ATD 81-96

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Please keep these annotations SPOILER-FREE by not revealing information from later pages in the novel.


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July Fourth started hot and grew hotter,...

Guardan Review
On Saturday, 18 November 2006, the UK's Guardian newspaper, in a Review section which featured a drawing of what Pynchon might now look like on its cover, published a full-page excerpt from Against the Day. This comprised pages 81 to 85 (up to "he wondered sometimes if he would've ever signed on."), with the addition of the final paragraph from page 96, ending with "Happy Fourth of July, Webb." This was a much more substantial excerpt than the one which appeared in the Penguin Press catalogue, and was arguably a more alluring one in terms of attracting the general reader. These were the only official excerpts published before ATD itself, on 21 November 2006.

The Guardian excerpt is now online: [1]

The timing of this chapter, opening on a summer morning, parallels that of the novel's very first chapter.

nitro beginning to ooze out of dynamite sticks
The important point about dynamite is when it doesn't blow up. Alfred Nobel discovered that he could stabilize nitroglycerine by soaking it into a powdered clay; the product was not sensitive to shock or heat. That is, until it separated in hot weather, with greasy-feeling free nitro collecting on the outside of the sticks. (A minor plot point in the TV series Lost, isn't it?)

Feast of St. Barbara
According to legend, Saint Barbara was the extremely beautiful daughter of a wealthy heathen named Dioscorus, who lived near Nicomedia in Asia Minor, in the 4th Century AD. Because of her singular beauty and fearful that she be demanded in marriage and taken away from him, he jealously shut her up in a tower to protect her from the outside world. When Barbara converted to Christianity, her enraged father killed her and was subsequently struck down by lightening. St. Barbara was venerated as early as the seventh century. The legend of the lightning bolt which struck down her father caused her to be regarded as the patron saint in time of danger from thunderstorms, fires and sudden death. When gunpowder made its appearance in the Western world, Saint Barbara was invoked for aid against accidents resulting from explosions — since some of the earlier artillery pieces often blew up instead of firing their projectile, Saint Barbara became the patroness of the artillerymen. [2]

Propaganda of the Deed
Anarchist terrorism. [Wikipedia]

Zarzuela
Webb's horse is named for a Spanish genre of musical theater. [Wikipedia]

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Skinner
A person who drives mules.

Chinaman
This is the latest of many allusions to China or Chinese in an exotic, oriental way. This may simply be imitating Gilded Age and early 20th century American fiction and films, which often featured mystical Chinese as characters and villains. It also recalls the use of Feng Shui in Mason & Dixon.

dynamite headache
The nitroglycerin in dynamite is the same compound used medicinally against angina pectoris. Users say the sudden headache is better than the chest pains . . . but sometimes they pause to think before answering.

Cour d'Alene bullpens
Usually 'Coeur'. Striking miners in 1892 were illegally confined in bullpens. [Wikipedia]

Cripple Creek
Cripple Creek was the location of a miner's strike in 1894. It was a significant labor event and it was the first time that a state Militia was called out in support of the miners. Wikipedia entry

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General Bobrikoff
Or Bobrikov, N.I. (1839-1904), given dictatorial powers in Finland, viewed there as oppressor, assassinated.

neuraesthenic
Neurasthenia (Fatigue syndrome) is a neurotic disorder Definition/Symptoms

Marcel Proust was a neurasthenic in a cork-lined room.

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1900
So the current Fourth of July must be 1901 or later (not 1899).

Minneskort
Modern Finnish word for computer memory cards. (TRP likely saw it on a Nokia phone.)

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Innocent Victims . . . Monsters That Did the Deed
Use of capitals seems to emphasize the fact that these persons are simply convenient stock characters in the forwarding of the owners'/government's agenda.

"some of these explosions, the more deadly of them, in fact, were really set off to begin with not by Anarchists but by the owners themselves."
Is this an allusion to the Controlled demolition hypothesis for the collapse of the WTC?

NO! In labor history, many 'accidents' and some planned deeds by owners were blamed on radicals, anarchists, etc.

See, however, a much more straightforward allusion in page 175.

