Dreams of a Robot Dancing Bee
By James Tate
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About this ebook
James Tate
James Tate's poems have been awarded the National Book Award, the Pulitzer Prize, the Wallace Stevens Award, the William Carlos Williams Award, the Yale Younger Poets Award, and the National Institute of Arts and Letters Award, and have been translated across the globe. Tate was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters; his many collections include The Lost Pilot, The Oblivion Ha-Ha, Absences, Distance from Loved Ones, Worshipful Company of Fletchers, and The Ghost Soldiers. Born in Kansas City, Missouri, he made his home in Pelham, Massachusetts.
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Reviews for Dreams of a Robot Dancing Bee
13 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Most of these very short stories ended so abruptly it grated on my nerves.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I fell in love with the poetry of James Tate a few years ago, and when I heard of this volume of his short stories, I quickly ordered it. Tate’s poetry is mostly written in a prose style, one that is most always unpredictable, wryly funny, often with a sudden aha twist at the end. I find his humor supremely amusing, endearing, and wise, but I’m know for my bad puns—so consider the source. His short stories were a lot like his poetry—strange and surprising. He had a spry mind that I will always treasure. I’ve read many reviews of his work, and it is not unusual to come across my favorite word, bizarre. Tate brought so much of life into his work, with politics sharing space with romance, absurdity cuddled up with the blackest of humor, with cold alienation suddenly entering the world of marriage, infidelity, and the many flavors of love. I love reading his work, never knowing where his words will take me, not seeing around the next corner, and not even seeing the next corner coming. In the end, I’m sure to reread some of these stories, but thinking of James Tate will always lead my mind first to his poetry.
Book preview
Dreams of a Robot Dancing Bee - James Tate
THE THISTLE
I’m sitting there in my den reading an article about the devastating effects of cyberphilia on the contemporary American family, or what’s left of it. Cyberphilia, in case you don’t know by now, is the compulsion to program and operate a computer, in preference to all other activities (I don’t own a computer, I am a cyberphobiac). Anyway, I am still interested in this article, I am gloating away at the verification of my original predictions, when in comes Eileen barking at me: Paul, would you please get off your duff and go out to the driveway and cut down that damned thistle. If I’ve asked you once I’ve asked you a dozen times to cut it down.
What’s that thistle done to you?
I reply, as I have probably replied at each of her requests all week. I am not allowed to read an article in peace in my study. I have worked for years so that I might be allowed to read an article all the way through to the end on a hot and muggy Saturday afternoon. But no, when Eileen wants a thistle removed from the driveway, then all else must be foresworn and her command obeyed or I will get no peace, the pleasure of reading about the domestic tragedies of the cyberphiliacs has been shattered. Eileen does not take my pleasure very seriously. She doesn’t understand my admittedly rather desperate need to be right about something. Eileen,
I said, in one last doomed attempt to defeat the General, it’s not as though that thistle’s going to tear the fender off the car . . . Alright, alright, I’m going . . .
So I put down my magazine, deprived of even getting to the juicy statistics and a few sample horror stories of children who have not spoken to their parents for years, husbands who have lost all sex drive, etc. The kind of stories that make me feel good about myself, that tell me I was right to never learn what that particular revolution was all about. No, instead I must go out into the sweltering, stifling shed; hunt around among oily rags and hyperactive wasps and hornets for the hedge-clippers—all this so that I can destroy the national emblem of Scotland. But I am by now something of an obedient cur. Oh, it’s a well-enough adjusted thralldom I endure.
So I locate the clippers, beneath, as I predicted, the mountain of oily rags, and I am buzzed and tormented by every known species of wasp and hornet, and, since I am allergic to all of their venoms, I am justified in calling this a life-threatening tour of duty. One sting and it’s all yours, Eileen: years of National Geographics, all yours, a treasure. The six boxes of travel brochures, all yours. So much rubbish to prove one’s been here, been around. And all of it undoubtedly in the dust-bin before my bones have stopped shaking. All the beloved rubbish, inter-changeable with the next guy’s. Why the hell not leave well-enough alone, let me go on reading about the smart guy who starved to death in front of his microelectric doo-da. No, no, no, never could it be so.
