PART TWO
Soul and Body
It would be senseless for the author to try to convince the reader that his characters
once actually lived. They were not born of a mother's womb; they were born of a
stimulating phrase or two or from a basic situation. Tomas was born of the saying
Einma! ist keinmal.
Tereza was born of the rumbling of a stomach.
The first time she went to Tomas's flat, her insides began to rumble. And no wonder:
she had had nothing to eat since breakfast but a quick sandwich on the platform before
boarding the train. She had concentrated on the daring journey ahead of her and
forgotten about food. But when we ignore the body, we are more easily victimized by it.
She felt terrible standing there in front of Tomas listening to her belly speak out. She felt
like crying. Fortunately, after the first ten seconds Tomas put his arms around her and
made her forget her ventral voices.
Tereza was therefore born of a situation which brutally reveals the irreconcilable duality
of body and soul, that fundamental human experience.
A long time ago, man would listen in amazement to the sound of regular beats in his
chest, never suspecting what they were. He was unable to identify himself with so alien
and unfamiliar an object as the body. The body was a cage, and inside that cage was
something which looked, listened, feared, thought, and marveled; that something, that
remainder left over after the body had been accounted for, was the soul.
Today, of course, the body is no longer unfamiliar: we know that the beating in our
chest is the heart and that the nose is the nozzle of a hose sticking out of the body to
"The Unbearable Lightness Of Being" By Milan Kundera
21
take oxygen to the lungs. The face is nothing but an instrument panel registering all the
body mechanisms: digestion, sight, hearing, respiration, thought.
Ever since man has learned to give each part of the body a name, the body has given
him less trouble. He has also learned that the soul is nothing more than the gray matter
of the brain in action. The old duality of body and soul has become shrouded in
scientific terminology, and we can laugh at it as merely an obsolete prejudice.
But just make someone who has fallen in love listen to his stomach rumble, and the
unity of body and soul, that lyrical illusion of the age of science, instantly fades away.
Tereza tried to see herself through her body. That is why, from girlhood on, she would
stand before the mirror so often. And because she was afraid her mother would catch
her at it, every peek into the mirror had a tinge of secret vice.
It was not vanity that drew her to the mirror; it was amazement at seeing her own I. She
forgot she was looking at the instrument panel of her body mechanisms; she thought
she saw her soul shining through the features of her face. She forgot that the nose was
merely the nozzle of a hose that took oxygen to the lungs; she saw it as the true
expression of her nature.
Staring at herself for long stretches of time, she was occasionally upset at the sight of
her mother's features in her face. She would stare all the more doggedly at her image
in an attempt to wish them away and keep only what was hers alone. Each time she
succeeded was a time of intoxication: her soul would rise to the surface of her body like
a crew charging up from the bowels of a ship, spreading out over the deck, waving at
the sky and singing in jubilation.
She took after her mother, and not only physically. I sometimes have the feeling that
her entire life was merely a continuation of her mother's, much as the course of a ball
on the billiard table is merely the continuation of the player's arm movement.
Indeed, was she not the principal culprit determining her mother's fate? She, the absurd
encounter of the sperm of the most manly of men and the egg of the most beautiful of
women? Yes, it was in that fateful second, which was named Tereza, that the botched
long-distance race, her mother's life, had begun.
Tereza's mother never stopped reminding her that being a mother meant sacrificing
everything. Her words had the ring of truth, backed as they were by the experience of a
woman who had lost everything because of her child. Tereza would listen and believe
that being a mother was the highest value in life and that being a mother was a great
sacrifice. If a mother was Sacrifice personified, then a daughter was Guilt, with no
possibility of redress.
Of course, Tereza did not know the story of the night when her mother whispered Be
careful into the ear of her father. Her guilty conscience was as vague as original sin.
But she did what she could to rid herself of it. Her mother took her out of school at the
age of fifteen, and Tereza went to work as a waitress, handing over all her earnings.
