On second thought,
it might have been revelatory to witness a tiger. While in Bangladesh, I had
convinced myself otherwise. To avoid disappointment? To temper entitlement? I
return from Dhaka the day before my birthday, in thrall to Red Roof Inn desynchronosis.
Broad-eyed and crepuscular, I daydream of Panthera
tigris tigris, a fetish I’ve cultivated over the past month. At midnight, a
Chinese businessman waits behind me at the vending machine. I forget I only
have Bangladeshi taka notes in my wallet, so I tell him go ahead. “Ah,” he
says, grinning, “you are still disorienting.” I nod, assuming it is a grammatical
slippage, that he meant to say disoriented.
He offers to buy me a “treat,” but I tell him I’ve changed my mind, thanks and
goodnight. Back in the hotel room, I realized he’s just wasted perfectly good
double entendre on me. It was a joke. Of course: you are still dis-Orienting. I’ve spent enough hours with Edward Said
that I’m not sure I would have laughed anyway. A mute CNN reporter with Turkish
backdrop blabs about the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. I type the
homographs over and over again, a keystroke daydreaming as if into the CNN
teleprompter: Said said Said said Said
said Said said Said said Said said Said said etc.
I want to hurl the
extra mattress from the balcony into the pool area. Its housekept sheets await disarrangement. The vertiginous canyon
between the mattresses accentuates my loneliness. In a state of lucid drift, I imprint the sheets with shallow
indentation, the curvaceous haunches of megafauna. In his essay “Dreamtigers,”
Jorge Luis Borges writes, “This is a dream… and now that I have unlimited
power, I am going to cause a tiger.” If by staring at my gift on Christmas Eve
1999, I became an infamous doglover (O, caged terrier, your insomnious eye
shine), then on this birthday eve 2015, I will myself to become a catlover too.
I keep distant company with the sustained pseudohallucination of Panthera tigris tigris in the dim
airport hotel room.
Known as the "father of sociobiology," Pulitzer-prize winner Edward O. Wilson defines biophilia as "the urge to affiliate with other forms of life." It's why we sometimes tap our brakes to bear witness to motion on the roadside, to remind ourselves the margins' whir is still habitat: a rafter of turkeys in Orangevale, California; the scurry of an armadillo in Chickasha, Oklahoma; the chukwalla's pushup in Tucson; the rooting javelina in Sedona; a jilted bear cub in the New Jersey highlands. Unlike zoophilia (persistent sexual interest in animals), biophilia is natural, adaptive, instinctual. When I was in my teens, I thought the cover of Belle and Sebastian's 1996 debut album, Tigermilk, was the former; it seemed overtly sexual, the lactating mother sitting in the bathtub as her suckling infant wore a tiger costume.
It was the facelessness
of the infant, I think—or maybe its cockeyed ears—that made it erotic, exhibitionist,
transgressive. Eager to make sense of the album cover, to project my own ordeal
onto another, I had decided it blended two paraphilias (zoophilia and lactophilia). As an adult, though, I
recognize the photograph outsources the intimacy of breastfeeding— the implicit
bonding and nourishment—to the tiger. It is decidedly biophilic.
One can read the
urgency of biophilia, that imperative for affiliation, in the lines of Borges’
trials in “The Other Tiger”: “We shall seek a third tiger. This / Will be like
those others a shape / Of my dreaming, a system of words / A man makes and not
the vertebrate tiger / … I know well enough / That something lays on me this
quest / Undefined, senseless and ancient, and I go on.” Unlike Borges who wrote
of the tiger in all three genres, resigned to impossible destining after a
single species, my biophilia is scattered among several species: dog, ferret,
parrot, tortoise, badger, and then there was tiger (most recent of fetishes). In
the tiger’s absence, Borges seems to discover his species’ profound loneliness.
Sometimes, when I’m alone—in house or hotel—my subconscious
fabricates a companion who's just on the other side of the wall, using the bathroom. “How does a tiger get in the
bathroom?” Alan asks in The Hangover.
