mercredi 10 juin 2026

(106) The abracadabrante story of Child Moon

 
 

Continuation of the Vera Causa
 
 
Félix reflected upon all the information reaching him from Lucian, who, judging by both the form and content of his letters, seemed to be travelling through a profound disorder. None of the letters he received was truly the continuation of the previous one, as though time itself were playing cards, shuffling the deck before dealing it out and leaving him with the task of attempting to arrange the scattered hands into certain logical sequences.
That is the game, he would tell himself.
And on that particular day, the game revealed a Lucian very different from the one of the day before... who might, perhaps, have been the one of the day after.
Lucian had spoken of this in one of the earlier letters I received very late one evening... as though he had spoken almost out of time... as though it had been a real conversation.
What Félix remembered most was the weariness of the room, the low lamps, the notebooks lying open without any apparent order, the sheets covered with sketches in which certain silhouettes already appeared, though they still had no names.
It also seemed to him that Lucian had approached the subject in that peculiar manner that was sometimes his own: beginning like a man making a secondary remark, only to descend gradually into something that concerned him far more than he wished to admit.
He had said that there existed a considerable difference between an idea that merely works and an idea that possesses a reality of its own.
Many hypotheses, Lucian said, resemble scaffolds erected around a single problem. They explain exactly what they are meant to explain. Nothing more. They are fitted like intellectual prostheses—that had been his expression. One could move them elsewhere, replace them, invent others. Their effectiveness remains local.
Then he had taken the example of the ancient astronomers.
Certain systems described the visible motions of the planets correctly, yet required so many corrections, so many circles added to circles, so many successive adjustments, that they eventually revealed their weakness. They remained standing—with a certain balance—but only with difficulty.
By contrast, some hypotheses possess a strange capacity for expansion. They seem to open, of their own accord, passages toward other phenomena.
Lucian had insisted upon this point with unusual slowness.
According to him, when an idea begins to generate unforeseen consequences, something changes in its status. It ceases to be a mere descriptive tool. It becomes an organizing force.
He then spoke of Newton, though less as a physicist than as a reader of the world.
What fascinated Newton, he said, was not merely understanding why an apple falls. Many people might have imagined an explanation for falling bodies. What truly transformed his thought was the suspicion that the same silent principle was also at work in the dance of the planets, in the tides, in the movements of the most distant celestial bodies...
Which, curiously enough, made me think of him... and of Igniatius... before I returned my attention to his words.
The greatness of a cause therefore resides not solely in its precision, but in its capacity to appear elsewhere than in the place where it was first discovered.
Lucian had paused before adding something that, at the time, I understood only imperfectly.
He said—and I quote—that certain ideas resemble underground springs. One discovers them at a particular point in the landscape; farther away another resurgence appears, then another still. Each time the water seems different, yet something in its temperature, its colour, or its taste reveals that it comes from the same invisible current.
It even seems to me, he continued, that the human mind instinctively recognizes such structures before it can fully demonstrate them. Perhaps that is why certain hypotheses exert a peculiar fascination. They give the obscure impression that previously separate regions of reality have suddenly begun to communicate with one another.
Then, almost despite himself, Lucian slipped from the scientific domain into far more ambiguous territory.
He said that there are also "true causes" within psychic life.
Certain analytical interpretations remain superficial because they explain an isolated behaviour without altering the rest of the inner landscape. They produce a local understanding. A provisional articulation. Nothing truly changes.
Yet there are moments when an intuition suddenly transforms several regions of existence at once.
Old dreams acquire another meaning. Memories become legible. Certain repetitions cease to appear accidental. Images that had previously remained scattered begin to gravitate around the same invisible centre.
Lucian then used a phrase that struck me deeply, though I did not know why:
"A real cause leaves traces in territories that do not yet know they depend upon it."
Afterwards he returned to his notebooks, almost embarrassed by having spoken so much.
Yet before falling completely silent, he added something stranger still.
He said that great literary figures sometimes obey the same logic.
A true character, according to him, never remains confined within the initial function for which its author conceived it. It begins to contaminate other regions of the narrative. It attracts images. Alters the tone of the scenes in which it appears. It even distorts the neighbouring characters.
Then, at a certain stage, it seems to acquire such density that one can no longer be entirely sure whether the writer is still directing it, or merely attempting to follow the consequences of its presence.
Lucian smiled at that moment, though only very briefly.
"Secondary characters die with their usefulness. The others become causes."
Félix remembered that sentence perfectly. What he understood only now, years later, was that Lucian was probably no longer speaking either of Newton or of literature. Perhaps he was already speaking of the drawings. Perhaps even of Igniatius.
Or of a figure still without a name, already seeking, in the darkness of the notebooks, the future form of the Moon Child.