On Saturdays, Eileen likes nothing better than to issue orders for me to kill things, or be killed: Those wasp nests on the shutters, kill them. The skunk got in the garbage again last night: find him and kill him (or get sprayed by him). Or better yet, get bitten by him, undergo a series of hideous rabies shots—since you mortally fear needles—Get up Paul, put down your beloved magazine, Paul, get out there on the frontline, Paul. Risk your life, Paul. Whatever you do, Paul, don’t let yourself get caught in a situation where you might feel comfortable, safe, or even right in one of your predictions.
So now, here at last, I stand before this stately, decorous Ono-pordum acanthium. It is approximately three-and-a-half feet in height and, I regret to report, in magnificent bloom. This is, I realize even more emphatically, a totally senseless execution. I would have preferred she had ordered me to cross the street and cut the throat of the neighbor’s dog. Yes, I could have accepted that order since the creature has an apparently incurable tendency to howl at the moon and kept us awake most of last night (most of the past six years is more accurate). But this thistle is a thing of almost breathtaking beauty, given to us by chance, and since Chance seems to be our new God, why am I now ordered to risk incurring the wrath of our new—and, most likely, extremely terrible and cruel when irritated—God? Eileen’s whim. Paul, go cut down that thistle by the driveway. Why, my dear? Why should I cut down the thistle?
Because I said so, Paul. Now, do it before I get mad!
It is beginning to rain. As I stand here before this delicate, purple flower with orders to kill, storm clouds are moiling up out of the hills. I can feel the barometric pressure dropping by the minute, and it is beginning to make me feel light-headed. These summer electric storms have been having this effect on me the past couple of years. I have never actually fainted, but I feel as if I am going to, and it is quite unpleasant. Perhaps I shall faint and never wake up again. Then Eileen would have to do all the murdering herself. Would she feel differently then? Perhaps that would be good for her. After her first bloodshed, say, pouring snail-poison down a mole-hole, and all the little blind star-nosed babies emerge gasping for air, perhaps, she’d give it up and become the patron saint of pests and varmints and thistles.
Now lightning is flashing and there is that deep rumbling that always precedes a real bang-up summer fury. I enjoyed them as a child, felt brave as I comforted my mother, who was terrified out of her mind by lightning. (That’s where my child’s imagination came up short: I thought it wouldn’t strike me.) But now, add another entry to my slowly growing list of . . . well, I won’t call them phobias, but things-that-fail-to-please-me. At the moment, I feel I may just keel over and be done with it, not have the slain thistle on my list of crimes when I show up at Chanceville.
However, if I make it back to the house and report to the General that her bidding had not been done, she may very well kill me, or at least make certain I never again pick up that magazine and find out just how awful other, more modern people’s lives have become. I’ll take my chances. I’ll tell her it had to stop somewhere, all this killing. And I’ve taken my stand, finally, with this thistle.
WHAT IT IS
Iwas going to cry so I left the room and hid myself. A butterfly had let itself into the house and was breathing all the air fit to breathe. Janis was knitting me a sweater so I wouldn’t freeze. Polly had just dismembered her anatomically correct doll. The dog was thinking about last summer, alternately bitter and amused.
I said to myself, So what have you got to be happy about? I was in the attic with a 3000 year old Etruscan coin. At least you didn’t wholly reveal yourself, I said. I didn’t have the slightest idea what I meant when I said that. So I repeated it in a slightly revised version: At least you didn’t totally reveal yourself, I said, still perplexed, but also fascinated. I was arriving at a language that was really my own; that is, it no longer concerned others, it no longer sought common ground. I was cutting the anchor.