“Of my dreaming… senseless and ancient,” Borges replies.
In the past couple
decades, scientists have been debating geochronological nomenclature. The
current epoch, the Holocene (Greek for “entirely recent”) is being slowly
abandoned for a new parlance, the Anthropocene, an epoch in which human
activity (as opposed to glaciation or other climatological phenomena) impacts the
planet’s ecosystems. The term, which has been predictably politicized, doesn’t
ring true to Edward O. Wilson, though. In the Economist, Wilson rejects anthropocene because it’s too
self-aggrandizing, “a time for and all about our one species alone.” Instead,
he offers the Eremocene, or the “Age of Loneliness.”
Back
in the States, I’m able to receive text messages again. “Dad wanted me to send
this,” my mother says in one, followed by a slew of photographs. One is an
accidental video, my parents background bickering over aesthetics (“Hurry up,
it’s beautiful now,” “I don’t know how,” “They’re beautiful now,” “I know…”);
another is taken through the screen door, indecipherable through the distortion
of mesh; for the last photo, though, my mother has opened the door to our
Western Pennsylvania backyard. It’s snowy blue hour, and she captures (just
barely) two deer mid-bolt after being caught eating the birdseed dislodged from the feeders by the
squirrels. Dad, with his broken ribs and collapsed lung (another brutal winter,
as if snow-shoveling would have cured his ennui, Nobody’s expecting you to be a hero here, Dad) has been
spending a lot of time at the windows, counting the deer—“…five at one time!”—waiting
to command his wife (“Get a picture, Mar!”) and share with his son (“Send them
to Lar!”) whom he sees just twice a year.
I reciprocate with
a photograph of spotted deer from the Sundarbans; standing
ass-to-ass-to-ass-to-ass beneath sundari trees, their collective of eyes search
in all directions for tiger as they wait for the macaques to drop leafy twigs
onto the alluvium. As we approached, a few deer barked while the others burst
away. Aboard the R. B. Emma, the green motorboat that grumbled us through the
channels, I read Kenneth Anderson’s Nine
Man-Eaters and One Rogue. Each essay is littered with the pug marks of
tiger, ecstatic imprints in the nullah.
Anderson coaxes the reader through bush and sapling forest. “Trust me reader,”
he seems to say, expertly. “I know how to find the tiger.” Written sixty years
before my Sundarbans tour, Anderson’s confidence seems antiquated; by
comparison, my Bangladeshi tour guide, Emamul (“Emu”), begins by
all-but-guaranteeing we won’t see a
tiger. By reading Nine Man-Eaters and One
Rogue in between treks and meals, amidst uninspired sightings of crocodile,
kingfisher, egret, kite, soft-coated otter, wild boar, and the others, I am
still able to engage with the megafauna fantasy. Unfortunately, by the end of
each essay, Anderson eliminates the tiger he has been promising to his reader.
The tigress becomes bulleted becomes carcass becomes taxidermy becomes trophy
becomes essay becomes, over and over again, a cipher for my loneliness in the
mangrove forest delta. In this way, Anderson’s essays are inevitable corpses,
but I read on, trying to resolve the dissonance.
If the tiger in my
hotel room is real, she will eventually leap the mattress canyon, slash and devour
my computer screen, its photo gallery of deer transmuted into buffet. I find quarters in
my backpack and return to the vending machine at 4 a.m. for the orgiastic
selection of American snacks. I look behind me for the Chinese businessman, but
he’s not here at this hour. I study Tony the Tiger depicted on the coil-kept
Kellogg’s box. Because my room is already sufficiently tigered, I snub Tony’s
digits. Every time I am in a hotel room with my pets—the parrotlet in his
traveling cage or the tortoise in the bathtub—I am reminded of Doug Aitken’s migration (empire), an eighteen-minute
video I used to watch at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh every
Thursday after bio lectures. I’d bypass all other exhibits, sit
in the dark room, watch the video twice (at least), and then leave, my acute
biophilia slaked. Filmed at lackluster motels not unlike this Ref Roof Inn in
Burlingame, Aitken films a cast of North American species inhabiting room after
room.
