A
VISIT
TO HELL
Short
Prose
Copyright
©
1979–2012 John O'Loughlin
_______________
CONTENTS
1.
The
Aesthetica
2.
Hanley's
Concept
3.
A
Literary Trinity
4.
A
Visit to Hell
5.
The
Reckoning
6.
Occupational
Species.
7.
The
Christian Compromise
8.
An
Extraordinary Rumour
________________
THE
AESTHETICA
It
was
with mixed feelings that Francis Daly shook hands with
several of the members of the club to which Miss June Faye had
introduced
him. Although he was relieved to have
surmounted the initial hurdle of arriving at the club, he was less than
certain
that his arrival had really been appreciated, since it appeared to
coincide
with the hasty departure of someone else.
Yet even if the angry-looking man who had pushed his way through
the
crowded room towards the exit at the very moment when the young writer
first
entered it was
the real source of embarrassment on the faces of those for whom
Francis' arrival necessitated a formal handshake, one could hardly feel
proud
of oneself for having arrived at such a seemingly inopportune moment! The embarrassment was there for all to see,
particularly the newcomer, who did his best not to appear offended.
"Well!" sighed
Miss Faye as soon as the formal handshakes had been courteously
dispatched and
his hand could return to its customary position of solitary confinement
within
his trouser pocket, "I do hope you'll get to like it here."
This statement struck
Francis as slightly out-of-context with what he had just experienced
but,
gentleman that he was, he lost no time in
assuring his
benevolent hostess that he would. More,
he stretched his politeness to the well-nigh absurd extent of informing
her how
honoured he felt to have been elected a member of such a prestigious
club. Was there a more exclusive
establishment in
However, Miss Faye, ever
the presiding genius of the place, was not one to allow matters to
stagnate
and, before the young writer could say anything further by way of
assuring her
how honoured he felt to be there, she had taken him in tow, as it were,
and was
showing him around the premises, taking especial care to point out the
paintings and/or enlarged photographs of the various aesthetes whom the
club
had chosen to honour.... Not that one could have overlooked them! For there wasn't a wall in the room, nor in
any of the other main rooms of the club, which hadn't been taken over
by
portraits of famous aesthetes of one persuasion or another! But as much for form's sake as anything else,
Miss Faye had no intention of being deprived of her duty in acquainting
new
members with the exhibits on display, as she proceeded to lead the way
past the
serried ranks of time-honoured men.
"A most revealing
photograph of Baudelaire, don't you think?" she opined, suddenly
halting
in front of one of the leading 'saints' of her 'church'.
"Indeed,"
Francis concurred, realizing that he couldn't very well demur or
express a
contrary view while the author of Les
Fleurs
du Mal leered down at
them from
piercing eyes, his gaze almost withering in its ferocious intensity. And his mouth was clamped so tightly shut by
the overbearing jaws that one might have supposed him incapable of ever
opening
it. Not that he ever did, when
considered merely as a photograph!
"You won't be
surprised that he should have this man as neighbour," Miss Faye
remarked,
pointing to another of her literary 'saints', this time a well-known
photograph
of Oscar Wilde in his prime. "He's
one of our bona fide aesthetes," she added, staring up admiringly at
the
well-dressed figure with a large carnation in his lapel, "the majority
of
our cultural forebears being fringe aesthetes."
"Fringe?"
Francis queried, not quite understanding her.
"Yes, writers of
quality who were never specifically part of an aesthetic movement," she
informed him. "Like Stendhal and
Flaubert, for instance."
The young writer smiled
his acknowledgement of her statement. No
doubt, it explained why there were also paintings or photographs of men
like
Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, and Coleridge on display.
There was something intrinsically aesthetic
about the writings of any genuine homme
de lettres, and even philosophers of a
certain stamp
weren't excluded from contributing their share to that ineffable something.
"The most important
qualification for membership of our club, whether the members be dead
or alive,
is a predilection for certain authors, artists, or musicians who might
broadly
be described as kindred spirits," Miss Faye declared, ignoring the
sneeze
that had erupted from the quivering nostrils of her latest protégé, and
indicating, by a broad sweep of her arm, the contents of an adjacent
wall. It contained large photographs of Aldous Huxley, Hermann Hesse,
Drieu
A little old man, who was
evidently a kindred spirit, glanced up from the crumpled newspaper on
his lap
and smiled across at Miss Faye through gold-plated teeth.
There was something distinctly Wordsworthian
about his polished skull, though his face was
uniquely his own.
Allow me to introduce
our new member," she said, responding to the elderly gentleman's
recognition. "Mr Francis Daly, Dr
Henry Faye, my father."
"Delighted to meet
you," the latter croaked, thrusting out a withered hand for Francis to
shake. "Let me congratulate you for
having passed our entrance examination with such distinction. It was an extraordinary result for a person
of such youth."
Francis blushed faintly,
as he withdrew his hand from the arthritic clutches of his latest
acquaintance. Such praise, legitimate or
not, made him feel distinctly uncomfortable.
"My father is
chiefly responsible for setting the questions," Miss Faye revealed,
blushing in turn, "as well as for marking the answers.
His are the real brains behind 'The Aesthetica'."
The old man chuckled drily. "Not
that my daughter is entirely bereft of them," he remarked, casting her a fondly paternal glance.
"Although she can be
swayed by sentiment from time to time.
It's not for nothing that her favourite Flaubert novel happens
to be L'Éducation
Sentimentale."
"Oh father, don't
be such a bore!" Miss Faye protested, dragging Francis by the sleeve in
the general direction of a large glass case which broke the monotony of
the
bookshelves lining the nearest wall. "This
is where we house the first editions of various significant works," she
informed him in a reverential tone.
'A veritable
tabernacle', Francis mused, as he stood before the glass case and
perceived a
number of worn volumes which time had evidently endowed with additional
significance. Amongst them were The
Unquiet
Grave by Palinurus
(alias Cyril
Connolly) and The Meaning of Culture by John
Cowper
Powys. A few of the twenty or so books
on display he had never even heard of, much less read.
"I expect you're
familiar with most of the titles," Miss Faye commented, briefly
scanning
the title pages of those volumes approximately on a level with her eyes.
"Indeed I am!"
came the confident response from the noviciate of first editions, his
face
momentarily indicative of pride.
"Over there we
house the rest of the first editions in our possession," his hostess
declared, pointing to a glass case of identical construction and size
to the
one in front of which they were still reverentially standing. It was evident that the aesthetic creed
required a fair number of testaments.
"Most
impressive!" Francis averred by way of a verbal response to the
case in question, which appeared to be more copiously stocked, if
anything,
than the nearer one.
"I'm glad you think
so," Miss Faye commented with a graceful smile and, catching hold of
his
sleeve again, she dragged him past the nearby first editions in the
direction
of a tall, thin man of moderately handsome appearance, who happened to
be
thumbing through a book in front of the right-hand rows of bookshelves
that
lined the wall. "Allow me to
introduce you to one of our most brilliant Aldous
Huxley scholars," she went on at once.
At their approach, the
Huxley scholar looked-up from his literary preoccupations and was duly
introduced as Martin Foley.
"So you're the
author of 'Trysting Violets'," he remarked, extending a trembling hand
in
Francis' direction.
"I'm afraid
so," the latter admitted, smiling wryly.
He so hated to be reminded of the fact!
"How
interesting!" Foley exclaimed.
There then ensued a verbal pause while they completed their
handshake
and peered into each other's faces.
"Curious, but I had no idea what you looked like actually. Not at all what I'd
imagined."
"Really?"
Francis responded, feeling slightly puzzled. "I trust my face doesn't make too
unfavourable an impression on you."
"Unfavourable?
Good God, no!
It's just that I had imagined someone older and more
academic-looking," Foley confessed.
"Oh, I see!
Well, it just goes to show that you can't
always tell what an author looks like from his books," Francis declared.
"Indeed not,"
Foley agreed, nodding sagaciously. "Although you might learn a thing or two about his books
from
his face! Take my word for
it. As soon as you discover that a
particular author has an ugly face, avoid his books!
They're bound to be just as ugly."
Francis felt vaguely
amused. "D'you
really think so?" he asked.
"Yes, in a majority
of cases," Foley replied.
"Ugliness begets ugliness, beauty begets beauty."
And he proceeded to lecture both Francis and
Miss Faye on the criteria of the Beautiful and one's duty to uphold the
cause
of beauty in a world increasingly beset by the ugliness of industrial
and urban
pollution. "'A thing of beauty is a
joy forever'," he concluded, recalling the poetry of Keats.
Francis wasn't
absolutely sure about that, but he allowed Foley the benefit of a
couple of
politely affirmative grunts, all the same.
It wouldn't do to complicate matters on one's first visit to the
club. Even if the world at large was
more in
tune with ugliness these days, and would have preferred to hear that a
thing of
ugliness was a woe forever, the fact nevertheless remained that 'The Aesthetica' was a law unto itself, an oasis of
beauty in a
desert of ugliness, against which it was unwise to rebel.
Meanwhile Miss Faye must
have remembered her duty to 'The Aesthetica's'
latest
member,
for she took hold of his sleeve again and began to drag him
along past
the rows of books that presented their glossy spines to one's admiring
gaze and
vaguely suggested an army regiment which one was obliged to review in
passing. "Such a pleasant
chap," she remarked, as soon as Foley was safely out of earshot and
reduced to his former preoccupations again.
"But dreadfully sententious!"
They had crossed the
threshold of the third and ultimate room of the club, a room twice as
large as
the library and containing twice as many people as the other two rooms
put
together. At the far end of it was a
platform upon which a red-bearded man of medium height and fiery eyes
was
standing at a table and speaking to an assembly of people in the seven
or eight
rows of chairs in front of him. At first
Francis couldn't understand a word of what was being said.
For the man's accent was so unequivocally
Scottish and his vocal inflexions so uniquely his own, that one became
distracted from the meaning of his words by their mode of presentation,
at once
beguiling and eccentric!
"This is our
lecture room," Miss Faye hastened to inform him in a respectfully
subdued
tone-of-voice. "We hold lectures
here every week, each member of the club being expected to deliver one
in due
course."
"Oh, really?"
gulped Francis, suddenly experiencing a distinct qualm at the prospect
of his
subsequently having to deliver one, too.
"All good fun, I
can assure you!" Miss Faye opined in response to the slight agitation
now
discernible on her young protégé's face.
"And usually most educative!" At which point she led the way towards the
back row of upright padded chairs serving the audience, and invited him
to take
a seat. Above their heads the deep voice
of the Scots lecturer continued to weave exotic patterns of sound in
the air,
though by now it had just about become possible for Francis to discern
the
drift of their import.
"... the
regeneration of
Francis cast a shyly
suspicious glance at Miss Faye, who seemed uncritically engrossed in
the
lecture which this member of the aesthetic cult was severely delivering. To be sure, a lecture on sex wasn't exactly
what he had expected to hear when first entering the room, and he was
almost
embarrassed by it or, more specifically, by the use of certain words
which the
lecturer had selected. But there was a
ring of truth about it all the same, a ring which sufficed to make him
prick up
his ears again and continue listening.
"... thus we can
differentiate between true sex and false sex, the sex that revitalizes
and the
sex that devitalizes, the former transmitting a positive current and
the latter
a negative one. Unfortunately it's the
false sex that dominates our age, and it's from this, ladies and
gentlemen,
that a majority of us are now suffering.
Too many relationships arise which should never have come about
in the
first place, too many men and women are locked together without feeling
any
genuine love or respect for each other, without that sine
qua
non of true sex. The
spirit of Tropic of Cancer prevails over that of Lady
Chatterley's
Lover, in consequence of which the world becomes an ever more
hellish place
in which to live. Instead of climaxing
simultaneously, couples climax either separately or not at all. And even those who are right for each other,
the couples whose simultaneous climax is likely to revitalize rather
than
devitalize them, even they, ladies and gentlemen, are all too apt, in a
majority of cases, to smother the beneficial effects of such a
harmonious
climax by the debilitating use of condoms and other life-denying
contraceptives!"
A number of gasps and
sighs suddenly erupted from the throats of various members of the
assembled
throng. One man shouted
"Reactionary rubbish!", and immediately stamped out of the room. Another drew everyone's attention to the fact
that AIDS had made the use of certain contraceptives, particularly
condoms,
virtually de
rigueur. But the
lecturer was apparently unmoved, for he quickly resumed: "I tell you,
ladies and gentlemen, the use of sheath-like contraceptives can be
equated with
coital masturbation. For the 'orgone' feedback - to use a Reichian
expression - which results from a simultaneous climax and provides the
revitalizing warmth, or energy, is prevented from taking place by the
sheath
and accordingly negated."
Renewed gasps and sighs
erupted from the assembly, this time more unrestrainedly than before. However, the lecturer was far from impressed,
but continued: "And, unfortunately, the pill isn't quite the wonder
drug
it was once cracked-up to be, since, by upsetting the natural hormone
balance,
it can cause severe depression and radically affect menstruation."
"Here, here!"
a young dark-haired female shouted from the second row.
"In short, ladies
and gentlemen, it should be obvious that nature is a sovereign power
that won't
tolerate being dictated to by a meddlesome humanity.
But modern science, that brainchild of the
Industrial Revolution, is generally loathe
to admit
this fact. There are branches of modern
science which presuppose an ultimate victory over nature, being
considered a
means of tricking it out of its traditional hegemony and sovereignty. But whenever one tampers with nature, one
pays the price for doing so. Who knows,
ladies and gentlemen, but that price could well be the ultimate nemesis
of our
civilization one of these days, the just retribution of the gods? For the more one tampers with nature, the
closer draws that nemesis which is its inevitable consequence!"
Here he paused to let
his words sink into the stunned minds in front of him, paused to survey
his
audience with a stern and almost contemptuous expression.
Droplets of sweat glistened on his domed brow
and his face was flushed with righteous indignation, like some Old
Testament
prophet or early Protestant.
"But I have no wish
to go into details of the scientific perversions to which our decadent
civilization is subject these days," he confessed, briefly consulting
his
notes, "for they are legion and scarcely to be corrected by mere words. Of course, we can criticize the various
attempts man makes to gain an ultimate victory over nature, since the
consequences are generally disastrous.
But we cannot prevent him from pursuing his folly merely through
recourse to reason. We must seek to
understand why he has become a victim of this folly in the first place,
a
policy which may or may not lead to the formulation of a practical
solution to
his dilemma. Unfortunately, the only
practical solution of which I can conceive as a means to overcoming his
current
plight isn't one that's likely to win widespread approval or support. For his current plight is essentially a
consequence of the Industrial Revolution and the subsequent development
of
heavy industry, inevitably giving rise to the modern metropolis and the
extensive urbanization which characterizes our time.
In short, a majority of us are so cut-off
from nature in our giant cities that we're obliged to act the
unenviable part
of madmen, which people deprived of regular contact with nature's
vitalizing
influence sooner or later invariably become.
Hence the scientific audacities of our time, the preposterous
attempts
to overcome nature which are less a hatred
of it than
a consequence of being so cut-off from it!"
Again gasps and sighs
erupted from the throats, now somewhat hoarse, of various members of
the
audience, some of whom now accused him of being superstitious and
ultra-conservative, whilst others simply yelled four-letter expletives
at the
platform. Even Francis felt a familiar
malaise enter him at this point. For he
knew, well enough, how detrimental prolonged confinement in any large
city
could be to the spiritual life, and how one was invariably transformed
into a
kind of robotic machine only fit, seemingly, for the mechanical
routines which
an industrial and technological society required.
Unperturbed by the
uproar, however, the bearded Scotsman went on: "And the fact that so
many
of the human kind are now isolated from the soul-enhancing life of
nature
inevitably means that their sex lives, to return to our principal
theme, are
more likely to be of the false variety than of the true.
Yes, the fact is that the regeneration of
Gasps and sighs erupted
from more throats than on any previous occasion. One
man
leapt to his feet and shouted
"Reactionary bastard!" at the lecturer. Another,
unable
to take apocalyptic rhetoric
in such strong doses, hurried from the room, as though from the
proximity of a
deadly virus. At his side, Francis
noticed that a vague smile had taken possession of Miss Faye's lips, as
she
apparently stared at the heads of a few of those seated in the front
rows. He wondered what her thoughts could
be at
this moment?
"Yes, ladies and
gentlemen, you find what I have to say somewhat disagreeable," the
fiery-eyed man on the platform pressed on, seemingly unperturbed by the
dissent
which his argument had now engendered, "and for that I cannot blame
you. But disagreeable or not, the facts
of contemporary life are there before you, as are the facts of Eternal
Life,
the life governed by nature. Now the
latter are somewhat stronger than the former and won't tolerate being
abused
for ever! The longer we persist in our
folly, the worse things will become.
Eventually we shall have no option but to commit mass suicide. For unless we get back to nature - not,
assuredly, in a strictly Rousseauesque
sense, but
simply in terms of living closer to it - there'll be no alternative. And as matters stand at present, there is
no way back to nature, not, at any rate, for those of us who are
obliged to live
and work in the giant modern cities. We
cannot pull down thousands of buildings and exterminate millions of
people with
the intention of reducing all modern cities to a maximum population of
between
two- and three-hundred thousand, thus making regular contact with
nature more
than a vague possibility. We cannot do
this, for the simple reason that it would be impossible, impossible to
discard
the world-wide network of business associations and reduce
"Of course, we can
continue to use contraceptives, to worship the god of sterility, and do
away
with our 'accidents' with the aid of abortion.
But we shouldn't thereby consider ourselves especially
fortunate, the
beneficiaries of genuinely progressive developments!
On the contrary, our so-called progressive
developments are usually regressive, detrimental makeshifts expedient
to a
crippled humanity, which have been forced upon us by the exigencies of
the
context. If we've been fooled by liberal
propaganda into thinking the contrary, so much the worse!
Our delusions won't prevent us from remaining
or becoming their victims. Admittedly,
the economic climate of industrial
There was a titter of
laughter from a middle-aged lady in the second row, who evidently had
the
courage to be flippant about the devitalizing influence of modern
industrial
civilization, whilst a few yards to her right a "Here, here!" broke
loose from the young woman who had earlier responded, in an identical
fashion,
to the lecturer's opinion on the pill.
Meanwhile this latter
worthy, having cleared his throat with guttural relish, swallowed some
water
and briefly scanned the faces of his audience, as though to gather
fresh strength
from their receptivity, now proceeded with renewed voice: "I hope
there'll
come a time when men and women will profit from one another more than
they do
at present, when the true sex of Reich and Lawrence will replace the
false sex
of the typical city perverts of the age, and humanity will blossom anew
in the
grace of the living God. That there are
people
scattered around the world who would seem to be fortunate enough to
share in
the miracle of creation these days, I don't doubt.
For a majority of people, however, the
sterile influence of the big city will have to be endured until such
time as
fate dictates otherwise.... Not being a worldly confidence-trickster, I
have no
desire to put false hopes into you. I
cannot offer you any immediate or short-term solution to your problem,
for the
simple reason that, short of the ultimate nemesis we previously touched
upon,
there just isn't one. All I can hope to
do is disillusion you with the confidence tricksters, and thus make you
more
aware of the extent of your plight. In
that respect, I believe I have temporarily succeeded."
With a parting bow,
dispatched with perfunctory contempt for the small audience which, with
few
exceptions, had responded to his severe diagnosis of contemporary
social ills
with such sarcastic derision, he abandoned the table and quickly
disappeared
through a door to the left of the platform.
A general outburst of derisory noise duly erupted from the
assembled
aesthetes, following his departure.
"Well, what did you
think of all that?" Miss Faye inquired of the young man seated beside
her.
Francis blushed faintly
and half-shrugged his narrow shoulders.
"I'm not absolutely sure," he replied, in the teeth of a
temptation to say it was a load of scare-mongering cowpiss,
"though
I
suppose there's some truth in what he says."
"Quite so,"
Miss Faye agreed, nodding. "As one
of our foremost aesthetes, he knows what he's talking about alright!
"Really?"
Francis exclaimed with surprise.
"But surely such a man wouldn't take so great an interest in sex
and nature and all the rest of it?"
"On the
contrary," Miss Faye responded, "most of our senior members have
little else
to take an interest in these days, considering that they're well
past the age when beauty, as you or I may understand it, held any real
charm
for them. They invariably become
puffed-up pessimists with an apocalyptic axe to grind."
And, getting up from her seat with a sigh of
despair, she slowly led the way back towards the library, where her
father was
still reading that day's paper in Olympian oblivion, seemingly, of the
throng
of senior and junior aesthetes who filed by on their way to or from
each of the
other rooms.
HANLEY'S
CONCEPT
It
was
with some surprise that I responded to Pat Hanley's
confession that he had formulated a new concept of God.
"You have?" I exclaimed, my memory
not recalling any old or previous concept of the Divine which Hanley
may have
formulated. All I could remember was
that at one time, when we were at school together, he had confessed to
atheism.
"Yes, Daniel, and a
very simple and rational concept it is, too," he boastfully admitted,
wiping some tea from the corner of his mouth with a paper napkin. "You see, God, as I conceive of Him, is
both body and spirit, like you or me."
"Really?"
I impulsively responded, even though I wasn't particularly enthusiastic
at the
prospect of learning about Hanley's new theological concept in a tea
shop! In fact, I wasn't particularly
enthusiastic
at the prospect of hearing about it at all, ex-priest or not.
"For too long man
has been willing to conceive of God in terms of either body or spirit,"
Hanley averred, his large blue eyes suddenly lighting-up with the
enthusiasm he
was evidently feeling at the opportunity of revealing his latest
spiritual or,
rather, religious profundities to someone like me, who might be
supposed to
appreciate them, even though I no longer dressed like a priest or even
felt
like one, having exchanged the proverbial 'dog collar' for a tee-shirt
quote
some time ago. "There have been
pantheists who were only too willing to equate God with nature, and
spiritualists
who were only too willing to equate Him with the Holy Spirit, or some
such
mystical abstraction like the Clear Light of the Void.
But such equations are apt,
it seems to me, to be lopsided, giving undue emphasis to one or another
of
God's manifestations whilst ignoring His entirety, as it were."
"I see," I
mumbled while chewing, with bashful self-consciousness, a piece of the
most
delicious fruit cake it had ever been given me to experience. "And so your concept of God has the
unique merit of not being lopsided?" I managed to add, in the teeth of
Hanley's impatience to continue.
"Indeed it
has," he affirmed with a look of such self-satisfaction on his ruddy
face
... that one might be forgiven for having supposed he had just won
first prize
in a lottery. "For I could no more
accept the notion that God was either a body or a spirit than that we
were
either the one or the other. It just
doesn't make sense."
"Perhaps not,"
I graciously conceded, before washing down the cake in my mouth with a
drop of
mild tea. But I was still waiting to
hear his revelation, or so I imagined.
"What does make
sense, however, is that the spirit of God should be identified with the
sun,
and His body with nature," Hanley averred, beaming across the table at
me
with eyes that were positively burning with enthusiasm.
Was this
the
revelation, I wondered?
"But surely,"
I objected, putting down my teacup with an unexpected suddenness, which
caused
Hanley to jump in his chair, "surely this identification of God with
the sun
and nature is really one and the same, and amounts to no more than the
usual
crass paganistic pantheism?"
His visual enthusiasm
was by no means weakened by my critical response. Quite
the
contrary, it appeared to grow
stronger, as though its possessor had anticipated such criticism and
was only
too glad for an opportunity of belittling it, the crafty devil! "Of course, people have included the sun
in nature and pantheistically conceived of
that
totality in terms of God," he impatiently admitted, "but they haven't
bothered to distinguish between God's body and spirit, like me. Thus while they may have included the sun in
their concept of Him, they haven't specifically equated it with His
spirit."
"Are you quite sure
of that?" I asked doubtfully.
"Sure?" he
echoed incredulously.
I could clearly see, to
my bottomless disgust, that he was perfectly sure of it!
Nevertheless, still desiring to weaken his
enthusiasm, I ventured to suggest that some other people or peoples
just might
have come to a similar conclusion without his knowing about it. After all, was it likely that Patrick Hanley,
one-time correspondent for 'Scientific Briton' and current editor of
'Industrial Technology', another tediously factual periodical, had the
privilege of being the first man in the entire history of the human
race to
know exactly what
the true nature of God was?
Hadn't Pascal pointed out the impossibility of one's having
absolute
knowledge of Him? And even if Pascal had
been mistaken, which was by no means inconceivable, wasn't this
relative
concept of God likely to have entered into other people's minds, from
time to
time, during the long and painful history of established religion? Yes, it appeared that I had found a tiny chink
in Hanley's theological armour. For the glare of his enthusiasm quickly faded from his
eyes, and
they became momentarily less bright.
"Naturally, Daniel,
it could well be that a few people or peoples have come to a similar
conclusion
about the nature of God without my knowing about it," he ruefully
conceded, his voice betraying a slight impatience with the gist of my
argument. "But, although I can't
lay claim to a complete knowledge of the world's religious beliefs, I
haven't
succeeded in reading of such a conclusion to-date."
"Not even concerning
the traditional beliefs of certain Indian tribes in
"No, and not
concerning the traditional beliefs of the Aztecs either," he rejoined
with
renewed zest. "The fact that
primitive peoples have equated God with the sun is, of course, well
known. And even in
"And, presumably,
you disapprove of both concepts?" I surmised.
"I most certainly
do," he affirmed, the beam of his visual enthusiasm having reasserted
itself on its previously intense level.
Feeling a shade
discouraged, I hastened to compensate myself by sampling another piece
of fruit
cake. Despite my discouragement,
however, the cake tasted as delicious as ever, enabling me to beam back
at
Hanley my appreciation of its quality. Alas,
my
beam
was still the weaker!
"As I explained to
you just now," he rejoined, ignoring my baser enthusiasm, "I cannot
abide the concept of a lopsided God. For
the idea that His spirit should be considered His entirety seems to me
as
preposterous as the idea of considering His body such."
"But what makes you
so confident that the sun can
be equated
with His spirit?" I gently objected.
"Surely there is just as good a reason for equating it with His
body or, for that matter, with both His body and His spirit?" Curiously I felt quite proud of myself for
launching such a theological bombardment so shortly after my last
humiliation. How would he defend himself
against that,
I
wondered?
"No, absolutely
not!" he replied, much to my disappointment. "For
the
driving-force behind anything
can only
be equated with its spirit, or will, not with its body.
The sun, you see, is a producer of
energy. It produces energy through the
conversion of hydrogen into helium, and this energy suffices to drive
the
planets on their paths around it and to engender the life of nature."
