Patrimony, p.1
Patrimony, page 1

Philip Roth
PATRIMONY
In 1997 Philip Roth won the Pulitzer Prize for American Pastoral. In 1998 he received the National Medal of Arts at the White House and in 2002 the highest award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Gold Medal in Fiction. He twice won the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award. He won the PEN/Faulkner Award three times. In 2005 The Plot Against America received the Society of American Historians’ Prize for “the outstanding historical novel on an American theme for 2003–2004.” Roth received PEN’s two most prestigious awards: in 2006 the PEN/Nabokov Award and in 2007 the PEN/Bellow Award for achievement in American fiction. In 2011 he received the National Humanities Medal at the White House and was later named the fourth recipient of the Man Booker International Prize. He died in 2018.
BOOKS BY PHILIP ROTH
zuckerman books
The Ghost Writer
Zuckerman Unbound
The Anatomy Lesson
The Prague Orgy
The Counterlife
American Pastoral
I Married a Communist
The Human Stain
Exit Ghost
roth books
The Facts
Deception
Patrimony
Operation Shylock
The Plot Against America
kepesh books
The Breast
The Professor of Desire
The Dying Animal
nemeses: short novels
Everyman
Indignation
The Humbling
Nemesis
miscellany
Reading Myself and Others
Shop Talk
other books
Goodbye, Columbus
Letting Go
When She Was Good
Portnoy’s Complaint
Our Gang
The Great American Novel
My Life as a Man
Sabbath’s Theater
FIRST VINTAGE INTERNATIONAL EDITION, APRIL 1996
Copyright © 1991 by Philip Roth
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York, and distributed in Canada by Random House of Canada, a division of Penguin Random House Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published in the United States in hardcover by Simon & Schuster Inc., New York, in 1991.
Vintage is a registered trademark and Vintage International and colophon are trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Roth, Philip.
Patrimony / by Philip Roth.—1st Vintage International ed.
p. cm.
1. Roth, Philip—Family. 2. Novelists, American—20th century—Family relationships. 3. Fathers and sons—United States—Biography.
4. Roth family. I. Title.
[PS3568.0855Z468 1996]
813′.54—dc20
[B] 95-43453
CIP
Vintage International Trade Paperback ISBN 9780679752936
Ebook ISBN 9780593685037
www.vintagebooks.com
Frontispiece photograph: Herman, 36, Sandy, 9, and Philip Roth, 4; Bradley Beach, New Jersey, August 1937.
a_prh_6.0_140999378_c1_r0
For our family,
the living and the dead
Contents
Cover
About the Author
Books by Philip Roth
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
1 Well, What Do You Think?
2 Mommy, Mommy, Where Are You, Mommy?
3 Will I Be a Zombie?
4 I Have to Start Living Again
5 Maybe Ingrid Can Look After Me for Good
6 They Fought Because They Were Fighters, and They Fought Because They Were Jews
1
Well, What Do You Think?
My father had lost most of the sight in his right eye by the time he’d reached eighty-six, but otherwise he seemed in phenomenal health for a man his age when he came down with what the Florida doctor diagnosed, incorrectly, as Bell’s palsy, a viral infection that causes paralysis, usually temporary, to one side of the face.
The paralysis appeared, out of nowhere, the day after he had flown from New Jersey to West Palm Beach to spend the winter months sharing a sublet apartment with a retired bookkeeper of seventy, Lillian Beloff, who lived upstairs from him in Elizabeth and with whom he had become romantically involved a year after my mother died in 1981. At the West Palm airport, he had been feeling so fit that he hadn’t even bothered with a porter (whom, besides, he would have had to tip) and carried his own luggage from the baggage area all the way out to the taxi stand. Then the next morning, in the bathroom mirror, he saw that half his face was no longer his. What had looked like him the day before now looked like nobody—the lower lid of the bad eye bagged downward, revealing the lid’s inner lining, the cheek on that side had gone slack and lifeless as though beneath the bone had been filleted, and his lips were no longer straight but drawn down diagonally across his face.
With his hand he pushed the right cheek back to where it had been the night before, holding it there for the count of ten. He did this repeatedly that morning—and every day thereafter—but when he let go, it wouldn’t stay. He tried to tell himself that he had lain the wrong way in bed, that his skin was simply furrowed from sleep, but what he believed was that he’d had a stroke. His father had been crippled by a stroke back in the early 1940s, and once he’d become an old man himself, he said to me several times, “I don’t want to go the way he did. I don’t want to lie there like that. That’s my worst fear.” He told me how he used to stop off to see his father at the hospital early in the morning on the way downtown to the office and again on his way home at night. Twice a day he lit cigarettes and stuck them in his father’s mouth for him and in the evening he sat beside the bed and read to him from the Yiddish paper. Immobilized and helpless, with only his cigarettes to soothe him, Sender Roth lingered for almost a year, and until a second stroke finished him off late one night in 1942, my father, twice each day, sat and watched him die.
