This is the world of Walter M. Miller Jr.’s wonderful A Canticle for Leibowitz (1959) which I
recently had the pleasure of re-reading after a span of many years.
A Canticle for
Leibowitz is a fragmented read, consisting of three discrete stories separated
by centuries of time. Each were short stories originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction.
As a novel this stitched-together structure helps to reinforce one of Miller’s
central messages: The painstaking, fragmentary, and precarious state of knowledge
transmission and preservation.
At its heart Miller’s book is a re-imagining of what the medieval
monks did with classical Greek and Roman literature, transcribing it
laboriously and preserving the flame of past knowledge until it could be used
in a more enlightened age. While historical monks survived barbarian predation
and Viking raids, in Miller’s novel nuclear war and predatory radiation-scarred
scavengers are the equivalent of barbarian invasions circa 476 AD. The
survivors of the nuclear exchange are subject to a brutal period called the
“Simplification,” where mobs of bitter, vengeful survivors attempt to
eliminate any trace of the science that led them down the path to oblivion.
Books and men that dare to read them are burned and destroyed.
This scenario is played out again in A Canticle for Leibowitz, with the monks of Albertian Order of
Leibowitz carefully preserving the old scientific literature, resurrecting an
arc lamp from old electrical blueprints. By the second and third act technology
has again risen from the ashes.
But Miller’s book is dark. History is cyclical, and so as in the works of Robert E. Howard apocalypse and barbaric overthrow will ultimately triumph. Man is fallen, and fallible. At the end of the book (unknown date but I believe the late third millennium AD), nuclear annihilation again envelops the earth, and mankind’s priceless artifacts and knowledge survive only by being taken to another planet, where starship pilgrims attempt to give civilization another shot.
Throughout the book Miller drops many wisdom bombs worthy of
pondering. For example, the only way that we as a species can truly evolve, and
stop endless cycles of war, is to “give up the bitterness.” It’s a Christian concept,
turning the other cheek. This is of course easy in principle but
extraordinarily hard in practice, as old grudges, distrust (leading to the need
to strike first in a nuclear war), make this almost impossible to achieve in
practice. See the Israelis and Palestinians. We fail because the evil we
succumb to is not suffering, but the unreasoning fear of suffering. Nature has
given us all the tools we need to live and die with grace, but our craving for
worldly security is the root of evil. From the book: “To minimize suffering and
to maximize security were natural and proper ends of society and Caesar. But
then they became the only ends, somehow, and the only basis of law—a
perversion. Inevitably, then, in seeking only them, we found only their
opposites: maximum suffering and minimum security.”
The book presents a dark vision of humanity. And we are
seeing its vision play out today with our unbridled pursuit of technology and
political utopias while abandoning the meaningful conversations: What is it all
this for, what should a just society look like, what is our ultimate end and
purpose? Our species is unwilling to accept responsibility, which starts by
looking at oneself. We’d rather find enemies to blame, and start the war, then
do the painful work of self-introspection. Again from the book: “The trouble
with the world is me—No ‘worldly evil’ except that which is introduced into the
world by Man—me thee Adam us—with a little help from the father of lies. Blame
anything, blame God even, but oh don’t blame me.” Our species has to “forgive God for allowing pain, for if he
didn’t allow it, human courage, bravery, nobility, and self-sacrifice would all
be meaningless things.”
Miller portrays the peace-loving and preservationist Monks sympathetically
but not uncritically. A visiting atheist scientist chastises them for not doing
anything with the knowledge they preserve. It’s not enough to mindlessly copy
it and embellish it with art around the edges and seal it in tombs, the
scientist says, but it should be used to improve humanity. But here the
scientists errs, because he fails to temper his desire for progress with
wisdom. Technology must be balanced and kept in check with our higher order
principles—wisdom, charity, mercy. Because life here on earth will never be
Eden. We have eaten of the fruit of knowledge, the serpent is among us and
within us.
After a limited nuclear exchange scientists round up the
most grievously wounded and hopelessly sick from radiation exposure and admit
them to a camp, where they can end their pain with assisted suicide. The monks
protest with homemade signs that evoke Auschwitz: Not work will set you free,
but Abandon all hope ye who enter here.
At the end of the book the Abbot Zerchi (the A-Z is
interesting, the monk’s alphabet has reached its end) encounters an old tomato
farmer who lives around the periphery of the chapel. She has been deformed by
radiation and has a “twin” growing out of her shoulder, a small, dormant second
head which she calls Rachel. With Zerchi pinned under the wreckage of a blast,
his life blood draining away, he sees the woman, whose Rachel head has awakened
with eyes of pure innocence—a new Eve in this hellish garden. Rachel refuses
Zerchi’s formal blessing of the cross on her forehead. Perhaps she represents humanity
starting over again, this time without the old prior hurts and wounds, religious
and scientific baggage that prevents us from advancing to a higher stage of
development. Or perhaps Rachel is the promise of resurrection, the image of
Jesus and his (possible) return for which we have been waiting for millennia.
Postscript: This
re-read of A Canticle for Leibowitz was prompted by the Online Great
Books Podcast, one of my favorite podcasts. I highly recommend
checking it out. The hosts are entertaining, bright, forthright, and not
plagued by political correctness. They always plug the next book they plan to
read on the prior show, and when I heard they were going to do A Canticle for
Leibowitz I wanted to read the book in advance and “participate” in the
conversation.
I've had this one in the TBR pile for a long time now. Maybe I'll put it on the short list for the remainder of the year.
ReplyDeleteThanks Paul. It's a great book and worth it. Some parts are a little hard to digest (untranslated Latin passages throughout, though you can can kind of guess at their meaning), but I obviously recommend it.
ReplyDeleteit's been a very long time since i read this but your excellent and thoughtful post stimulated my memory cells... time for a reread... tx...
ReplyDeleteI've wanted to read this forever. You make it sound quite worth it.
ReplyDeleteNice! Listened to this in audio format maybe 2 years ago, not really knowing what to expect (generic sci/fi thrills?)...but it wasn't this. I recall it being somewhat clumsy/simplistic in execution (? not sure those are the words I want to use - could have been shaped by the fact that I was listening instead of reading) but packed to bursting with *ideas*. Definitely stayed with me for a while after reading.
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