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from Austerlitz
by W. G. Sebald
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Time,
said Austerlitz in the observation room in Greenwich,
was by far the most artificial of all inventions,
and in being bound to the planets turning on
their own axes was no less arbitrary than would
be, say, a calculation based on the growth of
trees or on the length of time it takes a piece
of limestone to disintegrate, quite apart from
the fact that the solar day which we take as
our guideline does not provide any precise measurement,
so that in order to reckon time we have to devise
an imaginary, average sun which has an invariable
speed of movement and does not incline towards
the equator in its orbit. If Newton thought,
said Austerlitz,
pointing through the window and down to the
curve of the water around the Isle of Dogs as
it slipped by in the last of the daylight, if
Newton really thought that time was a river
like the Thames, then where is its source and
into what sea does it finally flow? Every river,
as we know, must have banks on both sides, so
where, seen in those terms, where are the banks
of time? What would be this river's qualities,
qualities perhaps corresponding to those of
water, which is fluid, rather heavy, and translucent?
In what ways do objects immersed in time differ
from those left untouched by it? Why do we show
the hours of light and darkness in the same
circle? Why does time stand eternally still
and motionless in one place, and rush headlong
by in another? Could we not claim, said Austerlitz,
that time itself has been non-concurrent over
the centuries and the millennia? It is not so
long ago, after all, that it began spreading
out over everything. And is not human life in
many parts of the earth governed to this day
less by time than by weather, and thus by an
unquantifiable dimension which disregards linear
regularity, does not progress constantly forward
but moves in eddies, is marked by episodes of
congestion and irruption, recurs in ever-changing
form, and evolves in no one knows what direction?
Even in a metropolis ruled by time like London,
said Austerlitz, it is still possible to be
outside time, a state of affairs which until
recently was almost as common in backward and
forgotten areas of our own country as it used
to be in the undiscovered continents overseas.
The dead are outside time, the dying and all
the sick at home or in hospitals, and they are
not the only ones, a certain degree of personal
misfortune is enough to cut off from the past
and the future. In fact, said Austerlitz, I
have never owned a clock of any kind, a bedside
alarm or a pocket watch, let alone a wristwatch.
A clock has always struck me as something ridiculous,
a thoroughly mendacious object, perhaps because
I have always resisted the power of time out
of some internal compulsion which I myself have
never understood, cutting myself off from so-called
current events in the hope, as I now think,
said Austerlitz, that time will not pass away,
has not passed away, that I can turn back after
it, and when I arrive I shall find everything
as it once was, or more precisely I shall find
that all moments of time have co-existed simultaneously,
in which case none of what history tells us
would be true, past events have not yet occurred
but are waiting to do so at the moment when
we think of them, although that, of course,
opens up the bleak prospect of everlasting misery
and never-ending anguish.
This is an excerpt.
To read the rest, please continue your travels
in the Republic by purchasing
No. 10, September 2004.
W.
G. Sebald's bio is forthcoming.
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