The doctor who told my father that he had Bell’s palsy assured him that in a short time most, if not all, of the facial paralysis would be gone. And within days of his getting this prognosis, it was confirmed for him by three different people, in just his section of the vast condominium development, who’d had the same ailment and recovered. One of them had had to wait for nearly four months, but eventually the paralysis went away as mysteriously as it had come.
His didn’t go away.
He soon couldn’t hear out of his right ear. The Florida doctor examined the ear and measured the hearing loss, but told him it had nothing to do with the Bell’s palsy. It was just something that happened with age—he had probably been losing the hearing in the right ear as gradually as he had lost the sight in the right eye and only now had noticed it. This time when my father asked how much longer the doctor thought he’d have to wait before the Bell’s palsy disappeared, the doctor told him that in cases that continued as long as his had, it sometimes never disappeared. Look, count your blessings, the doctor said; except for a blind eye, a deaf ear, and a half-paralyzed face, he was as healthy as a man twenty years younger.
When I phoned each Sunday, I could hear that as a consequence of the drooping mouth, his speech had become slurred and difficult to follow—he sounded at times like someone fresh from the dental chair whose novocaine hadn’t worn off; when I flew to Florida to see him, I was startled to find him looking as though he might not be able to speak at all.
“Well,” he said, in the lobby of my hotel, where I was meeting Lil and him for dinner, “what do you think?” Those were his first words, even as I bent over to kiss him. He was sunk down beside Lil in a tapestried love seat, but his face was aimed straight up at me so that I could see what had happened. Over the last year he had intermittently been wearing a black patch over his blind eye to prevent the light and the wind from irritating it, and what with the eye patch, the cheek, the mouth, and the fact that he had lost a lot of weight, he seemed to me gruesomely transformed—in the five weeks since I’d last seen him in Elizabeth—into an enfeebled old man. It was hard to believe that only some six years earlier, the winter after my mother’s death, when he was sharing the Bal Harbour apartment of his old friend Bill Weber, he’d had no difficulty convincing the wealthy widows in the building—who’d immediately begun to swarm with interest around the gregarious new widower in the fresh seersucker jacket and pastel trousers—that he had only just reached seventy, even though we had all gathered together to mark his eightieth birthday the summer before in my house in Connecticut.
At dinner in the hotel I began to understand how much of a handicap the Bell’s palsy was, in addition to being disfiguring. He could now drink successfully only by using a straw; otherwise the liquid ran out the paralyzed half of his mouth. And eating was a bite-by-bite effort, laden with frustration and embarrassment. Reluctantly he agreed, after spotting his tie with his soup, to allow Lil to wrap a napkin around his neck—there was already a napkin across his lap, more or less protecting his trousers. Occasionally Lil reached over with her own napkin and, to his disgruntlement, r
What made everything still more difficult was that cataracts in both his eyes had thickened in recent months, so that even the sight in his one good eye had grown blurry. For several years my ophthalmologist in New York, David Krohn, had been following the progress of my father’s cataracts and dealing with his deteriorating vision, and when, in March, my father returned to New Jersey from his unhappy stay in Florida, he went to New York to urge David to remove the cataract from the good eye; because he was powerless to do anything about the Bell’s palsy, he was particularly eager that some action be taken toward restoring his sight. But late in the afternoon following my father’s visit, David phoned to say that he was reluctant to operate on the eye until further tests had determined the cause of the facial paralysis and the hearing loss. He wasn’t convinced that it was Bell’s palsy.
He was right not to be. Harold Wasserman, my father’s New Jersey physician, had arranged locally for the MRI scan that David ordered, and when Harold received the report from the lab, he called me early that evening to give me the results. My father had a brain tumor, “a massive tumor,” Harold called it, and though with MRI pictures one couldn’t distinguish between a benign and a malignant tumor, Harold said, “Either way, those tumors kill you.” The next step was to consult with a neurosurgeon, to determine precisely the kind of tumor it was and what, if anything, might be done. “I’m not optimistic,” Harold said, “and neither should you be.”
I managed to get my father to the neurosurgeon without telling him what the MRI had already disclosed. I lied and said that the tests showed nothing, but that David, being extra cautious, wanted to get one last opinion on the facial paralysis before he went ahead with the cataract removal. In the meantime, I arranged for the MRI pictures to be sent to the Essex House Hotel in New York. Claire Bloom and I were temporarily living there while we were looking for an apartment—we were planning to find a place in Manhattan after ten years of dividing our lives between her house in London and mine in Connecticut.