The
video obscures the taxonomical rift by extending human accommodation to fellow animalia. I can still remember the
exhilaration of a raccoon on the kitchenette counter, the beaver under the gush
of the bath faucet, an unblinking owl on a bed as down feathers flurry around
it, the curved horn of the bison parting the curtain, peering outside to the motel
parking lot. In “The Deep Zoo,” Rikki Ducornet writes, “the mysteries of matter
are the potencies that, in the shapes of dreams, landscapes, exemplary
instants, and so on, inform our imagining minds; they are powers.” In Aitken’s
video, matter’s mystery is reclaimed because potencies are allowed to, as
Ducornet puts it, “fall into sympathy with
one another.” I may tap my brakes to let deer cross the road, but not since the
docile sika of Assateauge Island in Maryland have I ogled one at full stop. And
I may bow hungrily into my refrigerator, but have I ever sung its praise, the puzzling
convenience of its thermal insulation?
When the deer
peeks into the motel refrigerator, though, the two fall into such sympathy, a
sympathy that can be called irony or anthropomorphism, depending. In each room
of migration (empire), a new animal
inhabits a space designed for human transition—eagle, fox, some kind of white
peafowl—thrust into this impermanency and afforded basic amenity.
The cougar is the
most dynamic actor of migration (empire).
If my tuxedo cat is 95% genetically similar to the cougar or tiger or any large
cat (so the genome says), then this cougar segment is a demonstration of the 5%
that is savagely dissimilar. A static image of the cougar would not look so
anomalous, just an excellent taxidermy in a sterile motel room. But then it springs,
mauling the pillow, rumpling the sheets. Like my hallucinated tiger, this
cougar is dispossessed of its wild, so it ambushes the mattress. migration (empire) is a sophisticated
Dr. Doolittle in which the animals articulate through their embodied potencies.
Aitken’s dramatization of biophilia is psychic, sublime.
The sun rises in
Burlingame, and it’s officially my birthday. I’ve only managed forty
minutes of sleep, dreaming my parents’ snowy Appalachian yard was actually the grassland
steppe of Beringia, and we watched the transcontinental species swap from our
porch like it was a water station in a marathon, the nuclear family’s breath
fogging with each whoop. Mom texts at 6:34 a.m. PST. In the past, she would set
the alarm for my true birthday (EST), but more tired these retirement days, she
sleeps in. “Happy birthday!” she texts with emoji accoutrements—hearts,
balloons, and a gift box. “Sorry for breaking your pelvis,” I reply out of
habit. “What are you doing?” she wants to know. “Corn beef hash at hotel
diner,” I reply. “Your favorite!” she reminds me.
I drink coffee,
rereading the first essay in Anderson’s book, “The Maneater of Jowlagiri.” By the
time Anderson kills the tigress, the pleasure of the essay evanesces. To read
is to re-assassinate the tigress. When the writer kills (actus reus, Latin for “guilty act”), the reader becomes an
accessory to the crime (mens rea, “intending
mind”). What if, instead, the end is the beginning? If I, as reader, could elect
for “Give me the bad news first.”
FALSE START: The next second the .405 crashed squarely
between the [tigress’] eyes, and she sank forward in a lurching movement and
lay twitching in the dust. I placed a second shot into the crown of her skull,
although there was no need to have done so; actually this second shot did
considerable damage to the head and [caused]… unnecessary… work [for] the taxidermist.
If I read the
essay in reverse, beginning with the displeasing terminus and ending with the manifest
tigress, will the reverse path effectively undo the essay’s causality?
Resuscitate the tigress killed by my first reading? I try it out, and surprisingly,
the essay coheres. But it’s hard to renounce the forward linear path entirely.
No matter how subversive I am as a reader, on my second tour of the essay, I am
still complicit in its original momentum—gummed up by Anderson’s intention, his
actus reus, the initial vector impulse.
