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Double Birthday |
作者Author /  Willa Cather 維拉•凱瑟 |
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Double Birthday
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Introduction
The Court House
Judge Hammersley's House
Albert and Uncle Albert's House
Old Engelhardt House
Crossings and Doublings: Significance of Title
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Introduction
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“Double
Birthday" (1929) is in many ways cut from the same fabric as"Neighbour
Rosicky" (1928). Characters in both stories face mortality,
remember the past, and persist in lives lived against the grain of
financial success. But whereas Rosicky prefers the prairie to
the city,"Double Birthday" shows characters rooting their lives in a
modern industrial city, Pittsburgh. Neither of the two
protagonists—Albert Engelhardt and his uncle with the same name
(hereafter"Albert" and"Uncle Albert")—has pursued success as Pittsburgh
defines it. Fifty-five-year-old Albert has squandered his
family's fortune, and eighty-year-old Uncle Albert, although once a
successful throat doctor, gambled all his hope on the voice of one
young singer—and lost. Albert and Uncle Albert find meaning
in the city by linking together different houses, neighborhoods, and
points in history. The story's houses are all based on places
Cather knew, and the motion between them forms the story's structure,
as follows:
Section
Location
I.
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The Court House (Downtown)→ Judge Hammersley's
house (Squirrel Hill)
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II.
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Albert and Uncle Albert's house (South Side)
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III.
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Old Engelhardt house (Allegheny)
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IV.
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Albert and Uncle Albert's house (South Side)
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V.
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Albert and Uncle Albert's house→ Judge
Hammersley's house (Squirrel Hill)
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VI.
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Downtown→ Albert and Uncle Albert's house
(South
Side)
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The
Court House |
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It
is significant that the story opens at a courthouse. A
courthouse is a seat of judgment, and Cather's narrator begins by
making a judgment about “individuals" who don't seem to fit in:
Even in American cities, which seem so much
alike, where people seem all to be living the same lives, striving for
the same things, thinking the same thoughts, there are still
individuals a little out of tune with the times—there are still
survivals of a past more loosely woven, there are disconcerting
beginnings of a future yet unforeseen. (41)
The narrator makes a bold claim: people who
seem"a little out of tune with the times" are not simply living in the
past—they also reflect"a future yet unforeseen." They see more than the
rest of us. As the scene unfolds, Albert appears as the
individualist of the future, living according to his personal values,
while the judge—Judge Hammersley—views Albert as a failure.
Ironically, Cather's narrator does not share the Judge's
judgment. Although Hammersley is"really a sympathetic man"
(42), he is also blind to virtues in Albert that Cather wants us to see.
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Judge
Hammersley's House
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Judge Hammersley's house, located in a wealthy
section called Squirrel Hill, reflects his standards of
success. He has a comfortable residence, a nice library, and
a black servant. He likes order and privacy, and is quite
content even when his daughter, a widow named Mrs. Parmenter, is out
for the evening. Later Albert will view houses like the
judge's as places of"heavy domestic routine" with"all the frictions and
jealousies and discontents of family life" (55). Based on
what we see of the Judge's house, is this a fair characterization of
life in Squirrel Hill, or is Albert negatively stereotyping a kind of
existence that he will never have?
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This house
in the Squirrel Hill section of Pittsburgh, once the home of the
McClung family, is the basis for Judge Hammersley's house in"Double
Birthday." Cather lived here, on the invitation of her friend Isabelle
McClung, from 1901-06, when she was teaching high school during the day
and writing at night. She used a suite of rooms on the top
floor.
Photo by
Joseph C. Murphy
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Albert
and Uncle Albert's House |
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By contrast to the Judge's house, the house of
Albert and Uncle Albert is"a workingman's house" in"a queer part of the
city" on the South Side. It is the only possession remaining
of the fortune that Albert and his brothers inherited from their
father, the wealthy glass manufacturer August Engelhardt.
Despite these reduced circumstances, Albert enjoys his piano and
furniture, his books and pictures; these remind him of his youthful
freedom and exploration, especially of his years in Rome. He
also enjoys caring for his old uncle, and the companionship they share
with their downstairs tenants, the Rudders. Mr. Rudder once
worked in August Engelhardt's factory; now Mrs. Rudder and her daughter
Elsie look after the bachelors' rooms and help care for old Uncle
Albert.
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This
two-story workingman's house on Pittsburgh's South Side is the basis
for the Albert and Uncle Albert's house in"Double Birthday." It was
once the home of Cather's friends the
Seibels. Photo by Joseph C.
