What the dog meant by Bill Kirton
First I was riding my bike
along narrow roads which were miles out in the country, then I was walking
along familiar streets in a town I thought might be Dundee, but I wasn’t
certain of it. I came to a spiral staircase and started climbing it. Near the
top I found I couldn’t go any further, then I realised it was because an old
man was sitting on one of the steps. He was dirty and dressed in bulky old
clothes. He started to stand, muttering apologies and saying it wasn’t open
yet, but I saw that I was nearly at the top and the staircase just led to a
wall with no door, no breach in it, so I told him not to get up and I started
back down the steps.
That was an actual dream and
the reason I describe it is because it’s like the dog in my previous post – it
calls out for meaning. What do the various elements represent? What do they mean? And what did the dog mean?
The short (and correct) answer
is nothing. I did climb the hill, see the stump, speculate about the granite blocks - and there was a dog like the one I described. But the dog had an owner and it didn't follow me. I borrowed that bit from Flaubert. I used to give
lectures and tutorials on him and learned a helluva lot about writing in the process. Dogs
figured largely in his life but also in his books. An early experience which
marked him was seeing a woman called Mme Schlésinger at Trouville – she was 26, he was 14 and he fell
in love with her. He used to take her dog for walks on the beach and, when he
was out of sight, cuddle and kiss it where he knew her lips had been. (Don’t
ask.)
Emma Bovary had a little sort
of greyhound and she’d sit with it as it ran around chasing butterflies, biting
at flowers. Flaubert said its actions were like her own thoughts, aimless,
restless, scattered. But the dog I borrowed was a very sinister one from an
early novel, the first Sentimental
Education. That’s one based on his love for Mme Schlésinger. Jules, the
hero, has just had a sort of revelation of the harmony and beauty of the world.
The sun’s setting, the air’s pure, and everything seems fresh to him. Then the
dog comes rushing up to him.
It’s scabby, horrible, much worse
than mine, but it runs eagerly round him and tries to lick him. He throws a
stone at it but it doesn’t run away. Then, as it gets dark, he starts feeling
scared of it – it’s both repulsive and attractive. He thinks it may be one he
gave a girl way back but then maybe it isn’t. The dog seems to want him to
follow it. It barks, howls and snarls, especially when they get to a bridge
over the river. And Jules remembers he’d once thought of committing suicide
there. In the end, the dog seems to be looking at him with human eyes and it’s
so scary and loud that he kicks it hard. It carries on howling, running near
him but at last he gets home and locks the door. He then has a terrible night
and, when he opens the door in morning, there it is, lying just outside.
All this takes about 8 pages to
describe and critics have written articles about what it means. The only reason
I borrowed the dog was to remind myself (and illustrate) how readers supply so much
of the reality of what we write. We provide them with clues and they make their own stories out of them; they decide what the
characters look like and whether they’d want to spend time with them; they
decide what is and isn’t significant and what fits into the patterns we
provide. Like our characters, ‘we are such stuff as dreams are made on’.
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