American Pastoral

by

Philip Roth

Dawn Levov, formerly Dawn Dwyer, is the Swede’s first wife. She and the Swede have a daughter, Merry. Dawn grew up in urban New Jersey, and she and Swede share a similar resentment toward America’s gatekeeping, judgmental, and exclusionary upper class. Together, Dawn and the Swede strive to build a future unbeholden to the restrictive religious norms of their elders and enable their entry into the American mainstream. Dawn, a strikingly beautiful woman, was crowned Miss New Jersey in 1949. Many people in Dawn’s life use her former title to oversimplify her character and diminish her worth, implying that her past as a former beauty queen makes her ditzy or superficial. To prove her worth and gumption, Dawn starts a cattle-ranching business. Nevertheless, although the Swede recognizes Dawn’s hard work and admires her ambition, others don’t take the business venture as seriously. Jerry, for instance, suggests that Dawn’s cattle business is yet more proof of the underlying phoniness of the Swede’s life—he insists she’s just a silly rich woman playing out her fantasy of living off the land. As Merry enters adolescence and becomes increasingly more radical, Dawn struggles to cope and doubts her efforts at mothering Merry. After Merry’s crime and subsequent disappearance, Dawn falls apart and must be hospitalized twice for depression. She also begins an affair with Bill Orcutt—the Levovs’ wealthy, condescending neighbor, whom Dawn outwardly claims to find insufferable. The Swede predicts that Dawn plans to leave him and move into the new house

Dawn Dwyer Quotes in American Pastoral

The American Pastoral quotes below are all either spoken by Dawn Dwyer or refer to Dawn Dwyer. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Heroes, Legends, and Myth-Making  Theme Icon
).
Chapter 3 Quotes

The Swede had got up off the ground and he’d done it—a second marriage, a second shot at a unified life controlled by good sense and the classic restraints, once again convention shaping everything, large and small, and serving as barrier against the improbabilities—a second shot at being the traditional devoted husband and father, pledging allegiance all over again to the standard rules and regulations that are the heart of family order. […] And yet not even the Swede, […] could shed the girl the way Jerry the ripper had told him to, could go all the way and shed completely the frantic possessiveness, the paternal assertiveness, the obsessive love for the lost daughter, shed every trace of that girl and that past and shake off forever the hysteria of “my child.” If only he could have just let her fade away. But not even the Swede was that great.

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Jerry Levov
Page Number: 81
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

Not since Merry had disappeared had he felt anything like this loquacious. Right up to that morning, all he’d been wanting was to weep or to hide; but because there was Dawn to nurse and a business to tend to and his parents to prop up, because everybody else was paralyzed by disbelief and shattered to the core, neither inclination had as yet eroded the protective front he provided the family and presented to the world. But now words were sweeping him on, buoying him up, his father’s words released by the sight of this tiny girl studiously taking them down. She was nearly as small, he thought, as the kids from Merry’s third-grade class, who’d been bused the thirty-eight miles from their rural schoolhouse one day back in the late fifties so that Merry’s daddy could show them how he made gloves […].

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Lou Levov, Rita Cohen
Related Symbols: Gloves
Page Number: 121-122
Explanation and Analysis:

That is the outer life. To the best of his ability, it is conducted just as it used to be. But now it is accompanied by an inner life, a gruesome inner life of tyrannical obsessions, stifled inclinations, superstitious expectations, horrible imaginings, fantasy conversations, unanswerable questions. Sleeplessness and self-castigation night after night. Enormous loneliness. Unflagging remorse, even for that kiss when she was eleven and he was thirty-six and the two of them, in their wet bathing suits, were driving home together from the Deal beach. Could that have done it? Could anything have done it? Could nothing have done it?

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov
Page Number: 173-174
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Almost immediately after the reconstitution of her face to its former pert, heart-shaped pre-explosion perfection, she decided to build a small contemporary house on a ten-acre lot the other side of Rimrock ridge and to sell the big old house, the outbuildings, and their hundred-odd acres. […] When he overheard her telling the architect, their neighbor Bill Orcutt, that she had always hated their house, the Swede was as stunned as if she were telling Orcutt she had always hated her husband.