"Isn't that rather
Newtonian?" I objected, recalling to mind
Einstein's concept of curved space to the detriment of
"Yes, as far as the
driving of the planets is concerned," he conceded with a wry smile. "But I have great faith in
It was a question that
no-one had put to me before, and one I hardly felt competent to answer,
even
without an awareness of its probably rhetorical nature.
Nevertheless it did seem unlikely that the
planets of the Solar System would continue to behave in exactly the
same
fashion if deprived of the sun, and, slightly shamefacedly, I confessed
as much
to Hanley, seeing that the Solar System presupposed a solar component.
"Where the planets
would go without the restraining influence of the sun is anybody's
guess,"
he ironically remarked, much to my annoyance.
"Though it seems probable that, if they
didn't
disintegrate, some other star or stars would claim them in due course! However, speculation aside, the fact of the
sun's influence cannot reasonably be denied.
Neither, it seems to me, can the fact of other stars' influences
in the
Galaxy which, because of their cosmic proximity to our own, would seem
to exert
what one might term a competitive attraction on the planets, and
thereby
prevent them from being sucked-in to the sun."
"You mean the
nearest foreign stars also play a part in determining the nature of
planetary
orbit around the sun?" I suggested, fairly bewildered by the
implications
of this notion, which transcended anything I had ever studied on the
matter.
"I find it difficult
not to assume so," Hanley soberly declared, "seeing that the Galaxy
is a unit in which there's evidently a subtle balance of mutually
attractive
and repellent forces at work, a delicate symbiosis, as it were, where
each
component has a specific role to play in maintaining the overall
equilibrium or
integrity of it, and where the absence of various stars and/or planets
would
surely result in a predictably different arrangement of its components."
"All this takes us
a long way from your latest concept of God," I reminded him, helping
myself to another piece of fruit cake and staring across the table at
Hanley
with what I supposed would look like an ironic expression on my face.
"Not that
far," he corrected me, beaming brightly.
"For science and religion are but two sides of the same coin, a
coin centred on man's need to comprehend the nature of total reality,
the only
difference being that on the heads side, as it were, one looks at such
reality
literally, whereas on the tails side one looks at it figuratively or
symbolically. It's easy to turn a coin
from one side to the other, you know, and this one is no exception."
As usual I had to
concede that Hanley had a point. The
possibility of oscillating between the literal and the figurative
interpretations
of reality couldn't very well be denied.
For the one presupposed the other, the one to a certain extent
even
depended on the other, and it could be argued that both were equally
necessary
to the overall integrity of the human spirit.
However, it was on the nature of God, or the figurative side of
this
metaphorical coin of man's need to comprehend total reality, that Hanley had set out to lecture me, and it was
accordingly this that I now expected to hear about.
Thus I admitted, while chewing yet another
piece of delicious fruit cake, that the
spirit was a
driving force, an energizer upon which the body depended for its
motivations.
"Now what applies
to the human body applies just as much to God's body," Hanley smilingly
affirmed, "a body which manifests itself in the vast panorama of
nature,
and which depends upon His spirit, the sun - if I may reverse our coin
again -
to animate it. That human beings,
animals, fish, birds, etc., are also a part of His body, or nature,
should be
sufficiently apparent, since without the light and energy being
transmitted to
them by His spirit, they would be unable to live. Like
the
lower components of God's body, viz.
plants and vegetables, the higher ones, or autonomous life-forms,
develop
through successive stages of their being - through youth, maturity, and
old age
- to die when their spirits return to that greater spirit which is the
spirit
of God, and upon which their individual spirits depend.
Yet autonomous life-forms aren't merely or
simply manifestations of God's body, like their companions in the plant
and
vegetable worlds, but, possessing separate spirits, are also a part of His
spirit, and therefore stand closer in essence to the entirety of God
than
either of His two chief manifestations taken or considered separately. It's first and foremost for man, and then the
other creatures in life, that both the spirit of
God, as
manifested in the sun, and His body, as manifested in nature,
primarily
exist. Consequently it's God who serves
man as a rule, not vice versa! Prayers,
you may recall, are always fundamentally of two kinds: either the petitionary or the thanksgiving.
In the first case, we ask God to help us, to
forgive us, to protect us, to stand by us, etc., whereas, in the second
case,
we thank Him for what he has done for us, we acknowledge His goodness
in
answering our petitionary prayers, or
we're just
grateful that things are running relatively smoothly.
In both cases it will be observed that we are
addressing a servant, an immensely powerful servant in whose keeping
we're
fated to pass our days, but a servant nonetheless!
Only a small minority of people also serve
God, and they're the priests and religious philosophers, the
missionaries and
evangelists, the monks and nuns, who, besides being served by Him,
specifically
dedicate their lives to keeping the idea of God, the cause of a
figurative
interpretation of reality, alive in the world, so that a personal
relationship
may be presumed upon in the interests of one's spiritual and physical
well-being."
"Wouldn't such a
cause still remain alive if they weren't there?" I asked, feeling it
was
about time I said something again.
"Of course it
would," he replied, "since the mind requires both the literal and
the
figurative approaches to reality. But, I
ask you, Daniel, how could the professional servants of God not
be there?
They're a consequence of human reality, not something
arbitrarily
imposed upon it."
I realized the absurdity
of my question and admitted as much to him.
Clearly, Hanley's theological edifice, though crassly primitive,
wasn't
as shaky as I had first imagined.
Nevertheless, the idea that God served man still seemed a little
strange
to me, what with my background of clerical service.
But before I could comment on that, he had
proceeded to the next part of his revelation.
"As a rule, the
works of man serve and glorify man, not God," he maintained, his eyes
burning with that intense fiery look again, "because the body and the
spirit of God depend upon man's consciousness and are brought together,
as it
were, in man, made doubly manifest in man, who was, after all, the
inventor of
God. You cannot therefore expect God, in
the forms I've ascribed to Him, to show direct appreciation of, say,
Milton's Paradise
Lost or Beethoven's Ninth Symphony or John Martin's Belchazzar's Feast ... for the simple reason
that,
literally conceived in terms of the sun and nature, He isn't in a
position to
appreciate them. You can address a
reading to the sun if you so desire, but it's highly unlikely that it
will
listen, having neither a pair of ears nor a command of the English
language!"
"Now you're turning
the coin over again, turning it backwards and forwards, as though
unappreciative of the advantages of the figurative interpretation of
cosmic
reality," I reminded him.
"Yes, I fully
appreciate that fact," he guiltily conceded. "Though,
being
a man of both religion and
science,
you can hardly blame me! However,
there's an important lesson to be learnt from this coin, Daniel, a
lesson,
alas, which too many pantheists have failed to register over the
centuries, and
it is this: that, contrary to popular belief, God isn't nature, and not
because
He's also the sun but ..." Hanley hesitated a moment, as though
desiring
me to continue for him, a thing, however, I had no intention of doing
"...
because God and nature are two mutually exclusive contexts, the
figurative and
the literal, and one cannot look at both sides of a coin at once!"
I smiled my appreciation
of his logic across the tea table at him, an appreciation tempered by
the
realization that, for men of our dualistic stamp, it was only too easy
to
confound the two contexts, even though I was an ex-priest and he a one-time scientist.
"God is God," I hastened to assure him, "a being we've
invented in order to have someone to whom we can pray, and whose real
place is
in the mind rather than in the cosmos, where, by contrast, there are
only stars
and planets and things."
"Yes, or bearing in
mind my concept of Him, one might say that God is both the Holy Spirit and
the
Multiplicity of Organic Matter, or something of the kind," Hanley
opined.
In spite of the inherent
contradiction in his logic, I marvelled at the thought of it. How was it possible that I had never conceived
of the Holy Spirit in terms of a mystical abstraction from the sun
before? And even more extraordinarily, how
was it
possible that Daniel Forde had never
bothered to
ascribe God a separate body, but had been content merely to equate Him
with nature? I poured myself, Hanley
declining, another
cup of tea and helped myself to a digestive biscuit.
Eat digestive biscuits too quickly and you'll
get indigestion, my mother used to tell me.
I couldn't prevent myself from remembering it now.
But no sooner had I given way to and
dispatched the trivial ... than the profound returned to my mind in the
form of
a perplexity concerning Hanley's concept of the body of God, what he
had
bafflingly termed the 'Multiplicity of Organic Matter'.
Taken to include the whole of nature, plants
and vegetables alike, it undoubtedly made some sense.
But surely, if one was consistent, one would
have no option but to include the inorganic as well, to include the
planet as a
whole, its mineralogical formations: in short, everything that was
distinct
from the sun. And not only that, one
would have to include the rest of the planets in the Solar System as
well, the
planets and their moons! The body
of God, then, could hardly be defined by or described as the
'Multiplicity of Organic
Matter', and I hastened to inform Hanley accordingly.
But, contrary to my expectations, the old
devil's eyes grew brighter, much as though I had merely confirmed him
in his
own opinion.
"Quite so," he
admitted, leaning his elbows on the table and crossing his fingers with
the air
of a man who was about to reveal something terribly important. "There's no reason why we should limit
our concept of God's body to nature, as we generally conceive of it in
the
world about us. The seas, rocks, bowels
of the earth, together with the entire constituents of the other
planets in the
Solar System, have just as much right to be included in this context. Viewed impartially, there's no reason why
each planet, with its unique atmosphere, constitution, size, etc.,
together
with any attendant moon or moons, shouldn't constitute a part of God's
overall
body. That there are parts of this body
which, as in the case of the Earth, are intrinsically superior to other
parts
of it ... is nothing extraordinary. For
are there not parts of our body, like the brain, which are
intrinsically
superior to other parts of it and which we accordingly regard with more
esteem? And yet, in recognizing this, we
don't attempt to do away with the less noble or beautiful parts, the
stomach,
bowels, bladder, etc., because we realize they play an important role
in
maintaining the body's overall perfection; that by aiding digestion or
disposing of waste-matter they enable us to continue gratifying
ourselves in
the modes of life we most esteem, be they intellectual, emotional,
athletic,
creative, or whatever. Unless we're
somewhat perverse in this matter, as was Dean Swift with regard to the
bowels
and their function, we accept the lesser parts of the body in the
interests of
the nobler parts because it suits us to do so.
We recognize the underlying logic behind the body's natural
hierarchy. Likewise there is no reason,
once we agree to the concept of God's body, why we shouldn't do the
same with
God, and thus see in the nearest and farthest planets to or from the
sun -
alas, I was unable to prevent myself from reverting to the literal
again at the
expense of a purely figurative, and hence anthropomorphic,
reference-point -
the lesser parts of the body upon which the nobler parts, manifesting
in the
Earth, duly depend."
"You mean,
the inhabitable planets are blessed with the function of
making life possible on Earth by being what and where they are?" I
ventured to speculate, boldly turning my back on the figurative
interpretation
again.
"Indeed I do,"
Hanley responded with enthusiasm, a warm smile momentarily illuminating
his
sagacious countenance. "For I'm
quite convinced that if, for example, Mercury didn't exist, this planet
would
be a lot hotter than it normally is in summer: too hot for even the
most
sun-hardened Arabs to tolerate for long.
Without Mercury, I venture to guess that the Earth would follow
Venus in
closer to the Sun and enable Mars to take up a planetary position
roughly
corresponding to the one we're in now, so that, after a number of
centuries had
elapsed, it would be Mars rather than the Earth which was the
life-sustaining
planet. As to what might happen with the
removal, shall we say, of Pluto, Neptune, or Uranus, I hesitate to
guess. But I think we would be fairly
justified in
assuming that, once again, life on Earth would become an altogether
different
proposition from what it is currently."
"Somewhat colder I
should imagine," I half-heartedly suggested, finishing off the
digestive
biscuit, most of which was already under the control of my stomach -
that
drudge-ridden slave of my eating habits - and being methodically
digested. Whether the Earth would become a
lot hotter
or colder, with the hypothetical disappearance of one or more of the
'lesser
planets', wasn't something that I need trouble my plebeian stomach
about, even
if the mental indigestion my noble brain was experiencing in
consequence of
such an hypothesis might have led me to make the attempt.
But, joking aside, I was suddenly made aware
of a fact which Hanley's latest concept of God didn't appear to take
into
account: the fact, namely, of the sun (to return to the spiritual
interpretation of Him) being merely relative, not absolute. After all, weren't there a thousand million
or so other stars in the Galaxy besides this one and, assuming each of
them had
a number of planets revolving around it, weren't they equally entitled
to being
equated with manifestations of God's spirit?
Similarly, weren't the hypothetical planets of one kind or
another just
as entitled to being equated with manifestations of His body? Surely there was more to God than the solar
system relative to us? I put this point
to Hanley as soon as the remains of my digestive biscuit had been
washed down
with a mouthful of lukewarm tea.
"Perfectly
right," he admitted, smiling approval of my growing commitment to his
theme, "all the other stars and hypothetical planets in the Galaxy -
as,
for that matter, throughout the Universe in general - have a right to
be
figuratively interpreted in the same manner, though not in terms of
monotheism
but of polytheism."
"You mean each star
in the Universe represents the spiritual part of a separate deity?" I
exclaimed, my tone-of-voice betraying a degree of incredulity which
took even
Hanley by surprise.
"According to the
concept of God that I've already outlined, I most certainly do,
Daniel,"
he averred, a reassuring beam of enthusiasm issuing from his large eyes. "You see, the Western concept of God as
'Creator of the Universe' stems from days when next-to-nothing was
known about
the Galaxy - indeed, when next-to-nothing was known about the Solar
System -
and it was possible for man to consider himself at the centre of the
Universe,
with the Sun revolving around him and other such patent nonsense. There was no reason for him to adopt a cosmic
polytheism under the circumstances of his ignorance, and so, with the
development of Christianity partly from Hebraic sources, he settled for
a
largely monotheistic approach to God, as practised by the Jews. Well, as you're probably aware, the old
Ptolemaic concept of the Earth's position and importance in the
Universe was
eventually dispatched by Copernicus, who established something
approximating to
our current knowledge of the Solar System and made the subsequent
discoveries
of Kepler and
"Perhaps that was
inevitable," I calmly remarked.
"After all, the Church is built upon a 'rock', as you say, that
cannot be shifted about and radically altered to suit the latest
scientific
discoveries. It depends on the Bible,
and the Bible remains the same no matter what happens.
If it didn't, how could it lay claim to
truth, and what basis would there be for faith?"
Hanley curtly nodded his
large head. "That may well
be," he conceded. "But, in
light of recent scientific progress, one can hardly be surprised if
such
enforced inflexibility should prove such a grave stumbling-block in the
path of
its own salvation. All things have their
day, and the Church would seem to be no exception!
However, it's not for the upholders of that
venerable institution to throw-in the towel, as it were, and capitulate
to science, as though there was nothing more to religion than
metaphorical
fantasy and figurative hype. The mask
must be worn for the sake of Christ until such time as it's no longer
required,
the interpretation you choose to apply to that being your own business."
"I can't help but
think in apocalyptic terms myself," I confessed with a wistful smile.
"No, I suppose
not," Hanley commented, vaguely smiling in turn.
"Anyway, getting
back to what you were saying with regard to your concept of the Divine,
it
would appear that the Universe is polytheistic, that each hypothetical
solar
system signifies a different deity," I resumed.
"That's more or
less my contention," he agreed, uncrossing his fingers and folding his
arms
in the manner of one who has just concluded an important address to an
attentive gathering. "There's room
in my theological concept for both a monotheistic and
a
polytheistic approach to the figurative interpretation of reality, the
monotheistic being more important to us, however, because of greater
relevance
to this planet."
I knitted my brows in
some perplexity.
"In other
words," he continued, "it's obvious that the sun - to reverse the
coin again - upon which we depend ... is of greater importance to us
than are
any of the stars upon which, in all probability, beings on other
planets
elsewhere in the Universe may depend, and consequently it's to the sun
that we
look for the energy which will sustain us and enable nature to thrive. The sun, then, is the principal
creative-force behind all life on Earth, and, because the principal
creative-force is always spiritual, it may be equated, through
reversing the
coin, with the spiritual part of the deity who presides over our solar
system. Now whilst I acknowledge the deity
appertaining to the world in which I find myself, I also choose to
acknowledge
the deities who, in all likelihood, appertain to worlds alien to this
one, to
solar systems which we, as yet, know absolutely nothing about. But in acknowledging them - and we can be
pretty certain that the spiritual parts of these numerous gods exist by
dint of
our awareness of the stars, and can infer from that the likelihood of
corresponding material parts - I realize the greater part of my worship
must,
of necessity, be directed towards our
god, since
the others are too far away to be of any real importance to me."
"'Our Father Who
art in Heaven'," I intoned, recalling to mind that part of the Lord's
Prayer which seemed to lend itself to a Hanleyian
interpretation,
however little the Lord may have had to do with the Father, in the
sense of
Creator.
"Yes, that smacks
of figurative truth," he admitted, beaming brightly.
"Although, personally, I'd like to add a
prayer beginning: 'Their Fathers Who art in more distant Heavens', or
something
of the kind, so one could be reminded that, whilst it's perfectly
sensible to
attach greater importance to 'Our Father', there are other 'Fathers'
throughout
the Universe who should at least be acknowledged. Thus
one
would recognize that one's
monotheism was relative, not absolute, and that the Absolute, if it
existed,
was polytheistic, the sum total, in short, of all
the
gods of the Universe."
In spite of moral
misgivings, I had to smile in admiration of Hanley's spiritual
integrity, an
integrity which appeared to transcend both the religious and scientific
establishments. It was indeed refreshing
to hear such a concept, to be sitting face-to-face with a man who had
actually
bothered to think
about God, and in such a thought-provoking manner!
After all, who or what else could God be
when considered in basic terms? Was he a
giant man-like Supreme Being Who sat
on a throne somewhere in the centre of the Universe and lorded
it over His creations, directing the movements of the stars and the
revolutions
of the planets? Really, a man of
Hanley's thoughtful disposition could hardly be expected to stomach that
childish
nonsense! Or was He a spirit, a kind of
magnetic force that swept through the Universe and animated its
manifold
components? If
regarded as distinct from the stars, that seemed rather unlikely. And even in terms of the stars, what about
His body? Could one leave the body out
of account and imagine that spirit existed
for no
other purpose than itself! Or was Hanley
simply a dupe of the mentality of attributing undue importance to
unitary
appearances at the expense of disjunctive essences, a crude materialist
whose
unitary concept of God conveniently exempted one from sin or the
responsibility
of owning up to it? And
God
purely
as body, as matter?
That didn't appear to make much sense either, though perhaps a
little
more than merely as thought or words!
Yes, the reduction of
God to 'the Word' could hardly be expected to inspire the utmost
confidence in
Him in terms of Creator, since words were a product of thoughts, and
thoughts
were posterior to Creation and thus a sort of antithesis to dreams, in
which
Creation was effectively manifest.
Thoughts were ideological and dreams religious, like the
figurative fantasies
usually associated with them. So,
really, what was there, apart from an ideological distrust of religion,
to
prevent one from taking some of Hanley's notions seriously? After all, when you thought literally or
scientifically about the Universe, what did
you think
about? Not God, for one thing, but
stars, planets, moons, space, comets, meteors, meteorites, quasars, etc. There wasn't any room for a giant, man-like
Supreme Being lording it over things.
Ah, but according to
Hanley, there was another side to the coin of man's relationship with
the
Universe, namely a figurative or religious side, and there, suddenly,
one was
made aware of God or gods instead of stars or planets.
And God, being made in man's image in the
Judeo-Christian West, had human characteristics, so that one could talk
to him
through prayer and hope for a favourable response to one's prayers. He it was who dwelt as a wonderful Being in
the Universe and could understand everything, all the languages of the
world
simultaneously impinging upon His consciousness through prayers, and
simultaneously respond in kind as well!
Anything could be attributed to God, for He was a grandiose
figment of
the imagination, and nothing was too fantastic or difficult for this
grandiose
figment, this figurative extrapolation from some primal star. Conventional religion was a convenient
fiction, enabling a man to get down on his knees and offer-up thanks or
petitions to that which, in factual reality, would have been incapable
of
hearing, let alone responding, to them.
And whether one preferred to dwell on the literal or the
figurative side
of the metaphorical coin Hanley had conjured up, as though from a
magician's
hat, the facts remained the same in either case. The
scientists
could no more destroy God than
the priests could destroy the Solar System.
The one side of the coin presupposed the other and, without a
figurative
side, the probability was that the literal would have lost definition
in terms
of the 'heads' sanity it apparently signified.
But today, ah! today the scientist's side was uppermost. The metaphorical pendulum of man's spiritual
endeavour had swung from acknowledgement of the figurative to
acknowledgement
of the literal, not exclusively of course (for even in their extremes
men are
never quite absolutes), but predominantly, and largely at the dictates
of an
artificial, or urban, environment, with its technological advances. A creature with an approximately equal
capacity for both the figurative and the literal approaches to reality
had been
transformed from one who, under nature's influence, attached greater
importance
to the former ... to one who, under pressure of the Industrial
Revolution and
its subsequent extensive ubanization, now
attached
greater importance to the latter, as was apparent in the world around
us. As far as the Zeitgeist
was concerned, God was indeed 'dead', though not perhaps in the way
some
philosophers, including Nietzsche, had imagined, since His death was
more
figurative than literal, a consequence of the fact that, cut-off in
their great
cities from real contact with nature, with 'God's body' (as Hanley had
metaphorically called it), the majority of people were unable to
recognize His
spirit, and thus saw only the sun, only the literal, scientific side of
the
Janus-faced coin of human reference. The
figurative interpretation of reality, diverted from its original
source, was
obliged to seek other outlets less nourishing to the soul, with a
consequence
that a kind of religious anarchy prevailed which made for widespread
spiritual
unrest and instability. Clearly, this
unfortunate state-of-affairs could not be corrected so long as man
persisted in
his current materialistic direction.
"Well, Daniel, what
d'you think of
my concept of
God?" Hanley at length asked, the smoke of a cigarette briefly
interposing
itself between us and causing his gaze to appear less bright.
"Up to a point I
quite like it," I confessed, instinctively leaning back in my chair to
avoid the encroaching fumes. "But
I'm not altogether convinced that God should be defined in terms of
both a
spirit and a body myself, since if God had a body, the concept of sin
would be
meaningless and we could indulge the appetites of the flesh with
impunity - as,
unfortunately, is all too often the case in those societies which
uphold a
unitary view of divinity. Yet a concept
that allows for the possibility of monotheism and
polytheism
can't be bad, especially when it's mindful of the figurative nature of
fundamentalist religion and in no way inclined to imagine that God, or
gods,
actually exist other than as figments of the imagination originally
extrapolated-out from some primal cosmic source which science compels
us to
regard in literal terms, whether solar or stellar.
It would appear that you've established
yourself as quite a thoughtful heretic, wouldn't it?"
Hanley smiled his
gratified acknowledgement of this observation.
"I suppose you could say that," he noddingly
replied, "though I've no intention of converting anybody to my
viewpoint,
believe me! The facts of contemporary
life are there before us, and they won't be changed by the opinions of
a man
like me. If our recent ancestors knocked
God from his figurative perch with the factual reality of bricks and
steel and
glass and concrete, we can't very well expect to put Him back - or back
together - in His former position with nothing but words.
A society which is sufficiently evolved to be
built around man instead of God has no alternative but to look after
itself and
live out its humanistic destiny in its own fashion."
"To be sure,"
I agreed unhesitatingly, peering through the coiling smoke of Hanley's
cigarette. "By putting himself
beyond God, man unconsciously brings about his own salvation, since he
is then
obliged to put his own house in order, so to speak, and not rely upon
any
external power or deity to do it for him.
Without a figurative crutch to rely on, man must stand on his
own two
feet and face-up to the trials of life in as factual a manner as
possible. Otherwise he'll continue to
delude himself
with theological panaceas long after they're no longer helpful, because
more a
hindrance to his self-will than an encouragement of it."
"Right!" cried
Hanley, beaming across at me from behind the slowly-evaporating
smoke-screen of
his smouldering cigarette. "Which
goes to show that my concept of God, although well-intentioned, can
hardly be
regarded as a valid contribution to the edifice of applied theology,
since
priests depend upon the figurative no less than scientists upon the
literal,
and cannot assert that there is a dual-sided coin, much less that it is
reversible. For God isn't nature or the
sun, the reason being that you can't look at both sides of a coin
simultaneously. On the contrary, God is
simply ..."
"A figurative myth relevant
to religion," I impatiently interposed, tired of going over the same
old
ground and getting bogged down in the same sterile contradictions. "If we've learnt anything worthwhile
from our little discussion this afternoon, it should be that God cannot
be
explained in terms of science but only in terms of religion, and that
your
concept of Him is therefore a hybrid unworthy of both!"
As might be expected,
Hanley sighed and said nothing, which was just as well, since I'd had
enough of
God and concepts for one day! More than
enough, too, of simple materialists whose unitary deity was as gross a
delusion
as any that a person susceptible to figurative myths could conceive of,
even
though the figurative was largely responsible for its concept in the
first
place. As everyone well-knew, no head
without a body, and no mind without a head!
A
LITERARY
TRINITY
The
painting
I had commissioned from Nigel Hughes was at last
finished. My desire to see what I liked
to think of as 'the blessed trinity' of twentieth-century literature
exhibited
on one canvas was about to be realized.
The artist had only to remove the drape under which he had
ceremoniously
concealed it ... for me to witness the realization of a desire I had
cherished
these past five months. I was on
tenterhooks. Would it meet with my
expectations, I wondered? Seated in an
armchair in front of the easel on which the finished product was
resting, I
bade my friend go ahead with the unveiling.
The drape slid to the floor and there, before my eager eyes, the
nude
body of the canvas was at last revealed!
"You like it?"
he asked hopefully.
So great was my
excitement at seeing the completed work, at last, that I could scarcely
reply! Besides, the question seemed a
little premature, not allowing me sufficient time in which to come to a
proper
appreciation. But it was soon apparent
to him, by the spontaneous appearance of delight on my face, that I did
like it, and very much so! For he sighed his relief and turned a proudly complacent
smile upon
me.
"Exactly as you
specified," he declared.
"Even better,"
I managed to correct, looking from the elderly face of John Cowper
Powys on the
left of the canvas to the middle-aged one of Hermann Hesse
in the centre, and then across to the youthful face of Aldous
Huxley on the right. The
'blessed
trinity'
of twentieth-century literature as I conceived of it, the
three great cultural authors of the age.
From Nature-Worship to Buddhism via Zarathustrianism.
Pantheism, dualism, and mysticism; the
Father, the
Son, and the Holy Ghost. And each
face portrayed with consummate skill and infinite care!
