Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 2, Summer 2007 | Page 31

Thinking Things Through 27 Royce’s concept of blessed community, building on Rousseau’s notion of civic religion, resurrected now by Steeves’s recombinant lamentations: ‘"should I return in the muscle of a fish, in the blood of a buzzard, in the toes of a lizard, you may not [ever] recognize me” (63, parenthetical added). As Tom Joad knows, it won’t matter, if only because “I’ll be all aroun’ in the dark. I’ll be ever’where—wherever you look.”^^ That’s the kind of religion, or (Tillichian) ultimate concern you can’t argue with. You just take it on faith, provided you can say it with a straight (not poker) face. Maybe once we all learn to say it straight, we’ll think straight, see straight, and act straight. Until then, it’s wise to remember what Walter Connolly (Mr. Jones) told Barbara Stanwyck (Megan Devis) as they roiled from the ravages of the Manchurian invasion on a slow boat from (not to) mainland China, casualties, not of war but of their love and admiration for the same man: Maybe the Joke’s on us. [General] Yen was crazy. He said we never die—we only change. He was nuts about cherry trees. Well, maybe he’s a cherry tree now—maybe he’s the wind that’s pushing that sail—maybe he’s the wind that’s playing around your hair. Ah, it’s all a lot of hooey. I’m drunk. Just the same, 1 hope when I cool off, the guy who changes me sends me where[ver] Yen is. And I’ll bet I’ll find you there too.'^ Peter, when I die. I’ll go looking for you—that is, if you don’t find me first. I have a hunch that we’ll end up being (and not being) in the same place at the same time. That’s not so strange, is it, Hegel? Once you give up consistency, the world suddenly makes complete sense, in all of its chaotic lunacy and utter nonsense. As Billy Pilgrim recounted his odyssey, quoting from the Gospel according to Vince Lombardi and Soren Kierkegaard, dying isn’t the main thing, it’s the only thing. That is, until we decide once and for all to stop killing each other. When that happens. I’ll move to Tralfamadore, and you’re coming with me. After all, I wouldn’t want to leave you alone. You might end up writing another great book—and then what would I do for company? Gloria was wrong—faces aren’t enough; we also need dialogue. And a few of those funny things we call thinkers to keep talking, till death do us depart. Like Walt (our national bard), Peter is large, he contains multitudes. And at this very moment, as on the shores of eternity, after all this time, he stops somewhere, waiting for me. University of San Diego Dennis Rohatyn Notes ' Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Slaughterhouse-Five or the Children 5 Crusade, A Duty-Dance with Death, 1969; 25‘^ anniversary ed., new preface by the author, (New York, 1994), 200. Film, dir. George Roy Hill, 1972.