Margaret Atwood
THE TENT
For Graeme
Contents
I.
Life Stories
Clothing Dreams
Bottle
Impenetrable Forest
Encouraging the Young
Voice
No More Photos
Orphan Stories
Gateway
Bottle II
II.
Winter’s Tales
It’s Not Easy Being Half-Divine
Salome Was a Dancer
Plots for Exotics
Resources of the Ikarians
Our Cat Enters Heaven
Chicken Little Goes Too Far
Thylacine Ragout
The Animals Reject Their Names and
Things Return to Their Origins
Three Novels I Won’t Write Soon
Take Charge
Post-Colonial
Heritage House
Bring Back Mom: An Invocation
III.
Horatio’s Version
King Log in Exile
Faster
Eating the Birds
Something Has Happened
Nightingale
The Tent
Time Folds
Tree Baby
But It Could Still
Acknowledgements
I.
LIFE STORIES
Why the hunger for these? If it is a hunger. Maybe it’s more like bossiness. Maybe we just want to be in charge, of the life, no matter who lived it.
It helps if there are photos. No more choices for the people in them—pick this one, dump that one. The livers of the lives in question had their chances, most of which they blew. They should have spotted the photographer in the bushes, they shouldn’t have chewed with their mouths open, they shouldn’t have worn the strapless top, they shouldn’t have yawned, they shouldn’t have laughed: so unattractive, the candid denture.
I’m working on my own life story. I don’t mean I’m putting it together; no, I’m taking it apart. It’s mostly a question of editing. If you’d wanted the narrative line you should have asked earlier, when I still knew everything and was more than willing to tell. That was before I discovered the virtues of scissors, the virtues of matches.
Adolescence can be discarded too, with its salty tanned skin, its fecklessness and bad romance and leakages of seasonal blood. What was it like to breathe so heavily, as if drugged, while rubbing up against strange leather coats in alleyways? I can’t remember.
Once you get started it’s fun. So much free space opens up. Rip, crumple, up in flames, out the window.
I’m getting somewhere now, I’m feeling lighter. I’m coming unstuck from scrapbooks, from albums, from diaries and journals, from space, from time. Only a paragraph left, only a sentence or two, only a whisper.
CLOTHING DREAMS
Oh no. Not this again. It’s the clothing dream. I’ve been having it for fifty years. Aisle after aisle, closetful after closetful, metal rack after metal rack of clothing, stretching into the distance under the glare of the fluorescent tubing—as gaudy and ornate and confusing, and finally as glum and oppressive, as the dreams of a long-time opium smoker. Why am I compelled to riffle through these outfits, tangling up the hangers, tripping on the ribbons, snagging myself on a hook or button while feathers and sequins and fake pearls drop to the floor like ants from a burning tree? What is the occasion? Who do I need to impress?
***
There’s a smell of stale underarms. Everything’s been worn before. Nothing fits. Too small, too big, too magenta. These flounces, hoops, ruffles, wired collars, cut-velvet capes—none of these disguises is mine. How old am I in this dream? Do I have tits? Whose life am I living? Whose life am I failing to live?
BOTTLE
— I only want to be like everyone else, I said.
— You’re not, though, was what he told me. You’re not like them.
— Why not? I said. I was inclined to listen to him. He had a persuasive manner.
— Because I love you.