In fact, only about a week before the MRI pictures of my father’s brain, along with the radiologist’s report, were delivered to the hotel in an oversized envelope, Claire had returned to London to see her daughter and to look after repairs on her house and to meet with her accountant over a long-standing negotiation with the British tax authorities. She had been yearning terribly for London, and the month’s visit was designed not merely to let her attend to practical matters but to take the edge off her homesickness. I suppose that if my father’s tumor had been discovered earlier, when Claire was with me, my preoccupation with him would not have been so all-consuming, and—at least in the evenings—I might have been less likely to become as depressed about his illness as I did on my own. Yet even at the time it seemed to me that Claire’s absence—along with the fact that in a hotel, feeling transient and homeless, I was finding it impossible to write—was a peculiarly opportune fortuity: with no other responsibilities, I could attend entirely to him.
Being by myself also allowed me to be as emotional as I felt, without having to put up a manly or mature or philosophical front. Alone, when I felt like crying I cried, and I never felt more like it than when I removed from the envelope the series of pictures of his brain—and not because I could readily identify the tumor invading the brain but simply because it was his brain, my father’s brain, what prompted him to think the blunt way he thought, speak the emphatic way he spoke, reason the emotional way he reasoned, decide the impulsive way he decided. This was the tissue that had manufactured his set of endless worries and sustained for more than eight decades his stubborn self-discipline, the source of everything that had so frustrated me as his adolescent son, the thing that had ruled our fate back when he was all-powerful and determining our purpose, and now it was being compressed and displaced and destroyed because of “a large mass predominantly located within the region of the right cerebellopontine angles and prepontine cisterns. There is extension of the mass into the right cavernous sinus with encasement of the carotid artery…” I didn’t know where to find the cerebellopontine angles or prepontine cisterns, but reading in the radiologist’s report that the carotid artery was encased in the tumor was, for me, as good as reading his death sentence. “There is also apparent destruction of the right petrous apex. There is significant posterior displacement and compression of the pons and right cerebellar peduncle by this mass…”
I was alone and without inhibition, and so, while the pictures of his brain, photographed from every angle, lay spread across the hotel bed, I made no effort to fight back anything. Maybe the impact wasn’t quite what it would have been had I been holding that brain in the palms of my hands, but it was along those lines. God’s will erupted out of a burning bush and, no less miraculously, Herman Roth’s had issued forth all these years from this bulbous organ. I had seen my father’s brain, and everything and nothing was revealed. A mystery scarcely short of divine, the brain, even in the case of a retired insurance man with an eighth-grade education from Newark’s Thirteenth Avenue School.
* * *
—
My nephew Seth drove my father up to Millburn to see the neurosurgeon, Dr. Meyerson, in his suburban office. I had arranged for my father to see him there rather than at Newark’s University Hospital because I thought the mere location of the doctor’s hospital office, which I had been told was in the oncology wing, would signal to him that he had a cancer, when no such diagnosis had been made and he didn’t even know yet that he had the tumor. This way he wouldn’t be frightened out of his skin, at least for a while.
And when I spoke to Dr. Meyerson on the phone later that day, he told me that a tumor like my father’s, located in front of the brain stem, was benign about ninety-five percent of the time. According to Meyerson, the tumor could have been growing there for as long as ten years; but the recent onset of facial paralysis and deafness in the right ear suggested that “in a relatively short time,” as he put it, “it’ll get much worse.” It was still possible, however, to remove it surgically. He told me that seventy-five percent of those operated on survive and are better, ten percent die on the table, and another fifteen percent either die shortly afterward or are left worse.
“If he survives,” I asked, “what is the convalescence like?”
“It’s difficult. He’d be in a convalescent home for a month—maybe as long as two or three months.”
“It’s hell, in other words.”
“It’s rough,” he said, “but do nothing and it could be rougher.”
I wasn’t about to give Meyerson’s news to my father on the phone, and so the next morning, when I called at around nine, I said I was going to come over to Elizabeth to see him.
“So, it’s that bad,” he said.
“Let me drive over and we’ll sit down and talk about it.”
“Do I have cancer?” he asked me.
“No, you don’t have cancer.”
“What is it then?”
“Be patient for another hour and I’ll be there and tell you exactly what the situation is.”
“I want to know now.”
“I’ll only be an hour—less than an hour,” I said, convinced that it was better for him to have to wait, however frightened he was, than to tell him flat out on the phone and have him sitting alone, in shock, until I arrived.
It was probably no wonder, given the task I was about to perform, that when I got off the turnpike in Elizabeth, I missed the fork in the exit road that would have taken me into North Avenue and directly to my father’s apartment building a few blocks away. Instead, I wound up on a stretch of New Jersey highway that, a mile or two on, passed right alongside the cemetery where my mother had been buried seven years before. I didn’t believe there was anything mystical about how I’d got there, but it was amazing nonetheless to see where the twenty-minute drive from Manhattan had landed me.