"It will look even
better hanging in my study," I opined, once this reassuring inspection
had
run its course and enabled me to relax, in some measure, from the
anticipatory
strain experienced prior to the unveiling.
"I shall grant it a privileged position above the mantelpiece. The presence of such a painting there will
have a salutary effect on my writing."
Nigel smiled
sympathetically and, abandoning the canvas, sat himself down in the
nearest
armchair. "And who is the one whom
you most relate to as a writer?" he at length asked.
"Undoubtedly
"Yes, I take your
point," Nigel responded, smiling a shade contemptuously.
"
"In some respects I
dare say it is," I answered, turning my attention full upon him,
"since my dualism incorporates the integration of antitheses not only
on a
theological plane but also on an ethical one, the plane of good and
evil generally. Unlike Hesse, and
to an even greater extent Tolstoy, whom it's probably worth mentioning
in this
respect, I don't make a point of creating characters who are either
angels or
demons, as it were, but strive to integrate good and evil in each of
them. Thus instead of one character being
good and
another evil, my characters are both good and
evil, and
therefore men rather than lopsided monsters.
The character who loses our respect
in one
context or place in the novel is just as likely to win it back in
another, and
vice versa."
"Tolstoy certainly
wouldn't have approved of that
approach,"
Nigel frowningly averred. "He
wanted the author to take a moral stance on the side of good and to
denounce
the evil character or characters in no uncertain terms!"
"Which is something
I cannot bring myself to do," I said.
"For Tolstoy wanted authors to create either angels or demons,
not
men. But angels and demons are merely
figments of the imagination rather than reflections of human reality. The man who's incapable of evil is no man at
all. He would be just as incapable of
good. But even Tolstoy, moral cretin
that he aspired to being in theory, was fundamentally a man, not an
angel, and
consequently he was perfectly capable of facing-up to reality and
indulging in
evil."
Nigel looked
puzzled. "What kind of evil?"
he asked.
"Oh, the usual
kind: the actions or thoughts which proceed from negative as opposed to
positive feelings," I answered.
"You mean,
one's feelings inevitably condition the nature of
one's morality, whether one is doing good or evil?" said Nigel
doubtfully.
"Of
course!" I confidently declared.
"What other criterion can one have?
There's no escaping reality, no doing away with evil for the
sake of
good. Everything competitive pertains to
evil, everything cooperative to good.
Why? Because in
the first case one's feelings are negative, whereas in the second case
they're
positive. So when he attacked
other authors in print, Tolstoy was doing evil, a perfectly legitimate
and
sensible form of evil admittedly, but evil nonetheless!"
"Even
when the authors fully deserved being attacked?" Nigel queried,
a
somewhat sceptical expression marring an otherwise handsome countenance.
"Most especially
then," I assured him, nodding.
"For one is likely to write more scathingly against them in
consequence. One can only combat evil
with evil, not with good, which, by contrast, would lead one to ignore
it, to
'turn the other cheek', as the saying goes.
And, in combating evil with evil, one inevitably produces more
evil. For evil thrives on negativity, and
aggression of whichever kind in whatever context pertains to the
negative. So even the
lopsided
preacher of goodness was a man, a scowler
as well as
a smiler.
And because he knew how to utilize both good and evil to his
advantage,
if unconsciously so, he was a successful man, a famous one. That's the way of the world.
Those who most successfully approximate to
reality, who accept the responsibility of being human, have their
kingdom in
this world rather than in any other.
They're enabled to indulge their good and evil sides, within the
framework of the law, to the limit of their ability, as demanded by
their
integrity as men."
"How d'you
mean?" Nigel wanted to know.
"Take the case of a
composer," I proceeded to explain, "a
composer, shall we say, who writes for the piano. Supposing
he
transmitted only positive
vibrations, only good feelings through his music, it would be akin to
that of
an angel's and we would eventually grow tired of it.
The gently lyrical sounds would be pleasing
for a while, but the longer they persisted the less we would appreciate
them. Conversely, supposing he
transmitted only negative vibrations, only evil feelings through his
music, it
would be akin to that of a demon's and, similarly, we would eventually
tire of
it. In both cases, the composer,
transmitting only one of the two sides of man's dual nature, would
hardly
achieve lasting recognition as a truly great musician.
In fact, the chances are that he wouldn't be
appreciated. But as soon as he combines both the good and the evil approach, the positive
and
the negative vibrations, in the most balanced and ingenious manner, ah!
then our attention is held and he would be
recognized as the
genuine man he was, the whole rather than part man.
Now his greatness as a composer would depend
upon the extent of the good and evil to which he could attain, and
would
accordingly be in direct proportion to this.
Thus the greatest composers would combine in the same work,
though not necessarily
in the same movement, the most angelic sounds with the most demonic, the sweetest with the sourest, through various
gradations in
between."
"Hence
the greatness of Beethoven, Schumann, Liszt, Brahms, Saint-Saëns,
Rubenstein,
Franck, and other such manly composers?" Nigel suggested with a
slightly roguish - or romantic - glint in his eyes.
"Absolutely!"
I agreed without a moment's hesitation.
"Their greatness as men is reflected in the spectrum of their
music, which is somewhat wider than that of lesser men.
Indeed it's, above all, in the nineteenth
century that music most comes to reflect man's dual nature,
that man appears in it as he really is.
For prior to then, music was predominantly in the service of
what Spengler, the philosopher of history,
calls 'the Culture',
roughly corresponding to Medieval and Reformation Christendom, with its
emphasis on the ideal of a good God, viz. Christ. As
such,
composers were expected to
approximate to this ideal as best they could, and thus produce mainly
positive
or pleasant sounds. But with the gradual
decline of 'the Culture' throughout the eighteenth and, in particular,
nineteenth centuries, music increasingly came to reflect man's secular
reality
and accordingly utilized a more balanced spectrum of sounds.
"However, only in
the late-nineteenth and, to a much greater extent, early-twentieth
centuries
does it become apparent that service to an ideal is returning. For with the development of what Spengler calls 'the Civilization', which sprang
from the
decline of 'the Culture' as the Age of Reason superseded the Age of
Faith, so
the balance of good and evil was gradually superseded by the
predominance of
evil, of cacophonous sounds, which would seem to reflect service, if
unconsciously, to a devil, the devil, we may reasonably suppose, of
contemporary megalopolitan life. To have attained, however, to true humanity,
instead of being lopsided on the side of either the angels or the
demons, seems
to me the mark of the greatest men, whether they be
composers, artists, writers, actors, statesmen, or whatever. The Deists and Satanists, by contrast, are
almost monsters, though never quite what they appear to be, no matter
how hard
they may try to excel themselves. Even
Bach and Bartók were fundamentally men,
even if, from
the viewpoint of their respective creative extremes, somewhat lopsided
ones!"
"And 'the blessed
trinity' of twentieth-century literature were also men, I take it?"
Nigel
remarked, turning his critical gaze upon the painting.
"Naturally!"
I affirmed, smiling. "Although the
one in the centre, the Spenglerian
There was a short pause
in the conversation whilst I respectfully surveyed the three faces
before me
again: the exponent of Elementalism, or
sublimated
nature-worship, with his belief in a Janus-faced First Cause; the Zarathustrian dualist, with his Abraxas-like
concept of God embodied in the Self; and, finally, the advocate of the
Perennial Philosophy, with his penchant for the Clear Light of the Void
and blissful
absence of conflict. Then, realizing
that I had nothing further to add to my previous comment, I bade Nigel
Hughes
wrap up the painting and wrote him out a cheque for the fee required. What, exactly, people would think of Andy Hammill's latest painting, I didn't know. But I was pretty confident it would cause
quite a theological controversy nonetheless!
A
VISIT
TO HELL
A
ghastly
shudder shot through me at the thought of it all
...
"So what
happened?" Heather asked again, staring at me with genuine concern. "I want to hear all about it!"
I could tell by both the
concerned look on her face and her demanding tone-of-voice that she
really did
want to
hear all about it. Not for a long time
had I endeavoured to explain any such experience to her.
"Well," I
began, feeling slightly nervous and self-conscious but relieved, all
the same,
for the opportunity of being able to unburden myself, "I had just come
out
of a large West End bookshop in the vicinity of Tottenham Court Road
and was
slowly walking along the pavement when I felt a hand on my arm, a hand
which
sufficed to stop me in my tracks.
'Excuse me, sir,' the bearer of this hand - a tall, dark,
handsome man
of about thirty-five - said, 'but aren't you the philosopher, Justin
Thomas?'
"Not surprisingly,
I was somewhat startled by this mode of introduction, if such it was,"
I
went on. "For no-one, having
recognized me as the said person, had ever
stopped me
in the street before, considering that I'm not particularly famous or
subject
to public curiosity. Yet, much as I
dreaded the prospect of having to listen to this man's appreciation of
my work
or, worse still, answer questions about it and justify myself to him in
some
way, I was secretly gratified that someone had recognized me in these
terms and
thought it worth his while to confess the fact."
Heather smiled her
understanding of this egotistical confession.
"Ambivalent as ever," she commented in a playfully reproachful
tone.
"Anyway, realizing
that an acknowledgement was expected of me, I replied in the
affirmative,
though not very positively, since I couldn't be certain that the
stranger would
be
appreciative of my work. But his hand
was still on my arm and, much to my dismay,
he
tightened its grip on me. 'I'm so glad
to meet you,' he proceeded in a smooth well-educated accent, which
indicated a
person of some social distinction. 'For
there's something I have to tell you.'
"'There is?' I
responded, my initial misgivings beginning to worsen.
"'It's about your
wife,' he whispered, tightening his grip still further on my arm until
it
became virtually paralysed. 'She's being
unfaithful to you.'"
Heather's expression
suddenly turned apprehensive, as though in anticipation of some such
accusation
from me.
"'But that's
impossible!' I cried, momentarily forgetting where I was, as I allowed
my
feelings their instinctive expression.
'How can you say such a thing?'
"'Because I know
the man with whom she's being unfaithful to you,' the stranger
asserted,
automatically fixing me with a hard stare.
"He must be a
madman, I thought, flinching from his smouldering gaze and politely
endeavouring to extricate myself from his clamp-like grip on my arm.
"'And I can prove
it to you this very afternoon,' he continued, ignoring my impatience.
"'You can?' I
responded involuntarily.
"'Provided you're
prepared to make it worth my while,' he hissed."
At this point, I
couldn't help noticing a deepening of the apprehension which had come
over
Heather's ordinarily passive and charming face.
Could she really be expecting an accusation of infidelity from
me? I
wondered.
"'In
what way?' I asked, unable not to take him seriously, despite my
misgivings.
"'To the sum of
Ł500,' he gravely replied.
"'Five-hundred
pounds?' I felt outraged, the
victim of a mean exploitation.
"'Come, come!' he
gently chided me, patting the arm he had just released from his
clutches with a
reassuring benevolence before summarily returning it to them again. 'This is a very modest sum for the services
rendered,
I can assure you. Once you learn what
your wife gets up to while you're out lecturing at college, you'll
consider it
a bargain. Now by coming with me this
very moment to the scene of the crime, so to speak, you'll learn about
it in no
uncertain terms, and with the minimum of inconvenience.'
"Despite my outrage
over the amount required and, as I quickly realized, the base
accusation being
levelled against you, Heather, I felt my resistance to his proposition
breaking
down, giving way to a mild curiosity as to whether you could, in fact,
be
betraying me behind my back. After all,
could I be absolutely certain you weren't?"
Heather's apprehension
suddenly burst through the reserve in which she had patiently contained
it ...
to voice itself in a grievous complaint.
How could I say such things to her?
"I'm sorry,
darling," I responded sympathetically, "but you did want to hear all
about what happened."
"Yes, but, really,
Justin! I didn't think it would be like
this!" she objected.
No, of course she
didn't, and I was fairly ashamed of myself for not having bothered to
spare her
the details. Still, now that I had
committed myself to an account of this extraordinary experience, I felt
I had
to press on and bring it to completion.
Besides, the part of it which dealt with her alleged infidelity
had been
accounted for, or almost so, which meant that most of what was to
follow
probably wouldn't disturb or worry her quite so much.
Of this I now informed her in my most
reassuring manner.
"Oh, go on
then!" she sighed, slightly encouraged.
"Well, having come
to a brisk arrangement whereby I would consent to writing him out a
cheque for
Ł500 only after
I'd seen what he had allegedly to show me, I followed him down a
nearby side-street to a waiting car, a large black limousine which he
said he
owned and which would take me to my destination within a mere twenty
minutes. Since the rear windows of this
limo were tinted black, I couldn't see into its interior and felt a
distinct
misgiving at the prospect of having to get inside.
But when he opened the nearest rear door and
ushered me in with a wave of his powerful arm, I realized that, short
of making
a damned fool of myself by betraying my trust in him, I had little
option but
to comply. Thus it happened that I found
myself sitting on the back seat and staring at the rear of the driver's
head
through a plate of transparent glass which served to compartmentalize
the
limousine. Who-the-devil the driver was,
I didn't know. But no sooner had the man
of whom I'd just made the acquaintance opened the front door and taken
a seat
beside him ... than I became aware of a strange smell entering my
nostrils and,
before I could say or do anything, quickly lost consciousness."
By now Heather had got
over her bout of self-pity and was once more looking at me with
unfeigned
concern. "You were evidently
gassed," she concluded, her voice harmoniously supporting her
expression.
"Well, when I came
to my senses again, or perhaps I should say was brought to them again,
I found
myself in a large square room without windows and lit solely by
fluorescent
lighting. I was sitting on a couch in
front of a tall, medium-built man of indeterminate age, a man who, in
my dazed
state-of-mind, I initially took for the one who had earlier accosted me
in the
street. But as soon as the ability to
focus returned to my eyes, I realized that this man was in fact a
complete
stranger to me, someone whom I had never seen before and, to judge by
the
cruelly inhuman nature of his face, someone whom I hoped I would never
see
again, assuming I got out of there alive!
Draped in a long black cloak, he seemed closest in appearance to
the
popular conception of Count Dracula, though there was something about
his fiery
eyes, contrasting pale face, sharply aquiline nose, sardonic mouth, and
pointed
chin which suggested the possibility of someone even worse. Not until he opened his mouth and smiled down
at me through jagged teeth, however, did I realize that he actually was
someone
much worse! For, in addition to this
terrible dentition, I now noticed that he was also the bearer of two
small red
horns which jutted out of his temples beneath a mass of curly red hair. I almost screamed my horror at this
recognition of the demonic, and would have got up from the couch and
run
towards an exit, had my limbs not been bound to it by invisible fetters. Besides, there wasn't an exit in evidence to
run towards. In this room, doors had no
more place than windows!
"'Welcome,
Professor Thomas!' the creature's voice suddenly addressed me with
guttural
relish. 'I've wanted to make your
acquaintance for some time now: in fact, ever since the publication,
last year,
of your most recent book. What you said
in it suggested a profounder grasp of the modern world than I'd have
expected
from a mere mortal, a grasp which, while not omniscient and by no means
tallying with all the facts, nevertheless caused me a few doubts over
my power
to influence it for the worse.'
"'Who are you?' I
managed to ask, in spite of the state of my nerves and, more
surprisingly, the
stark evidence of my horrified senses.
"'I am the
personification of evil in the world,' the fearsome creature replied,
clearly
not a little relieved for the opportunity of being able to verbally
advertise
himself. 'In vulgar
parlance, the Devil.'
"I quaked at the
mention of it! Could I be imagining
things? Surely the Devil was nothing
more than a perverse figment of the imagination, a superstition of
bygone days? And even if he wasn't, what
could he possibly
want with me? What had I
done to
deserve his horrible company? I put a
question to that effect to him.
"'Haven't I already
told you, Professor?' he responded, a menacing smile revealing the
jagged edges
of his monstrous teeth again. 'I was
both impressed and concerned by your latest publication, and would
accordingly
like to clarify a number of issues you raised in it, to put you in your
place,
despite your considerable knowledge, and to demonstrate how deluded you
are to
imagine that I can be conquered and driven into moral exile. To put it frankly, I was a trifle disconcerted
by some of the things you wrote. Yet I'm
confident that, by lecturing you on the actual extent of my influence
on the
modern world, and the Western part of it not least of all, I'll not
only be
able to break your self-confidence but, more importantly, enhance mine
in the
process!'
"'But
what about my wife?' I asked, recalling to
mind
the ostensible reason for my presence there.
'Aren't I to witness her alleged infidelity?'
"The
personification of evil bared his gruesome teeth in an even more
menacing
fashion than before. 'All in bad time,
all in bad time, Professor!' he replied.
'In the meantime, however, you must be patient and allow me to
defend
myself.'"
Once again I could see
that Heather's facial expression had veered in the direction of
apprehension,
that her concern for me had duly turned into a concern for herself,
albeit
silently.
"As soon as the
Devil had said this," I continued, centring my concentration as best I
could on what there was to relate, "he clicked the thumb and middle
finger
of his right hand - if hand it was - and immediately the room fell into
darkness, a darkness which was instantaneously relieved, however, by
the
projection on to the wall in front of a bright light.
From behind me came the whirring sound of a
film projector and, before fear could take possession of my soul again,
I
realized that I was about to be treated to a film show; that the Devil,
contrary to my expectations, had not taken a step nearer me in order,
presumably,
to strangle me in the dark, but had gone over to stand beside the
picture which
now appeared on the wall in front. By
craning my neck around as far as I could, it was just possible for me
to
discern the outline of a figure seated behind the film projector a few
yards to
my rear, a figure who had evidently appeared, as though by magic. Because of the partial darkness, however, I
couldn't quite discern his facial features.
Nevertheless, I wasn't particularly grateful to discover that
the Devil
had company!
"'Now then,
Professor,' the latter's blood-curdling voice rang out above the whirr,
'pay
careful attention to what I have to show you!'
"I made a brave
attempt to. From aerial clips of small
villages
in various parts of Europe and North America, the film progressed to
similar
clips of towns, and from those to cities, the largest cities,
principally, of
the Western world. One saw, in quick
succession, New York, Chicago, Detroit, Toronto, London, Birmingham,
Manchester, Glasgow, Paris, Berlin, etc, with occasional clips of the
countryside in between. Although it
wasn't possible to see the Devil's face very clearly or distinctly from
where I
sat, I could tell, as much by the nervous twitching of his facial
muscles as by
various of the comments he was making, that he much preferred the
cities to the
towns, the towns to the villages, and the villages to the countryside,
with due
gradations of feeling in between.
"'As you correctly
pointed out in your book,' he remarked, while the projector whirred on,
'Western society underwent a radical transformation with the Industrial
Revolution, one that was to undermine the entire fabric of rural life
and, in
its more obvious manifestations, isolate a majority of the rapidly
rising
population of the cities from regular contact with the land. See how the Culture, in Spenglerian
parlance, was supplanted by the Civilization, which is its very
antithesis, in
consequence of this transformation brought about by the Industrial
Revolution. How faith, grounded in
nature, was replaced by reason, that artificial growth of the great
cities, and
how the man-made came to predominate, in these places, over natural
creation. See how little vegetation there
is in these
urban environments, Professor, and how wonderfully sterile they are by
contrast
with nature, how they set themselves up against it!'
"Frankly, it wasn't
difficult for me to see how much this deplorable state-of-affairs
pleased the
Devil, and how he gloated over the immensity of the largest cities like
one
whose personal dream of success had literally come to pass there. At that very moment, we were looking at
numerous tall buildings in
"'Delightfully
sterile,' the Devil went on, pointing towards some of the tallest and
most
grandiose of these buildings, a few of which were clearly skyscrapers,
'and
admirably indicative of the triumph of man over God.
As you rightly remarked, Professor, the
Culture blossomed with the collaboration of nature and withered once
that
collaboration was impaired by the rapid development of both
industrialization
and urbanization. Ah, how it delights me
to behold this cancer of industrial technology eating away at the
foundations
of life! You can well imagine, Professor, that nothing would delight me more
than to assist
in the further growth of these monstrous cities until nature has been
eaten
away altogether and my triumph is complete!
Alas, man has still not succeeded in entirely banishing God from
the
world, even in the cities. As yet, there
are still remnants of faith and allegiance to God there, though
particularly in
the villages and smaller towns. Believe
me, Professor, the chief threat to my power
comes from
these latter places, places, in short, where there's still too much
nature!'
"He turned his evil
eyes upon me for an instant, causing me to quake anew.
With an element of anger on his hideous
countenance, he was even more menacing than previously.
"'By comparison
with the country and provincial clergy, the city clergy are virtually
atheist,'
the Devil continued, returning his attention to the film, which was now
showing
the denser, more built-up parts of London.
'The city clergy are surrounded by too much concrete, glass, and
steel
to be of any real threat to me, and, with notably few exceptions, are
as much
the victims of their sterile environments as the laity.
Whether they like it or not, whether they
know it or not, they've fallen under my influence, their worship of God
is
little more than an hypocrisy, a mere shadow of genuine worship, a mask
which
the civilized West, rotting in its decadence and moral deceitfulness,
considers
it incumbent to wear for appearance's sake.
For God, as you well know, has long ceased to play a major role
in the
big cities, and his churches are really quite out-of-place there.'
"At this point, I
wanted to protest against the Devil, to defend myself from his hateful
opinions. But, even though I opened my
mouth to speak, nothing emerged, and I was left to my troubled silence.
"'You can't imagine
the pleasure it gives me to spy on the clergy who most struggle against
my
influence, who do everything they can to strengthen their tottering
allegiance
to God in the face of their sterile environments!' the Devil went on
grinningly. 'How it has amused me to watch
them at work
in their tiny gardens, trying to rejuvenate the sickly-looking plants
there, or
strolling in the nearest public park, or taking day trips into the
country in
order to acquire some contact with nature!
And how I have delighted in the defeat, disappointment, and
humiliation
of those who were desperately keen to secure a country or provincial
parish for
themselves but, due to fierce competition,
failed to
do so! Ah, to see them return to their
city manses with a look of deep dejection on their pallid faces such as
would
have shamed even the least of the medieval clergy!
How I delighted to see these so-called men of
God up against it! Particularly the
brightest and most sincere, the ones who, despite the overwhelming odds
stacked
against them, fought night and day to protect themselves from me. I can assure you, Professor, that there
aren't too many of them
in the large cities!'
"Meanwhile, the
film had progressed from aerial shots to close-ups of various
buildings, and it
was not before I had seen about thirty such buildings that I realized
what the
intention was. Again, from relatively
small towns with large cathedrals, one progressed to large cities where
the
cathedral was literally dwarfed by commercial and other secular
buildings of
gigantic proportions. Where tradition
was strongest, the cathedral still dominated the town, establishing or
reflecting the natural hierarchy of nature over civilization, God over
the State,
religion over commerce. But where, by
contrast, the vast cities were concerned, the cathedral, surrounded by
so much
towering concrete, was comparatively insignificant, since smothered by
the
numerous secular buildings which dominated the skyline and proclaimed
the
triumph of civilization over nature, the State over God, and commerce
over
religion. In
"'I trust you're
getting the picture, Professor?' the personification of evil at length
sarcastically remarked, inflicting what seemed like a conspiratorial
glance
upon me. 'One can learn a lot more from
these aerial and close-up shots of your civilization than you might
have
thought possible. Take the
churches. Have you noticed the extent of
the dilapidation into which so many of the older ones are falling, and
deduced
from this the apparent reluctance of the relevant authorities to
restore or
renovate them in any degree? And what
about the newest ones, those built during the last thirty or so years -
isn't
there something distinctly secular-looking about a majority of them,
comparatively few and far between as they are, which could lead one to
confound
them with any of the smaller commercial organizations?'
"The Devil was
pointing out one such 'church', a building which one might have taken
for a
factory or even a dance hall, so far removed was it from any
traditional
concept of church!
"'It would appear
that the God Whom men worship in such buildings isn't given quite the
acknowledgement or respect He used to get in the days before His works
were
shut-out from their lives to the extent we now see about us,' the Devil
sarcastically averred. 'Being
predominantly surrounded, as the vast majority of city-dwellers now
are, by the
works of man, it isn't altogether surprising that the latest churches
should
come to be patterned on them, and thus approximate to a reflection of
contemporary urban society as opposed to an acknowledgement of God's
essential
transcendence. Yet that, as you
doubtless realize, amounts to a contradiction in terms.
Before long, city people will have no need of
even those buildings, Professor, but will either cease worshipping God
altogether - if one can call what now goes on by that name - or worship
me
instead.... Which is mostly what does
happen, if
unconsciously, in any case. For I am at work as much in the design and erection of
the new
churches as in encouraging the dilapidation and neglect of the old ones. Admittedly, I don't have as much influence on
the Church as on the secular establishments.
But what influence I do have is certainly no disgrace to me! Believe me, Professor, it's growing all the
time, and not only in the cities! My
corruption is gradually spreading to the towns and villages as well,
though
not, alas, on a very large scale at present.
For wherever nature prevails over civilization - as it still
does in a
number of places - resistance to my influence is at its strongest and I
therefore have to make do with small gains.
Fortunately, however, the city has more influence on the town
than vice
versa, so I needn't fear for my future!
Every year, billions of words compiled in the cities are
disseminated
throughout the provinces in the forms of newspapers, magazines,
periodicals,
leaflets, and books, especially of the paperback variety; thousands of
films,
documentaries, and TV serials made in the cities are likewise
disseminated
there; and, thanks to the benefits of mechanized transport, millions of
city-dwellers are unleashed upon the towns and villages to spread their
urban
corruption far and wide. With such an
onslaught, there's little the provinces can do to resist being tainted. My evil dominion grows stronger and more
firmly entrenched with every new day!'
"The Devil bared
his jagged teeth in indication of his immense satisfaction at this
fact, and
induced me to quake yet again. How much
longer, I wondered, would I continue being subjected to these frightful
revelations, these ghastly scenes? But
before I could wonder anything else, the evil creature had become
reabsorbed in
the film, which was now showing the interior of an elegant-looking room
in
which an audience, garbed in eighteenth-century costume, were listening
to a
chamber orchestra performing one of J.S. Bach's Brandenburg
Concertos, the Fourth, as I quickly recognized by the music which
issued
from the direction of the film projector to my rear.
Surprised as I was by the sudden introduction
of music into the room, and no less so by the historical spectacle
before me, I
duly fell under its spell and allowed myself, in spite of my
surroundings, to
take a certain pleasure in its gracefully-flowing melodies and
harmonies. Yet it wasn't long before I
realized that the
Devil was feeling anything but pleasure at this performance, that he
was
patently agonized by its euphonious nature.
