CHAPTER VI
Mr Barbecue-Smith arrived in time for tea
on Saturday afternoon. He was a short
and corpulent man, with a very large head and no neck. In his earlier middle age he had been
distressed by this absence of neck, but was comforted by reading in Balzac's Louis
Lambert that all the world's great men have been marked by the same
peculiarity, and for a simple and obvious reason: Greatness is nothing more nor
less than the harmonious functioning of the faculties of the head and heart;
the shorter the neck, the more closely these two organs approach one another; argal ... It was convincing.
Mr
Barbecue-Smith belonged to the old school of journalists. He sported a leonine head with a
greyish-black mane of oddly unappetizing hair brushed back from a broad but low
forehead. And somehow he always seemed slightly,
ever so slightly, soiled. In younger
days he had gaily called himself a Bohemian.
He did so no longer. He was a
teacher now, a kind of prophet. Some of
his books of comfort and spiritual teaching were in their hundred and twentieth
thousand.
Priscilla
received him with every mark of esteem.
He had never been to Crome before; she showed
him round the house. Mr Barbecue-Smith
was full of admiration.
'So
quaint, so old-world,' he kept repeating.
He had a rich, rather unctuous voice.
Priscilla
praised his latest book. 'Splendid, I
thought it was,' she said in her large, jolly way.
'I'm
happy to think you found it a comfort,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith.
'Oh, trememdously! And the bit about the Lotus Pool - I thought
that so beautiful.'
'I
knew you would like that. It came to me,
you know, from without.' He waved his
hand to indicate the astral world.
They
went out into the garden for tea. Mr
Barbecue-Smith was duly introduced.
'Mr
Stone is a writer too,' said Priscilla, as she introduced Denis.
'Indeed!' Mr Barbecue-Smith smiled benignly, and
looking up at Denis with an expression of Olympian condescension, 'And what
sort of things do you write?'
Denis
was furious, and, to make matters worse, he felt himself blushing hotly. Had Priscilla no sense of proportion? She was putting them in the same category -
Barbecue-Smith and himself. They were
both writers, they both used pen and ink.
To Mr Barbecue-Smith's question he answered, 'Oh, nothing much,
nothing,' and looked away.
'Mr
Stone is one of our younger poets.' It
was Anne's voice. He scowled at her, and
she smiled back exasperatingly.
'Excellent,
excellent,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith, and he squeezed Denis's arm
encouragingly. 'The Bard's is a noble
calling.'
As
soon as tea was over Mr Barbecue-Smith excused himself; he had to do some
writing before dinner. Priscilla quite
understood. The prophet retired to his
chamber.
Mr
Barbecue-Smith came down to the drawing-room at ten to eight. He was in a good humour, and, as he descended
the stairs, he smiled to himself and rubbed his large white hands
together. In the drawing-room someone
was playing softly and ramblingly on the piano.
He wondered who it could be. One of the young ladies, perhaps. But no, it was only Denis, who got up
hurriedly, and with some embarrassment, as he came into the room.
'Do
go on, do go on,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith.
'I am very fond of music.'
'Then
I couldn't possibly go on,' Denis replied.
'I only make noises.'
There
was a silence. Mr Barbecue-Smith stood
with his back to the hearth, warming himself at the memory of last winter's
fires. He could not control his interior
satisfaction, but still went on smiling to himself. At last he turned to Denis.
'You
write,' he asked, 'don't you?'
'Well,
yes - a little, you know.'
'How
many words do you find you can write in an hour?'
'I
don't think I've ever counted.'
'Oh,
you ought to, you ought to. It's most
important.'
Denis
exercised his memory. 'When I'm in good
form,' he said, 'I fancy I do a twelve-hundred word review in about four
hours. But sometimes it takes me much
longer.'
Mr
Barbecue-Smith nodded. 'Yes, three
hundred words an hour at your best.' He
walked out into the middle of the room, turned round on his heels, and
confronted Denis again. 'Guess how many
words I wrote this evening between five and half-past seven.'
'I
can't imagine.'
'No,
but you must guess. Between five and
half-past seven - that's two and a half hours.'