Polly walked in without knocking: There’s a package from UPS,
she announced.
Well, I’m not expecting anything,
I replied.
She stood there frowning. And then, uninvited, she sat down on a little rug. That rug had always been a mystery to me. No one knew where it came from and yet it had always been there. We never talked of moving it or throwing it out. I don’t think it had ever been washed. Someone should at least shake it from time to time, expose it to some air.
You’re not even curious,
she said.
About what?
The coin was burning a hole in my hand. And the rug was beginning to move, imperceptibly, but I was fairly sure it was beginning to move, or at least thinking of moving.
The package,
she said. You probably ordered something late at night like you always do and now you’ve forgotten. It’ll be a surprise. I like it when you do that because you always order the most useless things.
Your pigtails are starting to crumble,
I said. Is there anywhere in the world you would rather live?
I inquired. It was a sincere question, the last one I had in stock.
What’s wrong with this?
she replied, and looked around the attic as if we might make do.
I guess there are shortages everywhere,
I said. People find ways. I don’t know how they do it but they do. Either that or . . .
and I stopped. Children deserve better,
I said. But they’re always getting by with less. I only pity the rich. They’re dying faster than the rest of us.
When I get in these moods, Polly’s the one I don’t have to explain myself to, she just glides with me along the bottom, papa sting-ray and his daughter, sad, loving, beautiful—whatever it is, she just glides with me.
Are you ever coming down again?
she asked, without petulance or pressure, just a point of information.
Not until I’m very, very old. I have to get wise before I can come down, and I’m afraid that is going to take a very long time. It will be worth it,
I said, you’ll see.
Daddy,
she said, I think you know something already.
THE NORTH COUNTRY
As a rule, Nona Kuncio was fond of saying,
it doesn’t take a Sigmund Freud to understand why a man wants to catch a rainbow trout." She and her husband Jerry bought the camp four years ago after Jerry’s logging accident. Nona kept an eye on all the guests. Most of them she had figured out within a few hours of their arrival. But Jerry liked everyone, even Mr. Lunceford.
When Lunceford registered, Nona knew by instinct the man was not a sportsman. The home address he listed on the slip was a full two-days’ drive from there. People came from all over the country, but they came for the fishing. Mr. Lunceford checked-in without so much as a hook and a piece of string. Nona told Jerry: He looks like some kind of CIA agent trying to pass himself off as a librarian.
Jerry offered to loan him some of his tackle.
That’s very kind of you, Mr. Kuncio. I may take you up on it, but for now the peace and quiet are all that I need.
Just call me Jerry. Lake Umbagog is known all over for its great rainbow fishing. If you change your mind, just let me know.
Nona told Jerry, partially just to get a rise out of him: Maybe he’s on the lam. You should check the wanted posters when you go to the post office this afternoon.
He was so naive when it came to these things.
Mr. Lunceford? He looks about as much like a criminal as I look like Paul Newman. Really, Nona, you’ve got some kind of imagination.
The perfect disguise,
Nona retorted.
Lunceford didn’t leave his cabin the whole first day. He opened his door several times to throw balls of bread to the ducks bobbing on the windy waters a few feet away. Nona now knew his type and put him out of mind.
Jerry took him at his word, that he just needed a little peace and quiet, but he also worried about Lunceford’s comfort. The cabins were furnished only spartanly, and the nearest store for provisions was six miles away. Mr. Lunceford didn’t appear to have brought much with him. Jerry wanted to tell his guest where he could find certain necessities in the area, but at the same time he didn’t want to disturb Mr. Lunceford’s privacy. It was a small dilemma.
What’s the big deal?
Nona said. If he came here to starve to death, that’s his business, as long as he’s paid in full.
