The Best Australian Science Writing 2013 (24 page)

At the museum, the female satin bowerbird's nest was the oldest in the box. It was found on 10 February 1900 by SW Jackson near the Bellinger River in New South Wales, half a metre from the ground. According to its accompanying note, it was in ‘an Oak tree near the edge of a dense Cedar scrub'. After mating, the male and female have no further contact and the female raises the family alone, not unusual in the animal world. After the intense scrutiny to which she subjects the male's creation, the female doesn't waste her time on ornaments and bravura technique, though her nest is lovely in its simplicity.

I watched a documentary that showed a bowerbird busily arranging the boudoir. When he'd nearly finished, a brush turkey many times larger than he wandered through the bower searching for food, picking and kicking his way along the forest floor. The bowerbird, forced to sit to one side and watch the methodical disarray of his composition, seethed. Philistine. Perhaps one artist in the family is enough.

Mating behaviours

Feathered

Minutiae

My father's body

Francesca Rendle-Short

I never saw anything so beautiful … you cannot conceive how the Orchids have delighted me. – Charles Darwin to Sir JD Hooker,
The Autobiography of Charles Darwin and Selected Letters
(1892)

Last Sunday I went to church to be with my father, to say goodbye. As I looked in from the vestibule, I could see he was already there; he was early, the church was empty. I saw him before he saw me, his face to the pulpit, sitting in his wheelchair down the front at the end of the pew near the window, out on his own. His head was bowed like a church orchid, an altar display, as if he were praying. His body curled over like a ball – he looked so small I thought he could very well roll away during the service and disappear under a pew. He was leafing through a hymnbook, ruffling the corners of the pages. He knew exactly what it was he was looking for– at least he looked as if he did: a hymn number, a title, the first line perhaps, a favourite tune. Later, when I was close enough to help him, I saw that the book was upside down and back-to-front.

My father is a six-day creationist, the sort who thinks God
made everything in six 24-hour days, and that our planet, indeed the whole universe, is just a tiny 6000 years old. He would call himself a creation evangelist, if asked, believing that only those Christians who have faith in a literal interpretation of Genesis are in fact Christians. The other sort, those Christians who are loose with their thinking and their hearts – ‘devout but unthinking Christians' is the way my father phrases it – who believe in metaphor and parabolic interpretation, the coupling together of science and theory with literature, even the most holy kind, will go to hell along with all the other heathens. God never discriminates between the goats. ‘Our concept of God has gone soft,' he writes, ‘God is absolute, sovereign good, a hater of evil'. My father's archenemy, of course, is Charles Darwin. ‘If evolution is true, there was no Fall. If man did not Fall, then there is no need for a Saviour.' I'm not making this up: it's true.

In 2009, we were in the middle of Darwinmania, a yearlong festival of events and celebrations that began in February with prayers at St Paul's in Melbourne. At the National Museum of Australia in Canberra, in an exhibition about Darwin's life and work (‘for twenty-one years he kept his theory secret' runs the tagline), I find carefully preserved letters written by hand to his closest friend, the botanist Joseph Hooker, confessing the imminent publication of
The Origin
. In one letter, Darwin writes in an elegant hand: ‘At last gleams of light have come, & I am almost convinced (quite contrary to opinion I started with) that species are not (it is like confessing a murder) immutable' (11 January 1844).

Then, in a curious afterthought written in pencil at the foot of the letter, he adds: ‘I do not know anything'. American writer Flannery O'Connor once famously said, ‘The more I write the less I know about writing'. Maybe, like O'Connor, Darwin knew just this, that he really didn't know where he was heading – he was being honest and open, not a faux naïf. The more he pieced
together this new tree of life, the less certain he became of its currency.

It is like confessing a murder.

If my father were aware of Darwin's birthday, if he knew what a fuss everyone was making of this great legend, touted as one of the most creative and influential thinkers of all time, if he knew about all the books that were being published about him, the talks that were being given, how Christian evolutionists were having their say through YouTube, if he could see the intense interest ordinary everyday people were showing in Darwin, he'd be ropable, spitting chips.

But the only chips my father spits now are those that come up from an industrial kitchen in Brisbane to his nursing home, nestled into the side of a highway on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland. Nowadays, the nurses sometimes have to feed him his lunch with a teaspoon.

(Am I committing murder with this writing?)

Alzheimer's suits my father.

As I sit with him in his room, we smile at each other about nothing in particular. We smell cut grass, listen to the
caw-caw
of the birds outside, to the sound of heavy rain on the galvanised iron when it pours out of the sky like gravy, or to the sweetness of his favourite hymn, ‘Love Divine, All Loves Excelling' on a video of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir performing in the Albert Hall in London. I know it's his favourite hymn because at the opening chord he leans forward listening, his body pulled in by the melody, his eyes watery when he turns to twinkle at me and say: ‘That's beautiful, isn't it?' He extends his vowels like the cooing of an owl so that the middle word is all
oo
: ‘That's
bootiful
, isn't it?'

To get a grip, I read about Alzheimer's, everything I can find, how it is a mental deterioration occurring in middle or old age owing to the progressive generalised degeneration of the brain. Senile (premature) dementia, the most common form of
dementia, is named after the German psychiatrist and neuropathologist Alois Alzheimer, who first described it in 1907, when an autopsy of the brain of a 55-year-old woman with the disease showed up neurofibrillary tangles. It can change personalities, turn gentle people into angry monsters. Or, as in the case of my father, soften the spirit; give him heart. It allows my father to express his emotion.

