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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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jan_mar
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0111520.000
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<text>
<title>
(Jan. 11, 1993) Laureate of the Wild:P. Matthiessen
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jan. 11, 1993 Megacities
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
PROFILE, Page 42
Laureate of the Wild
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Novelist, naturalist and activist, Peter Matthiessen pursues
an austere spiritual quest in his life as well as in his writing
</p>
<p>By PICO IYER
</p>
<p> "He'd heard from a Mongolian ornithologist," says the
writer, and you know there's only one major American novelist
who could be speaking, "that there were quite a number of cranes
in the eastern part of Mongolia. So we spent two weeks exploring
the river systems there. There are only 15 species of crane,
and seven of them are seriously endangered. And they're all
very beautiful--the biggest flying creatures on earth--and
they seem to me a wonderful metaphor. They require a lot of
space, a lot of wilderness and clean water." They are symbols
of longevity. "And about half the population's on the mainland;
the other half's in Japan." He smiles. "They've probably been
separated for millions of years. I like that. It humbles one."
</p>
<p> Peter Matthiessen is talking on a leisurely Sunday
afternoon in a secluded sunlit space at his six-acre compound
on Long Island, New York. His shaggy black yakling of a dog,
Tess of the Baskervilles, is sitting at his feet, and he is
stretching out his long, strikingly lean--somewhat cranelike--legs into the sun, picking up clumps of grass as he talks,
and now and then turning off the tape recorder with a desultory
toe. Already this week he's been to Idaho and Colorado to
attend a conference on freedom of speech and the American novel.
He's enjoyed a "very nice evening" with Salman Rushdie and
turned in a 132-page manuscript to Conde Nast Traveler on his
recent trip to eastern Nepal, from which he brought back
photographs of prints that may support the existence of the
yeti, or Abominable Snowman. He has two books just off the
presses--on Siberia and Africa. In between all these
activities, he is working on the second part of his
semifictional "Watson Trilogy," based on a real-life Florida
murderer, and is preparing to lead a tour group into remote
Bhutan for more investigations of the crane.
</p>
<p> Not far away is the converted stable that is his
meditation hall: after 20 years of study, Matthiessen was, three
years ago, formally accredited as a Zen teacher. His Zen name--Muryo, or Without Boundaries--seems inspired. For what
other Zen-minded patriarch can claim to be a founding editor of
the Paris Review? How many other American novelists have written
whole books in Caribbean patois that were influenced by the
principles of classical Japanese art? How many other New Yorker
writers have taken part-Cheyenne mercenaries for their alter
egos? And which other scion of America's Eastern ruling class
has devoted 628 pages and seven years of libel suits to
defending the name of a young Native American charged with
murder? While others pursue careers, Matthiessen has forged a
path, and often it seems a high, chill path through what he
calls "some night country on the dark side of the earth that all
of us have to go to all alone."
</p>
<p> The two words that friends invariably use when describing
this rare bird are Wasp and patrician--Matthiessen's voice
resounds with the kind of arrowhead sternness they hardly seem
to make anymore (and his sister was the college roommate of
George Bush's sister)."Tomato" has seldom had a longer "a", and
visitors are handled with a reserve at once concealed and
intensified by easy courtesy. Yet the other thing always said
about Matthiessen is that he's persistently tried to escape the
comfort of his upbringing and put himself in wild places where
privilege has no meaning. At 65 he's already spent a decade
wrestling with Mister Watson, the fierce and accursed and
untamable killer who was, by all accounts, "a good husband and
a loving father, an expert and dedicated farmer, successful
businessman and good neighbor."
