Small Talk with Professor Northrop Frye

Posted on: September 12th, 2012 by Eleanor Johnston No Comments

Small Talk with Professor Frye

“Simply put,” the Dean of Women at Victoria College told me in November 1970,  “Professor Frye can’t or won’t, and definitely doesn’t, engage in small talk.”

Miss Carmichael had chosen me, a second-year undergraduate, as head of table for a formal residence dinner, with Professor Northrop Frye sitting at my right hand as honored guest. “You’re an English major–you can strike up a conversation with him.” She added, “You are known to talk a lot.”

Until that moment, the only problem I’d had with Miss Carmichael was her determination to make all residents of Annesley Hall eat lima beans.

Would any other professors be attending? “Yes, one or two at each of the twenty tables. At the other end of your table, to the right of your roommate, will sit Mrs. Frye.” How was she at small talk? “Mrs. Frye isn’t a problem.”

I was an optimist in those days. Neither would her husband be a problem. My plan was to become the first undergraduate mortal in Vic history to pose, for Professor Frye’s consideration, such original and intelligent questions that he would delight in discussion with all the students at the table. After all, he liked talking to us in class.

My roommate, Margie, and I sat at the back of his next class on “The Bible as Literature” while I wrote out dozens of potential questions. When Professor Frye asked, “Any questions?” no-one understood enough of what he’d just said to frame a decent one. He waited, without apparent embarrassment, until someone couldn’t stand the silence a second longer and blurted out a poorly-worded query. Frye helped the student define his terms, then thanked him for his relevant and thoughtful question. Margie drew a big X across my page to impress me with the need to avoid typical undergraduate inanities.

I could, perhaps, memorize significant quotations. Margie nodded her approval. We knew some of Professor Frye’s favorite poems.  He taught in a gentle monotone but roused himself to enthusiasm whenever he found an excuse to sail off on a tangent involving The Bible, anything by Blake, The Waste Land, or “The Idea of Order at Key West.” I soon had several pages of his favorite lines and no idea how to use them. I did, by some intuitive good sense, ignore the poems of Sarah Binks.

Margie warned about another strategy to avoid: humor. In class Frye occasionally made a joke so unfunny that we only recognized it as a joke from his little smile as he waited for someone to chuckle. We could not conceive how he found it funny. Of course, we considered ourselves fortunate when we understood even one sentence per class. Any undergrad who claimed to grasp his lectures was immediately suspect in terms of honesty. Joking with Frye would be even more difficult than listening to him. My problem remained. How could I presume to talk one-on-one with this great brain? I asked if Margie would change chairs for the dinner. “Sorry,” she said. “No.”

Our favorite professor, Jay Macpherson, seemed able to converse with Frye. We watched as they walked, happily chatting, across campus to eat at Burwash Hall. We could understand her lectures. How did she talk at his level?

Frye was Vic’s answer to the existence, in other faculties and colleges, of genius such as Glenn Gould’s in Music and Marshall McLuhan’s at St. Mike’s.

Frye was a daily presence, and we felt honored to breathe the same air in the classrooms of New Vic. He peered at us with mild curiosity, and we stared back. He was clearly at the Einstein level of brilliance. Both had hair that appeared to have been accidentally frizzed by phenomenal mental powers.

What did he accomplish? Professor Frye freed us from uncritical acceptance of the assumptions of our culture. His brain danced nimbly from the humor of Aristophanes to the rage of the Minor Prophets, from the universality of Shakespeare’s dramatic structures to the brilliance of the Upanishads, Don Quixote and Crime and Punishment. His mind ranged with confident flexibility over the whole human story. One amazing presumption was to read The Bible not as Holy Writ but as literature. He expected us to read, as well, the wealth of human achievement in all non-Western myths, stories and poems.

If his ideas were difficult, his integrity was crystal-clear. An ordained United Church minister in a time of shifting moral relativity, he stood for social justice. In 1970 we were shocked to hear the rumor that the RCMP was spying on Frye for his political activities. This rumor proved true.

All too soon the night of the Annesley dinner arrived. Still dreading the hour I was assigned to converse with Professor Frye, I met him at the front door and escorted him to the dining hall. Expecting to demonstrate painful ignorance, I attempted to kick start a conversation—Professor Frye looked down at his hands and answered my questions in monosyllables. The other students chatted happily. Margie and Mrs. Frye had their heads together. Miss Carmichael, in her seat at high table, waved her hands as if I could understand what she was trying to communicate. Lima beans lay cold and starchy on my plate.

Inspiration: instead of wasting the time of our resident genius, I would stop chattering and let him think. I focused on the design etched on the silver dishes and flatware and the matching pattern stitched on the linens. When the meal was finished, my guest of honor leaned slightly towards me, smiled, nodded, stood and left. Professor Frye had taught me the role of the silence that supports the world of great thought.

 

 


Contest

Posted on: September 12th, 2012 by Eleanor Johnston No Comments

Contest Time

Who will be the first person to correctly identify the title of the Hemingway short story that Mary quotes in each chapter she narrates in Hemingway’s Island? Reply to this posting by sending only the story title and your name. The first person to identify this story will receive the honors and accolades of his/her peers, and the chance to enter in the next Contest (along with everyone else).