The twitching of his facial muscles, which I had already noted
in
connection with various provincial environments, became intensified
here to a
point which made it seem that his face was alive with millions of tiny
worms writhing
and criss-crossing it in all directions, as though goaded-on by some
unspeakable agony of spirit. Also, his
breathing became so heavy, so tensed and laboured, that one might have
expected
to hear it above the music. But just as
he appeared to be on the verge of collapsing or exploding - it was
impossible
to tell which, though it was evident from the noise coming from his
lungs that
the Devil was a heavy smoker - the film suddenly switched from the clip
of an
eighteenth-century audience entranced by the heavenly sounds of J.S.
Bach to
one of a contemporary audience seated in front of a large symphony
orchestra in
some vast concert hall and listening to it perform a modern work, the
title and
composer of which completely eluded me.
Almost at once, however, I could see that the Devil was
immensely
relieved by this abrupt change of musical context.
For both the agonized twitching of his facial
muscles and the heavy breathing to which his smoke-infested lungs had
been
subjected by the preceding scene quickly calmed down, to be replaced,
as the
music progressed along its allocated route, by signs of mounting
pleasure. But was this intensely
discordant and
seemingly chaotic composition to which I was now obliged to listen
really
music? Wasn't it really a noise, one of
the most diabolical noises I had ever heard, full of scrapings and bangings and sharp blasts of disjunctive sound? I couldn't help noticing, while the Devil
gloated over his pleasure, the agonized and hate-filled expressions on
the
faces of the musicians, which sharply contrasted with the serene and
comparatively joyful expressions of the chamber orchestra in the
previous
clip. And, by a similar contrast of
experience, it was apparent that the audience were being infected with
expressions and emotions corresponding to those of the musicians. To all appearances it seemed like a species
of sadomasochism was in progress, a torture chamber for ears and mind!
"The Devil,
however, had other opinions. 'Quite
delightful!' he exclaimed, indicating to his mysterious assistant, by a
gesture
of the hand, that he wanted the music's ear-shattering volume turned
down a
little in order to make himself heard. And most flattering so far as I am concerned. For I am now the ideal to which, knowingly or
unknowingly, a majority of contemporary composers dedicate their vile
compositions, the primary source of inspiration for their cacophonous
worship! Yes, how long I've had to wait
for this, how long I've had to wait for so many things!
But I had patience, believe me, Professor,
and I wasn't altogether inactive even when God had the better of me. I knew that, eventually, things would swing
in my direction, that my long-awaited
dominion over
Western man would come. And behold, it
has come, Professor, as surely as you have!
Here is yet another proof of my power over contemporary man, one
dependent on the ears. This, too, is
music, Professor, but music, I'm relieved to say, which is lopsided on
my side
instead of on God's. The euphonious
sounds which your society required of composers writing in the service
of the
religious ideal, the worship of a good deity, have been systematically
supplanted by the cacophonous sounds you now hear before you. Your composers have swung from one ideal to
another, though not, it must be admitted, without a transitional period
in
between, when they seemed to ignore ideals altogether and concentrated
on
simply being themselves, on reflecting man instead.
But that era, approximating to the nineteenth
century, subsequently gave way to the modern era, with its emphasis on
the
discordant, or service to me, to an ideal which is diametrically
antithetical
to the previous one. This, then, is my
music, Professor, and you can see how much it delights me, even though
there's
still room, as far as I'm concerned, for further improvement, for the
possibility of even greater delight!
Indeed, I'm not entirely satisfied with this particular
composition so
far as an approximation to the infernal ideal is concerned. It could be still more cacophonous, still
more discordant, in my opinion. Perhaps
in a year or two from now I shall have an opportunity to hear the work
of a
composer who can go beyond this and produce something so cacophonous,
discordant, diabolical, and therefore decadent from a Western
standpoint, as to
be virtually indistinguishable from the outright barbarism of the worst
pop
music, acoustic and electric distinctions notwithstanding!
Yet even this predominantly cacophonous
composition by some contemporary American composer is quite a delight
to me,
especially when I think back to what I used to suffer at the hands of
the
greatest seventeenth- and eighteenth-century composers.
The sheer agony of it all! Bar
after dreadful bar of hateful euphony,
composition after dreadful composition dedicated to my hereditary
enemy, Le
Bon
Dieu! Oh,
how
absolutely
unendurable it all was!
You can hardly be surprised, Professor, when, at the end of my
demonic
tether, I vowed to put every ounce of brain muscle I possessed into
pulling
musicians away from God. What a
nerve-racking tug-of-war it turned out to be!
From about the mid-eighteenth century, when I really dug my
heels into
it for the first time, I had to labour away well into the twentieth
century
before I was convinced that the contest had been won.
Throughout the nineteenth century,
compositions continued to reach my ears that sounded as much on God's
side as
on mine, and in the case of composers like Schubert and Bruckner,
I actually lost ground and almost slithered back to the deplorable
state-of-affairs that existed in Mozart's day.
To be sure, the Austrians were harder to pull away from God than
both
the Germans and the French put together, particularly Bruckner,
whose tonal innocence, coming relatively late in the nineteenth
century, caused
me one of the worst humiliations of my entire satanic career! Fortunately to say, Bruckner
was more or less involved in a lone-handed fight as the century wore on. For most of the leading composers, including
Liszt, Wagner, Saint-Saëns (who, despite his name, was no musical
saint), and
Franck, were increasingly veering in my direction, so that by the time
Richard
Strauss made his mark on the scene I was fairly confident my victory
had come,
in spite of that Austrian, Gustave Mahler,
who rather
set my teeth on-edge. Even some of the
early-twentieth-century British composers, including Elgar
and Vaughan Williams, didn't make my task any easier.
But with an ever-growing number of
Continental and American composers coming over to my side, I was in no
doubt
about the final outcome. These days I
scarcely need exert myself at all, since my initial efforts to pull
composers
away from God appear to have resulted in a veritable avalanche of
hell-bound
idiots falling in my direction, the few who most resist my influence
usually
being swept along by the rest.'
"It was apparent,
with the termination of these terrible confessions, that the Devil had
more or
less had his say as far as the orchestral performance was concerned. For the film once more changed course and,
much to my relief, presented me with the spectacle of assorted
paintings
passing in fairly swift succession before my well-nigh hypnotized eyes. Not possessing the most comprehensive
knowledge of art, I nevertheless soon realized that the intention of
this part
of the film was to chronicle the rise and fall of Western art from
approximately the fourteenth century to the present day.
Beginning with religious works by artists
such as Cimabue, Giotto,
Pisaro, Tura, da
Vinci, Bellini, and Mantegna,
it
progressed,
via Dürer, Raphael,
Michelangelo,
Titian, Veronese, Rubens, Rembrandt, and
El Greco, to
the more secular artists of the past three centuries, the most
prominent of
whom were Boucher, Fragonard, David,
Delacroix, Ingres, Hogarth,
Turner,
Constable,
Bourne-Jones, Manet, Renoir, Picasso,
Beckmann, and
Ernst. As happened in that part of the
film dedicated to the contrasting musical styles, the Devil's face
responded to
the stimuli before it in an appropriately agonized or delighted manner,
the
great religious works, on the one hand, causing him such acute
spiritual
discomfort that he was obliged to sharply avert his gaze from them on a
number
of occasions, whereas the great and lesser secular paintings, on the
other
hand, enabled him to recover from his agony of spirit and achieve
varying
degrees of pleasure, depending on the content of the works in question. Although the progression on film from
religious to secular paintings wasn't as clear-cut or continuous as one
might
have expected, the occasional secular painter of value, like Dürer, appearing among the predominantly
religious ones
and, conversely, the occasional religious painter of value, like Dali,
appearing among the predominantly secular ones, it was sufficiently
clear, as
one progressed through the centuries, that a division of sorts did
indeed
exist, and that the movement away from God followed a time-pattern not
unlike
the one established by music, a time-pattern, however, the principal
criterion
of which hinged upon subject-matter rather than sound and the way in
which this
subject-matter was treated. Thus from
religious paintings, at one end of the scale, with smooth, clear,
bright, and
harmonious techniques, one descended, at the other end of it, to
secular
paintings with rough, hazy, dull, and discordant techniques; from works
praising and acknowledging God, one descended to works dedicated to
man, and
from man on down to the machine; from the countryside and nature in
general to
the city and its manifold concomitants in particular; from the concrete
to the
abstract, from art to anti-art, with all due gradations, such as
Impressionism,
Expressionism, Cubism, Fauvism, Dada, Surrealism, etc., right down to
the
present day, coming in-between.
Exceptions to the general tendency of artistic decline there
undoubtedly
were, but the general tendency was indisputable and made adequately
manifest by
this film. It was only, however, when it
had arrived at a number of the most abstract contemporary paintings
that the
Devil, who had in the meantime lit himself a cigarette, next decided to
speak.
"'Ah!
what satisfaction it brings me to behold
such
wonderfully sterile and chaotic works,' he confessed, briefly turning
in my
direction, 'to witness the extent of my disruptive influence on
contemporary
art! How gratifying that a medium which
once served my great adversary - and served Him in such style - should
now be
reduced to this, to grovelling before me!
That the Most Evil should have come to supplant the Most Good in
such
unequivocal terms - truly, I've rarely felt so flattered!
Just look at them, Professor, at all these
works of so-called art which your society has been obliged to produce
in such
abundance, and see to what extent it is now in my grasp!
Merciless hell, how long I've waited for
this! How my eyes were tortured by all
those Blessed Trinities and Madonnas and
Crucifixions
and Ascensions and Last Suppers and Benedictions and Conversions and
Visitations and Immaculate Conceptions and God-knows-what-else the
greatest
artists, in serving God, contrived to inflict upon me!
Even in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries there were artists who, like William Blake and John Martin,
fought
against me with more courage and tenacity than I'd have expected from
mere
mortals. But even they were tarnished by
my brush, even they were forced to give so
many of
their religious productions a rather satanic twist.
The apocalyptic damnations of Blake and
Martin - how paradoxically true! Such
Biblical damnations were indeed befalling their own society, as they
doubtless
realized. Even while Gainsborough and
Constable were painting their accursed landscapes, I was gaining the
upper-hand
and slowly forcing God out of the picture.
By the turn-of-the-century there was very
little of Him left in it; for whatever He had created was being
transformed by
the perverse brushstrokes of the Pre-Raphaelites, Impressionists,
Expressionists, Symbolists, Decadents, and such-like into something
more to my
taste: an artificial world which set itself up against nature! Ah, my hateful disciples, my contemptible
brethren in fin-de-siecle iniquity, how I curse
you all! You couldn't please me enough,
not even when you bent over backwards to do so!
You were but a stage on the road to my current dominion, a stage
of the
infernal star, so to speak, which your successors have left severely in
the
lurch!'
"As I could tell by
the succession of abstract paintings which were now passing before my
hypnotized eyes, the extent to which late-nineteenth-century painters had
been 'left
severely in the lurch' was indeed staggering, revealing to my
bewildered mind
the incredible tenacity with which the Devil was working to bring art
closer to
his demonic ideal! Where the art of the
next century would lead, I could scarcely imagine.
For it seemed inconceivable that painting
could sink any further and thus approximate more closely to the Devil's
infernal ideal of chaotic sterility. Was
this really the end of our long and glorious civilization, the
death-rattle of
a sickly dotard? I shuddered at the
thought of it! Why hadn't I been born at
a better or, at the very least, less bad time in the history of the
arts? What had I done to deserve all this? And when, exactly, would the last Western
painting be painted? Alas, despite my
interest
in art, I was unqualified to answer such vexing questions!
I would have to make do with uncertainty.
"'Do you recall,
Professor, that hateful essay by Leo Tolstoy entitled: What
is
Art?' the Devil was asking me, 'and the conclusions it reached about
the
necessity of art - art in the broadest sense - being both in the
service of the
cultural ideal and universal as opposed to exclusive, or upper class?'
"I nervously nodded
my head.
"'Whether Tolstoy
was fundamentally a late Christian or an early Communist is irrelevant
to me,'
the Devil continued disdainfully. 'But
what is relevant is that his plea for adherence to the cultural ideal -
the
ideal of goodness and brotherhood as he defined it - has been
systematically
ignored by the majority of modern artists who, to my immense
satisfaction, have
taken art far beyond even the wildest anarchy of his contemporaries
and, in the
process, made it so exclusive ... that even I am sometimes at a loss to
understand it. Not
that there haven't been sporadic attempts at making it universal, which
is to
say, popular.'
"The Devil was
sarcastically staring at a painting which depicted three
different-sized
squares, one atop the other, the largest of which was red, the smallest
yellow,
and the one in between orange. 'I doubt
if there's a cretin on earth who wouldn't appreciate this,' he rasped,
drawing
my flagging attention to its utter simplicity.
'If, by universal, Tolstoy meant that art should be reduced to
its
lowest-common-apparent-denominator, then it would certainly seem that
this
painting admirably fulfils his simplistic requirements!'
"I felt strongly
resentful towards the Devil's disrespectful attitude to Tolstoy's
criteria of
art and would have attempted to defend them, had not the Evil One
suddenly
turned his hideous countenance in my direction again and, with a
penetrating
stare, halted my resentment in its emotional tracks.
Whether or not the Op, Pop, Kinetic,
Post-Painterly Abstraction, and Concept Movements were indebted to
Tolstoy, I
would have to resign myself to a begrudging silence and allow one of
the
nineteenth-century's finest minds to be ridiculed at will.
After all, could I really expect the Devil to
show respect for a man who was so unequivocally on the side of God? I held my tongue and, desiring to escape my
satanic host's fiery eyes, stared ruefully at what was to be the final
painting
of the series: a horizontally oblong canvas painted red.
For now, to my great
relief, the film progressed to the next stage of its didactic mission,
a stage
providing one with glimpses of various writers, both literary and
philosophical, and, subsequently, the titles of the books they had
written
..."
At this point in the
narrative I became conscious that Heather had yawned, so, not knowing
whether
through boredom or sleepiness, I asked her if she was still interested
in
hearing what I had to say.
"Yes, I am
still
interested," she replied, offering me a reassuring nod.
"In fact, more so now
than before."
"Good," I said
and, feeling slightly relieved, duly proceeded with my narration. "As in the cases of music and art, it
soon became apparent to me that literature and philosophy had also
passed from
the service of God to the service of His diabolic antagonist the closer
one
came to modern times, though not always consciously or with a clearly
definable
continuity. Of the earlier writers
exhibited on film, the Devil's greatest displeasure appeared to be
aroused by
the faces of St Augustine, St Thomas Aquinas, Calvin, Erasmus, Dante,
Sir
Thomas More, Pascal, Bunyan, Spinoza, Milton, and Fielding, each of
whom caused
him to avert his horrified gaze a moment, while, of the later writers
so
exhibited, his greatest pleasure appeared to be aroused by the faces of
Voltaire, Diderot, de Sade,
Byron,
Baudelaire,
Nietzsche, Lautréamont,
Rimbaud, Huysmans, Alistair Crowley, James
Joyce, Bertrand Russell,
Jean-Paul Sartre, Jean Genet, and Denis Wheatley, each of whom, in
varying
degrees and with differing emphases, had evidently furthered his
diabolical
cause. Not that there weren't
exceptions, once again, to the general trend.
For I was made manifestly aware of these when the Devil,
swallowing
rather than smoking his cigarette, gnashed his hideous teeth together
in overt
disapproval of them and temporarily averted his fiery eyes from the
film. Being the possessor of a fairly
comprehensive
knowledge of modern literature, however, I didn't have to pay too much
attention to his evil countenance to know that the faces of writers
like D.H.
Lawrence, John Cowper Powys, Aldous
Huxley, Hermann Hesse, and Malcolm Muggeridge
would prove distasteful to him, particularly in light of his powerful
influence
on the twentieth century. It was indeed
gratifying to know that pockets of resistance to his death-dealing
advance
could still be found, though not, alas, to any great extent! But, at this point, the series of faces,
culminating in an elderly Henry Miller, came to an abrupt end, to be
replaced
by the spectacle of individual books upon some of which, dating from
the
earliest days of Western civilization, the Devil chose to comment.
"'Ugh, how I
loathed Pilgrim's
Progress!' he growled, as the title of Bunyan's
masterpiece, following on behind a series of books which he could only
bring himself
to look at through his claw-like hands, duly appeared on the wall in
front. 'How I laboured to have it burnt
and banned as soon as I'd read it! You
can't imagine the tormented state-of-mind I was in as a consequence of
this
accursed man's ability to taunt and humiliate me before the civilized
world! If only Christian had fallen into
my clutches instead of achieving his heavenly objective in the
Celestial City -
how I would have rejoiced! Even Milton
and Goethe showed some mercy on me, much as I could have hoped for
more!'
"From Paradise
Lost and Faust respectively, the latter of which the Evil
One
confessed to a begrudging admiration, we passed to various works by
Voltaire
and the Philosophes, which my host
found more
to his liking, indeed contrived to praise more for their opposition to
Rousseau, with his cult of the 'Noble Savage' and advocacy of a return
to
nature, than for any atheistic seeds sown by them.
Not altogether surprisingly, it was of Diderot
that the Devil spoke most warmly, considering that
he was the most intelligent and outspoken of the Philosophes,
the one most gifted in the art of undermining the Christian faith and
thus of
furthering, no matter how indirectly, his satanic majesty's abominable
cause. However, not until we arrived at
the nineteenth century, and particularly the second-half of it, did the
Devil
show signs of being really interested in the books that flashed before
his
infernal gaze. For it was now that such
titles as Maldoror, Les Fleurs du Mal, Une Saison en Enfer,
The
Anti-Christ,
Notes From Underground, Lŕ Bas,
and The
Picture of Dorian Gray appeared on the wall, and it
was at
this juncture that he once again flashed his jagged teeth at me in
order,
presumably, to impress upon me the overwhelming evidence in favour of
his
mounting success.
"'If Nietzsche
proclaimed the death of God, it was left to Huysmans
to proclaim the triumph of the Devil and to the twentieth century to
prove it!'
he at length resumed. 'And not merely
through its books, Professor, but also and more unequivocally through
the worst
wars this planet has ever experienced, the expansion of the city and
consequent
desecration of nature, the tyranny of the machine, the mass-murder of
millions
of innocent people, the fragmentation of society and dehumanization of
people,
the sexual perversions of the masses, the dictatorship of money, the
commercialization of the arts, the plethora of violent films, the
growth of
Jazz, the politics of Bolshevism ... oh, don't let me unduly torture
you, Professor! I was quite forgetting
that you're a mere
mortal, unable to take evil in such strong doses as myself. Nevertheless, what I say is no exaggeration,
as I'm sure you'll be aware. Even those
who most hate me are powerless to conquer me, and neither can they
entirely
escape my influence. The likes of
Tolstoy, D.H. Lawrence, Aldous Huxley,
John Cowper
Powys, Hermann Hesse, et al., may have
bravely
battled against my growing dominion over Western civilization, but they
were
unable to check my advance or restore God to His former pre-eminence. Their words were no match for my acts. For the facts of modern life persisted, in
spite of their efforts to fight or criticize or ignore them. Had they not spent so much of their lives in
the country or provinces, they would probably have fallen under my
spell to a
much greater extent, and their works might have been more akin to those
of my
closest disciples, who almost invariably live in the biggest cities. As it was, their proximity to nature partly
shielded them from the fate which befell a majority of their fellows. And so, I regret to add, did their
comparatively high intelligence. But
their influence on the West was negligible compared with mine, which
continues
to spread despite the obdurate attacks made upon it by the likes of
them. If someone were to write a book like
Pilgrim's
Progress these days, he would be laughed at or ignored.
But the fact that books regularly appear with
titles like The Devil Rides Out, The Devil's Advocate, The Devil's
Alternative, Satan in the Suburbs, The Satanic Verses, and Demonomania is taken for granted, and simply
confirms
the extent of my current power!'
"I could hardly
accuse my evil host of lying about that
fact! Now that the procession of books on
film was
drawing closer to the present, it was sufficiently evident, by the huge
number
of crime, thriller, gangster, horror, war, occult, sci-fi, and other
such
literary publications on display, that the Devil held a virtual
monopoly over
the printed word, a monopoly which extended, I scarcely needed to
remind
myself, way beyond the confines of books!
However, for every book which may have had tenuous connections
with God,
there were at least ten times as many boasting of strong connections
with His
arch-enemy. The monotony of it all was
beyond belief! And, as before, one found
oneself wondering how much worse books could possibly become over the
coming
decades, whether, in fact, it would be possible for the Devil to get a
stronger
grip on their production than at present or whether, satisfied that
things had
reached a diabolical climax there, he would exclusively dedicate
himself to the
more overtly barbarous medium of film instead, effectively abandoning
the
crooked cross for the straight star. But
no sooner had a novel entitled Black
Mass been flashed before
my weary eyes ... than the film once again changed track and plunged me
into an
even more depressing scene, one in which a middle-aged man was
vigorously
masturbating over a magazine depicting, on the glossy pages in front of
him, a
model's body exposed in some of the most shamelessly erotic postures
imaginable! From a vaginal close-up of
the illusory model, one was obliged to witness a phallic close-up of
the
all-too-real masturbator as he endeavoured to bring himself to an
orgasmic
climax. And from a revolting shot of his
lewd and sickly face, one was returned to the garishly erotic
photographs in
the magazine, no less revolting under the circumstances!
"'I trust you're
aware of what's happening here, Professor,' croaked the personification
of
evil, briefly turning his gratified eyes in my direction and inflicting
yet
another burst of jagged teeth upon me.
'The subject of sex is one which greatly interests me,
particularly when
it's of a kind such as this and is therefore sufficiently perverse to
attest to
my influence on its practitioner. Never
before have there been so many wankers in
the world,
never before has sexual perversion attained to such a grand scale! How wonderful to behold so much wasted and
maltreated sperm, so much sexual anarchy!
How delightful that men should be
reduced to
this! And not only to this, Professor,
but to so many other, and grosser, forms of sexual perversion as well!'
"The film had
passed from the disgusting masturbation clip to one in which
prostitutes were
at work offering their swollen vaginas to a series of clients, each of
whom
appeared to take the frightful impersonality and sexual aridity of his
copulation for granted, merely content to dispose of his semen in the
nearest sexual
orifice to-hand, irrespective of the lack of any positive feeling. It was evident, from the spectacle in front
of me, that sex meant no more to these men than a mechanical process
which had
to be regularly indulged in for the sake of some promiscuous excitement. Of real sexual gratification there was not
the slightest hint, no matter how hard the prostitutes worked to
simulate
it. The criterion of mutual love, upon
which any worthwhile copulation ultimately depends, was totally absent
and, as
such, no number of convulsions, gasps, sighs, or groans could overcome
the
fundamental obstacle its absence engendered, could transform or nourish
their
practitioners. Here one was brought
face-to-face with the cold, impersonal 'fuck', the 'fuck' which Wilhelm
Reich
and D.H. Lawrence had dedicated so much of their literary careers to
denouncing, and it required little intelligence to see, from the
washed-out and
deadened appearances of its chief perpetrators, just how right they
were! Deprived of its raison
d'ętre,
sex was nothing less than a sin against the spirit, for which the
latter paid
dearly.
"'Ah, if only I
could force all
men and women to indulge themselves like this,' the Devil
continued, as the film persisted in highlighting scene after barren
scene of
mechanical copulation, 'my victory would be complete!
Alas, there are still too many people who,
partly under my enemies' influence and partly through good fortune,
attain to
something akin to the real God-given experience. But
they're
a dwindling number, Professor,
and love is getting harder for them all the time. My
influence
is so ubiquitous, these days, that
the word "love" has come to be
ridiculed as a bourgeois affectation and maudlin indulgence unworthy of
"enlightened" minds. It is
"free love" which has supplanted love, Professor, whether in the
decadence of extramarital infidelity or in the outright barbarism of multipartner promiscuity, and such "free love"
owes nothing to love, as any God-fearing person would define it. On the contrary, it's only through freedom from
love that such hate-filled promiscuity can flourish, so that my
materialistic
advance proceeds according to plan. Here
and there an intelligent voice is raised against me, but, thanks be to evil, it's quickly smothered by the vast
reality
confronting it, the reality, I need scarcely remind you, of my hateful
influence, which engenders either a conspiracy of silence or, more
usually, one
of mendacity and hypocrisy. Indeed, my
propaganda machine is so powerful ... that a majority of would-be
enemies lose
heart and resign themselves to the status quo, as though they were
deluded to
suppose it was really as bad as they thought.
Working through their fallen fellows, I attack their
self-confidence on
all fronts, pressing on until such time as it cracks and grants me an
entry
into their sexual integrity. And believe
me, Professor, there's scarcely a man on earth who hasn't got at least
a tiny
crack in his self-confidence, who isn't partly in my grasp, even among
my
greatest opponents!'
"I felt distinctly
uncomfortable at the mention of this, and pretended not to notice that
the Evil
One was staring at me through mocking eyes, perhaps searching my soul
for one
such crack that, once found, would brand my show of resistance to him
as a mark
of hypocrisy, if not a pretentious futility.
By now, however, the film had progressed to a clip highlighting
what at
first sight looked like yet another species of sexual perversion, one
in which,
to judge by appearances, women were trying their utmost to look and
think and
act like men. Or were they?
Dressed in trousers or jeans and doing work
that had hitherto been confined to men, it was difficult to know
exactly what to
assume. For the scene seemed relatively
innocuous and sufficiently commonplace to preclude any allegations of
perversion. But the Devil had other
opinions, as I now discovered, to my considerable dismay.
"'The position of
women in the contemporary world is one that particularly gratifies me,'
he
remarked, intently staring at the film.
'For your society has become so male-dominated, since I first
got a
tight grip on it over a century ago, that women, poor things, have been
coerced
into emulating men to the extent they can, and at the expense, needless
to say,
of their innate femininity. From a
society centred around intuition and faith, a naturalistic society
which made
the Virgin Mary a symbol of its essential femininity, the West changed,
under
pressure of its industrial and urban expansion, to one in which reason
and
technology prevailed, where masculinity was made the governing
principle, and
where it was therefore necessary for woman to adjust herself to this
materialistic state-of-affairs as best she could. Contrary
to
superficial appearances, woman
hasn't taken the law into her own hands, and thereupon declared her
will to
freedom, her desire for equal opportunity, democratic rights, social
regard,
etc., as so many simple-minded fools now suppose. Instead
she
has been obliged by environmental
pressures, by a subtle species of behaviourism, to adopt a social
position
contrary to her own traditional interests, in order to serve those of
man. Her much-vaunted liberty, about which
so much
fuss has been made on both sides of the gender divide, is essentially
liberation from herself as woman, a desperate attempt at
denouncing and
negating her femininity in accordance with the artificial standards
imposed
upon her by a male-dominated society.
