Friday, July 3, 2015

Guilt: The Caustic Character

            The Roman playwright, Plautus once wrote, “nothing is more wretched than the mind of a man conscious of guilt.”  In The Assault, the author, Harry Mulisch, composes a plot based on the integrity of Plautus’ wise words.  In the beginning of the novel, in order to avoid the wrath of the Krauts, Mr. Korteweg and his daughter fatefully transport Fake Ploeg’s dead body from their yard to that of the Steenwijk’s.  A major aspect of the plot is anchored by Anton Steenwijk’s unforeseen perception of the guilt that wrecks havoc upon Mr. Korteweg’s life.  This guilt arises because all but Anton in the Steenwijk household are murdered.  Korteweg’s actions stem from the immense necessity he has to care for his lizards.  However, once the guilt of the Steenwijks’ deaths manifests itself in Korteweg’s mind, he murders the very lizards he once sought to protect.  Death seems to follow those who reap death, for Korteweg commits suicide later in life.  And although the assault may have directly caused the murders of Fake Ploeg and the people whose yard his body ultimately desecrated, it is the sheer violence of guilt that conceives the deaths of Mr. Korteweg and his lizards.  
            Throughout the novel, Anton locks himself in a room of ignorance by refusing to learn why certain events, in relation to the assault, transpired.  He describes this room in a broader sense, in that he feels as if “his entire universe had become that other one which now fortunately had come to and end, and about which he never wanted to think again” (56).  In this new, imperceptible universe, Anton represses his feelings, emotions, and even his mere thoughts pertaining to anything that happened the night of the assault.  Yet, ironically, throughout his life, Anton comes face to face with numerous people who hold many truths about the assault.  For instance, Anton faced Fake Ploeg’s son in a heated discussion where “every word mattered” (90); he listened to the man, Cor Takes, who “shot [Ploeg] first in the back, then in the shoulder, and then in the stomach” (108); and ultimately, he met Karin Korteweg, who enlighteningly described to him “what happened that night” (175).  However, it is not until Anton’s conversation with Karin Korteweg, that he is able to piece together the collection of personalized stories he had heard about the assault.  Through this conversation, Anton learns of Mr. Korteweg’s guilt.  This guilt stems from Korteweg’s interpretation of the events in which “three people had lost their lives because of his love for a bunch of reptiles, and the thought that [Anton] might kill him if [he] ever got the chance” (182).  However, Korteweg’s guilt reeks of a pathetically ironic scent, for Anton had never pondered about Korteweg’s guilt because Anton had purposefully remained in locked in ignorance.  The unknown sparks the fire that destroys Korteweg’s guilty mind.  Therefore, through Anton’s informative interactions with the people of the assault, especially Mr. Korteweg, guilt becomes a character in the novel that ruthlessly and maleficently devastates lives.
            This very guilt, murders Korteweg’s lizards.  Although lizards stereotypically seem like ephemeral pets that cannot form strong bonds with their owners, in Korteweg’s eyes, he witnesses “something about eternity and immortality, some secret in them” (181).  Even to other people, Anton included, Korteweg’s lizards evoke an inner, universal mystery.  When young Anton secretly views the lizards, which he describes as “weirdly silent” (69), awe washes over him – for “the creatures stared at him out of the past as deep and immovable as themselves.  Though some of them seemed to be grinning broadly, their eyes spoke a different language, of a gravity so immovable and undisturbed as to be almost unbearable” (69).  The lizards captivate their viewers with an almost hypnotic spell, which, only elevates in power with Korteweg’s emotional connection to them.  Karin later terms this emotional connection as “something to do with [her] Mother’s death” (181).  This symbolic association between the lizards and Mr. Korteweg’s deceased wife alludes to another representation of the character, guilt.  For through the lizards, which are depicted as “the only thing [Korteweg] still cared about, Korteweg tried to cope with the loss of his true love.  In turn, this loss transforms into guilt as Korteweg tends to the reptiles he desperately attributes to the loss of his wife.  The lizards’ need for attention consumes Korteweg and the “trouble he took to keep them alive through that winter of hunger” (181) was irrelevant – he had already fallen victim to guilt’s tight, emblematic grasp.
            Accordingly, when in order to save the lizards, Korteweg and Karin fatefully transport Fake Ploeg’s dead body from their yard to that of the Steenwijk’s, everything changes – for all but Anton of the Steenwijk household die because of this.  When discussing this with Anton, Karin puts it as such, “Peter dead, and your parents too, they seemed to turn back into lizards for him again, just ordinary animals” (182).  Thus, the guilt that ravages Korteweg’s mind from the murder of his three neighbors ultimately consumes the once all-powerful guilt that Korteweg had felt from his lizards.  In turn, the guilt grows like a wild fire, and as if almost to stomp it out, “as soon as [Korteweg] came home from the Ortskommandantur, he trampled [the lizards] to death…like a madman” (182).  And although Korteweg terminates his lizards’ physical lives, that “something about eternity and immortality” (181) he had once felt for them, lives on in the form of brutal, violent guilt.
            This very guilt, murders Korteweg.  When Korteweg’s wife had passed, the lizards “had become his only reason for living.”  So, when Korteweg is ravaged by the guilt of how he murdered his lizards, he breaks.  He enters a state of paranoia – fearful that Anton, the only survivor of the Steenwijks “might take revenge” (180).  “But in the end he didn’t need [Anton] to kill him” (182).  After the assault, in order to try and escape Anton’s possible vengeance, Korteweg and Karin “leave on a merchant ship within the year” (180).  There, in New Zealand, they try to create a new life for themselves.  However, guilt follows them, “and there, in forty-eight, [Korteweg] commit[s] suicide” (180).  When Karin shares all of this with Anton, she concludes with “perhaps he did it mainly for you” (180).  Nevertheless, she, like her father, is still ravaged by guilt, and so she also attributes her own history to Anton’s perception of her and her father’s guilt.  This attribution is nothing but a mere representation of blame, which in turn creates the next prey for the ravenous character, guilt.  And so, the brutal cycle continues. 
           Ultimately, Plautus was correct in his observation of the guilty mind – for Mr. Korteweg and his lizards die from the sheer violence of the destructive, emotional force.  However, through the juxtaposition of these deaths and the continuation of the guilt that presides in Karin and eventually Anton, the author of the novel, Mulisch, gave life to guilt.  And so, as death seems to follow those who reap death, guilt, like a wildfire, consumes all as it expands its caustic realm. 

      - J. A. Kind

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