CHAPTER
XVI
The ladies had left the room and the port
was circulating. Mr Scogan
filled his glass, passed on the decanter, and, leaning back in his chair,
looked about him for a moment in silence.
The conversation rippled idly round him, but he disregarded it; he was
smiling at some private joke. Gombauld noticed his smile.
'What's
amusing you?' he asked.
'I
was just looking at you all, sitting round this table,' said Mr Scogan.
'Are
we as comic as all that?'
'Not
at all,' Mr Scogan answered politely. 'I was merely amused by my own speculations.'
'And
what were they?'
'The idlest, the most academic of speculations. I was looking at you one by one and trying to
imagine which of the first Caesars you would each resemble, if you were given
the opportunity of behaving like a Caesar.
The Caesars are one of my touchstones,' Mr Scogan
explained. 'They are characters
functioning, so to speak, in the void.
They are human beings developed to their logical conclusions. Hence their unequalled
value as a touchstone, a standard.
When I meet someone for the first time, I ask myself this question:
Given the Caesarean environment, which of the Caesars would this person
resemble - Julius, Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, Nero? I take each trait of character, each mental
and emotional bias, each little oddity, and magnify them a thousand times. The resulting image gives me his Caesarean
formula.'
'And
which of the Caesars do you resemble?' asked Gombauld.
'I
am potentially all of them,' Mr Scogan replied, 'all
- with the possible exception of Claudius, who was much too stupid to be a
development of anything in my character.
The seeds of Julius's courage and compelling energy, of Augustus's
prudence, of the libidinousness and cruelty of Tiberius, of Caligula's folly,
of Nero's artistic genius and enormous vanity, are all within me. Given the opportunities, I might have been
something fabulous. But circumstances
were against me. I was born and brought
up in a country rectory; I passed my youth doing a great deal of utterly
senseless hard work for a very little money.
The result is that now, in middle age, I am the
poor thing that I am. But perhaps it is
as well. Perhaps, too, it's as well that
Denis hasn't been permitted to flower into a little Nero, and that Ivor remains only potentially a Caligula. Yes, it's better so, no doubt. But it would have been more amusing, as a
spectacle, if they had had the chance to develop, untrammelled, the full horror
of their potentialities. It would have
been pleasant and interesting to watch their tics and foibles and little vices
swelling and burgeoning and blossoming into enormous and fantastic flowers of
cruelty and pride and lewdness and avarice.
The Caesarean environment makes the Caesar, as the special food and the
queenly cell make the queen bee. We
differ from the bees insofar that, given the proper food, they can be sure of
making a queen every time. With us there
is no such certainty; out of every ten men placed in the Caesarean environment
one will be temperamentally good, or intelligent, or great. The rest will blossom into Caesars; he will
not. Seventy or eighty years ago
simple-minded people, reading the exploits of the Bourbons in
Mr
Scogan drank off what was left of his port and
refilled the glass.
'At
this very moment,' he went on, 'the most frightful horrors are taking place in
every corner of the world. People are
being crushed, slashed, disembowelled, mangled; their
dead bodies rot and their eyes decay with the rest. Screams of pain and fear go pulsing through
the air at the rate of eleven hundred feet per second. After travelling for three seconds they are
perfectly inaudible. These are
distressing facts;; but do we enjoy life any the less
because of them? Most certainly we do
not. We feel sympathy, no doubt; we
represent to ourselves imaginatively the sufferings of nations and individuals
and we deplore them. But, after all,
what are sympathy and imagination?
Precious little, unless the person for whom we feel sympathy happens to
be closely involved in our affections; and event hen they don't go very far. And a good thing too; for if one had an
imagination vivid enough and a sympathy sufficiently
sensitive really to comprehend and to feel the sufferings of other people, one
would never have a moment's peace of mind.
A really sympathetic race would not so much as know the meaning of
happiness. But luckily, as I've already
said, we aren't a sympathetic race. At
the beginning of the war I used to think I really suffered, through imagination
and sympathy, with those who physically suffered. But after a month or two I had to admit that,
honestly, I didn't. And yet I think I
have a more vivid imagination than most.
One is always alone in suffering; the fact is depressing when one
happens to be the sufferer, but it makes pleasure possible for the rest of the
world.'
'There
was a pause. Henry Wimbush
pushed back his chair.
'I
think perhaps we ought to go and join the ladies,' he said.
'So
do I,' said Ivor, jumping up
with alacrity. He turned to Mr Scogan.
'Fortunately,' he said, 'we can share our pleasures. We are not always condemned to be happy
alone.'