"The Unbearable Lightness Of Being" By Milan Kundera
22
She was willing to do anything to gain her mother's love. She ran the household, took
care of her siblings, and spent all day Sunday cleaning house and doing the family
wash. It was a pity, because she was the brightest in her class. She yearned for
something higher, but in the small town there was nothing higher for her. Whenever she
did the clothes, she kept a book next to the tub. As she turned the pages, the wash
water dripped all over them.
At home, there was no such thing as shame. Her mother marched about the flat in her
underwear, sometimes braless and sometimes, on summer days, stark naked. Her
stepfather did not walk about naked, but he did go into the bathroom every time Tereza
was in the bath. Once she locked herself in and her mother was furious. Who do you
think you are, anyway? Do you think he's going to bite off a piece of your beauty?
(This confrontation shows clearly that hatred for her daughter outweighed suspicion of
her husband. Her daughter's guilt was infinite and included the husband's infidelities.
Tereza's desire to be emancipated and insist on her rights—like the right to lock herself
in the bathroom—was more objectionable to Tereza's mother than the possibility of her
husband's taking a prurient interest in Tereza.)
Once her mother decided to go naked in the winter when the lights were on. Tereza
quickly ran to pull the curtains so that no one could see her from across the street. She
heard her mother's laughter behind her. The following day her mother had some friends
over: a neighbor, a woman she worked with, a local schoolmistress, and two or three
other women in the habit of getting together regularly. Tereza and the sixteen-year-old
son of one of them came in at one point to say hello, and her mother immediately took
advantage of their presence to tell how Tereza had tried to protect her mother's
modesty. She laughed, and all the women laughed with her. Tereza can't reconcile
herself to the idea that the human body pisses and farts, she said. Tereza turned bright
red, but her mother would not stop. What's so terrible about that? and in answer to her
own question she broke wind loudly. All the women laughed again.
Tereza's mother blew her nose noisily, talked to people in public about her sex life, and
enjoyed demonstrating her false teeth. She was remarkably skillful at loosening them
with her tongue, and in the midst of a broad smile would cause the uppers to drop down
over the lowers in such a way as to give her face a sinister expression.
Her behavior was but a single grand gesture, a casting off of youth and beauty. In the
days when she had had nine suitors kneeling round her in a circle, she guarded her
nakedness apprehensively, as though trying to express the value of her body in terms
of the modesty she accorded it. Now she had not only lost that modesty, she had
radically broken with it, ceremoniously using her new immodesty to draw a dividing line
through her life and proclaim that youth and beauty were overrated and worthless.
Tereza appears to me a continuation of the gesture by which her mother cast off her life
as a young beauty, cast it far behind her.
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23
(And if Tereza has a nervous way of moving, if her gestures lack a certain easy grace,
we must not be surprised: her mother's grand, wild, and self-destructive gesture has left
an indelible imprint on her.)
Tereza's mother demanded justice. She wanted to see the culprit penalized. That is
why she insisted her daughter remain with her in the world of immodesty, where youth
and beauty mean nothing, where the world is nothing but a vast concentration camp of
bodies, one like the next, with souls invisible.
Now we can better understand the meaning of Tereza's secret vice, her long looks and
frequent glances in the mirror. It was a battle with her mother. It was a longing to be a
body unlike other bodies, to find that the surface of her face reflected the crew of the
soul charging up from below. It was not an easy task: her soul—her sad, timid, self-
effacing soul—lay concealed in the depths of her bowels and was ashamed to show
itself.
So it was the day she first met Tomas. Weaving its way through the drunks in the hotel
restaurant, her body sagged under the weight of the beers on the tray, and her soul lay
somewhere at the level of the stomach or pancreas. Then Tomas called to her. That
call meant a great deal, because it came from someone who knew neither her mother
nor the drunks with their daily stereotypically scabrous remarks. His outsider status
raised him above the rest.
Something else raised him above the others as well: he had an open book on his table.