It's nothing less than a betrayal of woman by woman, a betrayal
which I
initiated and encouraged with the growth of my power over the
industrialized
world and which, to judge by the scenes before you, has blossomed quite
extensively. Given a few more years,
women will be so much more like men that a majority of the younger ones
will
absolutely refuse to sacrifice their careers for children.
In fact, they'll absolutely refuse to have
any children in the first place, deeming it against their liberated
interests. The birth-rate will continue
to fall and the abortion rate to rise, while contraceptives,
sterilization, and
other deterrents to propagation will be in greater demand than ever
before. Truly, I foresee a great future
for myself, a future in which I shall continue to pull the wool over
the eyes
of countless women, who are convinced that they're best serving their
own
interests when most going against them!
And I shall employ more men, moreover, in attacking the cruder
aspects
of behaviourism, so that its subtler aspects, those depending upon
environmental
changes rather than social conditioning, will be simultaneously
undermined. Being by nature egotistical,
a majority of people still refuse to accept the fact that they're being
dictated to by external forces. They
prefer to see their various liberation movements in terms of an ongoing
cause
which they've initiated, rather than as something brutally thrust upon
them. But I've thrust these liberation
movements upon them, Professor, and I shall continue to inflict a
cruelty upon
them which, in their blind optimism, they'll mistake for a self-imposed
kindness. Whatever authors like J.B.
Priestley may write about the importance of restoring woman to her
proper place
in society, and thereby establishing a balance between femininity and
masculinity instead of allowing the present trend of male domination to
continue, my influence on that society will persist, and no amount of
counter-revolutionary preaching will do anything to eradicate it. The irony of it all is that while people like
Priestley may know what needs
to be done to check the growth of
my influence, they're absolutely powerless to do anything,
because the
root cause of the problems they see - in other words, the nature of the
environment which gives rise to such problems in the first place -
persists in
spite of them, and will doubtless continue to persist until such time
as,
desiring an intensification of my diabolical satisfactions, I decide to
inflict
a major catastrophe upon it in order to eradicate the problem once and
for
all! In the meantime, they'll have no
option but to persevere with my dominion and continue to live in a
predominantly masculine society, where woman must do what she can to
approximate more closely to man. But
there are some women, Professor, who, even in this day and age, are
less under
my influence than others, and who accordingly lead something
approximating to a
healthy feminine existence. I refer, in
particular, to your wife.'
"A ghastly dread
overcame me at the sight of you on film, Heather. For
I
suddenly remembered that I had allowed
myself to be brought along to this room for the specific purpose of
witnessing
your alleged infidelity and, having forgotten all about the matter
during the
Devil's black and largely lying sermon, I realized that this was what I
was now
about to do."
I didn't have to pay
Heather too much attention to see that her initial apprehension had
returned,
and with even greater intensity, if anything, than before.
Could it be that she really was being
unfaithful to me, I wondered? This was
no time, however, to embark on an official inquiry.
Nevertheless, her state of mind was somewhat odd
...
"So what
happened?" she asked, showing visible signs of impatience.
"Well, no sooner
had the film acquainted me with your presence in our bedroom than you
must have
heard someone knocking at the door," I responded. "For
you
immediately opened it to admit
a man whom I was granted a brief glimpse of from behind but whom I
couldn't
recognize, at least not at that moment.
Yet, as he bent over you to kiss you on the mouth, a vague
recollection
dawned on me that I had in fact seen him before, if only briefly. But where? If nothing further had happened and his head
had remained perfectly still, I might have been able to figure it out. But, in the ensuing seconds, the sight of you
being fondled and stripped by him gave me such an unpleasant shock ...
that I
could scarcely believe my eyes, let alone think. And
when
I saw him drag you to the bed and,
having impatiently stripped off the remainder of your clothing, throw
himself
down upon you, I was virtually beside myself with outrage.
'Who-the-devil is this man?' I cried,
breaking, in one frantic breath, the long intimidated silence that had
been
imposed upon me since the commencement of this singular film.
"'Don't panic,
Professor,' the Devil answered, lighting himself another cigarette as
though to
savour the spectacle more complacently.
'Everything will be revealed to you in bad time.'
And, as though these words were a cue for the
enactment of his sordid revelation, the mysterious 'lover' suddenly
disengaged
his lips from yours and looked back over his shoulder at me with a
mocking
smile on his face.
"'Don't forget the
Ł500, Professor Thomas,' he hissed in an equally mocking tone-of-voice.
"With a gasp of
disbelief, I recognized the man who had earlier accosted me in the
street and
induced me to believe that you were being unfaithful.
'But that's impossible!' I cried, staring
aghast at his lustful countenance. 'You
told me ...' But before I could say
anything else, a burst of sardonic laughter erupted from the vicinity
of the
film projector to my rear and, craning my neck around, I now beheld, to
my
utter astonishment, the very same man whom I had just seen on film! And it was at this point, Heather,
that I screamed and woke up!'"
Once again a horrible
shudder shot through me at the thought of it, of all I had experienced
during
the course of this harrowing nightmare.
How could anyone actually dream all that? "Tell
me,
Heather, that n-none of it was
true and that I w-was only imagining things," I stammered, in the
throes
of my distress.
But, contrary to my
expectations, Heather simply put her arms about my neck and drew me
closer to
her chest, like a mother about to offer succour to her infant. "There, there!" she responded soothingly. "It was only a dream."
THE
RECKONING
"What,
in
a nutshell, is modern diplomacy with the East, Near
or Far, all about but an attempt by the West to stave off the
possibility of a
third world war for as long as possible, so that people like us can
continue to
absorb as much of our cultural heritage as possible?" the journalist
Julian Brown was saying to Timothy Young, a long-term friend of his. "All this frantic rushing around Europe,
all these urgent trips to various museums, galleries, cathedrals, etc.,
in
which people like us tend to indulge, how symptomatic it all seems of
our
desire to see as much as possible before the great cataclysm erupts and
we are
all ploughed under! And not only us, but
our bloody cultural heritage as well!"
"There was and
continues to be a great deal more to modern diplomacy than that!" Young
retorted to the middle-aged man beside him, who still seemed to be
wrapped,
despite the collapse of Soviet Communism, in the wintry embrace of the
cold
war. "But I grant you it's in our
interests to preserve ourselves for as long as possible.
Whether the great cataclysm, as you
mysteriously put it, will erupt this century, next century, or in two
or more
centuries time ... is anyone's guess.
Though, if recent diplomatic bunglings
are
anything to judge by, we needn't be surprised if something analogous
erupts
sooner than later, and not necessarily in consequence of war, either!"
"And that may well be
before you've had an opportunity to visit all of the major cultural
centres of
"Oh, Julian, do
spare us the sordid details!" Bridget Ryan protested, turning a quite
peeved expression on the face of her latest boyfriend, who sat
in-between. "Here we are, in one of the
prettiest
parks in London on one of the warmest days of summer, and all you can
talk
about is the hypothetical future overcoming of Western civilization by
some
hypothetical barbarians from the East!
Really, you are
the limit! Anyone would think you actually
wanted
it to
be overcome."
Her boyfriend gave vent
to a short sharp burst of cynical laughter.
Poor Bridget, she could never face-up to the nuclear and
biological
threats of the contemporary world, not even in the heart of summer. She preferred to ignore them, to pretend that
they would disappear if one chose not to dwell on them, and to see in
every
temporary or expedient change for the better which the East or some
other
godforsaken part of the world underwent, an irreversible change for the
best. And yet, she was by no means
untypical in that respect. Almost
everyone had an optimistic streak in him these days, though it didn't
necessarily require Glasnost
and Perestroika to bring it out. "Yes,
to
some extent I suppose I do
want it to be overcome," he gravely admitted. "To
some
extent, I think we all have a
little suicidal demon egging us on, reminding us that our civilization
is
fundamentally moribund, that there's no possibility of our being able
to
reverse time and restore it to anything like its former glory. One need only view the latest examples of
modern art, or listen to the latest examples of modern music, or read
the
latest examples of modern literature ... to realize that we're fast
drawing to
a close. We have 'had our day', if you'll forgive me the expression, and
all we can do
now is await the end, await the death and destruction that the
uncivilized
enemy or accident or whatever will mete out to us all in due course. After all, could one really expect it to be
otherwise? Hasn't every civilization
worthy of the name, from the ancient Egyptian and Chinese to the
slightly
less-ancient Greek and Roman, had its allocated time-span?
Is there any reason for us to assume that
we're an exception? No, not the
slightest! Only fools and ignoramuses
are convinced that the West, conceived in traditional civilized terms,
has a
long and glorious future ahead!"
There ensued a period of
solemn silence during which Timothy Young, profoundly bored by his
friend's
apocalyptic pessimism, reflected on his literary ambitions and brooded
over his
comparative lack of success. Like Julian,
he was acutely aware of the feebleness and inanity of most contemporary
artistic productions. Yet, unlike that
forthright man, he had not been discouraged by it from pursuing a
literary
career, but had blundered on with his creative desires as though that
was the
most sensible thing to do. Preferring to
believe that literature, no less than the other arts, still had a
future, he
had thrown himself into the production of novels which, by contemporary
standards, were intellectually daring and ideologically precocious,
only to
realize, much to his dismay, that the reading public generally had
little or no
taste for such literature, being more attuned to the latest commercial
fiction
of what might be called the pro-filmic avant-garde.
Unfortunately, his profound distaste for the
equivalent commercial developments in art and music had sufficed to put
him off
the production of literary parallels, in consequence of which he now
found
himself faced with no alternative but to abandon his literary ambitions
and
follow Julian Brown into the philistine world of commercial journalism,
which
he still despised from an artist's standpoint, the standpoint, needless
to say,
of a subjective reinvention and reinterpretation of things. If the reading public had accepted his more
philosophical approach to literature, all would have been at least
relatively
well. But his endeavour to bring
literature to new conceptual heights had not met with a wide
appreciation,
obliging him to conclude that the genuine writer was as much
out-of-favour, these
days, as the genuine priest. Only the
pro-filmic antiwriter, like the pro-cosmic
antipriest, had a chance of surviving, of
acquiring a sort
of negative prestige. For
at
least
he was relevant to the times instead of effectively
anachronistic, and
stood as both a chronicler and mouthpiece of the age. Unless one had the willpower to face-up to
the creative requirements of contemporary Western society, and thus
produced
material of a cinematic nature, there was little place for one in the
modern
world. Like art and music, literature
was essentially a thing of the past, and those who were well-versed in
it and
genuinely appreciative of its true nature could hardly be expected to
take a
leading role in the furtherance of the materialistic productions which
had come
to supersede it at the behest of the market.
With very few exceptions, anyone who, because of his creative
endeavour,
considered himself an artist ... was simply deceiving himself. Artists, like the works they produced, were
also a thing of the past, an outmoded species of man for which the age
had no
real use. Strictly speaking, there was
no 'modern art'. If one didn't like the
works of the pro-photographic anti-artists, that
was
too bad. One had to lump it.
The 'Call that art?' mentality was simply
ignorant of the current position of cultural activities in the Western
world,
as, for that matter, were those who replied with a 'Yes' to their
detractors.
This
period
of solemn silence was eventually
broken, however, by the loud voice of Julian Brown, who expanded on his
previous comments with a remark about the likelihood of various
important art
treasures being saved from martial destruction either by judicious
underground
storage or timely transportation to remote places, in the event of the
great
cataclysm eventually breaking out; though he thought it unlikely there
would be
time or inclination to store or transport that many.
"And yet, I dare say some Western art
treasures would survive a third world war and be treated with respect
by a future
civilized people some decades or centuries after the Atilla-like
purge on Western institutions and cultural creations had run its
demented
course," he added wistfully, turning first towards Timothy and then
towards Bridget.
"What makes you
suppose the West would
come
off
worst in any such
hypothetical nuclear war?" the latter asked, still impatient with her
boyfriend's apocalyptic preoccupations, which struck her as symptomatic
of the
pessimistic imagination of a petty-bourgeois intellectual who refused
to accept
the inexorable march of proletarian history, as bearing upon the arts,
so that
he had a sort of blind sport for cinema and photography.
"Simply knowledge
of the fact that Western civilization is dying," Brown irritably
replied. "Whether the enemy would
be vanquished along with us or come out victorious, we cannot of course
be
certain. But, either way, the outcome
could only be bleak for the West. You
see, the enemy is ideologically opposed to our religious, political,
economic,
social, and cultural traditions. He has
assumed, consciously or unconsciously, a raison
d'ętre of opposing
the West, and this seems to accord with historical precedent, with the
inevitability, almost, of a barbaric opposition to tottering
civilizations, in
order that the ground may be cleared, as it were, for subsequent
cultural
development. You couldn't have expected
decadent Rome to pull down its own pagan temples for the sake of a
future
religious development called Christianity, and neither, it seems to me,
can you
expect the decadent West to destroy its own Christian churches, the
very
symbols of its cultural integrity. Too
many vested interests are at stake and, besides, what would be the
point of
destroying that which purports to offer one Eternal Life?
No, that is only likely to be done by
barbarians, by a strong outside power, corporation, industrial
conglomerate, or
whatever which, in opposing Western civilization, may succeed in
sweeping it
into the rubbish bin of history. And,
believe me, our civilization may not have
much longer
to go before that happens!"
Both Bridget Ryan and
Timothy Young knew that, fundamentally, Julian had a point, though they
also
knew that one couldn't make a point of being overly concerned about it,
since,
to all appearances, Western civilization had already been swept away by
the
world barbarism of the proletarian arts, including film and
photography, and
was only hanging-on in the background, as it were, of its religious and
cultural traditions. And for those who
valued such traditions, the great art treasures of Europe were there to
be
visited and viewed as frequently as possible.
Another decade, another two decades, and the works of Crevelli, Tura, Mabuse, Mantegna, Bellini, Botticelli,
Tintoretto, and other such religious
masters might be
beyond one's grasp, shut out for ever from the admiring eye, banned or
destroyed. The great galleries might be
blown to smithereens, the great cathedrals, museums, libraries, and
stately
homes along with them. Then Western
civilization would truly be dead. At
present, however, it was still there, a sort of death-in-life
traditionalism
which had been effectively eclipsed by the vigorous modernity of world
barbarism, a barbarism which shone with a vibrant light from every
cinema
screen, camera lens, TV screen, light bulb, flashbulb, colour magazine,
and
rock stage in the country, and which only those marooned in bourgeois
culture
could be expected to regard with a condescendingly critical and even
aloof eye. Clearly, Julian was one such
person, and so
too, up to a point, was Timothy Young.
Though Bridget fancied herself to be more in-tune with
proletarian
modernity, and thus effectively an enemy of the very civilization for
which
Julian Brown appeared to be standing up, despite the fact of his never
having
contributed anything particularly original to it himself.
In fact, the thought of this caused her to
laugh outright, and when asked by her tetchy companion exactly what she
found
so amusing, she simply replied: "The prospect of you two idiots
traipsing
round Europe like a pair of cultural dinosaurs, in search of dead
culture upon
which to feast your cadaverous imaginations!"
"Oh," said
Julian, who blushed with shame in realizing that Bridget held him in
such low
esteem, "then it doesn't matter to you what fate befalls the cultural
masterpieces which our civilization has produced over the centuries?"
"Not in the
slightest," said Bridget, to her boyfriend's further dismay. "The only thing that matters to me is
that I should continue to live and be able to experience the culture of
my
time, no matter how barbarous it may be in relation to what you choose
to
regard, in that finicky way of yours, as civilized.
For the only way to the future is through the
present, not the past, and if you had an ounce of real imagination and
courage,
either of you, you'd drop the culture of the past and concentrate on
living in
the present or, better still, find some way to overhaul and transcend
it in the
interests of a more civilized future!
"I can't deny there's
some truth in what you say," Young conceded, frowning with what seemed
to
Bridget like an overly sententious solemnity.
"But, frankly, I don't see how that can be done, especially when
you've been accustomed, like me and Julian, to an academic background."
"Quite," the
latter seconded, nodding in the process.
"Timothy and I are too fixed in our ways to be able to change
now,
and, besides, what would be the point? We'd
never
succeed
in becoming anything but second- or third-rate punks."
"Then you really
are a pair of cultural dinosaurs," said Bridget.
"Who deserve to
perish, is that it?" he angrily rejoined.
"By my reckoning,
you're already dead," she retorted.
"For the longer you live off the art of the past, the more dead
you
become to the present, and the less chance there is that the future
will revive
you. Your physical demise will simply be
the culmination of a process which began on the spiritual plane several
years
ago."
"Better to die in
civilized conceptualism than as a perceptual barbarian," Young somewhat
sententiously opined.
Bridget smiled wearily
before concluding, as she rose to go, that although there may be some
truth in
such a statement as far as he
was
concerned, Julian, with his professed love of art, was more orientated
towards
the perceptual in any case, and therefore doubtfully civilized in
regard to that
criterion.
"Oh,
don't be so pedantically paradoxical!" he exclaimed, not fully
understanding her. "I'm as
civilized as I damn-well want to be and in the way I want to be, and
that's
all."
"You said it!"
laughed Bridget, walking away.
"Better luck next
time," Timothy said to his friend, who just shrugged in exasperation
and
cried: "Women!"
OCCUPATIONAL
SPECIES
Personally,
I
prefer them to wear something different every day,
giving me plenty of variety. Too many of
them tend to dress in exactly the same boring fashion day after day,
week after
week, month after month, year after year.
It's rather depressing to see them, particularly when they dress
like
men, and thus wear pants or jeans all the time.
Ah, you agree with
me! I thought you would.
Variety is the spice of life, after all. Well,
that's
my idea anyway. Someone who knows
she's a woman and gives one
the maximum experience of what a woman is or should be.
These days, however, there are too many women
who look and act and think just like men.
It's a mark of the times. You
can't altogether blame them, though you can't particularly admire them
either. They're sacrificing too much
of their basic
femininity, their sexual distinctiveness.
They're victims of the age, forced into the unisex cult. Well, I can assure you that that isn't my
idea of
the ideal. If I had the good fortune to
live with a beautiful woman, I'd make damn sure she behaved like one! And I wouldn't want her to dress in jeans
every day.
No, certainly not! Jeans are all very well now and again, two or
three times a week, if you see what I mean, but not every day. She might as well be a man as wear them that
often.
No, what I would want
from her, apart from the obvious, is variety, as already remarked. Not too much, mind you, but just enough to
keep me interested, giving me a pleasant surprise from time to time.
Yes, that's it!
For too much variety would
be as bad as too little, wouldn't it?
A woman must have a personality, a temperament, mustn't she? And good looks too, of course.
But not so good that she lacks character and
intelligence. When there are too many
charms on the outside, you can't really expect very much inside, or
under the
physical surface in the depths of her psychology, can you?
That's what I've always found, anyway. Too
many
charms in one context generally mean
too few in another! Take my word for
it. A beautiful blockhead isn't the most
exciting of people to live with, believe me!
You might regret the fact that you had been fooled by her
superficial
charms into imagining there was something profounder about her.
That's right, I entirely
agree! Quite so. For the converse case of a woman who's highly
intelligent but relatively ugly is no real improvement, either. You've got to put beauty before brains,
admittedly. But not to the extent that
you discount brains altogether! That's
the whole point. It's a question of
achieving a sort of golden mean. After
all, who wants to discuss philosophy or psychology or history with his
woman
every evening? Not I, at any rate! You might as well live with a man as do that!
Absolutely!
Of course, it's an advantage if your wife or
girlfriend does know something about the intellectual life and can
therefore
discuss such subjects with you now and again, when you feel like it. But to have them thrust upon you every night
- ugh, how revolting! Particularly
after
you've
put in a hard day's grind at your own philosophy or literature
or
whatever. Then you're only too
keen to take a break from your intellectual commitments and sample a
little
marital relaxation, or something of the kind.
Yes, absolutely! I'm glad you agree with me.
A thoroughly Strindbergian
viewpoint, I'll admit. One needs to get
away from the concerns of man after one has been up to one's eyes in
them all
day, and how better than by approaching those of woman?
And her principal concerns are man and the
propagation of the kind. That's the way
I see it anyway, whether or not people think me old-fashioned. The world and that which
keeps it going, as Schopenhauer would say. Two opposing standpoints. So
one
shouldn't expect women to have all the
same abilities and interests as men, should one?
Quite! But
too
many fools now do, which again is
typical of the times. They see
companionship primarily in terms of being able to discuss all the same
authors,
painters, musicians, etc., and of having the same or similar views on
everything. Ugh, could anything be
worse? Imagine one's beloved with her
beautiful head regularly buried in the works of Nietzsche or Spengler or any other great thinker, in order to
be able to
discuss them with one and thereby offer one
intellectual
companionship! Ugh, how
awful! One really shouldn't expect women
to behave contrary to what they are by nature.
It's shameful.
Indeed!
Yet all too many of them are obliged to
compromise themselves in the most unseemly and unfeminine manner these
days, to
close their legs and open their mouths, sacrificing their co-operative
traditions to compete with men! Quite obscene, in fact.
More frigging obscene than anything out of Felician
Rops!
Yes, I entirely
agree. If things continue as they are at
present, there'll be no hope for anyone, men included.
And the way I see it, there's scant chance of
things not continuing as at present.
Oh yes, I know all about
them alright, all about the confidence tricksters and other
intellectual charlatans
of which the world is currently so well-stocked, but I can't put much
faith in
their solutions, believe me! It's all
very well for some sophisticated Oriental to say that contemporary
Western
society needs to be changed, if it isn't to destroy itself. But when he goes on to suggest that the only
way to change it is by one's undergoing a personal revolution which
will
similarly influence other people, and thus bring about the desired
amelioration, I must confess to a certain astonishment that he should
expect
such an idea to be taken seriously on a large scale, let alone put into
practice under the existing circumstances!
One might be led to assume that the world, or at any rate the
Western
part of it, was populated by people who could be relied upon to indulge
in the
desired personal revolution at the drop of a hat, and were consequently
only
too willing to give it a try. But that's
nonsense, as I'm sure you'll agree. For
in a world where it 'takes all sorts', as the saying rather blithely
goes, one
can only expect a tiny handful of people to be such as would, through
temperamental or other reasons, take it seriously.
And they would be unable to influence more
than another tiny handful, if, indeed, they influenced anyone at all,
which
seems to me somewhat doubtful. No, all
these exhortations to personal revolution as a means to saving
contemporary
industrial society are entirely beside-the-point, and simply amount to
playing
with words on the part of their literary perpetrators, who assume
environment
doesn't matter, that it can be overcome at will in the interests of
one's
personal revolution. Typically Eastern
attitude to reality or, rather, the traditional Oriental inability or
reluctance to give external reality its due and treat it as something
more than
mere 'maya', or illusion!
Quite, I entirely
agree! No shortage of illusion in their
heads, though. Main
reason why they're so popular here these days.
For the truth is becoming increasingly
difficult to bear. Fake panaceas
generally preferred. Still, you do get
the occasional lucid and outspoken writer in the West, don't you? Like myself, for instance.
Not afraid to disillusion people concerning
the crassly materialistic nature of contemporary reality, and by no
means
unaware of the soul-destroying influence which this reality exerts on
most
people, reducing them to the dehumanized level of so many 'scumbags',
'piles of
shit', 'cunts', 'pricks', 'assholes',
'bums' and
other such denigratory epithets which
follow from a
materialistic premise.
Absolutely!
And that is probably why the name Adrian
Holland is never found on the current best-seller list.
My writings are generally too depressing for
popular consumption. I refuse to be
impressed by the fake panaceas. Instead
of
feeding
people false hopes, I give them the truth about their society
in
relation to the system of things, the sphere of God, or whatever else
you would
like to call that eternal manifestation of life which stands outside
and above
the predominantly temporal preoccupations of contemporary man. I don't exhort them to improve themselves
with the aid of meditation or self-analysis, and thereby change society
for the
better, because I know that no amount of hypothetical self-improvement
on the
part of the relatively small number of people who just might
be
interested in trying it ... will do a thing to change the attitudes and
natures
- yes, temperamental and physiological dispositions - of the great
majority of
people who, indifferent to or ignorant of my writings, will doubtless
continue
in their well-worn tracks without even realizing that I may have
suggested some
such self-improvement in the first place.
And why shouldn't they, considering that life is an affair of
types of
people, not of any one type, and certainly not of any one type of
person who
may imagine his type capable of influencing and changing the other
types! No, the self-improving, meditation
type
certainly has his place in the world, but it's only one place amongst
others.
Yes, if they wish to
believe that any personal revolution their self-analysis or whatever
may bring
about will help to change society in general, good luck to them! But I don't see that anyone who isn't of
their type should necessarily be impressed by it. Revolutions
are
going on all the time, and
mostly they're anything but personal, as you well know.
Yes, absolutely! Not exactly the most encouraging prospect for
anyone who hopes to change contemporary industrial society for what he
considers to be the better, is it?
Especially when the cost of living is going up and up so
rapidly, and
the wage demands are going up and up even more rapidly, and the
standard of
living is going down and down so rapidly that you can hardly keep-up
with it!
Yes, I quite agree. It makes you wonder how some people got it
into their heads that we're a single species, a nice big family of
bipeds whose
desire for self-improvement should lead to a rosy brotherhood of man
some time
in the not-too-distant future. Think of
it - the homogeneity of man! Everyone
helping everyone else because everyone is the same as everyone else! Really, I can't begin to fathom the mentality
of the type of person who imagines that because we all go on two legs -
at any
rate, those of us who aren't crippled or legless - and have two hands,
two
eyes, two ears, etc., we must belong to the same species!
Is one to suppose that, instead of being a
more subtle and sophisticated version of the jungle and its jungle
laws, modern
society is an institution where everyone cares for everyone else and
endeavours
to further the noble cause of man? I
must confess to being somewhat perplexed by such a supposition! One would think that we were all sheep-like
or horse-like or goose-like or even ant-like.
Imagine it, to think of man as one might think of goats or pigs
or rabbits, that is to say in terms of a
particular species
rather than of a particular kind! How
odd or deficient the reasoning powers of such people must be! Instead of being equated with the animal kind
or the bird kind or the fish kind, mankind is regarded by such people
as
constituting one of the many species which make up the animal kind,
only a more
sophisticated species of animal than those which ordinarily go on four
legs.
You laugh, my friend,
but I assure you this nonsense is taken perfectly seriously by many
people,
perhaps even by a majority of them, who are convinced of their social
homogeneity. Never for a moment would
they dare think of mankind the way they might think of the animal kind
or the
bird kind. That would be to betray their
long-cherished illusion that, in consequence of having two legs, two
arms,
etc., their neighbours must belong to the same species as themselves.