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Bill Orcutt
Related Symbols: Old Rimrock
Page Number: 188-189
Explanation and Analysis:

Mrs. Conlon had said, “You are as much the victims of this tragedy as we are. The difference is that for us, though recovery will take time, we will survive as a family. We will survive as a loving family. We will survive with our memories intact and with our memories to sustain us. It will not be any easier for us than it will be for you to make sense of something so senseless. But we are the same family we were when Fred was here, and we will survive.”

The clarity and force with which she implied that the Swede and his family would not survive made him wonder, in the weeks that followed, if her kindness and her compassion were so all-encompassing as he had wanted at first to believe.

He never went to see her again.

Related Characters: Mrs. Conlon (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Dr. Conlon
Related Symbols: Old Rimrock
Page Number: 216-217
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

“She looks like a million bucks,” his father said. “That girl looks like herself again. Getting rid of those cows was the smartest thing you ever did. I never liked ’em. I never saw why she needed them. Thank God for that face-lift. I was against it but I was wrong. Dead wrong. I got to admit it. That guy did a wonderful job. Thank God our Dawn doesn’t look anymore like all that she went through.”

Related Characters: Lou Levov (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Bill Orcutt
Page Number: 298
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

“[…] I sometimes think that more has changed since 1945 than in all the years of history there have ever been. I don’t know what to make of the end of so many things. The lack of feeling for individuals that a person sees in that movie, the lack of feeling for places like what is going on in Newark—how did this happen? You don’t have to revere your family, you don’t have to revere your country, you don’t have to revere where you live, but you have to know you have them, you have to know that you are part of them. Because if you don’t, you are just out there on your own and I feel for you. I honestly do. […]”

Related Characters: Lou Levov (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov
Page Number: 365
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

But whether he was or wasn’t running the show no longer mattered, because if Merry and Rita Cohen were connected, in any way, if Merry had lied to him about not knowing Rita Cohen, then she might as easily have been lying about being taken in by Sheila after the bombing. If that was so, when Dawn and Orcutt ran off to live in this cardboard house, he and Sheila could run off to Puerto Rico after all. And if, as a result, his father dropped dead, well, they’d just have to bury him. That’s what they’d do: bury him deep in the ground.

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Lou Levov, Bill Orcutt, Rita Cohen, Sheila Salzman
Related Symbols: Old Rimrock
Page Number: 369
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire American Pastoral LitChart as a printable PDF.
American Pastoral PDF

Dawn Dwyer Quotes in American Pastoral

The American Pastoral quotes below are all either spoken by Dawn Dwyer or refer to Dawn Dwyer. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Heroes, Legends, and Myth-Making  Theme Icon
).
Chapter 3 Quotes

The Swede had got up off the ground and he’d done it—a second marriage, a second shot at a unified life controlled by good sense and the classic restraints, once again convention shaping everything, large and small, and serving as barrier against the improbabilities—a second shot at being the traditional devoted husband and father, pledging allegiance all over again to the standard rules and regulations that are the heart of family order. […] And yet not even the Swede, […] could shed the girl the way Jerry the ripper had told him to, could go all the way and shed completely the frantic possessiveness, the paternal assertiveness, the obsessive love for the lost daughter, shed every trace of that girl and that past and shake off forever the hysteria of “my child.” If only he could have just let her fade away. But not even the Swede was that great.

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Jerry Levov
Page Number: 81
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

Not since Merry had disappeared had he felt anything like this loquacious. Right up to that morning, all he’d been wanting was to weep or to hide; but because there was Dawn to nurse and a business to tend to and his parents to prop up, because everybody else was paralyzed by disbelief and shattered to the core, neither inclination had as yet eroded the protective front he provided the family and presented to the world. But now words were sweeping him on, buoying him up, his father’s words released by the sight of this tiny girl studiously taking them down. She was nearly as small, he thought, as the kids from Merry’s third-grade class, who’d been bused the thirty-eight miles from their rural schoolhouse one day back in the late fifties so that Merry’s daddy could show them how he made gloves […].