While it's true that many "anarchist" explosions were planned by the owners of industry, to suggest that this is NOT! an allusion to the possibility of US Government involvement in the 9-11 attacks seems rather limiting. Pynchon hinted strongly that this novel is an allegory for our own time in the jacket blurb, and much of what makes this chapter interesting is the way it creates a disturbing analogy between the terrorism carried out by Webb, a highly sympathetic figure, and that carried out by the 9-11 hijackers, whom we so love to hate.

Which left precious few targets except for the railroad.
Frank Norris's 1901 novel The Octopus is summed up in one short paragraph. Wikipedia entry.

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Shorty's Billiard Saloon
This is based on real accounts of billiard balls sparking and exploding in saloons. The balls in question used a then-new thermoplastic compound of cellulose nitrate and camphor developed and patented under the trademark "celluloid" by John Wesley Hyatt as a substitute for ivory. See Celluloid for Wikipedia links to Hyatt and Celluloid.

without being hit once
Similar to a pivotal scene in the film, Pulp Fiction.

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those French Anarchists . . . Emile Henry . . . Vaillant
Emile Henry (1872 - May 21, 1894) was a French anarchist who on February 12, 1894 detonated a bomb at the Café Terminus in the Parisian Gare Saint-Lazare killing one person and wounding twenty. Henry was angered over the execution of another Anarchist, Auguste Vaillant, for the destruction of a government building that hurt no one, and took it upon himself to strike back to avenge his fellow revolutionary's death. He saw the Cafe as a representation of the bourgeois itself and his intent was to kill as many people as possible in the bombing. Wikipedia entry.

how can anyone set off a bomb that will take innocent lives?
Rev. Moss Gatlin's rhetorial question and its wisecrack response, "Long fuse" seems a calculated echo of Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket. ("How you shoot women and children?" "Easy -- don't lead 'em so much.")

Mason-Dixon line
We learn that the Traverse family had been "an old ridegerunning clan from southern Pennsylvania, close to the Mason-Dixon." No Traverses appear, however, in Pynchon's Mason & Dixon (except in the sense that the whole M-D survey was conducted by the traverse method), but one can speculate that had they been, the Traverse ancestors may have been victims of the Line's bad Feng Shui. From this, one could infer a connection between the Line and Colorado Anarchism.

Civil War
This is the first instance of the term, for a war so far in the novel being referred to as "The Rebellion".

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westward drift
Webb Traverse's wanderings are referred to as "this westward drift". The phrase is probably not accidental: in scientific circles "westward drift" is used for either of two geophysical phenomena: the gradual westward [movement of the magnetic north pole] and the westward [rotation of the outer layers of the Earth] (the lithosphere) relative to the inner layers.

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silver-boom babies
Assuming the silver boom of 1890-1892 is meant, Webb's kids were aged about 9 to 16. Timeline with spoilers

fancy briar pipe . . . beat-up old corncob
Briar pipes appeared in Europe from the 1850s on. The Missouri Meerschaum brand of corncob pipe dates from 1869. Until close to 1900, clay pipes were probably more common than either.

Bob Ford's Funeral
June 1892 [Wikipedia]

Creede
Central Colorado mining town, now a ski resort.

Telluride
Far southwestern Colorado mining town, now a ski and mountain resort, with an annual film festival. Named for the telluride ores typical of the vicinity, but the name has more possible significance in AtD.

Used as an adjective, Telluric: Of or belonging to the earth; terrestrial; pertaining to the earth as a planet; also, arising from the earth or soil (OED). In turn the origin of Tellurism: Magnetic influence or principle supposed by some to pervade all nature, and to produce the phenomenon of Animal Magnetism; also the theory of Animal Magnetism based on this, propounded in 1822 by Keiser in Germany (OED). "Animal Magnetism" is referred to in English as Mesmerism [3].

repeal of the Silver Act
Prior to 1892, both Silver and Gold were used as a metallic standard for currency in the United States. The Sherman Act authorized the treasury to purchase 4.5 million ounces of silver per month. This inflated the price of silver, causing eastern investors to start hoarding gold as a hedge. The unrest this caused in the Colorado mines resulted in the repeal of the Act. When this happened, the mining of silver began to rapidly decline, causing further destabilization in the silver mining industry.