At best, this reading is contrapuntal, a fugue with an ecstatic finish:
FALSE FINISH: Suddenly, from the thicket of ever-green
saplings to their left, could be heard the sound of violently rustling leaves
and deep-throated grunts. What could be there? … There was a snarling roar and
a lashing of bushes, followed by a series of coughing ‘whoofs’ and then
silence. Not pigs, but a tiger!
In
a village in the Sundarbans, we were led down a dirt path to a shrine devoted
to Bonbibi, a syncretic protectress of the outer forest. We huddled beneath a
beehive to peer into the shrine.
Bonbibi, center,
separates the demon god Dakkhin Rai (left-center) from the young honey-hunter
Dukkhe (right-center). Bonbibi is regularly propitiated and petitioned,
recognized by Hindus and Muslims alike, for safeguarding citizens of the
“beautiful forest” against tiger attacks. When I asked the eldest villager if
Bonbibi had a husband, she nodded. “There was a husband, but he was killed by a
tiger,” she told Emu, who translated. There was some disagreement among the
women. “Wait, Bonbibi is a tiger widow? Or this woman is?” I asked Emu, but the
women were talking about something else, and the moment passed. Having read
dozens of Bonbibi tales, I have never encountered this detail. Her vahana (Sanskrit for “vehicle”) is a
tiger, sure, but this new revelation would mean her fabled dominion over tigers is just a protracted revenge killing. Suddenly, the mythic protectress seems no different to me than Kenneth Anderson; both are just vindictive trophy
hunters.
“The Maneater of
Jowlagiri” discusses how “death [follows] death” as the tiger marauds towns,
looking for her mate: carrying a boy in her jaws, mauling farmers in cattlepens, devouring a new bride, consuming the
skinny chest of a priest, puncturing the throat of a defecating pilgrim, etc.
And who can forget how, as Anderson waits alongside a half-eaten corpse, expecting
“the return of the [tigress] to its gruesome meal,” he glances at the remains,
and it seems “one arm [reaches] upward… in supplication or [calls] perhaps for
vengeance.” Anderson baits the tigress with livestock, but now that she has
acquired a taste for human flesh, the method is ineffectual. Instead, Anderson resorts
to embodying the male tiger, the partner whom the tigress grieves. The slayed
tiger is, after all, what has instigated her ferocity. Anderson’s is a
deceitful mating call, but an even more treacherous biophilia.
I could then easily distinguish the intonations of a tigress
calling for a mate… Twice I gave the answering call of a male tiger, and
received at once the urgent summons of this imperious female. Indeed, she came
to the edge of the clearing and called so loudly as almost to paralyze us all…
By calling the
tiger, Anderson causes the tiger just
as in the lucid “Dreamtigers,” Borges can cause
a tiger. It is a spontaneous generation as when (in the first century) people believed certain creatures were derived from dust,
foam, moss, and particulate. The Roman architect Vitruvius wrote in De Architectura, “in libraries with
southern exposures the books are ruined by worms and dampness, because damp
winds come up, which breed and nourish the worms, and destroy the books with
mould, by spreading their damp breath over them.” As a result, Roman libraries
thereafter faced east to prevent Auster (the personified southerly wind) from spoiling texts.
In Borges’ short
story “Blue Tigers,” the protagonist Alexander Craigie is, like Kenneth Anderson,
a man of Scottish descent who finds himself in India, chasing tigers. Published
twenty-three years after Nine Man-Eaters
and One Rogue, it is possible that “Blue Tigers” is another of Borges’ fantastical roman à clefs. Upon hearing of
an anomalous blue tiger, Craigie goes to a village on the banks of the Ganges.
After being misled by the villagers, he independently discovers a collection of
brilliant blue disks stored in a crevice in the ground. The villagers, familiar
with the disks, call them “the stones that spawn.” Over the course of days,
Craigie finds that it is an impossible task to count the stones; they multiply
and divide, spontaneously generating and degenerating, and the paradox burdens
Craigie, shattering his rationalism. In all of Borges’ writings about tigers
(the blue one, the “other” one, the dreamt one, the Zahir, etc.), the speaker
struggles with their finite inventory. It occurs to me that the literary
ecology of a species has always been one of impractical keystrokes hoping to
conjure “the feel of the bony structure that quivers under the glowing skin.”