Murphy |
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Old
Engelhardt House |
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Section 3 of the story, which takes place some
thirty years in the past, centers around the old Engelhardt house in
Allegheny, on the north side of Pittsburgh. This house
with"many colored bricks, with gables and turrets," across from a park,
represents an easier kind of existence than either the Judge or the two
Alberts enjoy in the present (48). Perhaps this is"the past
more loosely woven" that the narrator refers to in the first
paragraph. The Engelhardt boys enjoy a leisurely, aesthetic
life in their yard. Uncle Albert and young Marjorie
Hammersley were both frequent visitors then.
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This house in Allegheny (now called
the North Side of Pittsburgh) likely served as the inspiration for the
old Engelhardt house in"Double Birthday." It was once the home of
Cather's friends the Gerwigs. The stained glass window here
does not picture a Venetian gondola and gondolier as in Cather's story;
that window was apparently Cather's invention. Photo
by Joseph C. Murphy |
It
is at the old Engelhardt house that the singer Marguerite Thiesinger
enters into the life of Uncle Albert. He discovers her unique
voice, the"one Voice," sounding from the chapel of the local high
school, and he invites her to the Engelhardts' to perform.
Uncle Albert's sponsorship of Marguerite's singing career turns out to
be the great tragedy of his life. He loses her two times,
once to an unwise marriage, and finally to cancer, which ends her life
at age 26. When she dies, a part of him dies with
her. As Uncle Albert says, “Her dissolution occurred within
me" (53).
A clue to the meaning of Uncle Albert's relationship with Marguerite,
as well as to other relationships in the story, is in the stained glass
window of the old Engelhardt house"representing a scene on the Grand
Canal in Venice, the Church of Santa Maria della Salute in the
background, in the foreground a gondola with a slender gondolier"
(48). Like a stained glass window in a medieval cathedral,
this one is highly symbolic. However, like many symbols in
Cather's work, its meaning is ambiguous. This mysterious
gondolier is driving a passenger boat without a passenger.
Perhaps he represents various characters who help other characters on
their life journeys: Uncle Albert helped Marguerite
Theisinger in the past; Albert helps Uncle Albert in the
present. Do any other characters serve as"gondoliers" in the
story? Do any other characters function
as"passengers"? Why do you suppose that in the stained glass
window there is no passenger visible? Also, the name of the
church in the background,"Santa Maria della Salute," means Our Lady of
Health. What significance might this have to the story?
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Crossings
and Doublings: Significance of Title |
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Although"Double Birthday" is built around
individual houses, its meaning really exists in the relationships
between houses—and the most meaningful scenes are those where
characters cross from one location to another: when Albert travels from
his house to the Judge's in Section 4 or when Mrs. Parmenter goes from
the Judge's to the Alberts' home in Section 6. Typical of
these “crossing" scenes is the one where Albert, going from downtown to
his home on the South Side in Section 6, crosses the Smithfield Street
Bridge:
A thick brown fog made
everything dark, and there was a feeling of snow in the air.
The lights along the sheer cliffs of Mount Washington, high above the
river, were already lighted. When Albert was a boy, those
cliffs, with the row of lights far up against the sky, always made him
think of some far-away, cloud-set city in Asia; the forbidden city, he
used to call it. Well, that was a long time ago; a lot of
water had run under this bridge since then, and kingdoms and empires
had fallen. Meanwhile, Uncle Doctor was hanging on, and
things were not so bad with them as they might be.
Albert's crossing allows him to reflect on the
meaning of his life, and it gives him the resolution to persist in that
life.
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View
of present-day Pittsburgh from Mount Washington, looking north, with
the Smithfield Street Bridge crossing the Monongahela River.
Downtown, to the right of the bridge, the stone tower of the courthouse
is visible, in front of the tallest skyscrapers. Photo
by Joseph C. Murphy |
The theme of crossing relates to the fundamental theme of doubling
suggested in the title"Double Birthday." Cather seems to be suggesting
that reality is not single but double: people should not be seen in
isolation but in combination—combinations of different personalities,
different places, and different times. Even for characters
like Albert and Uncle Albert, whose great hopes lie in the past, the
lost past still inspires the present. This is the meaning of
the Uncle Albert's final remark"Even in our ashes"
(63). This is a reference to"Elegy Written in a Country
Churchyard" (1751) by the English poet Thomas Gray:"Even in our ashes
live their wonted [accustomed] fires." Even in the ashes of our lives,
the fires that produced the ashes are still burning.
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