No, because their
neighbours eat meat with the aid of knives and forks, speak the same
language,
vote at elections, brush their teeth twice a day, visit the local
doctor from
time to time, watch television, and wear shoes, they cannot conceive of
them as
belonging to a different species. And
yet, the chances are pretty high that their neighbours do belong to a
different
species! Unless they happen to live in a
neighbourhood where everyone is pretty much alike, or the species vary
only
slightly, the chances are that their neighbours will belong to such a
different
species ... that they would be unable to communicate with them on
anything but
the most rudimentary or commonplace terms, like the state of the
weather or the
cost of petrol. Yes, if the truth were
known, it's likely that mankind contains more individual species, these
days,
than both the animal and the bird kinds put together.
You laugh,
my friend, but I assure you I'm not joking.
I take the concept of human heterogeneity very seriously. I see no reason to suppose that all those who
go on two legs are necessarily any closer to one another, spiritually
or
physically, than all those that go on four legs or, like birds, two
legs and
two wings. On the contrary, it seems
more reasonable to suppose that there are even greater differences
between them
than between all the different species of animals and birds, not to
mention
insects and fish. Naturally, there's
still a basic division between predator and prey. But
how
much more complicated and
multifarious it is in the human kingdom than in each of the other
kingdoms,
where nature rules supreme and accordingly dictates the exact form the
facts of
life or survival must take. Believe me, even the most predatory of us regularly
ends-up prey,
albeit with less serious consequences, as a rule, than would be the
case were
we not human beings. But there you are,
the survival laws of human society are so much more subtle and
sophisticated
than those of the jungle ... that we often fail to grasp the connection
between
them, fail to recognize the jungle foundations, so to speak, upon which
our
society is built. We imagine a
homogeneity of purpose akin to that of, say, the ants or the bees, and
leave it
at that, confident in the supposition that the fellow who sits next to
us on
the bus or stands in front of us on the subway escalator is essentially
of the
same species as ourselves, a fellow-worker, it may be, in the glorified
nest or
hive we habitually refer to as society.
But, really, how foolish to equate men with ants or bees or any
other
homogeneous species of insect! Ant and
bee equivalents there may well be among the heterogeneous crowd of men,
but
they would no more be representative of men in general than ants and
bees of
insects in general.
Yes, I realize I was
speaking of the jungle a moment ago. But
the barbarous laws of that ancient institution are no less applicable
to
insects, indeed are no less applicable to birds and fish as well - at
any rate,
as far as the predator/prey relationship is concerned.
In respect of survival techniques, the laws
of the jungle are just as evident in the depths of the ocean or in the
heights
of the air or in the lengths of one's back garden as in the breadth of
the
jungle, whichever jungle you care to name.
Absolutely!
Life lives on life, whether that life happens
to be found at the top of the Telecommunications Tower or at the bottom
of the
deepest ocean. How could it be
otherwise? Only, where human life is
concerned the living-on process is generally so much more subtle and
sophisticated, as already remarked, that half the time you aren't aware
you're
actually being lived on. You imagine
you're getting value for money and money for value, which is quite
often the
case. Quite often. But there are times, too, when nothing could
be further from the case, and you may or may not be aware of it.
Cynical? Yes, I suppose you could say I'm being a bit
cynical. But only a bit, mind you! Perhaps you've had better luck than me
recently?
Yes, well, whatever the
case, you have to admit that life lives on life, even if human life
doesn't
always live on human life. It's all very
well to eat roast chicken or lamb or beef or turkey, and think of the
brotherhood of man. But equating 'living
on' merely with eating isn't exactly the most comprehensive of
viewpoints, is
it?
Quite! You've
got
to stretch the metaphor as far as
you can, so that working and buying are also included.
In other words, the means you utilize to earn
your living, the methods by which you acquire money, determine the
species of
man to which you belong, as, to some extent, does
what
you do with the money once acquired.
No, it's not simply a
matter of class. For class is too vague,
too
general
a scale of reference to be
anything but of the most basic use to us.
All class really tells you, in the long run, is
whether you're predator or prey, not what sort
of
predator or prey. It doesn't indicate
your species, if you see what I mean.
You could find yourself in the company of fellow upper-class
people who
had as little in common with one another as spiders and lions, sharks
and
eagles, beetles and wolves, hawk and pike, bats and snakes. Or, alternatively, you could find yourself in
the company of fellow lower-class people who had as little in common
with one
another as sheep and cod, chickens and worms, snails and rabbits,
sparrows and
goldfish, cows and frogs. There are so
many different methods, objectively considered, which members of either
the
upper or the lower classes can utilize to earn a living ... that the
concept of
class is of little help to us in pinpointing a given species of man. For class is general, species
particular. The banker, composer, judge,
priest, doctor, and professor may all belong to the same class, but in
terms of
species they're effectively as far apart from one another as lions,
bears,
sharks, eagles, hawk, pike, etc. And
what applies to the upper class applies no less to the lower, indeed,
may even
apply more, insofar as it's such a populous class.
Of course, we do speak of classes within both
the upper and lower divisions, I'll grant you.
But does the plural tell you exactly which species of man is
being
referred to at any given time? I mean,
doesn't it usually imply royalty, peers, gentry, priests, politicians,
professionals, and businessmen on the one hand, but lower-middle class
and
working class on the other hand, whether these be
white-collar or blue-collar, skilled or unskilled?
Again, its use is general, isn't it? Only
if
the plural was used in a more
specific sense, so that, for example, professionals were divided up
into the
various professions which currently exist, and each profession was
ascribed a
distinct class, would I be satisfied that the term 'class' was being
used to
indicate species. Then one could speak
of the doctor class, the lawyer class, the teacher class, etc., and the
word
would signify the human equivalent of species.
But is it used like that? Are we
really thinking in terms of a distinct species then?
You're not convinced and
neither am I, because it seems that neither of us uses the word in
anything but
a general sense, and has little experience of anyone who doesn't. Still, the idea is interesting!
We could speak of classes instead of species,
if we consistently intended to assign each individual profession or
each type
of job a separate class. But it would be
confusing, because the usual use of the word to signify aristocratic,
upper
middle-class, lower middle-class, and working-class distinctions, both
singular
and plural, would have to be discarded in the interests of our
particular
occupational divisions. One might speak
of upper middle class one minute, upper classes the next, and lawyer or
doctor
class the minute after, which would, to say the least, be pretty
confusing! So I can't see that use of
the word 'species' is a bad idea, particularly in light of the immense
differences of occupation and ability which do in fact exist between
different
members of the same class. To a large
extent one is born into a given class but not, as a rule, into a given
species.
Yes, absolutely! The fact of one's father being a lawyer
doesn't necessarily mean that one is destined to become a lawyer as
well. On the contrary, the chances are
that one
will become something else, something which can be equated with the
same class
but not the same species. One may prefer
to become a politician or a stockbroker or a priest or a writer. Admittedly, professions do run in families,
but not as often as one might suppose.
Thus while there may be little doubt as to the exact class into
which
one was born, there's certainly no guarantee that one will follow in
one's
father's footsteps and develop into a member of the same species. The complexities and subtleties of human
society are so great that you might find yourself habitually utilizing
a method
of survival, or earning a living, which is so far removed from your
father's as
to preclude all but the most trivial or generalized of conversations
from
taking place between you. The gulf of
dissimilar conditioning and knowledge would open-up before you, making
you
acutely conscious of the fact that, to all intents and purposes, you
belonged
to different species of men, to men who, while belonging to the same
class, had
little more in common with each other than different species of animal
predators would have if obliged to live together. Indeed,
it
might even transpire - if one is
to take the analogy with other life forms seriously - that you had less
in
common. For who can seriously deny that
human life is more diversified, these days, than the lifestyles of
virtually all
the other life forms that live on this planet taken together? Is there anywhere, from the heights of the
tallest mountain to the depths of the deepest coal mine, from the
heights of
the air to the depths of the ocean, where men don't venture or exist? Are there not men who, through regular use of
aeroplane or submarine, are closer in kind to the birds and the fish,
respectively, than to the animals?
Where, formerly, men were confined to the land and sea surface,
they now
have regular access to both the heights of the air - not to mention
space - and
the depths of the ocean, an access which turns the chief inhabitants of
those
places into species akin to birds and fish.
Thus it may happen that a man accustomed to living in a
submarine for months on-end could find
himself being transported through
the air, one day, by a species of man, i.e. a pilot, with whom he would
probably have as little in common as a whale with an eagle.
Yes, you laugh, but it's
perfectly true! Even when they speak the
same language and have the same colour skin, men can be as
environmentally
different from one another as are the most dissimilar species of
non-human
life, indeed even more different from one another!
For what bird has ever flown to the moon and
walked about on its surface? What fish
can travel for miles under the North Pole and go or stay down as deep
as the
greatest submarines? No, one cannot
confine man to a single kind these days, and thereby equate him with or
oppose
him to the animal, bird, fish, and insect kinds. It
would
seem that mankind is the most
heterogeneous kind, the only kind that can make use of more than three
environments by producing species akin to each of the other kinds. For just as some men are closer in occupation
to birds and fish, so others exist who are closer to animals and
insects, men
whose land-based occupations bring to mind connotations with other
land-based
life forms. And, of course, there are
those species of men - undoubtedly the more numerous - who are uniquely
human,
men whose occupations provide us with no parallels in the non-human
worlds
whatsoever, and who may be said to constitute the backbone of mankind,
the
essence of its uniqueness. We have
already alluded to spacemen, but we could just as easily refer to
writers, lawyers,
sculptors, comedians, priests, judges, lecturers, typists, newscasters,
taxi
drivers, disc jockeys, barbers, etc., who live in a world strictly
fashioned by
man without reference to other life forms.
Yet, even with the relatively few species of men that I've just
named,
what a world of difference there is between them! Could
any
two animals be further apart or
have less in common with each other than a lawyer and a disc jockey, or
a
barber and a priest, or a judge and a comedian?
Can you imagine such people seeing eye-to-eye with each other on
everything, or being able to understand each other on everything? My God, they speak of the brotherhood of man,
but, in reality, how tenuous and superficial such a brotherhood really
is! A brotherhood, one can only suppose,
which
distinguishes those who go on two legs, wear clothes, and speak a
language,
from those that don't, meaning the animals, etc.
Yes, I entirely
agree! One might just as well speak of a
brotherhood of animals, one which overlooks the fundamental differences
between
predator and prey in the interests of the fact that, with relatively
few
exceptions, they all go on four legs.
Absolutely!
But, then again, few of us take the idea of a
brotherhood of man very seriously in any deeper sense, these days,
anyway -
least of all in practice. We're
generally much too sensible and logical to kid ourselves that all those
who go
on two legs belong to the same family.
Brothers in the battle for physical survival we may well be, but
hardly
brothers to one another! Only to some,
to those, if you like, who belong to the same species as ourselves, to
a lesser
extent to the same class as ourselves, and to a lesser extent again to
the same
type as ourselves.
Yes, I was speaking
about type a little while ago, mentioning the fact that it took all
types to
make a world, and stressing the impossibility of any one type being
able to
change the fundamental natures of the other types in the name of
self-improvement, world-improvement, or whatever. Type
corresponds
to temperament, character,
and build. It can be psychological, as
in the case of Carl Jung's eight-fold classification of Psychological
Types,
viz. introverted and extroverted feeling, sensation, intuition, and
thinking
types; or it can be physiological, as in the case of W.H. Sheldon's
three-fold
classification of Physiological Types, viz. fat, medium, and thin,
which I
believe he called endomorphic, mesamorphic,
and
ectomorphic. Or,
better
still,
it can be a combination of both.
However you prefer to regard it, type is something that cuts
across
occupation and class, the species and the genus. Hence
one
can speak of the composer species
but of different types of composer, the writer species but of different
types
of writer,
the artist species but of different types
of artist,
and so on. One type may be predominantly
romantic, another type classic; one type may be predominantly
idealistic,
another type realistic; one type may be predominantly intuitive,
another type
sensual, depending on their respective internal and external, mental
and
physical characteristics. Thus you may
find the romantic type of composer, for example, relating to the
romantic types
of painter, poet, sculptor, etc., who each pertain to different species
of
men. And, conversely,
the classic type of composer likewise relating to different species of
men who
yet pertain to the same type.
Viewed objectively, however, even the most dissimilar composers
are
going to be closer to one another, in terms of species, than to men of
other
artistic species whose types may nevertheless correspond more closely
to their
own. It's a strange fact, but true
nonetheless! Species-specific rivalry is
one thing, inter-species rivalry quite another!
No amount of quarrelling between brother and brother can alter
the fact
of their being brothers. Similarly, no
amount of professional rivalry between, say, one type of composer and
another
can alter the fact that they're both members of the same occupational
species. In the jungle one lion may attack
another
over a dead zebra.
Yes, I entirely
agree! But I think I've said enough
about dissimilar species of men to preclude my having to draw tentative
analogies with dissimilar species of animals.
In theory, it does seem rather strange that one should think in
these
terms when the evidence of the senses would suggest that all those who
go on
two legs more or less belong to the same species. But,
in
practice, in the artificial way
contemporary society actually works, it's apparent that men, no less
than other
life forms, function as members of different species, their dissimilar
conditioning and occupational contexts establishing the essential
heterogeneity
of mankind, or of the human kind, in contradistinction to any
subsidiary or
natural heterogeneity based on race or type or class.
Yes, you might think it
odd but, irrespective of language barriers or racial differences, a
Chinese
painter and an American painter are likely to have more in common with
each
other - as befits members of the same occupational species - than
either of
them would have with, say, bankers or lawyers or politicians of their
own
race. You could equate them, in
analogical terms, with geographical variations on the different species
of
elephant or bear or eagle which, while being dissimilar in relatively
small
ways, nevertheless function according to a uniform pattern of survival,
one
kind of elephant being pretty much akin to another, and so on. The painter species, then, is universal, not
confined to any one country or geographical locality.
It supports itself in a given fashion, a
fashion we may define as 'the painter's method of survival', whilst all
around
it, in houses or buildings perhaps no more than a few-hundred yards
away,
different species of men are preparing for or indulging in their
particular
methods of survival, much more subtle and sophisticated as a majority
of those
methods generally are to anything encountered more naturally in the
jungle, the
ocean, or the air.
But what of women, you
ask? Well, I was unconsciously including
women under the noun 'men' or 'mankind', insofar as they also pertain
to
different occupational species, have various methods of earning a
living, etc.,
which enables us to classify them accordingly.
But as I began talking to you about women, I suppose I may as
well
finish by doing so, since it's a subject which is of great interest to
us
both. Nowadays there are more species of
women than ever before, because an increasing number of females are
obliged or
choose, depending on their circumstances, to indulge in methods of
survival
which lie outside the traditional framework of family life. Strictly speaking, woman is much less
inclined to the formation of different species than man.
For her rightful profession, her chief raison
d'ętre in life, traditionally lies in ensuring the survival of the
kind, as
I think I remarked earlier. Naturally,
there are exceptions to the general rule, and they must be
tolerated. But I'm sure that most women
would be inclined to view any woman who, well-advanced in years, had
not
produced a child or children with a mixture of pity and contempt, much
as
though she had somehow lived in vain, not done what she was put into
the world
specifically to do, and therefore failed as a woman.
Yes, you smile, but I'm
pretty confident that, even these days, this is the way most normal
healthy
women, young or old, would secretly feel towards such a childless woman. Traditionally, then, women belong to one
occupational species, which is essentially concerned with producing and
raising
children. These days, however, society
has encouraged more women than ever before to acclimatize themselves to
occupational activities outside the family, with a consequence that
they've
become divisible into numerous species and are accordingly more
man-like than
ever before. Admittedly, there are still
more species of men, more jobs or professions which are exclusively a
male
preserve - professional football and cricket not least among them -
but, even
so, the transformation of women into the numerous species which now
exist marks
a social revolution of an unprecedented nature and scale.
Never before have women fallen so much under
the influence of men. Not only do large
numbers of them work like men, they often endeavour to look like men,
dress
like men, think like men, act like men, and even talk like men, as was
remarked
at the beginning of our discussion.
Yes, our technological
society has so transformed women that many of them are scarcely
recognizable as
women! Of course, a large number of
them still produce children and thus revert to the natural maternal
species to
which women traditionally belong, albeit studies usually indicate this
reversion to be temporary, confined to the latest months of pregnancy
and the
earliest years, if not months, of child-raising, after which time
financial
necessity or occupational enthusiasm may induce them to return to the
artificial species of woman they had been before. Naturally,
circumstances
vary with the individual. But
you can be pretty certain that the
pressure is on women to behave increasingly like men, to give
precedence to the
artificial rather than to the natural species to which they belong, so
that any
woman who has the strength or good fortune to swim against the current
of
ongoing male domination for any length of time certainly deserves our
respect
as a genuine rebel in the cause of women's traditional rights! Unfortunately for the so-called fair sex,
however, the current is so strong that only a comparatively small
number of
them remain consistently loyal to their natural species, an
increasingly large
number falling victim to the contraception/abortion mentality which
mainly
results, I believe, from fidelity to the artificial species which
contemporary
society has imposed upon them.
Yes, absolutely! If the present is severe on women, the future
will probably be even more so, leading towards a society not all that
far
removed from the one Aldous Huxley
outlined in Brave
New
World, where technological expertise will have made it unnecessary
for women
to live as women even temporarily, thus saving them the time
and trouble
of having children by mass-producing babies in test tubes, etc., and
thereby
maintaining a maximum work force for the male-dominated industries of
that
lopsided age.
You laugh, but, believe
me, that's the kind of society we are
heading towards
and would probably arrive at, were the expansion of contemporary
mechanistic
trends allowed to continue unchecked throughout the coming decades. Personally, I don't believe it will. For the hardships would be too much for
anyone to bear, men included, and would probably culminate in mass
suicide. Yet whatever happens between
now and doomsday, there's not much possibility of our being able to do
anything
to alter the course of contemporary Western society, since it would
take the
greatest revolution the world has ever known to reduce our cities and
populations to a scale commensurate with a less unnatural, and possibly
more
healthy, mode of existence, and that is unlikely to happen. If the small-minded wish to doubt it, let
them. But we must stand by our
intellectual perceptions and relate to matters as they actually exist. And if we're fortunate enough to possess a
woman, a real woman and not just a distorted caricature of one, we must
do
everything we can to protect her from the pressures increasingly being
brought
to bear on women to sacrifice their essential femininity to the false
idols of
industrial expansion and technological advancement.
As victims of contemporary society, we may
not be able to do a great deal in that respect, but we should at least
do what
we can to encourage her to dress, behave, talk, and generally live like
a
woman. After all, it's our loss if she
doesn't, isn't it?
Yes, I thought you'd
agree with me!
THE
CHRISTIAN
COMPROMISE
Whether
or
not they would appreciate what I, an itinerant American
philosopher by name of Paul Gertler, had
to say, I
couldn't of course be sure. But I could
tell by the expectant hush that suddenly descended on the lecture
theatre, with
the termination of their polite clapping, that these undergraduates
were eager
to give me a hearing. So, obedient to my
role as guest speaker, I cleared my throat and then proceeded to speak.
It was first of all
necessary to give them a brief outline of the essence and direction of
human
evolution as I conceived it, since this was indispensable to a proper
understanding of what I subsequently had to say on the subject of
religious
art. Thus I began with comments to the
effect that evolution was in large measure a consequence of man's
tendency to
pit himself against nature and establish a world of his own, a
consequence, one
might say, of his spiritual essence, which inevitably rebels against
sensual
tyranny. "Evolution is a phenomenon,"
I continued, "leading man in the direction of a higher spirituality, a
spirituality not hampered by the sensual but able to entirely transcend
it. From predominantly sensual
beginnings in nature, Western man has evolved to a predominantly
spiritual context
in large cities, where he finds himself regularly isolated from
nature's
sensuous influence and therefore no longer under its sway to anything
like the
same extent as his historical forebears.
Naturally he's still partly sensual, since sensuality is a
condition of
man, but by no means as sensual as he would otherwise be, if life in
the big
city had never been invented, so to speak.
The trend of evolution is consequently pushing him towards a
lopsided
spirituality, a spirituality which may well culminate in the
transformation of
man into superman, where the sensual will cease to have any part to
play and
human evolution accordingly attain to its apotheosis.
"Hence the path of
evolution is mapped out from the beastly to the godly, with three
stages of human
life coming in-between. The first stage
is early man, or man surrounded by and imprisoned in nature. With this stage goes a religion which gives
priority to the sensual, since man is so much under its sway, and this
religion
takes the form of phallic worship, fertility rites, pantheism, animism,
etc. One might say that it is
essentially the Creator Who is being worshipped or feared at this early
stage
of man's religious development, since it's a very mundane type of
religion that
prevails.
"But, unlike the
beasts, man doesn't 'stand still', in a given mould, but evolves. So the struggle with nature continues, as
villages turn into towns and towns into small cities, and when a kind
of
balance has been struck with nature, when his civilization has evolved
to a
point where he is no longer smothered by nature but exists at a fairly
safe
remove from it and in a fairly harmonious relationship with it, exists,
in
other words, as its equal rather than as its inferior, then we may
claim that
man is in the second stage of his evolutionary development, which marks
his
high-point as man. Now emerges a
religion which reflects this balanced stage of his development,
testifying to
his environmental progress, and which thus embraces both the body and
the spirit of man. It's at this juncture
of compromise between the sensual and the spiritual that the tendency
to
anthropomorphize God fully presents itself, and so arises Christianity,
with
its faith in the man-god, the Son of God, meaning effectively the
logical religious
development beyond the Father, or Creator.
Here the mundane and the transcendent balance
each other out, in accordance with the environmental context of
second-stage
man.
"However, this is
by no means the end of man's evolution.
For the villages, towns, and cities continue to expand, to
multiply, to
be transformed into larger and stronger representations of man's
ongoing
evolution in the face of nature, and when the larger towns and cities
arrive at
a point of growth where man is no longer in a balanced compromise
between
nature and civilization - ah! then it's
'all up' with
his second-stage religious awareness ... as a new awareness,
appertaining to
his artificial environment, makes its appearance, to usher in the third
stage
of his evolution. For now that man has
isolated himself, or been isolated, to such an extent from the
proximity of
nature, its influence is much less apparent than before, and
consequently the
religion of compromise between the sensual and the spiritual is no
longer
relevant. Only that which acknowledges
the spirit of man is now acceptable to him, and this we call
transcendentalism. Thus the three stages
of man's development are accompanied by a corresponding religious
awareness in
each case, an awareness in large measure
attributable
to the nature of the environment in which he happens to live at any
given
time. It is, in effect, a journey from
the Father to the Holy Spirit via the Son.
A journey, in other words, from paganism to transcendentalism
via
Christianity - the evolutionary Trinity of Western man's religious
evolution."
I paused here partly to
let my words sink into the undergraduates' minds, and partly because I
had
given them a brief outline of my conception of human evolution. Now it was time to proceed to the next part
of my lecture, and for this I required the assistance of the projector
I had
brought along, with which I intended to project enlarged colour slides
of
various works of religious art onto the large screen behind me. I could tell by the students' respectful
attention that the first part of my lecture had been relatively
successful, so
I felt more confident now, as I walked across to the waiting projector,
that
what followed would also meet with their approval.
The subject of Christian art was what I
intended to embark on, now that they had a better understanding of
Christianity. For Christianity, I
hastened to remind them, was the religion of compromise between the
sensual and
the spiritual, as appertaining to second-stage man.
To be a Christian, one had to believe in
Christ as the Son of God, as the man-god come to earth.
One took anthropomorphism for granted. There
could
be no question of one's regarding
Christ merely in mundane terms, as a highly-talented and influential
preacher
who happened to get himself posthumously taken for God.
And neither could one conceive of God in
terms of the Inner Light, or some such mystical abstraction. If one did, one wasn't a Christian, even if
one attended church twice a week every week of the year, and
accordingly
entertained a contrary opinion. One
either accepted the compromise between the mundane and the
transcendental, or
rejected it in favour of some absolute.
There could be no indecision. For there was a clear-cut divide between second- and
third-stage
man, as between the town and the big city.
Today, however,
third-stage man predominated, though it was still possible to be a
Christian,
particularly in those less-urbanized parts of the Western world where
villages and
small towns still prevailed, and the people were accordingly exposed to
the
context of compromise between nature and civilization in which
second-stage
religious awareness especially thrives.
But where, on the other hand, civilization had the advantage
over
nature, where civilization had supplanted nature, ah! then
it was not anthropomorphism but transcendentalism which was more
relevant to
the environment, since it signified a break with the sensual realm. Thus the traditional religious awareness could
not be conceived as an end-in-itself.
For third-stage man, Christianity was simply a pointer in the
direction
of transcendentalism, a midway stage between man's sensual beginnings
and his
spiritual endings. Now he could
understand it in light of man's ongoing evolutionary struggle with
nature. He could get it into perspective
and leave it
behind him without any Nietzschean
bitterness towards
it. For it was indeed a very ingenious,
logical, and objective record of second-stage man's spiritual evolution
towards
the transcendent.
Yes, he could leave it
behind him without any serious regrets, since he was now on a higher
plane of
evolution than second-stage man, a plane which would lead him towards
his
ultimate destination in spiritual transformation. Viewed
from
this higher perspective, the
decline of the West, about which Spengler
had written
at such great length, wasn't something to regret but, on the contrary,
something for which to be grateful, because it attested to Western
man's
ongoing spiritual development. All that
had really declined was the old religious sense and the aesthetic
culture
appertaining to it, and this had declined because industrial and urban
expansion were making the establishment of a higher religious sense
possible -
namely a transcendentalism which had no need of cultural illustration. For cultural illustration is only relevant to
a sensual/spiritual compromise in which, paradoxically, the spiritual
has to be
illustrated in sensuous terms, not to a transcendentalism in which
there is
nothing but spirit, and therefore no place for illustration. Thus to third-stage man, the decline of
Western culture is no cause for regret.
It is not the Son of God but the Holy Spirit on which he will
fix his
religious aspirations: the third and highest part of the evolutionary
trinity,
wherein cultural illustration has no meaning.
Having said which, it
was necessary for me to add a word or two about the great European art
nations
before proceeding with the projection of successive examples of
Christian art
onto the screen in front. "For
purposes of categorization," I continued, "it will be expedient for
us to divide nations into primary and secondary art-producers. Briefly, primary nations are those, such as
Italy, Spain, Flanders, and Germany, which flourished at the height of
the
Christian culture, when the anthropomorphic impulse was strongest, and
produced
mainly religious works. Secondary
nations, by contrast, will be those, like Holland, France, and England,
which
flourished at the tail-end of this culture, and thereby produced mainly
secular
works, works more suited to industrial civilization.
