
certain.
Referring both to Three Lives and her long novel, The Making of Americans, Stein describes
the process she would use throughout much of her early writing and which
influenced her later work:
In the first book there
was a groping for a continuous present and for
using everything by beginning
again and again.
There was a groping for
using everything and there was a groping for a
continuous present and there
was an inevitable beginning of beginning
again and again and again.
Having naturally done
this I naturally was a little troubled with it when I
read it. I became then like
the others who read it. One does, you know, ex-
cepting that when I reread it
myself I lost myself in it again. Then I said to
myself this time it will be
different and I began. I did begin again I just
began.
In this beginning
naturally since I at once went on and on very soon there
were pages and pages and
pages more and more elaborated creating a more
and more continuous present
including more and more using of everything
and continuing more and more
beginning and beginning and beginning.
I went on and on to a
thousand pages of it.
In the introduction to my Green
Integer edition of 2004, Lyn Hejinian, following the lead of Donald Sutherland
and other early Stein critics, approaches Three
Lives in just this manner, relating it to Stein’s ideas of composition as a
continuous present. Yet Hejinian also convincingly connects these tales to
Stein’s relationship with art, in particular the Portrait of Madame Aubin by Cézanne, which hangs upon Stein’s
drawing room wall, glimpsed in one of the most famous of the photographs of
Stein and Alice B. Toklas. Quoting Stein herself— “Everything I have done has
been influenced by Flaubert and Cézanne, and this gave me a new feeling about
composition”—Hejinian also refers to critical commentary by figures such as
Joachim Grasquet, who described “Cézanne’s ability to convey his subject’s
inner experience, his ability, as it were, to paint time.” Similarly, in his
early study of the author, Sutherland describes the stories, particularly
“Melanchtha,” as having the weightiness of Cézanne’s apples and pears.
However, composition in art is not the same as composition in language.
Despite the weight of the figure and the relationship of the parts through
color and position, Madame Aubin is not precisely a thing in motion, a thing
“beginning and beginning and beginning” through the fluid repetition and alteration
of words.
Perhaps if we think more broadly about the idea of composition of
Stein’s, separating it from her obvious use of the “continuous present, and
focus instead on her comments, introduced at the end of her “Composition as
Explanation” essay, on “distribution and equilibration,” we can more clearly
understand the relationship of Stein’s work to visual representation.
Distribution is interesting
and equilibration is interesting when a continuous
present and a beginning
again and again and using everything and everything
alike and everything
naturally simply different has been done.
…
The time in the
composition is a thing that is very troublesome. If the
time in the composition is
very troublesome it is because there must even
if there is no time at all
in the composition there must be time in the com-
position which is in its
quality of distribution and equilibration.
Throughout, “The Good Anna,” for example, we discover that this serving
women is attracted to certain kinds of individuals, involving herself in a
pattern of relationships that one might also describe as magnetic-like forces
which Anna cannot resist. The women with whom she works best, and to whom she
is even romantically attracted—Miss Mary Wadsmith, Miss Mathilda, and Mrs.
Lehntmann—are opposed throughout the book to those for whom Anna sees herself
as unable to work for, Mary’s neice Jane and Dr. Shonjen’s wife. Stein
capsulates these differences in terms of various adjectives and adverbs
throughout her tale: Anna is described as scolding, hard, short of temper,
conquering, magnificent, grumbling with a high voice, a woman with a small,
spare, worn, and awkward body, her thin cheeks, sharp and clear; her life, we
are repeatedly told, was “an arduous and troubled one.”
In opposition to those qualities, Stein early on tells us that
Anna found her place with
large, abundant women, for such were always
careless or all helpless, and
so the burden of their lives could fall
and give her just content.
Anna’s superiors must be always these large help-
less women, or be men, for
none others could give themselves to be made
so comfortable and free.