Hemingway sighting

Posted on: September 11th, 2012 by Wayne Fraser No Comments

At a presentation about our novel, Hemingway’s Island, we met a most interesting man, Dr. David Goicoechea, of Ketchum, Idaho (Professor Emeritus, Department of Philosophy, Brock University, St. Catharine’s, Ontario, Canada)
During the Q&A, David explained that Hemingway came to Ketchum, to the Sun Valley Lodge, the same year that David was born, 1938. He saw Hemingway lots of times over the years, for Ketchum is a small place and Hemingway was often around. David recalled meeting Hemingway in the Christiana Restaurant in the fall of 1960, and he made the observation that Hemingway in his last year was affable and sociable.
Along with these personal encounters was David’s claim that his brother was one of the two acolytes at Hemingway’s funeral. It was a Roman Catholic funeral Mass and the young lad had therefore eaten no breakfast; consequently, he fainted into the flower bed. If you google the image of Hemingway’s funeral, you can see that one of the acolytes was supported by the man beside him.
Finally, David claimed that his father, one of the town garbage men, was asked by Mary Hemingway to come to the Topping House to help clean up the blood and mess from Hemingway’s suicide.
What I find most fascinating about all these details is that I do not recall reading about the Goicoechea family in the Hemingway biographies. David is a most engaging man, a bit of a raconteur who writes his own stories and memoirs. We found David’s story intriguing and want to share his family’s Hemingway connection here on our blog.


Niagara Reads

Posted on: September 10th, 2012 by Wayne Fraser No Comments

Dr. Wayne Fraser and his wife Dr. Eleanor Johnston have written and published a novel that explores Ernest Hemingway’s last days in Cuba. Researched by Wayne and written by Eleanor, “Hemingway’s Island is a novel packed with Hemingway lore for both aficionados and general readers.” Join Wayne and Eleanor for a reading and discussion of their novel.

• Thursday, September 20

• 7:30 pm

• CENTRAL LIBRARY, Mills Room, St. Catharines, Ontario

• FREE

• For more information, please call 905-688-6103, ext. 211.


Novel Now Available

Posted on: September 10th, 2012 by Wayne Fraser No Comments

After technical glitches, our novel Hemingway’s Island is now available on Amazon.com, .ca, and .uk, as well as on barnesandnoble.com and, of course, lulu.com. The epub version is coming soon.


Hemingway Newsletter

Posted on: August 20th, 2012 by Wayne Fraser No Comments

The new issue of the Hemingway Newsletter edited by Al Defazio is now available online at

<http://hemingwaysociety.org/?page_id=114“>

It includes a half-page advertisement for Hemingway’s Island. Thank you to the Editor!


Our writing together shtick

Posted on: August 20th, 2012 by Wayne Fraser No Comments

He writes:
Even though as a young man I fantasized being a writer, sitting in a Paris bistro sipping café au lait or vin ordinaire, my ability to create dialogue or scenes never materialized. As an undergraduate, I set my mind to read and write at a scholarly level. My essay writing improved after a third-year prof tore apart one of my essays and growled, “I suppose you think you know how to write.” The next year I challenged him to improve my skills. I have become a writer of homilies, articles and essays, using a plain, clear style developed over the years. Lost was any ability to imagine a story longer than an anecdote. I can, however, still sit in a bistro and enjoy the place.

She writes:
As a teenager I found myself engrossed in reading and writing. I knew that one day I would be a writer, even though I wasn’t particularly skilled at that point. What was missing from my life as an author was experience and income. Teaching and raising children did the trick. Now, writing is so satisfying, so much fun! Seeing how a scene develops and polishing it up are the best parts. I love writing a dialogue that reveals character or clarifies a theory. I react strongly against anything fake or unjust and come up with most of my ideas before breakfast. After years of discipline, I’m into originality. For some reason to do with my stubborn family background, I refuse to write in any particular genre or to indulge in writing vicarious sex and violence. Hence, a small audience. (Thanks, friends and relatives!)

She writes:
“Any change is a good change” is our recklessly optimistic motto. I like to dress up and he likes to dress down. This sounds a bit off-topic? Stick with me. My writing style is convoluted and specific; his is straightforward and abstract. I get carried away on tangents and lose the thread of what’s happening; he can untangle the knots of a story. Writing, like everything we do together, is a pilgrimage, a search for a way to express meaning or, more accurately, Meaning. How do you know if someone is your soul mate?

He writes:
The essence of our writing partnership is collaboration. With coffee or wine in hand (depending on the time of day) and feet up on the ottoman, we bounce “What if?” back and forth, and characters and events emerge. I know that, 24 hours later, she will have woven her notes into one more scene. Meanwhile, I’ll have mulled over a narrative glitch. I can review what we had determined the day before and relate it to the direction we wanted to take in the first. Some scenes need several imagining sessions tried out in writing. When one of us reads it aloud the next day, we can easily see what works. I enjoy listening and synthesizing: ideas produce ideas; details, more details. It’s delightful to play with the words together.


Dr. Donald Daiker writes:

Posted on: August 18th, 2012 by Wayne Fraser No Comments

“Vacationing last week at North Litchfield Beach, South Carolina, I had the pleasure of reading the recently published novel ‘Hemingway’s Island’ by Eleanor Johnston & Wayne Fraser, wonderful people I met at the Petoskey Hemingway Conference in June. Hemingway’s island is, of course, Cuba, and the novel follows a young couple seeking to find the lost manuscript of Mary Hemingway’s account of their final days–July 19-July 25, 1960–before leaving the island for good. I especially enjoyed the sections of the novel in Mary’s fictional voice: Johnston and Fraser convincingly capture her wit and irreverence. It’s a well-researched and fair-minded book, and it taught me a lot about Hemingway’s later years.”

Donald A. Daiker
Professor Emeritus
Department of English
Miami University


Conspiracy Theory

Posted on: July 28th, 2012 by Eleanor Johnston No Comments

I heard two retired teachers from the USA talking about how the American government’s policy, since the early 1990’s, has been to make their children as poorly educated as possible so that they can be easily manipulated.


War is over

Posted on: July 28th, 2012 by Eleanor Johnston 5 Comments

Signs? The Olympics, international agencies, the internet. Who isn’t adapting too well, yet? Me-first people, arms manufacturers and dealers, and the very crazy.