</p>
<p> The story of Matthiessen's life sounds like a colorful
adventure tale. The son of a New York City Social Register
architect, he had already, by the time he graduated from Yale,
studied at the Sorbonne, served in the Navy and sold fiction to
the Atlantic. After a short stint teaching writing at Yale,
followed by a spell in Paris, he began working as a commercial
fisherman to support his art. Then, separated from his first
wife (he has had three, and four children), he loaded a few
books, a gun and a sleeping bag into his Ford convertible and
set off to visit every wildlife refuge in the country; by the
time he was 32, this self-taught naturalist had produced the
definitive guide Wildlife in America. Already, too, he was
showing that he needed a lot of space, and wilderness, and clean
water. His early novel Raditzer is an almost allegorical tale
of a restless, artistically minded son of wealth--Charlie
Stark--who goes to sea "unable to answer his own questions,
and nursing ill-defined resentments" and finds himself
irresistibly drawn to an orphaned ne'er-do-well who seems his
shadow self. By the time of his next novel, At Play in the
Fields of the Lord, the two sides are even closer--in
characters whose names alone (Wolfie and Moon) suggest that men
have murderous beasts in them, and pieces of the heavens.
</p>
<p> From the beginning, in fact, Matthiessen has hewed to the
same harsh, uncompromising path: nearly all his books are set
in a primitive, half-mythical landscape where men are alone
with nature and a lost spark of divinity. You will not find
much contemporary in the books, and there is scarcely a mention
of domestic relationships, or cities, or Europe. Nearly all of
them simply trace the dialogue of light and dark. "One reason I
like boats so much," he explains, "is that you have to pare
everything down to the bare necessities, and there you are, the
captain of a little boat, without a shelter, without a past,
without future hopes."
</p>
<p> That starkness seems to call to him like a bell in a
forest clearing. "I longed for something very, very spare," he
says of his favorite book, Far Tortuga, and he notes with pride
that there's only one simile in all its 408 pages. "Simply
putting down the thing itself was so astonishing," he says. "I
often think of the antennae on a cockroach coming out from under
a ship's galley, and the light catching these two
extraordinary, delicate mechanisms--that light, and those
things, to me is the echo of eons of evolution. What do you need
with a simile or metaphor?"
</p>
<p> The austerity of that approach gives the books something
of the quality of redwoods--lofty, solid monuments invested
with an almost classical presence. They can also seem
unbendingly solemn. "I like to think I have a merry side," he
says, almost wistfully, and in conversation he certainly talks
often of "fun," his sonorous voice rolling up and down with
command and theatricality, now mimicking a genteel old lady, now
a Taoist sage. "I've never in my life--or hardly ever--laughed so loud as during the creation of my fiction," he says,
while acknowledging that his humor may be too laconic for some
tastes. At the same time, he remains unflinchingly serious in
his determination to speak for those who cannot speak for
themselves.
</p>
<p> In nonfiction, in fact, his principal role has been that
of a warning bell and an elegist, trying to rescue traditional
values and forgotten instincts from the ravages of progress.
("Modern time, mon, modern time," runs the knelling refrain of
Far Tortuga.) "The world is losing its grit and taste," he says
with feeling. "The flavor of life is going." And he rises to
highest eloquence when talking of the way ever brighter urban
lights have caused a "loss of the night"--the fading of the
stars he knew as a boy and of the dark waters on Long Island
Sound that used to terrify him. "I used to be able to record 16
species of wood warblers on my property, all in a very short
time," he says. "Now I'm lucky to see eight or 10 warblers all
spring--of any species."
</p>
<p> Matthiessen was an environmentalist before the term was
fashionable--just as he was a "searcher" before it became a
'60s job description, and an apostle of "male wildness" before
Robert Bly got out his drums. Yet he is too tough-minded to
dwindle into New Age pieties, and even though he does not
hesitate to call the Gulf War "one of the great disgraces in our
history," he equally stays clear of reflex
anti-Establishmentism: at times, he says, he has been obliged
to remind more militant friends that police self-discipline
makes this "a very easy country to be brave in."