It’s a futile exercise, a senseless relay writing we’ve been committing for
generations while failing to generate even an embryo from our imagining, let
alone something that could decimate a “tribe of buffaloes.” Not songs of
experience, but shrinking fantasies that bear the dubious reminder: if you want
to witness a tiger, you must go to the zoo.
My girlfriend
meets me for my birthday (2/6 in San Francisco). We eat oysters, drink martinis,
and even though she hasn’t seen me for over a month, she indulges my chatter
about Panthera tigris tigris. “We saw
tiger poop,” I tell her, “and claw markings on the bark of the trees.” I tell
her about the muezzin who alternated
between pointing in the distance and looking over his shoulder, the boy in the
village with bow and arrow, how we heard baagh growl from inner forest. Walking through the Lower Mission, I
see depictions of tigers on doors (emerging from bamboo) and windows (one tiger
chases another on the sill); tiger print and tiger tattoo; its stripes in
Chinatown too, the zodiacal mural (the “Water Tiger” will be back by popular
demand in 2022). I take stealth photos and have delusions that my urge to
affiliate causes these tigers. On Valentine’s
Day (2/14 in Sacramento), Shane McCrae reveals the cover of his new book, The Animal Too Big to Kill, via Twitter:
a matryoshka set of tigers, identical but scaling down in size, each emerging
from the previous tiger’s jaws. They roar each other into existence. In this
vomitous book cover, a tiger contains Whitmanian multitudes. My perception of
it feels clairvoyant. When a friend points at the inebriated woman bucked by
mechanical bull (2/21 in Los Angeles), I study her backdrop instead, the music
video for “Eye of the Tiger.” I am trying to convince myself that upon my
return, the tiger’s range has coextended with my own, and why not: the MLB
claims there are tigers in Detroit, the NFL in Cincinnati, and the PGA would
have you think there’s one teeing off in Georgia this April.
I start to become
aware of where the nearest tiger is to me at any given moment (which zoo) and
realize it’s only a matter of time until I pay admission. Where was I when I last saw a tiger? I start asking myself
questions such as this, goading myself on. (In
Baton Rouge, across from LSU’s football stadium, the living mascot in his
enclosure: Mike VI)
I read that the
Folsom City Zoo Sanctuary has feral cats, bobcats, cougars, and tigers. It’s
hard to imagine the zoo will be anything less than an extension of the city’s
infamous state prison, but I go anyway for the sake of their project of
sanctuary (for unwanted wild pets, injured wildlife, and surplus and
confiscated animals). From the joint parking lot for the sanctuary and public
library, I can hear the Folsom Valley Railway, a miniature steam-powered train
(according to its website, “the only 12 inch gauge railroad… in the United
States”), and I can’t help but wonder how many times the tigers hear the
whistle each day (“I hear the train a’comin’…”). Inside, ample enclosures seem
like cells, the kindly volunteers like jailers. “How long have they been here?” I
ask a volunteer. “Um, since two-six in oh-four,” Susan replies. My fifteenth
birthday. I peek at Misty and Pouncer, worry them for a minute until I realize
they’re as lethargic as my own tuxedo cat. They seem just fine.
Misty and Pouncer
were just two of thirty-nine tigers confiscated from Jon Weinhart’s Colton,
California property in 2003. It was the largest rescue of big cats in United
States history. Originally intended as a sanctuary for retired big cat actors
in the suburbs of Los Angeles, Tiger Rescue functioned more like a tomb when PAWS arrived.
According to CNN, there were thirty animal carcasses in the yard, “including
the skeleton of one big cat sharing a cage with a live burro” and fifty-eight
cubs frozen in three freezers. Not only was Weinhart breeding the animals
(there were “seven tigers cubs and two leopards cubs” in the attic), but he
also stored big cat pelts in the barn.