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Lou Levov, Rita Cohen
Related Symbols: Gloves
Page Number: 121-122
Explanation and Analysis:

That is the outer life. To the best of his ability, it is conducted just as it used to be. But now it is accompanied by an inner life, a gruesome inner life of tyrannical obsessions, stifled inclinations, superstitious expectations, horrible imaginings, fantasy conversations, unanswerable questions. Sleeplessness and self-castigation night after night. Enormous loneliness. Unflagging remorse, even for that kiss when she was eleven and he was thirty-six and the two of them, in their wet bathing suits, were driving home together from the Deal beach. Could that have done it? Could anything have done it? Could nothing have done it?

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov
Page Number: 173-174
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Almost immediately after the reconstitution of her face to its former pert, heart-shaped pre-explosion perfection, she decided to build a small contemporary house on a ten-acre lot the other side of Rimrock ridge and to sell the big old house, the outbuildings, and their hundred-odd acres. […] When he overheard her telling the architect, their neighbor Bill Orcutt, that she had always hated their house, the Swede was as stunned as if she were telling Orcutt she had always hated her husband.

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Bill Orcutt
Related Symbols: Old Rimrock
Page Number: 188-189
Explanation and Analysis:

Mrs. Conlon had said, “You are as much the victims of this tragedy as we are. The difference is that for us, though recovery will take time, we will survive as a family. We will survive as a loving family. We will survive with our memories intact and with our memories to sustain us. It will not be any easier for us than it will be for you to make sense of something so senseless. But we are the same family we were when Fred was here, and we will survive.”

The clarity and force with which she implied that the Swede and his family would not survive made him wonder, in the weeks that followed, if her kindness and her compassion were so all-encompassing as he had wanted at first to believe.

He never went to see her again.

Related Characters: Mrs. Conlon (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Dr. Conlon
Related Symbols: Old Rimrock
Page Number: 216-217
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

“She looks like a million bucks,” his father said. “That girl looks like herself again. Getting rid of those cows was the smartest thing you ever did. I never liked ’em. I never saw why she needed them. Thank God for that face-lift. I was against it but I was wrong. Dead wrong. I got to admit it. That guy did a wonderful job. Thank God our Dawn doesn’t look anymore like all that she went through.”

Related Characters: Lou Levov (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Bill Orcutt
Page Number: 298
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

“[…] I sometimes think that more has changed since 1945 than in all the years of history there have ever been. I don’t know what to make of the end of so many things. The lack of feeling for individuals that a person sees in that movie, the lack of feeling for places like what is going on in Newark—how did this happen? You don’t have to revere your family, you don’t have to revere your country, you don’t have to revere where you live, but you have to know you have them, you have to know that you are part of them. Because if you don’t, you are just out there on your own and I feel for you. I honestly do. […]”

Related Characters: Lou Levov (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov
Page Number: 365
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

But whether he was or wasn’t running the show no longer mattered, because if Merry and Rita Cohen were connected, in any way, if Merry had lied to him about not knowing Rita Cohen, then she might as easily have been lying about being taken in by Sheila after the bombing. If that was so, when Dawn and Orcutt ran off to live in this cardboard house, he and Sheila could run off to Puerto Rico after all. And if, as a result, his father dropped dead, well, they’d just have to bury him. That’s what they’d do: bury him deep in the ground.

Related Characters: Nathan Zuckerman (speaker), Seymour “The Swede” Levov, Dawn Dwyer, Merry Levov, Lou Levov, Bill Orcutt, Rita Cohen, Sheila Salzman
Related Symbols: Old Rimrock
Page Number: 369
Explanation and Analysis: