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Patrick White 'Down at the Dump' Patrick White, most noted for his longer
works of fiction, exemplifies his craft of storytelling in his short story 'Down
at the Dump'. White has dramatized an event in life, such as a funeral, and
given us a very believable insight into our own culture. Some readers will take
offence to such a raw and truthful portrait, while others will find humor and
hope in the same story. White is a writer who crafts a story with such
intensity, that at times it slaps you in the face with the truthful, dirty,
honest depiction of his characters. All of whom we can see something, if not the
smallest little detail of our selves in them. 'Down at the Dump' counterpoints
two families, and their journeys on an afternoon. One of the families is off to
the funeral of Mrs. Hogben's sister Daise. The other family the Whalley's, off
to the Sarsaparilla dump, for busness and pleasure 'I thought the beer was an
excuse for comin'.' (Isba pg.8) 'Down at the Dump' is also a modern day
Australian Romeo & Juliet, the forbidden love between Lummy Whalley and Meg
Hogben. Both it seems are destined for more then what is expected of them. The
story is also a comment on the staid middle-class lifestyle, the petty bourgeois
existence of the suburbs.
The story is also a comment on the sexually
non-conformist such as daise's character represents, more about this later. The
story is also a comment on standards, principals, morality, values and
judgmental and discriminatory behavior. White pays attention to the dirty,
honest characteristics of human beings, Her eyes were that blazing blue, her
skin that of a brown peach. But whenever she smiled, something would happen, her
mouth opening on watery sockets and the jags of brown, rotting stumps. (pg.1)
This serves to give the readers a deeper understanding of the characters right
down to the bone. This typical descriptive passage is common in white's writing.
It cuts to the core of the character, shedding light on a side rarely taken by
an author. A gritty and honest sense of reality is achieved. Down at the Dump is
a story revolving around binary oppositions, a set of contrasts. The two main
families, 'The Hogben's and Whalley's' are the two main constructs of White's
direct opposition. This opposition is nowhere more visible then in white's use
of language when giving his characters a voice. Whites characters speak from the
heart. Their own use of language reflects directly their class and education.
For example - the Whalley's speak from the heart, with a distinctly
working-class accent. Ere!…waddaya make me out ter be? A lump of wood. (Isba
pg.1) We get a sense very early in the story, by the way the Whalley's speak, a
direct reflection of their socio-economic background. White's use of language
when describing the Whalley's is derogatory and intentionly off putting. This is
contrasted in direct opposition to the Hogben's. Who are described through their
slightly more capable use of the English language. This helps enforce them as
being worth more in a snobby middle-class way. This direct opposition is again
contrasted to another level. For although White uses harsh, dirty, honest
language when describing the Whalley's, we cannot help but feel empathy with
them for their honesty.
The Whalley's seem truthfully real and direct people,
yet crass and crude on the outside. This is the opposite for the Hogben's. The
Hogben's use of speech is much more educated. Although they are described with
nice, fluffy, sensitive language, I am filled with contempt for them. Meg being
the exception she is one of white's poetic seers; someone who is destined for
more. The domestic abodes of the two families are also a symbolic representative
of their different socio-economic position and different way of life. Our story
takes its journey to the funeral and the dump respectively where towards the end
of the funeral serves daise rises from the grave to relinquish her thoughts and
feelings. It is about here in the story that the passage I will be discussing
indepth occurs. It is through Daise Morrow that Patrick white chooses to make
social commentry through his authorial voice. The ideological concerns of the
story are quite clear in this passage. The passage I will be referring to starts
midway down page 16 'Even if their rage grief, contempt, boredom, apathy, and
sense of injustice had not occupied the mourners…to…as she got in side the car,
and waited for whatever next.' (Pg.16-17) The passage I will now be examining
starts with a comment by white's authorial voice. The omniposent narrator 'Even
if their rage grief, contempt, boredom, apathy, and sense of injustice had not
occupied the mourners…' this is a direct comment that the religious proceedings,
was not in the forefront of the guests. It seems that this sermon from the dead
is falling on def ears all to caught up in their own hypocrisies and
superficialities. White is commenting here that the townspeople, disconcerted by
the death of the loose woman in flora cotton. are more concerned with their own
position in society, and how people view themselves and others view them.
White
arranges the framework of the story around a shifting Point Of View. The story
moves from the Whalley's perspective, to the Hogben's. From there it moves on to
a family of no real importance, Horrie and Georgina Last, shifting back and
forth until the resurrection of Daise Morrow. White cleverly uses this technique
of each family commenting on the other, to give the reader valuable insights and
help the reader empathize. However we must not for get that in doing so White is
in some way controlling how the reader interprets each character, everyone
brings their own experiences to every story they read. One of the more
significant ideological concerns White chooses to comment on is that of
sexuality, intimacy and love, as being a social construct. We observe this
through glimpses of this certain behavior in each family. The Hogben's are
shallow, anal people. This is no more evident then when Les reminisces about
pushing up against Daise in his hallway, denying there was any sexual intention
what so ever. We as reader can make up our own minds about that. Daise' rise
from the grave is significant to white's concerns about intimacy, about people
following their hearts. Daise, White's heroin or mystic seer, has a will to
create her own freedom, above the social constraints of her sisters middle-class
conformities. This is nowhere more evident then in her haunting comment from the
grave towards the end of the section I've been discussing. Truly, we needn't
experience tortures, unless we build chambers in our minds to house instruments
of hatred in. Don't you know, my darling creatures, that death isn't death,
unless it's the death of a love? Love should be the greatest explosion it is
reasonable to expect. Which sends us whirling, spinning, creating millions of
other worlds. Never destroying. (Pg.17) The story finishes with a glimmer of
hope. Maybe a budding relationship between Lummy and Meg, each I feel is
destined for something more out of their lives. A life where honesty, like that
of a first kiss, takes precedence over learned social behaviors. the end.
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