</p>
<p> In his nonfiction works, such as The Snow Leopard,
physical and metaphysical worlds often conspire melodiously. His
novels, however, can seem like mountain climbs--effortful,
punishing, dauntingly ambitious mountain climbs that demand as
much of the reader as of the author. Often their virtuosity
almost obscures their virtues. "Peter always takes the difficult
way out," says one editor. Matthiessen all but acknowledges this
when he says, "I am really not in the least bit conscious of the
reader. Maybe that's braggadocio, or flamboyance, but I really
don't think that way. I think you're doing your best work when
you're not even conscious of yourself. That's what's so
thrilling about it--you're out of yourself."
</p>
<p> That unsparingness may also begin to account for the fact
that the sum of his parts--and of his books--sometimes
seems greater than the whole. Here, after all, is a writer with
all the gifts--an exceptional ear, an unequaled eye, a
ravenous soul, a committed heart and a muscular radiance. While
his more famous Long Island neighbors have ground out books
every few years, he has written six novels, a collection of
short stories and 20 nonfiction works, all of them rigorously
crafted, meticulously researched and compendious. And yet, as
his oldest friend, George Plimpton, says, "He's never been truly
recognized." In part, perhaps, because so much comes easily to
him that he has had to create his own challenges. "I think
there's some sadness--not bitterness, but I know there's some
sadness--about this," says Plimpton. "But Peter is determined
to go his own way. He's made it difficult for himself."
</p>
<p> It may also be that he juggles so many balls that it's
hard for his audience to follow the high, clear arc of any one.
With his number listed in the phone book and his receptive
manner, he may be one of the most overburdened writers in
America, a natural ear for anyone concerned with Buddhism,
Africa, Native Americans or any of the other topics on which
he's written authoritatively. Everybody seems to have some
request or other of this ubiquitous loner. There are also other
kinds of pressure. "Peter's a dream man in a certain kind of
way," says a longtime friend, "handsome, adventurous, patrician,
very well-bred, and he's done all these things." The small world
of the Hamptons buzzes with tales of women who've given up
everything just to live within sight of him. Yet in prose, at
least, his remains a relentlessly male world--Men's Lives, the
title of one book, might almost be the summary of his entire
oeuvre.
</p>
<p> After all his striving, there is a kind of fittingness in
the fact that it was Zen, in a sense, that found him--in the
form of three small Japanese masters he encountered in his
driveway one day, invited by his late second wife. An
aristocratic, solitary, exacting discipline that prizes
immediacy, irreverence and unanalytical attention to the moment,
Zen might almost have been made for this practical rebel ("We
deserved each other," Matthiessen says with a self-mocking
laugh). His commitment to the discipline has never been
halfhearted. "Peter is very, very serious about Zen practice,"
says Helen Tworkov, author of Zen in America and editor in chief
of Tricycle: The Buddhist Review. She recalls how he once took
three months off from his "incredibly full life" to lead a Zen
retreat. "Peter doesn't take himself for granted," she says.
"Here he is at the age of 65, and he's still committed to
exploring what life is about. There are very few people of his
age, or accomplishment, or stature, who are trying so hard."
</p>
<p> Trying for what? one sometimes wonders. Perhaps for the
same simple thing that Mister Watson's neighbors seek: a good
night's sleep. "Simplicity is the whole secret of well-being,"
he writes in The Snow Leopard. "The secret of well-being is
simplicity," he writes in Nine-Headed Dragon River. His great
remaining ambition, he says, is "to figuratively clean out my
office. I've really said what I have to say, and I really would
rather, if I could bring myself to a halt and stop traveling,
fool around with fiction, maybe more experimental fiction."
</p>
<p> Maybe so. But 17 years ago, in a talk with TIME, he used
almost exactly the same words. And so one is left with the
noble, and slightly poignant, image of a restless, ambitious,
complex man trying and trying for simplicity. "There's a line
in Turgenev," he says, "in Virgin Soil, that absolutely haunts
me. It's a suicide note, and the entire note is, `I could not
simplify myself.' What an arrow through the heart!"
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>