I imagine tangles in his head, knots on the underside of his skull. I imagine trying to untangle them too, the time it would take, how carefully you'd have to do it with the tips of your fingers, fingers aching.

I read, but still fail to understand.

I wish my father would explain it to me in the way he liked to explain what goes on with the body. These sorts of bodies interested him – bodies with medical conditions, diseased bodies, bodies with congenital abnormalities. If it wasn't theology he was talking about over lunch and tea, then it was the ins and outs of medicine. Sometimes I fancied he liked being around sick people so that he could talk about diagnoses and prognoses. He sparked up. Nowadays, the only medical intervention he has a part in is his medicine, which he refuses with alacrity; obstinacy as the last vestige of control.

If my father could see the book in my hand now, the 1968 Pelican Classic of
The Origin,
edited by JW Burrow, I wonder what he would say. It's a scruffy old copy, borrowed from the library, dog-eared with pencil marks and some pages torn out. I want to talk to him about it, to show him the delicate diagram at the centre of Darwin's thesis, which reaches out from the inside pages and from long ago like a willowy sea anemone. I want to read him passages – the final words, for instance: ‘There is a grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers … from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved'. Wouldn't you say: He
writes b
oo
tifully? Surely my father would agree. I fancy I could hold a conversation with him about the book and Darwin's writing – am I dreaming?

I doubt that he would have even had this book in his study, even when writing his own treatises on creationism. In 1981 my father published the book
Man, Ape or Image: The Christian's Dilemma
(Creation Science Publishing, Queensland) and in 1998
Green Eye of the Storm
(The Banner of Truth Trust, Edinburgh). The latter is an exploration of the creationist debate told through the biographies of four Christian men, including my grandfather, the surgeon Arthur Rendle-Short.

Growing up, my father was always disappearing into his books and his writing. No matter where he sat in the house, no matter how much noise we made with our games. Sometimes he'd disappear into his study and we wouldn't see him for days.

He lived for his books and his writing; my father lived in his head. He boasted that he and his father had been in continuous print for more than 80 years. ‘Of all the ways of acquiring books, writing them oneself is regarded as the most praiseworthy method,' Walter Benjamin once remarked in his essay ‘Unpacking My Library'. This is what my father did: he wrote the books he wanted to read, the latest on creation apologetics. In youngearth circles they refer to him as ‘the Prof '. He was the founding chair of the Creation Science Foundation in Australia, mentor to Ken Ham, who is now the CEO of Answers in Genesis USA and the force behind the multimillion-dollar Creation Museum in Kentucky.

* * * * *

I hope that I may be excused for entering on these personal details, as I give them to show that I have not been hasty in
coming to a decision. – Charles Darwin,
On The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life
(1859)

When my father wasn't doing his ward rounds at the Royal Children's Hospital or lecturing to medical students about the intricacies of becoming a good physician, he was preaching the Word of the Lord, peddling the rightness of creationism. He hated Charles Darwin and his theory of evolution. He thought what Darwin did was evil, blamed him for the state of the world today, for the breakdown of society and the family unit, school violence, abortion, homosexual behaviour, gay marriage, lawlessness, feminism, etc. If it wasn't for Darwin we would all be creationists safely bound for heaven. He wrote: ‘[There will be] a cataclysmic end to the universe … And this plan, designed before the foundation of the world is being executed by a God of love, to cull out a group of men and women, to live forever in the beauty of a new earth'.

Never mind his children, of whom some are heathens, atheists even, some who ‘live in sin' and with partners of the same sex, no less. He never talked about these sorts of abominations. He didn't know how, especially homosexuality. He could barely countenance the idea of not saying grace with morning tea. If I were to press my father on my own ‘lifestyle choice' (his words, not mine) you could see his body stiffen, curl into itself, lips shut tight like the shell of a clam. In fast retreat. I've tried it once or twice since my mother died. To press the point maybe. In an attempt to live more honestly and more openly. To challenge the security of my own internalised homophobia, share the burden. But the hurt in his eyes is insufferable. A failed experiment of slow dissolve.

There was a time, not so very long ago, when I took my father
out in the car for little jaunts into the Maleny hills, for mugs of coffee and cream cakes in Montville and Mapleton.

On one of those jaunts we ate fish and chips beside the Maroochydore River: grilled dory, all fat and juicy with wedges of lemon my father liked to suck on. Gorgeous, he exclaimed, to the rill of water lapping the edges of our feet. Mostly we munched away in the stillness, in silence: my father in his wheelchair and me cross-legged on the sand, body beside body, flesh in the company of flesh. It's just you and me now, he volunteered. His words sent a trill of sighs through my veins out there under the blue, blue sky; we were
at rest
somehow. In the cemetery that morning, when we had visited my mother's grave, something must have passed between us.
It's just you and me
. My heart pumped a little louder than normal.

Once upon a time, and not so long ago, I didn't know what I was going to do when I was with my father, I didn't know what to say to him. I was afraid. Yet here I was – just take a look at us, will you – having a picnic lunch like seagulls with a flap of words between us every now and again, it didn't matter what about. If a passer-by thought to comment they might say: Look at those two, they're so at home in each other's company; how sweetly they must care for each other. I'd like to have what they've got.

There's a photo I return to whenever I think of my father. I was a teenager when I took it: my father and his orchids. Looking at it I can just feel the hot Brisbane sun on my father's back through the grapevine, the cold patio concrete under his feet; his concentration of muscle with the curl of toes, that forefinger holding the orchid pot.

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