No one had ever opened a book in that restaurant before. In Tereza's eyes, books were
the emblems of a secret brotherhood. For she had but a single weapon against the
world of crudity surrounding her: the books she took out of the municipal library, and
above all, the novels. She had read any number of them, from Fielding to Thomas
Mann. They not only offered the possibility of an imaginary escape from a life she found
unsatisfying; they also had a meaning for her as physical objects: she loved to walk
down the street with a book under her arm. It had the same significance for her as an
elegant cane for the dandy a century ago. It differentiated her from others.
(Comparing the book to the elegant cane of the dandy is not absolutely precise. A
dandy's cane did more than make him different; it made him modern and up to date.
The book made Tereza different, but old-fashioned. Of course, she was too young to
see how old-fashioned she looked to others. The young men walking by with transistor
radios pressed to their ears seemed silly to her. It never occurred to her that they were
modern.)
And so the man who called to her was simultaneously a stranger and a member of the
secret brotherhood. He called to her in a kind voice, and Tereza felt her soul rushing up
to the surface through her blood vessels and pores to show itself to him.
After Tomas had returned to Prague from Zurich, he began to feel uneasy at the
thought that his acquaintance with Tereza was the result of six improbable fortuities.
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But is not an event in fact more significant and noteworthy the greater the number of
fortuities necessary to bring it about?
Chance and chance alone has a message for us. Everything that occurs out of
necessity, everything expected, repeated day in and day out, is mute. Only chance can
speak to us. We read its message much as gypsies read the images made by coffee
grounds at the bottom of a cup.
Tomas appeared to Tereza in the hotel restaurant as chance in the absolute. There he
sat, poring over an open book, when suddenly he raised his eyes to her, smiled, and
said, A cognac, please.
At that moment, the radio happened to be playing music. On her way behind the
counter to pour the cognac, Tereza turned the volume up. She recognized Beethoven.
She had known his music from the time a string quartet from Prague had visited their
town. Tereza (who, as we know, yearned for something higher ) went to the concert.
The hall was nearly empty. The only other people in the audience were the local
pharmacist and his wife. And although the quartet of musicians on stage faced only a
trio of spectators down below, they were kind enough not to cancel the concert, and
gave a private performance of the last three Beethoven quartets.
Then the pharmacist invited the musicians to dinner and asked the girl in the audience
to come along with them. From then on, Beethoven became her image of the world on
the other side, the world she yearned for. Rounding the counter with Tomas's cognac,
she tried to read chance's message: How was it possible that at the very moment she
was taking an order of cognac to a stranger she found attractive, at that very moment
she heard Beethoven?
Necessity knows no magic formulae—they are all left to chance. If a love is to be
unforgettable, fortuities must immediately start fluttering down to it like birds to Francis
of Assisi's shoulders.
He called her back to pay for the cognac. He closed his book (the emblem of the secret
brotherhood), and she thought of asking him what he was reading.
Can you have it charged to my room? he asked.
Yes, she said. What number are you in?
He showed her his key, which was attached to a piece of wood with a red six drawn on
it.
That's odd, she said. Six.
What's so odd about that? he asked.
She had suddenly recalled that the house where they had lived in Prague before her
parents were divorced was number six. But she answered something else (which we
may credit to her wiles): You're in room six and my shift ends at six.
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Well, my train leaves at seven, said the stranger.
She did not know how to respond, so she gave him the bill for his signature and took it
over to the reception desk. When she finished work, the stranger was no longer at his
table. Had he understood her discreet message? She left the restaurant in a state of
excitement.
Opposite the hotel was a barren little park, as wretched as only the park of a dirty little
town can be, but for Tereza it had always been an island of beauty: it had grass, four
poplars, benches, a weeping willow, and a few forsythia bushes.
He was sitting on a yellow bench that afforded a clear view of the restaurant entrance.