'Twelve
hundred words,' Denis hazarded.
'No,
no, no.' Mr Barbecue-Smith's
expanded face shone with gaiety. 'Try
again.'
'Fifteen hundred.'
'No.'
'I
give it up,' said Denis. He found he
couldn't summon up much interest in Mr Barbecue-Smith's writing.
'Well,
I'll tell you. Three
thousand eight hundred.'
Denis
opened his eyes. 'You must get a lot
done in a day,' he said.
Mr
Barbecue-Smith suddenly became extremely confidential. He pulled up a stool to the side of Denis's
armchair, sat down on it, and began to talk softly and rapidly.
'Listen
to me,' he said, laying his hand on Denis's sleeve. 'You want to make your living by writing;
you're young, you're inexperienced. Let
me give you a little sound advice.'
What
was the fellow going to do? Denis wondered: give him an introduction to the
editor of John o' London's Weekly, or to tell him where he could sell a
light middle for seven guineas? Mr
Barbecue-Smith patted his arm several times and went on.
'The
secret of writing,' he said, breathing it into the young man's ear - 'the
secret of writing is Inspiration.'
Denis
looked at him in astonishment.
'Inspiration
...' Mr Barbecue-Smith repeated.
'You
mean the native wood-note business?'
Mr
Barbecue-Smith nodded.
'Oh,
then I entirely agree with you,' said Denis.
'But what if one hasn't got Inspiration?'
'That
was precisely the question I was waiting for,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith. 'You ask me what one should do if one hasn't
got Inspiration. I answer: you have
Inspiration; everyone has Inspiration.
It's simply a question of getting it to function.'
The
clock struck eight. There was no sign of
any of the other guests; everybody was always late at Crome. Mr Barbecue-Smith went on.
'That's
my secret,' he said. 'I give it to you
freely.' (Denis made a suitably grateful
murmur and grimace.) 'I'll help you to
find your Inspiration, because I don't like to see a nice, steady young man
like you exhausting his vitality and wasting the best years of his life in a
grinding intellectual labour that could be completely obviated by Inspiration. I did it myself, so I know what it's
like. Up till the time I was
thirty-eight I was a writer like you - a writer without Inspiration. All I wrote I squeezed out of myself by sheer
hard work. Why, in those days I was
never able to do more than sixty-five words an hour, and what's more, I often
didn't sell what I wrote.' He
sighed. 'We artists,' he said
parenthetically, 'we intellectuals aren't much appreciated here in
'At
thirty-eight I was a poor, struggling, tired, overworked, unknown
journalist. Now, at fifty ...' He paused modestly and made a little gesture,
moving his fat hands outwards, away from one another, and expanding his fingers
as though in demonstration. He was
exhibiting himself. Denis thought of
that advertisement in Nestlé's milk - the two cats on the wall, under the moon,
one black and thin, the other white, sleek, and fat. Before Inspiration and
after.
'Inspiration
has made the difference,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith solemnly. 'It came quite suddenly - like a gentle dew from heaven.'
He lifted his hand and let it fall back on to his knee to indicate the
descent of the dew. 'It was one
evening. I was writing my first book
about the Conduct of Life - Humble Heroisms. You may have read it; it has been a comfort -
at least I hope and think so - a comfort to many
thousands. I was in the middle of the
second chapter, and I was stuck.
Fatigue, overwork - I had only written a hundred words in the last hour,
and I could get no further. I sat biting
the end of my pen and looking at the electric light, which hung above my table,
a little above and in front of me.' He
indicated the position of the lamp with elaborate care. 'Have you ever looked at a bright light
intently for a long time?' he asked, turning to Denis. Denis didn't think he had. 'You can hypnotize yourself that way,' Mr
Barbecue-Smith went on.
The
gong sounded in a terrific crescendo from the hall. Still no sign of the
others. Denis was horribly
hungry.
'That's
what happened to me,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith.
'I was hypnotized. I lost
consciousness like that.' He snapped his
fingers. 'When I came to, I found that
it was past
'What
a very extraordinary thing,' said Denis.
