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Fantasia of the Unconscious
Epilogue
D.H.Lawrence
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       _ "_Tutti i salmi finiscono in gloria._"
       All the psalms wind up with the Gloria.--"As it was in the beginning,
       is now, and ever shall be, World without end. Amen."
       Well, then, Amen.
       I hope you say Amen! along with me, dear little reader: if there be
       any dear little reader who has got so far. If not, I say Amen! all by
       myself.--But don't you think the show is all over. I've got another
       volume up my sleeve, and after a year or two years, when I have shaken
       it down my sleeve, I shall bring it and lay it at the foot of your
       Liberty statue, oh Columbia, as I do this one.
       I suppose Columbia means the States.--"Hail Columbia!"--I suppose,
       etymologically, it is a nest of turtle-doves, Lat. _columba_, a dove.
       Coo me softly, then, Columbia; don't roar me like the sucking doves of
       the critics of my "Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious."
       And when I lay this little book at the foot of the Liberty statue,
       that brawny lady is not to look down her nose and bawl: "Do you see
       any green in my eye?" Of course I don't, dear lady. I only see the
       reflection of that torch--or is it a carrot?--which you are holding up
       to light the way into New York harbor. Well, many an ass has strayed
       across the uneasy paddock of the Atlantic, to nibble your carrot, dear
       lady. And I must say, you can keep on slicing off nice little
       carrot-slices of guineas and doubloons for an extraordinarily
       inexhaustible long time. And innumerable asses can collect themselves
       nice little heaps of golden carrot-slices, and then lift up their
       heads and brag over them with fairly pan-demoniac yells of
       gratification. Of course I don't see any green in your eye, dear
       Libertas, unless it is the smallest glint from the carrot-tips. The
       gleam in your eye is golden, oh Columbia!
       Nevertheless, and in spite of all this, up trots this here little ass
       and makes you a nice present of this pretty book. You needn't sniff,
       and glance at your carrot-sceptre, lady Liberty. You needn't throw
       down the thinnest carrot-paring you can pare off, and then say: "Why
       should I pay for this tripe, this wordy mass of rather revolting
       nonsense!" You can't pay for it, darling. If I didn't make you a
       present of it you could never buy it. So don't shake your
       carrot-sceptre and feel supercilious. Here's a gift for you, Missis.
       You can look in its mouth, too. Mind it doesn't bite you.--No, you
       needn't bother to put your carrot behind your back, nobody wants to
       snatch it.
       How do you do, Columbia! Look, I brought you a posy: this nice little
       posy of words and wisdom which I made for you in the woods of
       Ebersteinburg, on the borders of the Black Forest, near Baden Baden,
       in Germany, in this summer of scanty grace but nice weather. I made it
       specially for you--Whitman, for whom I have an immense regard, says
       "These States." I suppose I ought to say: "Those States." If the
       publisher would let me, I'd dedicate this book to you, to "Those
       States." Because I wrote this book entirely for you, Columbia. You may
       not take it as a compliment. You may even smell a tiny bit of
       Schwarzwald sap in it, and be finally disgusted. I admit that trees
       ought to think twice before they flourish in such a disgraced place as
       the Fatherland. "_Chi va coi zoppi, all' anno zoppica._" But you've
       not only to gather ye rosebuds while ye may, but _where_ ye may. And
       so, as I said before, the Black Forest, etc.
       I know, Columbia, dear Libertas, you'll take my posy and put your
       carrot aside for a minute, and smile, and say: "I'm sure, Mr.
       Lawrence, it is a _long_ time since I had such a perfectly beautiful
       bunch of ideas brought me." And I shall blush and look sheepish and
       say: "So glad you think so. I believe you'll find they'll keep fresh
       quite a long time, if you put them in water." Whereupon you, Columbia,
       with real American gallantry: "Oh, they'll keep for _ever_, Mr.
       Lawrence. They _couldn't_ be so cruel as to go and die, such perfectly
       lovely-colored ideas. Lovely! Thank you ever, ever so much."
       Just think of it, Columbia, how pleased we shall be with one another:
       and how much nicer it will be than if you snorted "High-falutin'
       Nonsense"--or "Wordy mass of repulsive rubbish."
       When they were busy making Italy, and were just going to put it in
       the oven to bake: that is, when Garibaldi and Vittorio Emmanuele had
       won their victories at Caserta, Naples prepared to give them a
       triumphant entry. So there sat the little king in his carriage: he had
       short legs and huge swagger mustaches and a very big bump of
       philoprogeniture. The town was all done up, in spite of the rain. And
       down either side of the wide street were hasty statues of large,
       well-fleshed ladies, each one holding up a fore-finger. We don't know
       what the king thought. But the staff held their breath. The king's
       appetite for strapping ladies was more than notorious, and naturally
       it looked as if Naples had done it on purpose.
       As a matter of fact, the fore-finger meant _Italia Una_! "Italy shall
       be one." Ask Don Sturzo.
       Now you see how risky statues are. How many nice little asses and
       poets trot over the Atlantic and catch sight of Liberty holding up
       this carrot of desire at arm's length, and fairly hear her say, as one
       does to one's pug dog, with a lump of sugar: "Beg! Beg!"--and "Jump!
       Jump, then!" And each little ass and poodle begins to beg and to jump,
       and there's a rare game round about Liberty, zap, zap, zapperty-zap!
       Do lower the carrot, gentle Liberty, and let us talk nicely and
       sensibly. I don't like you as a _carotaia_, precious.
       Talking about the moon, it is thrilling to read the announcements of
       Professor Pickering of Harvard, that it's almost a dead cert that
       there's life on our satellite. It is almost as certain that there's
       life on the moon as it is certain there is life on Mars. The professor
       bases his assertions on photographs--hundreds of photographs--of a
       crater with a circumference of thirty-seven miles. I'm not satisfied.
       I demand to know the yards, feet and inches. You don't come it over me
       with the triteness of these round numbers.
       "Hundreds of photographic reproductions have proved irrefutably the
       springing up at dawn, with an unbelievable rapidity, of vast fields of
       foliage which come into blossom just as rapidly (sic!) and which
       disappear in a maximum period of eleven days."--Again I'm not
       satisfied. I want to know if they're cabbages, cress, mustard, or
       marigolds or dandelions or daisies. Fields of foliage, mark you. And
       _blossom_! Come now, if you can get so far, Professor Pickering, you
       might have a shrewd guess as to whether the blossoms are good to eat,
       or if they're purely for ornament.
       I am only waiting at last for an aeroplane to land on one of these
       fields of foliage and find a donkey grazing peacefully. Hee-haw!
       "The plates moreover show that great blizzards, snow-storms, and
       volcanic eruptions are also frequent." So no doubt the blossoms are
       edelweiss.
       "We find," says the professor, "a living world at our very doors where
       life in some respects resembles that of Mars." All I can say is:
       "Pray come in, Mr. Moony. And how is your cousin Signor Martian?"
       Now I'm sure Professor Pickering's photographs and observations are
       really wonderful. But his _explanations_! Come now, Columbia, where is
       your High-falutin' Nonsense trumpet? Vast fields of foliage which
       spring up at dawn (!!!) and come into blossom just as quickly ()
       are rather too flowery even for my flowery soul. But there, truth is
       stranger than fiction.
       I'll bet my moon against the Professor's, anyhow.
       So long, Columbia. _A riverderci._
       [THE END]
       D. H. Lawrence's Book: Fantasia of the Unconscious
       _