It's interesting how common the trope, that a man's life should be better than 
that of a dog. 



I don't know how universal that is, but I do remember the socialist seed that 
was planted when I read bits from Hector Maillot's "Sans Famille" (Without 
Family) as a child. It's the story of a brother and a sister who are orphaned 
and who wander the streets of Paris looking for the next crust of bread. One 
day they run across a birthday party, given by a rich pet owners for their dog 
and the dog's friends. As the dogs enjoy an elaborate and delightful meal, the 
children watch gnawed by hunger from the other side of the park grille. 



Orwell captures this moment perfectly in his essay "Marrakesh," in which, while 
feeding crusts of bread to a gazelle, he is approached by a timid native who 
hazards to say quietly, "I am hungry too." 



I think the trope is powerful because it combines two things at different 
levels: one, a dog's life should not be miserable because a dog is loyal and we 
should not repay loyalty with violence and misery 2) that we should not treat 
one another like dogs because we owe eachother sustenance and help. As a 
chat-friend recently put it: 



"My larger point about competition, particularly economic competition, is that 
it creates far more losers than winners, and even the winners lose because they 
are isolated from the rest of humanity." 



You can't get any clearer than this. 



I am currently in DC. It's 100 in the shade, and I am in the company of a 
globe-trotting research scientist who is a good soul but believes that the 
economy has seen the bottom and that in any case, it is good for educated 
middle-class people to lose their jobs because it stimulates their creativity 
and from that will come the ideas and entrepreneurship that will create the 
next brave world. I maintain a polite silence. 



As the clouds gather and the storm breaks, it will be important to cultivate 
the clarity and visceral force of writing like that of Michael P's. But avoid 
irony and cynicism. Those are the tropes of those who have the choice of 
joining the masters or the servants. And most people do not have that choice. 



Hugs to all, 



Joanna 







_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to