The primary nations will therefore have had
approximately the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries at their disposal,
the
secondary ones ... the seventeenth to twentieth centuries.
Some overlappings
and exceptions to the general rule there will of course be. But, for categorical purposes, this division
of nations into primary and secondary producers of great art isn't
without
value.
"Thus it's to
Italy, Flanders, Spain, and medieval Germany that we must turn for the
greatest
art, since the religious should take precedence over the secular in a
cultural
context, as it illustrates the foundations upon which the Christian
culture was
built. Now the Christian culture was
built, as I've already remarked, upon foundations of compromise between
the
mundane and the transcendent, and so in any objective assessment of
Christian
art it is necessary to bear this fact in mind, just as it's necessary
to bear in
mind the direction of evolution for a proper appreciation or
understanding of
it. This, then, we'll now endeavour to
do, as we study the slides I intend to show you."
I switched on the
projector and requested that the theatre lights be dimmed.
On the screen ahead, some thirty yards from
where I stood, The
Annunciation by Jan Van Eyck was
presented to the scrutiny of the undergraduates' gazes, as I proceeded
to
comment on it in the light of what I had just said about the
foundations of
compromise, which in illustrations of the Annunciation were a foregone
conclusion, being specified in Scripture itself. "This
is
a good compromise," I
assured them, "between the mundane, represented by Mary and the room
she
is in, and the transcendent, represented in part by the angel and in
part by
the dove and beam of divine light to Mary's head, which testifies to
the
transcendental influence of the spiritual upon the sensual, and endows
her with
a partly supernatural significance. She
is to become the Mother of God, which effectively means that the
transcendent
principle of god-like spirituality, signified by the dove, will take on
human
form and thus dilute itself for the sake of humanity, and she will be
the
receptacle through which this divine spirit enters the world in due
course." From the Van Eyck
we progressed to similar Annunciation scenes by Van der Weyden, Piero
della Francesca,
Rubens, El
Greco, Titian, Botticelli, and da
Vinci, all of whom illustrated the Christian compromise with varying
degrees of
success, according to their respective temperamental or artistic biases. Piero della Francesca, for example, preferred to leave
the dove
and beam of light out of his interpretation altogether and to endow
Mary with a
halo, as did Botticelli and da
Vinci, whilst El Greco - one of the most transcendental painters -
contrived to
add an orchestra of angels, perched on luminous clouds, to the angel,
dove, and
beam of spiritual light which already adequately represented the
transcendent,
thus upsetting the Christian compromise in the general direction of
mysticism. At the other extreme, Van der Weyden was
merely content to
represent the transcendent with an angel, dispensing altogether with
halo, beam
of light, and dove, and consequently tipping the balance in favour of
the
mundane. My contention was that the more
balanced compromise made for superior art, from a strictly Christian
standpoint, to the less-balanced one which both El Greco and Van der Weyden
represented, and was
therefore worthier of our critical appreciation.
But the Annunciation was
only the beginning of our investigation into the relative merits of
religious
art, which was now to be focused on the Nativity, the Adoration of the
Shepherds,
and the Adoration of the Magi, in that order.
Of the Nativity paintings, the most successful compromise
between the
mundane and the transcendent was achieved, in my opinion, by Van der Weyden, who
appeared to atone
here for his previous lapse in favour of the mundane by including six
small
angels: three stationed in the sky to the upper left of the painting
and three
kneeling on the ground next to the Mother of God in adoration of the
baby
Christ Who, like His Mother, was haloed in indication of the
transcendent. "This work," I hastened to
inform
the undergraduates, "is undoubtedly one of the finest Nativity
paintings
in existence, doing full justice to the dual integrity of Christianity." But such eulogistic comments could not, alas,
be extended to The
Nativity by Piero della Francesca, which was devoid
of even the faintest traces of transcendentalism and seemed not to
represent
the birth of the Son of God but, rather, a son of man.
Whether or not the five female figures to the
left of the kneeling Mary - three of them playing musical instruments
and two
singing - were intended as angels, there was no evidence of wings or
haloes to
support one's confidence in the possibility, and this absence led one
to the
conclusion that the work was too mundane in appearance to serve as a
leading
example of great Christian art. On the
other hand, the Mystic Nativity by Botticelli
veered in the opposite direction ... towards transcendentalism, so many
angels
did it contain, and could hardly be praised as a leading example of
such art,
either. However The Adoration of the
Shepherds, painted in 1475 by Hugo Van der
Goes,
maintained a good balance between the two extremes, the shepherds and
angels,
and so brought back my enthusiastic appreciation, as, curiously, did
the
1612-14 version of this same theme by El Greco, who supplied a
sufficiency of
different-sized angels to complement the various mundane components of
this
excellent work.
As, however, for The
Adoration
of
the Magi, it was upon works by Jan Gossaert,
called
Mabuse, and Mantegna
that I bestowed my critical appreciation.
For the compromise in both paintings was excellently handled,
the three
kings being complemented by angels, and this I pointed out to the
undergraduates in regard to the Christian position.
Less good from this dualistic standpoint,
however, were the works of Van der Weyden and Botticelli,
which
were
predominantly mundane, the first making use of only the faintest haloes
on the
heads of the Virgin and Christ respectively, the second providing only
a small
star above the heads of St Joseph and the Virgin. But
if
they at least made some attempt to
remind the viewer that he wasn't looking at an ordinary mundane scene
but at a
partly transcendental one, in which the Son of God was being worshipped
by
three wise men, then Jan der Beer, Rubens,
Dürer, and Titian made no attempt at all in
the slides of
their respective interpretation of The Adoration of the Magi which
I
next
chose to project onto the large screen in front.
From the standpoint of an artistic
illustration of the foundations of compromise upon which the Christian
culture
had been reared, these works were simply disastrous, suggestive of a
kind of
pagan or pre-Christian interpretation of the Magian
adoration, in which only the mundane mattered.
Especially guilty of this omission, I duly informed my audience,
was
Titian, whose 1557 version of the above-mentioned theme was followed,
in 1560
and 1566, by two more equally mundane versions, works which could only
lead one
to the conclusion that the treatment of religious themes in secular
styles
marked a transitional stage between the era of religious art-proper and
the era
of secular art which was to follow.
Titian, clearly, wasn't among the greatest religious painters. As a leading light of the High Renaissance,
he evidently wasn't entitled to be!
Following on behind The
Adoration
of
the Magi, however, came slides of The
Virgin
and
Child, which I once again presented more or less in order of
ideological merit, beginning with good compromises and ending with the
mundane
and transcendental extremes. "In
this version by Van der Weyden,"
I remarked, "a subtle balance has been achieved between the exposed
right
breast of the Virgin, which is giving suck to the infant Christ, and
the halo which
crowns their heads, reminding one of the partly mundane and partly
transcendental nature of the portrayed.
El Greco has likewise achieved a fairly good compromise in his
version
of this theme, the haloes being replaced by angels and cherubs,
although the
balance has, if anything, been slightly tipped in favour of the
transcendent,
as we note the absence of an exposed breast.
To my mind, angelic beings of whatever age or rank create a more
transcendental impression than haloes, and so, once again, we can
perceive in
El Greco the growing preoccupation with mysticism which, from the
strictly
Christian standpoint, was to spoil so much of his later work. On the other hand, the Titian, painted in
1560, contains neither angels nor haloes, being,
like so much
of his work, extremely mundane.
In point of fact, he painted quite a few versions of this theme
and,
like the one here, it is generally the case that transcendentalism is
absent. One might be looking at any
young mother and child. More surprising
in this respect, however, is The Virgin and Child before a Firescreen by Robert Campin which, painted before 1430, is very
mundane
indeed. Here, too, a complete absence of
angels and haloes." And so onwards,
through The Madonna of the Book by Botticelli
which, with the use of haloes, achieved a good compromise, a compromise
that
was shamelessly discarded, however, with The Madonna of the
Pomegranate,
in which this same Botticelli contrived to
add six
angels to the haloes of the Virgin and Child, thus giving the work a
predominantly transcendental slant. A
slant, it transpired, which was similarly endorsed by Mantegna,
in The Madonna and Child with Angels and Four (haloed) Saints. But to bring the undergraduates firmly down
to earth and momentarily deflate their mystical pretensions, I
concluded this
part of the proceedings with Dürer's Madonna
and
Child
with Pear - one of the most mundane religious works ever
painted!
Skipping lightly over a
few other religious themes, I proceeded to project examples of The
Baptism
of
Christ onto the screen, beginning with Piero
della Francesca, who, with the use of a
dove over Christ's
head and some angels to His right, achieved a good compromise between
the two
extremes, and continuing with examples by Van der
Weyden, El Greco, di
Tito, and Tintoretto, whose work also did
justice to the Christian
position. Especially meritorious in this
respect was the 1580-85 version by Tintoretto,
in which a very bright light emanated from the dove at the top of the
painting
and shed its beams upon a haloed Christ.
The baptizer was entirely mundane.
Less convincing, however, were the examples by Masolino
da Pincale and
Giovanni di Paolo, whose work appeared too
transcendental. Not content with merely a
halo for Christ and
a dove above His head, di Paolo chose to
include the
Father, five haloed angels flying in the sky, and three haloed figures
standing
on the bank by the side of the river in which Christ was being baptized. But the inclusion of the Father, represented
by a bearded head in the sky, could be regarded as a mundane or, at any
rate,
pagan component if one equated Him with first-stage religion, so that
His
presence might be said to balance, in some degree, the conspicuous
transcendentalism otherwise apparent.
Thus the Christian cynosure of this work was linked to the past,
in the
guise of the Father, and to the future, in the guise of the dove ...
symbolic
of the Holy Spirit. A religious
continuity had been maintained.
Taking leave of the life
of Christ for a moment, I next projected onto the screen The
Temptation
of
St. Anthony, painted by Tintoretto
in 1557, which I regard as one of the few really great works on a theme
which
is, after all, of no small importance in the evolutionary development
of
Western man. In this work, Christ
appears in a blaze of light to St Anthony, who is surrounded by three
figures
whose nude or semi-nude bodies leave one in no doubt as to their
seductive
intentions, intentions which the Devil, stationed immediately behind
the group
in the foreground, is busily encouraging ... by pulling the dark
drapery off
one of these bodies via the body of St Anthony himself, as though to
draw him
closer to the woman in question and thus expose him to still greater
temptation. "Only the intervention
of Christ, it seems, can save the saint from sensual degradation and
sustain
him in his battle against the flesh," I averred, by way of comment on
the
scene before us. "For a battle it
truly is, in which the spiritual aspirations of man are pitted against
the
reality of sensuous nature, represented in this instance by the three
figures
tempting the beleaguered saint. For
Anthony is a progressive, a follower of Christ, pointing humanity in
the
direction of its evolution towards a higher spirituality, and therefore
he
isn't particularly keen to sink back down to the sensual hell out of
which
Christian humanity is slowly climbing.
Sensual preoccupations usurp the spiritual domain, reduce one to
the
base level of the beasts, and thus obstruct one's advancement towards
the
Beyond. Anthony knows this, and so he
battles bravely in the name of the spirit.
And how he needs to battle! For
the semi-nude bodies to either side of him are both extremely
beautiful, are
they not? They offer a sufficiently
alluring bait to tempt the progressive idealist back to his human
reality, to
remind him that he isn't the Son of God but only a man, and therefore
fallible.... Which is doubtless something that the nude tempter on the
ground
in front of Anthony also realizes, as he pulls at the latter's modest
raiment. But thanks in large measure to
the intervention of Christ, symbolizing the spiritual principle, St
Anthony
holds firm, his frozen posture an encouragement and reminder to future
humanity
of the anti-sensual direction evolution is taking."
Likewise the slide
showing the 1515-24 Joachim Patinir and
Quentin Massys version of this theme won
my warm-hearted critical
appraisal for the sufficiently-convincing seductive powers of three of
the four
women who accost the saint in the middle of a pleasant landscape, one
of the
three holding out an apple to him, whilst a small monkey, suggestive of
the
bestial, tugs at his clothing. Clearly,
these two Flemish artists understood something about fleshy temptations! One had no doubt that Anthony was being
tempted. But the versions, on the other
hand, by Bosch, Jan Mandyn, and Peeter
Huys, which I subsequently projected onto
the screen,
gave one little confidence in the idea, since too fantastic in style to
warrant
serious consideration in this respect.
Of the three, the temptress of Bosch's Temptress
in
the
Hollow Oak seemed the least likely to achieve anything palpable,
her
nudity partly hidden by the hollow trunk in which she was standing, a
coy
maiden whose existence at some distance from the saint merely served to
distract him from his reading. Almost as
strange, however, was the Sassetta slide I
had
singled out for the undergraduates' scrutiny.
For the temptress of the haloed saint in this version wore
brightly-coloured wings and had all the appearance of an angel. Could it be, I wondered, that Anthony was
susceptible to the enticement of angels?
Or maybe just to fallen angels? Sassetta
undoubtedly had a very transcendental concept of the temptress! But if he took St Anthony up higher than the
context really warranted, then Titian very definitely brought Christ
firmly
back down to earth in his Noli Me Tangere, painted approximately 1512, in which
a
scantily-draped Christ is accosted by the Magdalene fully clothed. A little too mundane-looking to satisfy the
canons of good religious art, this work, but an attractive and
skilfully-wrought achievement nonetheless!
Having dispatched the
above-mentioned slide, I immediately projected another Titian onto the
screen,
this time The
Agony
in the Garden, which I ventured to praise on the
strength of the compromise between the mundane and the transcendent
achieved by
incorporating the appearance of an angel to the agonized Christ, a
comforter
and reminder of Who He was. El Greco had
likewise included an angel in this context, but Correggio
and Bergognone had gone one better, as it
were, by
placing a halo on the praying Christ's head, which left no room for
doubt as to
Who He was. And
Tintoretto's 1580 interpretation of this
tragic
scene, while dispensing with halo, had permitted a very bright light to
emanate
from the angel as it held out a chalice to the kneeling Christ. Once again, it was Tintoretto
who received my critical homage for the ingenious compromise attained. But Carpaccio's
work, on the other hand, gave no importance to angels or haloes or
chalices or
anything transcendental at all, and was accordingly deemed too mundane
to pass
muster as true religious art. Even
Giovanni Bellini could have made something
more, I
felt, of the chalice-bearing angel he contrived to place in the sky at
an
indeterminate distance from Christ's head.
And so the projector
whirred on, and it was now the turn of The
Crucifixion and
kindred works to stand trial, as it were, in our assessment of their
relation
to the Christian compromise. Would the
Son of God be recognizable by the presence of a halo and/or angels, or
could He
be mistaken for some common criminal nailed to a cross?
That question was quickly and efficiently
answered by the slides I now presented to the undergraduates'
respectful
attention, the most successful religious works leading the way. Here, then, it was the turn of Giotto, El Greco, and Castiglione
to steal the limelight, while Tintoretto,
though by
no means mundane, made a slightly less-favourable overall impression on
me -
and, I trusted, on the students - in consequence of a tendency to
overcrowd the
scene with mundane figures: soldiers, peasants, mourners, etc., in
which Christ
seemed less significant. This was
especially true of his 1560-65 and 1565 versions of The Crucifixion,
though
the
work of 1588 succeeded in banishing the crowd, mostly composed of
soldiers, to the background, and thus allowed the haloed Christ to
stand out in
a more dignified perspective, relatively speaking.
However, it was the Giotto,
with its tiny angels and Byzantine haloes, and the El Greco of
1596-1600, in
which three flying angels are balanced by three mourners at the foot of
the
Cross, that I considered the more perfect representations of this
scene, and
about which I spoke at some length for the students' benefit. I also reminded them that the man-god had to
die because, as chief representative on earth of the spiritual
principle, he
was incompatible with the human predicament and too spiritually
superior for
mundane men to properly relate to at that more primitive juncture in
time. He taught them about the future,
about 'the
kingdom of God within the self', but they could only live in the
present, being
recipients less of the Holy Spirit than ordinary dual men with sensual
ties to
nature. They were still too close to
Jehovah, that old wrathful God of first-stage man, to be able to
appreciate
Christ's message of love, and so they had Him put to death. This, at any rate, was how I figuratively
interpreted it for the students' benefit, since it was necessary to
take
anthropomorphism seriously if one hoped to understand the development
of
religious art. Looking at the paintings
by Giotto and El Greco, one could be under
no doubt
that a divinity was being represented on the Cross, since the angels
and haloes
did ample service to the transcendent dimension, as, indeed, did the
judicious
use of haloes by Castiglione, who
preferred them to
angels.
Another good example of
religious art was furnished by Lucas Cranach,
who
likewise
preferred to omit the angelic in his Christ
on
the
Cross, and to distribute haloes according to the requirements of
the
occasion, Christ and four of the ten figures at the foot of the Cross
being
transcendentally endowed, while the two thieves to either side of it
retained
their mundane status. But if this
highly-gifted artist struck a balanced compromise in the 1500 version
of this
theme, then his 1503 work gave no place at all to the transcendent and
was
accordingly criticized by me for its infidelity to second-stage
religion, a
criticism I was also obliged to level at examples of The
Crucifixion by
Rubens, Mantegna, Titian, and Castagne,
whose preoccupations with a purely or predominantly mundane rendering
of the
scene might have led one to confound the Son of God with any common
criminal,
or to suppose that they preferred a paganized
interpretation of Him which would have been more relevant, had they but
known
it, to the Father in His capacity of Creator.
Be that as it may, it was
now the turn of The
Resurrection to pass briefly before our eyes, as I
projected first a Mantegna and then a Tintoretto onto the screen in front, and
commented
approvingly on the results obtained in each case. As
with
The Annunciation, the theme
with which we began our investigations, this aspect of Christian myth
was a
foregone conclusion as far as the inclusion of the transcendent element
was
concerned. Consequently, it wasn't
strictly necessary for one to mentally congratulate the artist for
having provided
angels, haloes, aureoles of light, etc., when he had little choice in
the
matter, but, rather, to congratulate him for tipping the balance of
compromise
in favour of the transcendental ideal without, however, entirely giving
way to
the mystical. Thus it was necessary that
he should remain loyal to second-stage religious awareness, with its
dualistic
compromise, even at its most transcendental point, which, as it
happened, both Mantegna and Tintoretto had
admirably done, the latter more successfully in his 1576-81 version of The
Resurrection, by offsetting the radiant Christ and four angels with
approaching mundane figures to left and sleeping figures to right of
the
canvas. And, similarly, The
Transfiguration by Raphael had achieved a delicate compromise which
rightly
favoured the transcendent, as Christ ascended into Heaven in an aura of
dazzling light, His spirit aflame with the Holy Ghost - the religious
focus of
third-stage man.
"But if human
evolution was slowly proceeding towards the most spiritual
interpretation of
God and would eventually reach its goal in blessed union with the
transcendent," I remarked, "then it was also true to say that there
was a price to be paid by those who lagged behind in this respect and,
through
allegiance to the sensual, would drag man back to a first-stage
religious
impulse. For those who were
insufficiently spiritual, whose activities went against the grain of
evolution,
there was the penalty of Damnation, banishment from the heavenly scheme. The Church pointed the way forwards, but
those who chose not to follow its example and to indulge in sensual
pleasures
would be going back, back towards the beasts, towards an earlier
religious
impulse which could hardly be equated with the path of Salvation. And the further back they went, the closer
they would be to Hell. For Heaven and
Hell signify the opposite extremes of evolution, the spiritual and the
sensual.
"In effect, the
path of human evolution leads from the hell of our bestial beginnings
to the
heaven of our godlike endings, the three stages of religious
development lying
in-between," I continued, warming to my thesis. "Thus
by
not following this path to
Salvation, one is doomed to the hell of sensual torment.
By not following the example of Christ, one
is forced to live with the beasts.
Needless to say, we all follow it to some extent, for we're
human
beings, and human beings, at that, who are gradually drawing nearer to
our
ultimate transformation. But for
purposes of allegorical interpretation, the Church was obliged to
overstate the
consequences of sin in order the better to encourage men towards the
Inner
Light, to hurry their evolution along towards the godlike
transformation which
would signal their entry into the post-human Beyond.
In reality, however, Hell is something in the
past, Heaven yet to come, and the condition in which men live a kind of
purgatory. But it could well transpire
that the future transformation into the transcendent, symbolized by the
Last
Judgement, won't be possible for everyone, including those who are
insufficiently spiritual, and that they'll either perish or be forced
to
persevere with the purgatorial state in which we exist, until such time
as they
or their descendants are spiritually qualified to enter the
post-human Beyond,
and thus abandon the world of humanity.
In the meantime, we must press-on with our spiritual evolution
as
third-stage men and be grateful that we are one stage closer to the
possibility
of that ultimate transformation than were the Christian contemporaries
of the
great painters on whom I have chosen to comment. But
let
us look, finally, at some examples of
the Last Judgement, as the Christians conceived of it, and thus relate
them to
the compromise between the sensual and the spiritual."
With these words I
projected onto the screen a slide of Michelangelo's Last
Judgement, which I considered a fairly good example of the
above-mentioned
compromise. Here Christ, situated next
to the Virgin in the upper portion of the fresco, was seen passing
judgement on
both righteous and sinners alike, the former supported by His angels
approximately on a level with Himself, the latter plunging into Hell
with the
assistance of demons. Clearly, the
presence of both angels and demons (police and soldiers?) testified to
the
dualistic compromise one expected. Though the stern mien and resolute gestures of Christ
suggested an
emphasis on the damning of sinners rather than the saving of the
righteous. One felt, in
contemplating the passionate
intensity of this work, that the muscular Christ of Michelangelo was
closer in
character to the wrathful Jehovah of the Old Testament than to the
Saviour of
Man which the New Testament represented.
By nature, Michelangelo was better qualified to depict Old
Testament
characters, and it's above all this aspect of his work in the Sistine
Chapel
that merits our approval. However, if
the vengeful attitude of the Saviour, as Michelangelo conceived of Him,
may not
have constituted the best, or most dualistic, interpretation of the
Last Judgement,
then the overall conception as such was certainly in harmony with the
Christian
position. A harmony that was even
better-illustrated, in my opinion, by the 1560 version of this theme by
Tintoretto, who had likewise divided the
painting between angels
and demons, the former naturally stationed in the upper portion of the
work and
the latter lower down. Here Christ,
situated near the apex of the painting, appeared a good deal
gentler-looking
than the Christ of Michelangelo, as though His very position in Heaven
- a
realm of peace and bliss - necessarily precluded the slightest
agitation on His
part. Surrounded by and impregnated with
the light of the Holy Spirit, He radiated love throughout His kingdom,
the beam
of this divine love coming to an end with the darkness of Hell, into
which the
Damned were falling or in which they lay helpless, as in a swamp, at
the mercy
of demons. The contrast here between the
light and the dark, the spiritual and the sensual, was admirably
achieved, and
elicited my critical approval. From the
symbolic standpoint, this work was undoubtedly one of the most
accomplished
interpretations of the Last Judgement in existence, the very fact of
Christ
being situated near the apex of the painting rather than actually at
the apex
... doing full justice, it seemed to me, to the spiritual superiority
of the
Holy Ghost, which shone, as a cloud-like halo, just above His head.
However, if Tintoretto had almost said the last word in
painting, it
was to Giotto that I next referred my
audience's
attention, as a slide of the fresco decorating the whole of the West
Wall of
the Arena Chapel at Padua was projected onto the screen in front, and
his
interpretation of the Last Judgement duly investigated.
Here it was the fate of Christ to sit in
judgement, saving with His right hand and damning with His left,
flanked on
either side by His apostles and crowned by angels, while beneath Him
two angels
supported a Cross which divided, along its length, Heaven from Hell,
and thus
permitted the establishment of another masterly compromise between the
mundane
and the transcendent. If this work was
structurally less good than the Tintoretto
(the
parallel positioning of Heaven and Hell to either side of the Cross,
rather
than in a vertical arrangement, being notably inept), it nevertheless
made-up
for its structural deficiency with the aid of a fastidious application
to
particular symbolic details which emphasized the antithetical natures
of
Salvation and Damnation respectively.
Thus the realm of Heaven to the right of the Cross put due
emphasis on
the blissful passivity of the Saints and the Elect who peopled it,
while the
realm of Hell to its left writhed with the tortuous activity of the
Damned in
the clutches of ravenous demons. Here I
specifically drew the undergraduates' attention to the latter's beastly
appearance: fur-covered creatures pre-dating man, whose ghastly
activities were
appropriately sensual. In Giotto's Hell, the emphasis was clearly on the
sexual
organs as constituting the chief offenders against the spirit, though
other
sensual sins, like gluttony, were also represented and duly punished. To be sure, it was rather disquieting to
behold people being hung upside down from their genitals or physically
assaulted by demons, but nonetheless highly educative and suggestive,
moreover,
of the most explicit allegorical teaching possible at the time. One could be under no illusion, at the sight
of this ghastly scene, exactly why the Damned were in Hell, even if one
was
somewhat puzzled by the exact applicability of the proceedings to the
Last
Judgement, or puzzled, it may be, by the moral position of the Saviour
in
relation to it. But for all its
weaknesses when viewed from the strictly objective angle of
post-Christian man,
this fresco remained one of the greatest early figurative
interpretations of
human evolution, a tribute to the patronage of Enrico
degli Scrovegni,
who
is
himself immortalized in the small dedication group at the foot of the
Cross, in
which the patron places a model of the chapel, held by a friar, in the
hands of
the Virgin, accompanied by a saint and an angel, to the greater glory
of God
and early fourteenth-century Italian art.
But if this work
signified a good compromise between the mundane and the transcendent,
the two
slides which I now chose to conclude with focused exclusively on one or
other
of the two extremes: the first going back, it seemed to me, to the
beginnings
of human evolution, and the second pointing man towards his ultimate
salvation
in a future Beyond. Now if, in his
portrayal of Hell, Giotto had put the
emphasis on
sex, it was left to Rubens, in The
Fall
of the Damned c. 1620,
to put it firmly on the flesh, as the slide depicting the fall of
numerous
flabby bodies all too poignantly attested.
To me, the flabbiness inherent in so many of Rubens' nudes had
always
excited a certain disgust, but in this context, disgusting though it
arguably
still was, its pertinence was beyond dispute, elevating Rubens to the
rank of
the very greatest damnation painters.
