On a spring afternoon in 2007, I was lying on the couch in my living room reading Simon Schama''s Power of Art . This chapter was an essay on Picasso''s Guernica . As I read Schama''s account of the German planes appearing in the sky over the Spanish town on April 26 1937, something caused me to look up from the book. The objects in the room, clearly outlined in the spring light, seemed altered somehow, stark yet dubious along their edges. Not quite familiar, either as themselves or as an arrangement of objects. I had a sense of items poised in a museum, absorbing my attention while contriving to escape it utterly. Clear and hunkered as they were, I couldn''t quite see them. I realized then the date was April 26.
The same day as the Guernica attack, exactly seventy years later. The bombers had appeared in the sky at four p.m. I looked at the homemade wooden clock on the end table. Hand-sawed and painted yellow-green, it has the shape of a tall slim house with no window, and, at its base, a little red door askew on its hinges. The hour hand had dropped below the eave on the right, two-thirds of its way toward the crooked little door. The big hand pointed straight up into the peak of the tall roof. It was four p.
m. For a long instant, like the sustained vibrations of a musical chord, past and present collapsed together like the two ends of an accordioned paper figure. Or more than two: the moment thronged with splintery harmonics. Stretched out, the two sequences--the destruction of a town, which became the subject of a famous painting, which became the subject of an essay; and (reversing things) my reading of the essay about the painting about the destroyed town--were separated by the innumerable twists and folds of seven decades. Then somehow, with a speed that gave me vertigo, they shut up tight together, without a wafer of space between them. They overlaid each other like clear transparencies. That was part of the vertigo. As if the intervening seventy years had suddenly gone sheer and negligible.
Like wandering (I was looking at the house-clock again) in a building made of glass. A glass construction polished to such speckless transparency that things which ordinary walls and floors and ceilings would keep apart could suddenly loom, merge and blend. But there was movement in that image. There had to be. In part to account for the lurching, jittery sense I felt lying there. A sense of caged turbulence--wild whirling bounded by absolute stillness--like the frenzy of snowflakes inside a glass-globed paperweight. A dance, I thought. In a dance you whirl through space without ever leaving the dance.
At a given moment someone may be across the ballroom, or right next to you, or in your arms--these positions and others can repeat and alternate. All of these thoughts and comparisons, none of them quite right, none of them exactly wrong, could go on without any disruption to the dance itself. Perhaps they were even part of it. A step, a style of stepping, however ungainly, that I could claim and recognize as my own. For if the pure exhilaration of this kind of dancing has always come with close echoes of apprehensiveness, it is not just because of its weightlessness and the transparency of its figures, those unmoored glassy possibilities that bring havoc just as easily as redemption to the world of solid sense and obscurity. It is because, once finding myself aswirl again, I have never had the slightest clue when or where or how the dance will end. After that there was nothing for a few days. Then the first transmissions, widely spaced.
The number 70. Lines and circles scratched in dirt. My grandfather''s face. These could be core signals, or peripheral or preliminary, perhaps to test or clear the line. There was no way to tell at this point. I knew by now to do nothing but wait. The laws of breakdown. Its code.
Which you must on no account violate if the breakdown is to be yours (and of what use would another''s be?). Perpetual vigilance is required, the paradox of rigour amid crack-up (which is in fact no paradox but a precondition). What you don''t want above all, the worst betrayal--of the process, of yourself, of life even--is a botched breakdown. One of those tape-and-glue stumble-ons that can simulate recovery, functionality, can even, with a protraction that a Torquemada might flinch from inflicting, extend themselves into a slow-motion suicide lasting seventy years or more, "sadly missed." No. (That much you know.) Eventually the watch will stop. Or you will smash it: that seems daily more likely.
Beyond a stopped watch will be.no time or new time. But not fractured time. Not these splintered and dissolving minutes. Beware of watch-repairmen. Tinkerers. Parts-replacers. Let the watch break.
(And yet no way to tell, from the first slip-slidings out of time--or the first noticing of them, for who remarks on a few dropped seconds?--how long it will take a watch to break. Days? Weeks? Years? More time than a lifetime affords? To smash, crash, stop. And become.time-less, bare-wristed? Or tell time true, anew? Or be tinkered back to passability? Fiddled with and spit-shined by the old, bald man? No way, ultimately, to know.).