The very same bench she had sat on the day before with a book in her lap! She knew
then (the birds of fortuity had begun alighting on her shoulders) that this stranger was
her fate. He called out to her, invited her to sit next to him. (The crew other soul rushed
up to the deck other body.) Then she walked him to the station, and he gave her his
card as a farewell gesture. If ever you should happen to come to Prague...
Much more than the card he slipped her at the last minute, it was the call of all those
fortuities (the book, Beethoven, the number six, the yellow park bench) which gave her
the courage to leave home and change her fate. It may well be those few fortuities
(quite modest, by the way, even drab, just what one would expect from so lackluster a
town) which set her love in motion and provided her with a source of energy she had
not yet exhausted at the end of her days.
Our day-to-day life is bombarded with fortuities or, to be more precise, with the
accidental meetings of people and events we call coincidences. Co-incidence means
that two events unexpectedly happen at the same time, they meet: Tomas appears in
the hotel restaurant at the same time the radio is playing Beethoven. We do not even
notice the great majority of such coincidences. If the seat Tomas occupied had been
occupied instead by the local butcher, Tereza never would have noticed that the radio
was playing Beethoven (though the meeting of Beethoven and the butcher would also
have been an interesting coincidence). But her nascent love inflamed her sense of
beauty, and she would never forget that music. Whenever she heard it, she would be
touched. Everything going on around her at that moment would be haloed by the music
and take on its beauty.
Early in the novel that Tereza clutched under her arm when she went to visit Tomas,
Anna meets Vronsky in curious circumstances: they are at the railway station when
someone is run over by a train. At the end of the novel, Anna throws herself under a
train. This symmetrical composition—the same motif appears at the beginning and at
the end—may seem quite novelistic to you, and I am willing to agree, but only on
condition that you refrain from reading such notions as fictive, fabricated, and untrue to
life into the word novelistic. Because human lives are composed in precisely such a
fashion.
They are composed like music. Guided by his sense of beauty, an individual transforms
a fortuitous occurrence (Beethoven's music, death under a train) into a motif, which
"The Unbearable Lightness Of Being" By Milan Kundera
26
then assumes a permanent place in the composition of the individual's life. Anna could
have chosen another way to take her life. But the motif of death and the railway station,
unforgettably bound to the birth of love, enticed her in her hour of despair with its dark
beauty. Without realizing it, the individual composes his life according to the laws of
beauty even in times of greatest distress.
It is wrong, then, to chide the novel for being fascinated by mysterious coincidences
(like the meeting of Anna, Vronsky, the railway station, and death or the meeting of
Beethoven, Tomas, Tereza, and the cognac), but it is right to chide man for being blind
to such coincidences in his daily life. For he thereby deprives his life of a dimension of
beauty.
Impelled by the birds of fortuity fluttering down on her shoulders, she took a week's
leave and, without a word to her mother, boarded the train to Prague. During the
journey, she made frequent trips to the toilet to look in the mirror and beg her soul not
to abandon the deck of her body for a moment on this most crucial day of her life.
Scrutinizing herself on one such trip, she had a sudden scare: she felt a scratch in her
throat. Could she be coming down with something on this most crucial day of her life?
But there was no turning back. So she phoned him from the station, and the moment he
opened the door, her stomach started rumbling terribly. She was mortified. She felt as
though she were carrying her mother in her stomach and her mother had guffawed to
spoil her meeting with Tomas.
For the first few seconds, she was afraid he would throw her out because of the crude
noises she was making, but then he put his arms around her. She was grateful to him
for ignoring her rumbles, and kissed him passionately, her eyes misting. Before the first
minute was up, they were making love. She screamed while making love. She had a
fever by then. She had come down with the flu. The nozzle of the hose supplying
oxygen to the lungs was stuffed and red.
When she traveled to Prague a second time, it was with a heavy suitcase. She had
packed all her things, determined never again to return to the small town. He had
invited her to come to his place the following evening. That night, she had slept in a
cheap hotel. In the morning, she carried her heavy suitcase to the station, left it there,
and roamed the streets of Prague the whole day with
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