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before he got shot
1899. [cite]

the Cornish wives in Jacktown
Many Western miners came from Cornwall. The stock nickname for any Cornishman was "Cousin Jack." So Jacktown is the area where the Cornish families live.

Lake
'Lake Traverse' is a real lake between Minnesota and South Dakota. Wikipedia

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"Sleep? is when you sleep . . . ." "Only that I wouldn't want it . . ."
(Looks like typos to me.)

The "sleep?" could also just be a transcription of conversational style. We often include a question in our answer, in this case summarising the question with "sleep?" then immediately answering.

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. . . a mule dropping on the edge of life's mountain trail, ready to be either squashed flat or kicked into the void.
Brings directly in mind a scene from Cormac McCarthy's 1985 highly praised novel Blood Meridian or The Evening Redness In The West:

"The following evening as they rode up onto the western rim they lost one of the mules. It went skittering off down the canyon wall with the contents of the panniers exploding soundlessly in the hot dry air and it fell through sunlight and through shade, turning in that lonely void until it fell from sight into a sink of cold blue space that absolved it forever of memory in the mind of any living thing that was." (Modern Library Edition 2001, p. 147).

The novel is considered as one of the 20th century American masterpieces (WIkipedia entry). It is set about 45 years before the beginning of AtD (1849-50) at the Mexico - Texas borderlands. In fact, due to Pynchon's frequent references to red light, west and sunset (see here for a growing list), I suspect a kind of deeper relation between the two novels, but more evidence is required.

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plutes
Plutocrats: members of the wealthy class controlling a government

Labor produces all wealth. Wealth belongs to the producer thereof.
Reviewers of ATD have quoted this line, [4] but Pynchon did not make it up. It comes from authentic miner's union literature of the time. [5]

Compassion
With 'Republicans' below, a possible reference to 'compassionate conservatism' of the Bush administration. "...starving, homeless, and dead..." is what the Republicans mean by compassion, demonstrating the need for the "foreign phrase book". Has always been thus,historically and now?

Republicans
William McKinley was elected in 1896 on the Republican ticket, defeating Democrat William Jennings Bryan, ushering in a chain of Republican Presidents until Woodrow Wilson was elected in 1912. Obviously, could also be interpreted as a jab at the current Republican Party.

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duster
Long coat. Wikipedia entry

the people's work, if not God's, the two forces according to Reverend Gatlin having the same voice
Gatlin has in mind the proverb Vox populi vox Dei, "the voice of the people is the voice of God." There's a twist, though; see Wikipedia.

"Don't beg, you hear me? Don't any of you ever, fucking, beg, me or nobody, for nothin."
Could have easily been TRP's response to interview requests!!!

I think it's about honor, not annoyance.

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dynamite rounders
Rounders was a precursor to baseball. [Wikipedia]

Consider the alternative, that the "rounders" are the kids; "every sheriff has at least a dozen in his county" can refer to the game of rounders only by a stretch of meaning. Rounders: rascals, mischief-makers, in this case making mischief with dynamite.

waiting for the rest of the joke
Cf Dally and Lindsay, p27.

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"We ready?"
The destruction of the railroad bridge is reminiscent of scenes in Edward Abbey's anarchistic 1975 novel The Monkey Wrench Gang. Wikipedia entry.

Sufficient unto the day
From The Gospel According to Saint Matthew: 6:34. "Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." (The New Testament of the King James Bible) Very title thematic?

Annotation Index

Part One:
The Light Over the Ranges

1-25, 26-56, 57-80, 81-96, 97-118

Part Two:
Iceland Spar

119-148, 149-170, 171-198, 199-218, 219-242, 243-272, 273-295, 296-317, 318-335, 336-357, 358-373, 374-396, 397-428

Part Three:
Bilocations

429-459, 460-488, 489-524, 525-556, 557-587, 588-614, 615-643, 644-677, 678-694

Part Four:
Against the Day

695-723, 724-747, 748-767, 768-791, 792-820, 821-848, 849-863, 864-891, 892-918, 919-945, 946-975, 976-999, 1000-1017, 1018-1039, 1040-1062

Part Five:
Rue du Départ

1063-1085

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