Predictably, Miss Mathilda is
described as a “large and lazy woman,” with a “cheerful, lazy temper to be
always without care.” Mrs. Lehntman is “bland, impersonal and pleasant,” a
woman slack, “diffuse, and careless in her ways.” Mrs. Drehten is patient,
homely, stalwart, cherry. Anna likes men such as Dr. Shonjen, moreover, because
they “could eat so much and with such joy”; “And then they were warm and full,
they were content, and let her do whatever she thought best.” In short, Stein
balances her characters as would a painter placing groups of people or objects
upon his canvas. The thin and sharp placed in apposition to the round and
slack, the scolding conqueror set against the lazy and the large. Perhaps
rather that depicting on the cover of the Green Integer edition Stein in her
apartment in a vertical position in relation to her Cézanne painting, if we had
presented the picture horizontally, portraying a vast distance between the
heavyset smiling Stein and the thin, slightly dour- looking Alice B. Toklas, we
might have more completely represented the structure of the first of Stein’s Three Lives, where figures are
distributed in equilibration.
Stein’s great story “Meclantha” also contains numerous instances in
which characters are in type and size are drawn or repelled to one another:
Meclantha is clearly attracted to Jeff Campbell because of his thought
processes, his need to think things over, while she is often a dreamy wanderer
who has a hard time “remembering.” Early on it the story she is drawn to Jane
Harden because she can help her to become “understanding,” and later she is
pulled toward another of Stein’s lazy, selfish women, Rose Johnson, in part,
because they are true opposites, Melanchtha being “complex” and yet obedient,
almost servile in her presence. Yet if we look for the kinds of sculptural
balances that we have witnessed in “The Good Anna,” we will be disappointed in
this longer story. The idea of distribution and equilibration does not work in
the same way.
Recent and often younger critics have
often represented Stein’s story of a Baltimore black woman as being racist, and
there certainly are elements in the writing that might be interpreted as such.
Some of the descriptions of Rose Johnson, for example, seem, upon first
reading, to be stereotypical white myths of black behavior:
Rose Johnson was a real
black, tall, well built, sullen, stupid,
childlike good looking
negress. She laughed when she was happy
and grumbled and was sullen with everything that troubled.
Rather than distributing her figures in “Meclantha” in terms of their
size and psychological qualities, Stein uses the compositional method of color
and the effect these colors have upon each other. Meclantha’s mother is “pale
yellow,” she herself is sometimes described as yellow, at other times as brown.
Jefferson is also brown, sometimes black; Melanctha’s father is a dark black.
As the representative of the worst of bourgeois attitudes, rose (Rose Johnson)
is opposed to Meclantha, who as the story progresses, becomes more and more
“blue,” the two major colors, not so coincidentally, of Picasso’s early
paintings. In its palette “Melanctha” reminds me somewhat of the 1942 painting,
“Patience,” by Georges Braque, a portrait of another tormented woman.
In short, Stein uses color in this story the way she used weight in “The
Good Anna,” as a method of distributing her characters in “equilibration,”
representing them in a state of balance or of opposing forces.
By the time she completes “The Good Lena,” the shortest work of the
three, Stein has almost dispensed with any compositional method, in part
because her central character does not seem to really exist. Lena is not only
described as being “dreamy” and slow of mind, she is literally “not all there,”
a character in name only. In a sense Lena is an abstraction, a thing which her
aunt, Mrs Haydon, collects, just like the objects purchased by so many American
tourists, on her trip to Germany. She is of use, upon their return, only as a
kind of test case for Mrs. Haydon to discover if she can arrange a marriage, an
act she must soon accomplish for her own two monstrous daughters.
Equally without substance, Lena’s husband Herman Kreder is forced to
give up his life to his mother and father, having nothing of his own except for
the three children Lena produces before she dies.
At the heart of this story, accordingly, is a vast emptiness, almost a
vortex of energy that leaves us only with an abstraction. Like Picasso and
others who during this same period were moving away from naturalist
presentation, and like the Vorticist artists of some years later, Stein would increasingly
shift, after this work and The Making of
Americans, into a creative process where her images (of words) no longer
represented naturalist figures, but created meaning in relation to their
placement to one another in space.
Los
Angeles, September 23, 2007
Reprinted from Green Integer Blog (February 2008).
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