Just finished a book, Thomas Pynchon's massive Against the Day, at least
60% of which flew over my head, but which I think one of the best novels
I've ever read. I came across this passage on page 896:
In September, Hunter would invite her to accompany him to
Gloucester Cathedral, where as part of that year's Three Choirs
Festival, a new work by Ralph Vaughan Williams would be having
its first performance. Ruperta, who despised church music, must
have seen some irresistible opening for idle mischief, because
she went along wearing a sportive toilette more appropriate to
Brighton, with a hat she had always found particularly loathsome
but kept handy for occasions just such as this. The composer
was conducting two string orchestras set like cantors and decani
facing each other across the chancel, with a string quartet
between them. The moment Vaughan Williams raised his baton,
even before the first notes, something happened to Ruperta. As
Phrygian resonances swept the great nave, doubled strings sang
back and forth, and nine-part harmonies occupied the bones and
blood vessels of those in attendance, very slowly Ruperta began
to levitate, nothing vulgar, simply a tactful and stately ascent
about halfway to the vaulting, where, tears running without
interruption down her face, she floated in autumnal light above
the heads of the audience for the duration of the piece. At the
last long diminuendo, she returned calmly to earth and reoccupied
herself, never again to pursue her old career of determined pest.
She and Hunter, who was vaguely aware that something momentous
had befallen her, walked in silence out along the Severn, and
it was hours before she could trust herself to speak. "You must
never, never forgive me, Hunter," she whispered. "I can never
claim forgiveness from anyone. Somehow, I alone, for every
single wrong act in my life, must find a right one to balance
it. I may not have that much time left."
Ordinarily he would have humorously disputed her theory of moral
bookkeeping. But later he would swear he had seen her surrounded
then by a queer luminous aura he knew he could not banter away.
Possessing one of those English ears on which flatted-seventh
sonorities are never lost, Hunter had of course immediately
fallen for the Tallis Fantasia, would always love it, but the
change of heart he himself needed would have to proceed from
some other source.
Steve Schwartz
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