'I
was afraid of it at first. It didn't
seem to me natural. I didn't feel,
somehow, that it was quite right, quite fair, I might almost say, to produce a
literary composition unconsciously.
Besides, I was afraid I might have written nonsense.'
'And
had you written nonsense?' Denis asked.
'Certainly
not,' Mr Barbecue-Smith replied, with a trace of annoyance. 'Certainly not. It was admirable. Just a few spelling mistakes and slips, such
as there generally are in automatic writing.
But the style, the thought - all the essentials were admirable. After that, Inspiration came to me regularly. I wrote the whole of Humble Heroisms
like that. It was a great success, and
so has everything been that I have written since.' He leaned forward and jabbed at Denis with
his finger. 'That's my secret,' he said,
'and that's how you could write too, if you tried - without effort, fluently,
well.'
'But
how?' asked Denis, trying not to show how deeply he had been insulted by that
final 'well.'
'By cultivating your Inspiration, by getting into touch with your
Subconscious. Have you ever read
my little book, Pipelines to the Infinite?'
Denis
had to confess that that was, precisely, one of the few, perhaps the only one,
of Mr Barbecue-Smith's works he had not read.
'Never
mind, never mind,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith.
'It's just a little book about the Connection of the Subconscious with
the Infinite. Get into touch with the
Subconscious and you are in touch with the Universe. Inspiration, in fact. You follow me?'
'Perfectly,
perfectly,' said Denis. 'But don't you
find that the Universe sometimes sends you very irrelevant messages?'
'I
don't allow it to,' Mr Barbecue-Smith replied.
'I canalize it. I bring it down
through pipes to work the turbines of my conscious mind.'
'Like
'Precisely. Like
'It
all sounds wonderfully simple,' said Denis.
'It
is. All the great and splendid and
divine things of life are wonderfully simple.'
(Quotation marks again.) 'When I
have to do my aphorisms,' Mr Barbecue-Smith continued, 'I prelude my trance by
turning over the pages of any Dictionary of Quotations or Shakespeare Calendar
that comes to hand. That sets the key,
so to speak; that ensures that the Universe shall come flowing in, not in a
continuous rush, but in aphorismic drops.
You see the idea?'
Denis
nodded. Mr Barbecue-Smith put his hand
in his pocket and pulled out a notebook.
'I did a few in the train today,' he said, turning over the pages. 'Just dropped off into a
trance in a corner of my carriage.
I find the train very conducive to good work. Here they are.' He cleared his throat and read:
'The
'The
Things that Really Matter happen in the Heart.'
It was curious, Denis reflected, the way
the Infinite sometimes repeated itself.
'Seeing
is Believing.
Yes, but Believing is also Seeing. If I believe in God, I see God, even in the
things that seem to be evil.'
Mr Barbecue-Smith looked up from his
notebook. 'That last one,' he said, 'is
particularly subtle and beautiful, don't you think? Without Inspiration I could never had hit on
that.' He re-read the apophthegm with a
slower and more solemn utterance.
'Straight from the Infinite,' he commented reflectively, then addressed himself to the next aphorism.
'The
flame of a candle gives Light, but it also Burns.'
Puzzled wrinkles appeared on Mr
Barbecue-Smith's forehead. 'I don't
exactly know what that means,' he said.
'It's very gnomic. One could apply
it, of course, to the Higher Education - illuminating, but provoking the Lower
Classes to discontent and revolution.
Yes, I suppose that's what it is.
But it's gnomic, it's gnomic.' He
rubbed his chin thoughtfully. The gong
sounded again, clamorously, it seemed imploringly:
dinner was growing cold. It roused Mr
Barbecue-Smith from meditation. He
turned to Denis.
'You
understand me now when I advise you to cultivate your Inspiration. Let your Subconscious work for you; turn on
the
There
was the sound of feet on the stairs. Mr
Barbecue-Smith got up, laid his hand for an instant on Denis's shoulder, and
said:
'No
more now. Another
time. And remember, I rely
absolutely on your discretion in this matter.
There are intimate, sacred things that one doesn't wish to be generally
known.'
'Of
course,' said Denis. 'I quite
understand.'