Pouncer, who was
found tethered to a pole on Weinhart’s property, hides out of sight in the
Folsom City Zoo Sanctuary. Misty, who was once emaciated and covered in mange,
privately lounges on a rock face. Her gorgeous sprawl defies the reality that
she was once crammed in a cage only three-by-three foot in area, having never
touched a natural surface. According to the World Wildlife Fund, there are more
tigers in American backyards than there are in the wild in Asia. I imagine Misty
and Pouncer passing through my parents’ backyard in Pennsylvania, inserting
them into my Beringia dreamscape, and I shiver. It seems to me the black market is the
most irresponsible way to cause a tiger. Despite
the horror of Tiger Rescue, I don’t doubt that Weinhart was a cat lover, that
his was just an unchecked biophilia. Despite his best intentions, a mismanaged urge to
affiliate resulted in the deaths of ninety big cats, a figure six times greater
than Anderson’s spree in India. I leave the Sanctuary, pass the miniature train
still circuiting the sidewalk, and as I enter the library, I hear the shrill whistle. “Far from Folsom prison, that’s where I want to stay / … And I’d let
that lonesome whistle blow my blues away.”
What, indeed, is
the best way to cause a tiger? If by
pointing, it only appeared. If by gale force, it spontaneously generated. If by
squinting through the orange saline stripes of the phoenix palm, shadows conspired
in fleet illusion. If by writing, the futile song was fruitful—if, à la Ducornet, “words, just as things” could “acquire
powers,” become “the mind’s animating flame.” If only, just for one seductive
instant, when the nervous system reactivated, sleep left us a wink of its
perilous hallucination.
Because we cannot
adequately cause a tiger, though, in
our Age of Loneliness—we can’t even reasonably anticipate one in its natural
range—the fetish becomes gradually extinguished. It becomes as endangered as
the species itself. If I am to ever see a tiger in its wild, then I must
discontinue the relay, accept once and for all (as Louis Pasteur did 1,864
years after the Vitruvian treatise), “La génération spontanée est une chimère” (spontaneous generation is a dream). With this, Tigger and Hobbes return
to what they always were: synthetic fiber batting. By law of “Omne vivum exvivo” (all life comes from life), only a tiger can cause a tiger, meaning an
optimal ending for a tiger essay is not one that successfully coaxes the tiger into
existence. We cannot cause by intention alone. If we could, Borges’
trials would have resulted in an overpopulation of the Royal Bengal Tiger. By
ending with implicit conditionality (i.e., Anderson would cause a tiger if
he could), an essay can promote the natural biophilic urge. In this false
finish, the writer appears to give up his trophy as he calls to the absent
species in continuous petition, a “senseless and ancient” ritual with the veneer of zoophilia:
I clambered up [the tree] some twelve feet to a crotch… Then,
expanding my lungs, I called lustily in imitation of a male tiger. Nothing but
silence answered me… I called a second time. Still no answer. After a short
interval, and expanding my lungs to bursting-point, I called again.
Works Cited
Anderson,
Kenneth. Nine Man-Eaters and One Rogue. New
York: Dutton, 1955. Internet Archive. Creative
Commons. Web. 10 Mar. 2015.
Borges, Jorge L. Dreamtigers. New York: E. P.
Dutton &, 1970. Print.
Ducornet, Rikki. The Deep Zoo: Essays. Minneapolis: Coffee House, 2015. Print.
LAWRENCE LENHART holds an MFA from the University of Arizona. His essays appear or are forthcoming in Prairie Schooner, Alaska Quarterly Review, Gulf Coast, Guernica, Wag's Revue, Sundog Lit, and elsewhere. Currently living in Sacramento, he is a reviews editor and an assistant fiction editor of DIAGRAM.
LAWRENCE LENHART holds an MFA from the University of Arizona. His essays appear or are forthcoming in Prairie Schooner, Alaska Quarterly Review, Gulf Coast, Guernica, Wag's Revue, Sundog Lit, and elsewhere. Currently living in Sacramento, he is a reviews editor and an assistant fiction editor of DIAGRAM.
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