Nona liked to exaggerate her callousness at times just to shock her husband who took his guests’ happiness to heart. He was personally hurt if their vacation at Lake Umbagog was in any way less than perfect. He even took responsibility for the weather. And if they didn’t catch any fish for the first couple of times out on their own, then he would drop what he was doing and go out with them. This annoyed Nona to no end when he was supposed to be helping her, but it is also why she married him. He cared about everybody.
Jerry felt a little ashamed when he caught himself stealing glances toward Lunceford’s cabin windows as he pretended to see to some chore or another. Lunceford had placed a towel over the window that faced the cabin nearest him. Maybe he was a CIA agent, maybe he was a criminal. But, still, he was a human being too. When Lunceford caught Jerry obviously looking toward his undraped kitchen window, he waved him in.
I didn’t want to disturb you, but I was worried . . .
Nonsense, come in. I could use a little company.
Mr. Lunceford put on a pot of coffee and seemed pleased that the owner of the cabin had consented to join him.
It’s a lovely place you have here,
he said to Jerry, I envy you.
I was born just twenty miles from here,
Jerry said. I never wanted to live anyplace else.
I can see why.
Lunceford poured steaming coffee. And your wife, is she from around here too?
Nona? No, she’s from Philadelphia, a city girl. She still has family there, I guess they think she’s crazy for living like this, you know how in-laws are—nothing’s ever good enough for their little girl . . .
Have they ever visited you here?
Once, the first year. They were lost for three days just trying to find us. It was pretty funny. They had read somewhere that there was a high population density of black bears around here, and they were afraid to walk from the lodge to their cabin after dark. I had to escort them with a flashlight and a rifle. They insisted on the rifle.
Lunceford appreciated the humor of the situation and smiled. Jerry felt him loosening up and felt a kinship with the man, though, most likely, they had little or nothing in common. The two men blew on their coffee and took first sips. Jerry wanted to ask Lunceford about himself, but the man looked wholly contained right where he was, without family, without history, without even a fishing pole. Maybe he was CIA. There were missiles buried in the hills and mountains near Lake Umbagog. And, though he had never thought about it before, it occurred to him now that that might attract enemy agents, and therefore . . . All his life he had felt safe in this far northern corner. He didn’t even own a television set, and those locals who did only got one channel faintly a few weeks in the fall.
And I don’t suppose you can get away from here to visit them in Philadelphia?
What? Oh no. We’re open twelve months a year; hunters in the fall, cross-country skiers in the winter. It’s pretty much a full-time job.
The water was splashing on the rocks just feet away from the cabin door, and the sound lulled the men into easy silences. Jerry noticed a tape-machine beside the bed in the other room. He also saw what he took to be a large stack of computer print-outs on the little desk in the bedroom. Here, in the north country, they were as common as Dead Sea Scrolls, which is to say, Jerry had never seen computer print-outs before. He just imagined that that was what they must be. He finished his coffee in several gulps and thanked Lunceford for the conversation, If you change your mind about the fishing, I’d be glad to take you out.
I’ll keep it in mind,
Lunceford replied, walking him to the door.
Nona now saw her chance to play Jerry along. He always wanted everybody to be so nice. Sure,
she said, he’s probably got ultra-sensitive listening devices planted all over the campground by now.
Then she put her finger to her lips. Outside,
she whispered, and motioned for Jerry to tiptoe. Now listen to me,
she said once they were safe under the birches, "There’s that Hungarian fellow in cabin 8. Sure, he fishes. Of course he fishes. He’s smarter than this Lunceford character. Lunceford’s calling attention to himself by not fishing. Americans are the stupidest. The Hungarian acts like he’s on a holiday, walks around in the open greeting everybody ever so politely. But this Lunceford is an embarrassment to our National Security."
Jerry looked worried now, Nona was right. If he could tell that Lunceford was an agent, then surely everyone else could tell. He thought it over for a moment.
Do you think I should say something to Mr. Lunceford? I don’t want anybody getting hurt here.
"Protect yourself, Honey, that’s my advice. These guys think nothing of slitting the throats of innocent people. They play for high