Naturally mundane as so much of his work ordinarily was, one
felt that
no other artist could have dealt with this theme better than him. For here his predilection for the flesh was
perfectly in its element, containing not the slightest intimation of
ambiguity. Whether the falling bodies were
destined to
be devoured by monsters or tortured by demons, there could be no doubt
that the
fate awaiting them was strictly in accordance with the sinful nature of
their
lives on earth, lives which had induced them to turn their back on the
godly
and because of which they were helplessly plunging towards the beastly. For those already in the monsters' jaws it
was the end of what little humanity they still possessed, the beginning
of
their fate as beasts. Here, for
all
its repulsiveness, was the ultimate gluttony, the ultimate comment on
sensual
sin. What one was looking at wasn't
Christian, nor even pagan, but effectively primeval, a world totally
dominated
by the beast. Christian symbolism
embraced both the beginning and end of human evolution!
But if Rubens preferred
to return to its beginnings in this horrific work, then it was left to Tintoretto to have the final word on man's
ultimate
destiny, as I projected a slide of his 1577-94 mosaic of Paradise, from
the San
Marco in Venice, onto the screen in front, and thereby gave the
undergraduates
an opportunity to study the wonderful symbolism of this highly
transcendent
work, a work which, in abandoning the Christian compromise, had more
relevance
to them, in this post-Christian age, than they might have at first
imagined! Not surprisingly - and to the
eternal credit of Tintoretto - it was the
dove,
symbolic of the Holy Ghost, that formed the most important ingredient
of this
work, its position in the upper right-hand corner of the mosaic
constituting a
sort of cynosure from which radiated the light of spiritual love
informing the
figures of Christ, the Virgin, angels, saints, and the elect
respectively, in a
descending hierarchy of spiritual importance.
If Tintoretto's earlier versions of
Paradise
possessed the symbolic advantage over this one of portraying the
spiritual
hierarchy vertically rather than horizontally, from right to left of
the
mosaic, they had not achieved such a convincing portrayal of the
superiority
and importance of the Holy Ghost, which in this work more than
adequately
testified to the apex of spiritual evolution, the consummation of
divinity in
eternal bliss. Thus it was fitting that
I should have selected this version of Paradise to represent the climax
of Tintoretto's achievement from the
mystical standpoint, even
if it could not be equated with the finest Christian art on account of
its
lopsided transcendentalism.
And so, with the showing
of this slide, my projections came to an end, and the lights were
accordingly
switched back on again. The world of
Christian art faded into memory in the minds of the students, as I
reminded
them of the direction of evolution towards the spirit of God and away
from the
anthropomorphic compromises of our cultural forebears.
"Second-stage man is now largely a
phenomenon of the past, a phenomenon that is destined to grow rarer as
we
progress further into third-stage life, and thus draw closer to the
Inner
Light, otherwise known as the Holy Spirit, of transcendental man. What second-stage man had dreamed of, we are
destined to realize, and so bring human evolution to a climax. Our future
salvation draws nearer with every
new day, draws nearer in spite of all the obstacles we either choose or
are
obliged to put in its way. Somehow, it
will all come right in the end.
Third-stage man is the last and most spiritually advanced of
human
beings, the closest yet to the post-human Beyond,
otherwise
known
as Heaven, of the Superman.
On that account, he has good reason to rejoice!"
I could tell by the
enthusiastic applause which descended on my ears, as I terminated the
lecture
at this point, that a majority of the undergraduates had, indeed,
appreciated
what I had said. For it was as much as I
could do to hear myself think, as I slowly made my way towards the
privacy of
an adjoining room for a well-earned rest.
AN
EXTRAORDINARY
RUMOUR
"Did
you
hear that Michael Estov
actually experienced Infused Contemplation the other day?" Stephanie
Voltaire asked, primarily addressing herself to Serge Riley, her senior
colleague at the Galactic Research Unit.
"No, I can't say
that I did," replied Riley, who happened to be seated opposite.
"Maybe that
explains why we haven't seen him so much recently,' Adam Kurtmüller
commented, an ironic smile subtly qualifying his suggestion. "He probably considers us all infra
dignum now."
At twenty-three, Adam was the youngest and most promising of the
Unit's
junior research team, a high-level graduate in galactic geology from
the University
of Europe.
"Yes, I wouldn't be
surprised," Stephanie admitted, offering the young man to her left a
complementary smile. "Anyone who
experiences that ... usually takes a rise in his own estimation. He becomes one of the spiritual elect."
"Virtually a
superman," Adam confirmed, drawing on his Nietzschean
scholarship. "Isn't that so,
Serge?"
"So I'm told,"
the latter languidly replied. "Though I must confess to not having anticipated any
such
spiritual breakthrough from him.
He never struck me as being one of the more accomplished or
dedicated meditators before - not, at any
rate, when he used to
attend my centre. Doesn't do more than
five hours a day, does he?"
"No, he doesn't
actually," Stephanie confirmed while looking out through the narrow
window
of the small rest room in which she and her two colleagues were seated. It gave-on to a view of another department of
the Galactic Research Unit, some twelve yards away, and usually
permitted her
to watch or, rather, spy on the activities of various personnel there,
activities which sometimes amused and often intrigued her.
In this instance, however, she was slightly
baffled by the violent gestures a Senior Administrator was making, as
he
engaged himself in soundless conversation with an attractive young
woman in a
standard white one-piece zippersuit. She wondered what he could be saying; for it
wasn't often that one saw elderly men gesticulating in such a seemingly
passionate, not to say theatrical, manner.
Perhaps he had fallen in love? It
still happened occasionally, though society took good care to protect
itself
from atavistic eruptions of this ancient passion by isolating its
victims from
contact with the rest of humanity, thereby precluding the possibility
of
contagion. For the most part, however,
love had been successfully stamped out, consigned, thanks to
environmental and
moral progress, to the rubbish bin of emotional history.
The modern world had neither use nor place
for it.
"Still, he may have
achieved a more concentrated method of meditation without our knowing
about
it," Adam was saying, as Stephanie returned her attention to the
occupants
of her room and recalled the subject of Estov's
spiritual breakthrough to higher levels of mystical experience. "Some people have apparently perfected a
technique which enables them to approach the threshold of total
enlightenment
in a much shorter time, with a mere 4-5 hours' meditation a day over as
short a
span as ten years. I've heard of a
number of cases in which a surprisingly quick breakthrough to pure
knowledge
has been achieved in recent years. Our
local meditation centre reported three such cases last month, one of
which also
involved astral levitation."
"Well, I doubt if I
shall ever
have such good fortune," Riley commented.
"Even after thirty years' meditation at six hours a day for five
days a week, I haven't achieved nearly anything so spectacular. My transcendentalism has evidently been less
ambitious. There must be something about
my temperament which inhibits real spiritual progress."
"Ditto for
me," Stephanie confessed, smiling temperamental complicity upon her
senior
colleague. "Perhaps our scientific
duties here detract from our transcendental potential?
After all, we have a fair number of mundane
tasks to attend to, during the course of our two days work each week,
don't
we? Studying the flora of the planet Galbrais isn't exactly the most spiritual of
tasks."
"Neither is
classifying the fauna on Sestos," Riley
declared, referring to his latest duty, which pertained to a smaller
planet in
the same solar system as Galbrais. "But it has to be done. Just
as
the rock formations on Hebatta have to
be ..."
"You needn't remind
me!" Adam interposed, throwing up his arms in mock exasperation. "I've been trapped in those damn rocks
for the past three months! Frankly, I
envy Estov his investigations of the
mineral deposits
on Fulmer. Those gems can hardly be
accused of obscuring his view of Eternity!"
"Whatever such a
view happens to look like," Riley commented, as though from afar. "Still, we mustn't grumble.
The path of evolution may be leading us
towards a spiritual transformation into godlike entities, but we still
have to
attend to the more mundane affairs of this galaxy in the meantime. As yet, we're still men, even if relatively
advanced ones. So our scientific
activities cannot be discarded or underestimated, particularly with the
prospect of a galactic war hanging over us!
Who knows, but the other alliance may be preparing to overrun
our solar
system at this very moment and plunge us all into slavery?"
"Well, it won't
receive a very warm welcome if it is," Stephanie asseverated, her noble
countenance stern with the knowledge of contemporary ideological
rivalry. "Our laser beams should be more
than sufficient
to repulse any such invasion."
"I sincerely hope
so," said Riley. "For
if not, then our beloved transcendental meditation won't be of much
help to us. If we're to attain to
the millennial
salvation which technological progress has been promising us for the
greater
part of the past two centuries, we shall certainly have to keep
ourselves out
of the gruesome clutches of the Kibalatics. For if they get their
greedy hands on the world, we'll be set back hundreds of years."
This was fairly common
knowledge among the Earthlings of 2200 A.D., even though no Kibalatic
invasion had yet occurred and it seemed unlikely, in view of the
fearsome
potential of the then-existing military resources,
that
such an invasion would ever occur. But
if the earlier interplanetary wars had been anything by which to judge,
then
the possibility of a first galactic war between five or more different
solar
systems could by no means be ruled out, the Kibalatic
League, comprising a military alliance between three of the most
powerful planets
in the Galaxy, being the most probable instigator of such a conflict. However, the Earth, as one of four members of
the Stanta Alliance, was prepared for the
worst and
had accordingly amassed a large arsenal of laser-defence weapons to
safeguard
its citizens from alien aggression.
Meanwhile Stephanie had
changed the subject to one more congenial to herself, by embarking on a
conversation to do with the extraordinary rumour being spread about the
sex-life of a certain Maria Gomez, a laboratory technician who, so it
appeared,
was indulging in clandestine sex as regularly as once a month.
"Once
a month!" Adam exclaimed, his eyes fairly bulging with the
mental
shock of this extraordinary allegation.
"But that's preposterous!"
"So it
sounds," Stephanie conceded.
"But that's what I was told by Phillippa
Stuart, who happens to be a close acquaintance of hers.
Apparently, Maria's official sex partner is
too ascetic for her needs, so she has acquired herself an unofficial
one to
take care of them on the sly, a certain Franz Jones, who isn't as
spiritually
conscientious. And he doesn't ask
questions."
Adam Kurtmüller
could scarcely believe his ears! The
fact of someone's having sex in
naturalis
as many as
twelve times a year was virtually unheard of!
It was strictly against the moral code to indulge in naked
carnal
appetites that often. Why, one could
risk official disgrace and summary dismissal from one's profession! One could even be sent away somewhere to
labour at some unsatisfying task. None
of the intelligentsia - which included those working in scientific
research -
was permitted natural sex more than four times a year as a rule, once
every
three months. It was against the grain
of evolution to commit oneself more frequently to such a primitive
passion or,
rather, act. For evolution was leading
man towards the post-human Beyond, towards
his
ultimate spiritual transformation, and consequently away from the
sensual. No-one in any degree spiritually
developed
could possibly countenance the prospect of voluntarily submitting to
the
sensual to any great extent, least of all to an extent of twelve times
a
year! Wasn't the widespread recourse to
artificial insemination and test-tube reproduction, not to mention the
use of
plastic inflatables, or so-called 'sex
dolls', and
the availability of a variety of gadgets used in conjunction with
certain types
of approved sex videos, ample evidence of modern man's distaste for the
sensual, proof of his ongoing spiritual evolution?
Hadn't it been conclusively demonstrated to
people that sensual preoccupations were contrary to their deepest
interests and
to the will of God? Hadn't Christianity
- that ancient religion of second-stage man - put due emphasis on
salvation of
the spirit through sexual moderation, if not abstinence?
Hadn't it been shown by a certain
twentieth-century philosopher that Hell signified consummate sensuality
and
Heaven consummate spirituality, and that the path of human evolution
was
accordingly leading men away from the hell of their beastly beginnings
towards
the heaven of their godlike endings, towards their ultimate salvation
in
transcendent union with true divinity?
And weren't they now closer to that heaven than ever before, now
that
they were approximately two-hundred years into third-stage life? How, therefore, could anyone in his right
mind possibly allow himself to be dragged back towards the hell of
man's
sensual past by copulating with another person to the extent of twelve
times a
year?
Adam was astounded, and
so, too, was Serge Riley; though, being older and more experienced in
worldly
affairs, he managed to hide his feelings to a greater extent than the
young man
who sat next to Stephanie and looked as though he had just been accused
of some
such sexual promiscuity himself. But, in
reality, Kurtmüller's past sensual record
was a model
of late-third-stage sexual morality, a testimony to the advanced state
of
spiritual evolution prevailing at the time.
Ever since coming of age, he had scrupulously adhered to the
specifications
laid down by the canons of transcendental ethics, and accordingly
limited
himself to just four sexual engagements a year.
Despite his tender years this had never proved too difficult for
him in
any case, not only because he was by nature predominantly cerebral and
of a
physiological disposition which W.H. Sheldon, a twentieth-century
American
psychologist, would have classified in terms of ectomorphy,
i.e.
leanness,
but, no less significantly, because the society into which he
had been born was so spiritually advanced ... that categorical
limitations on
sensual indulgences seemed the only reasonable and proper procedure. It wasn't as though, by obeying this
restriction on sexual activity, one was putting oneself out or
undergoing
punishment. On the contrary, one's
sexual appetites were usually so slight that the avoidance of regular
natural
sex (not to be confounded with artificial sex) proved as easy and
logical a
procedure as adherence to an artificial diet, in which vitamin capsules
played
a more significant role, or reliance on the artificial oxygen that was
manufactured on a systematic basis. So
little incentive was there for one to indulge in regular sex, even when
the
women were pretty - as incidentally was more often the case - that one
took
one's celibacy for granted, grateful to know that one stood on a higher
rung of
the evolutionary ladder than the billions of more sensual men and women
who had
populated the Earth in times when nature had a much stronger influence
on human
behaviour than at present.
In actual fact, nature
currently had very little influence; though what it did have was still
enough
to prevent one from becoming ultimate divinity.
However, that someone who was ostensibly one of the spiritual
elect - a
brilliant chemistry graduate and zealous meditator
-
should have found it desirable or necessary, in this day and age, to
rebel
against the wisdom of spiritual progress and degrade herself in the
manner
described, Adam simply couldn't understand, no matter how hard he tried! It was even stranger than if a caveman - ugh,
horrible creature! - should have elected, through some inexplicable
paradox, to
spend more time meditating towards unitive
knowledge
of the Godhead than copulating with some beastly woman!
It was so entirely out-of-context. And
yet,
if rumour was true - and they
generally were concerning such distinguished people as Maria Gomez -
then one
would have no alternative but to accept it for fact, accept the fact,
namely,
that someone preferred Hell to Heaven, and carry on as though nothing
unusual
had happened.
"D'you
think she's gone mad?"
asked Adam, becoming intimidated by the embarrassing silence which had
fallen
between them, like a cloudburst.
Stephanie shrugged her
shoulders,
but briefly smiled acknowledgement of such a possibility.
It wasn't altogether implausible, considering
that a number of responsible people - mostly female - had cracked-up
under
pressure of keeping abreast of the times in recent years, and thereupon
reverted to an earlier stage of spiritual development.
But as she didn't know Maria Gomez
personally, she was hardly in a position to say. Only
Phillippa
Stuart could tell them the truth, assuming she was qualified to judge,
of
course. Still, it was most unusual
nonetheless, especially where people of her
background
and reputation were concerned. Even
among the European masses, the fact of anyone's having sex more than
ten times
a year was virtually unheard of; though it was still permissible for
them to
indulge their natural appetites from between eight and ten times,
considering
that they were generally less spiritually advanced than the
intelligentsia, and
therefore weren't expected to adhere to exactly the same criteria of
transcendental ethics. Only in certain
parts of Africa and Latin America, where the level of sensuality had
been
traditionally so much higher on account of the climate, was it socially
permissible for people to copulate more frequently: to the extent of
fifteen
times a year for the broad masses and ten times for the intellectual
elite. But in the most developed and
least sensual parts of the world, particularly in Northern Europe, such
criteria would have been at least a century out-of-date and hopelessly
irrelevant to the moral dictates of the day, dictates that were slowly
but
surely goading the European people towards a still higher level of
spirituality, such as had already been attained to in certain Oriental
regions,
where the leading lights could go without sex altogether and the masses
confine
themselves to a mere three or four times a year.
Be that as it may,
Europe was what essentially mattered to the three people in the private
rest-room at the London-based Galactic Research Unit, and, as such, it
was upon
European criteria of spiritual evolution that they based their feelings. Whether Maria Gomez had actually gone mad or
simply regressed, through imperious atavistic eruptions from her
subconscious,
to a level of sensual criminality totally unworthy of a person of her
intellectual calibre, there could be little doubt that the nature of
her
alleged promiscuity was utterly reprehensible in a society which put so
strong
a priority on transcendental progress and was justly proud of its
advanced
stage of spiritual evolution. Madmen and
criminals were equally dangerous to the cause of enlightenment,
especially
highly intelligent ones!
"Let's hope for her
sake that, if what I heard is true, she doesn't get caught," Stephanie
remarked, turning her gaze towards the window and briefly staring
across at the
department opposite, where the two occupants of the room most
accessible to her
view were still engaged in soundproofed conversation, albeit less
passionately
than before. "Personally, I'm not
one to go around informing on people myself," she went on, "but I'm
fully aware that there are a number of persons here who, from a variety
of
motives, would relish the prospect of embarrassing this unfortunate
woman by
bringing her to trial and winning official favour for themselves."
"Yes, you can say
that again!" Riley exclaimed, nodding knowingly. "Maybe
this
Maria-creature has already
been reported by someone and deprived of her professional status? Who knows?
After all, things happen pretty fast these days."
"Especially where
sexual indiscretions are concerned," Stephanie rejoined.
"The authorities are very stringent with
'the carnal enemies of progress', as we all know."
"Yes, and not least
of all by subjecting them to the ugly spectacle of various Christian
paintings
depicting the wrong side, as it were, of The Last Judgement," Riley
confirmed, a sly smile on his lips.
"The sight of the Damned being punished for their sensual
crimes,
or sins, is certainly an excellent reminder to offenders against the
spirit of
what they're doing to themselves and where they'll end-up if they don't
watch
out: namely in a hell of their own making.
Now obviously, very few people wish to have their fate spelt out
to them
in such blunt terms these days."
"You're not
kidding!" Adam exclaimed, a slight but perceptible shudder shooting
through him. "The sight of a
Damnation scene would be enough to precipitate me into Hell. It's one of the worst psychological
punishments
imaginable!"
"Fortunately,
however, very few people have to undergo it," Stephanie reminded him,
smiling reassuringly. "Not,
at
any
rate, among the intelligentsia.
We're much too spiritually disposed to run the risk of
backsliding, and
thus jeopardizing or ruining our impending prospects of Salvation. We're much too aware of the direction in
which our deepest interests lie, to run the risk of preferring the
hellish to
the heavenly."
"Quite!" Riley
seconded, nodding reaffirmatively. "Although I have to say, in all fairness
to my own gender, that that applies slightly more to the men than to
the women,
as a rule."
Stephanie frowned
impulsively and lowered her head, as though to hide the incipient shame
and
regret which were threatening to tarnish her relations with the older
of the
two men. She recalled a remark Serge had
casually let drop, a few months previously, about evolution working
against the
traditional interests of women, and it humiliated her slightly. To be sure, there had been an element of
truth in it, insofar as women were generally more sensual than men,
having more
fat on them, quite apart from the milk in their breasts, and therefore
weren't
qualified to embrace the spiritual with quite the same gusto. But something about Serge's mode of
communication at the time suggested a faint tone of mockery, much as
though he
secretly relished the fact.
Yes, it was almost as
though he had been subtly reproaching her for being a woman,
criticizing,
through her, the fundamentally sensual nature of women in general. And she had resented it, considering it
wasn't her fault that she had been born a woman anyway and, even so,
she was
pretty spiritual as women went - more spiritual, in fact, than a number
of men
she knew! But now the thought came back
to her and irritated her slightly. She
could almost feel a kind of mockery in Serge's presence beside her, an
oblique
mockery which sought to condemn her for being spiritually pretentious. A delusion probably, but nevertheless hardly
the most ennobling of delusions! And it
only sufficed to unearth depressing material from the depths of her
subconscious, like the recollection, amongst other things, that she had
more
than once gone beyond the bounds of the current sexual morality herself
in
recent years, and 'made love' to another person to the extent of six or
seven
times a year. And that
without anyone but her regular sex-partner knowing.
Just as well, she reflected, that neither
Serge nor Adam were mind-readers!
But, even so, she was
beginning to regret that she had brought-up the subject of Maria
Gomez's
alleged promiscuity in the first place.
Hadn't she been slightly envious of Maria's immorality, and
wasn't the
fact that she had brought it up sufficiently indicative of her status
as a
woman, a creature for whom the sensual or sexual was never very far
away, not
even in the year 2200, and therefore apt to manifest itself
subliminally and
indirectly, if not concretely and directly?
Yes, in all probability! And yet
she was spiritually earnest, like most contemporary women, being only
too keen
to spiritualize herself to the extent that
she could,
irrespective of the pressures put upon her by feminine sensuality. Evolution might be working to undermine the
fundamental or traditional interests of women, but that was the way it
had to be,
and all one could do was adjust oneself to the reality of the situation
as best
one could and endeavour to take it for granted.
For what else could one do? Men
were always the deeper and stronger sex, the sex that shaped the world,
and, as
such, one had to follow their lead. As a
woman, it was one's duty to help them thrive, not hinder them. One had to go along with whatever was in
their best interests, even if this meant that some or most of one's
sensuality
would have to be sacrificed in the process.
And at the highest point of human evolution, at that point where
women
had most spiritualized themselves, one would have preferred to be
treated as
a man than regarded as a woman.
Yes, absolutely! Otherwise one
would be damned, left behind in a world which man, in attaining to his
spiritual
transformation, no longer inhabited. So one had better make a determined effort to keep
abreast of the
latest spiritual developments, even if one couldn't be expected to lead
the
way. For in spite of the emphasis
on sexual equality, these past two-hundred years, men and women were
still
fundamentally different creatures who couldn't be expected to act and
think
exactly alike. Women would generally
have a stronger sensual allegiance than men, no matter how spiritual
they
strove to make themselves.
Not particularly
surprising, therefore, if the majority of people punished for sexual
immorality
these days were females, and that even the ranks of the female
intelligentsia
weren't immune to sensual aberrations, as they were somewhat
euphemistically
termed by the spiritual authorities.
What would happen to women in due course,
remained to be seen. But Stephanie
sincerely hoped that they wouldn't be 'left behind' when men took off,
as it
were, for a higher realm of transcendentalism.
That would certainly be unfair on them, especially when one bore
in mind
the immense efforts they usually made to live in the spirit!
Indeed, ever since the
Women's Liberation Movement initiated the drive towards sexual
equalitarianism,
way back in the twentieth century, woman had increasingly made efforts
in this
context and, by and large, she had been highly successful, witnessing,
over the
passing decades, the reduction of sexual intercourse from as many as a
hundred
times a year to as few as three or four times, with a corresponding
fall in the
ratio of sexual promiscuity. Thus she
had sound reason to believe that evolution was as much a fact of her
life as of
men, in consequence of which she would be properly rewarded in due
course. But how ironic that Women's Lib,
as it used
to be called, should have been feared and misunderstood by so many men
when it
made its first appearance in the European world, in response to the
exigencies
of commercial and/or industrial progress, and accordingly precipitated
women in
the general direction of greater professional responsibility and, as a
direct
corollary of that, increased intellectualization. As
Serge
had once remarked to a colleague in
Stephanie's company one day, it was a wonder that so many men had
either openly
or secretly opposed this liberation movement, since it was in their
interests
that women should increasingly assume responsible roles in society and
thereby
testify to evolutionary progress away from the sensual!
For a society in which
woman was very much in her sexual/maternal element and man, under
nature's
domination, was largely sensual and worldly in his social outlook,
still had a
long way to go before any spiritual transformation could come about. But a society, on the other hand, in which
woman was making a determined effort to spiritualize herself, in
response to
the artificial ideals of industrialism and its corollary of large-scale
urbanization, had reason to believe that the long-awaited consummation
of human
evolution was closer to-hand than at any time in the nature-bound past,
where
the worldly ideal of mundane sensuality was uppermost and the
otherworldly
ideal of transcendent spirituality no more than a distant dream. Like so many other aspects of
twentieth-century
change, however, this one hadn't been widely understood or appreciated
at the
time, and was consequently subject to varying degrees of pessimistic
interpretation.
To be sure, one cannot
now be surprised that the twentieth century, as the great turning-point
in
Western man's evolution, should have been the source of so much
confusion,
since it signalled the transition between second- and third-stage
development,
between middle and late man, town and city man, and thus provided
sufficient
grounds for uncertainty. In shaking off
the old anthropomorphic religious impulse, many people were convinced,
after
Nietzsche, that 'God was dead' when, in effect, all that had really
died was
the old way of conceiving of divinity.
And out of this futile conviction, born of ignorance and
confusion, had
come various absurd philosophies of a nihilistic import which sought to
repudiate the existence of God! As if
God were here one moment and gone the next!
No, it was subsequently
realized that only second-stage man had gone, his outdated concept of
God being
replaced by the transcendental concept appertaining to his more
spiritual
successor. That was what had happened,
though it wasn't absolutely clear to most people at the time, just as
the
Women's Liberation Movement had caused quite a degree of uncertainty or
hostility, whilst other developments, both political and scientific,
were
likewise exposed to varying interpretations, some of which were highly
unfavourable. And yet things eventually
sorted themselves out, in spite of all those who believed that the end
of the
world was nigh and man's religious evolution accordingly drawing to a
close. The transition between the two
stages of Western man's spiritual evolution was successfully bridged
and
weathered, willy-nilly, in the interests of posterity, who repudiated
the
absurdities and confusions of the twentieth century and pressed-on with
the
destiny of humanity towards its ultimate goal in spiritual
transformation, a
transformation which, two centuries into third-stage life, had still to
come
about, but was a great deal more feasible now than in the age of
writers like Aldous Huxley and Henry
Miller. With transcendental meditation
five days a
week, mankind was now closer to its ultimate salvation than at any
previous
time in the world's history, even if a few sensual mishaps still
occurred, from
time to time, and not everyone had direct experience of Infused
Contemplation. Perhaps when the working
period was cut from two days to one day a week, as rumour suggested it
might
soon be, more people would have a better chance of breaking through
onto the
higher levels of mystical contemplation and thus of achieving a real
glimpse of
the post-human Beyond, the millennium of millennia which would last not
merely
a thousand years but for ever?
This was a prospect,
however, which Stephanie Voltaire half-cherished and half-feared. For deep down in her sensuous nature she
didn't want evolution to proceed too quickly, although she was fairly
resigned
to its gradual progress. Frankly, there
were still too many things in life that mattered to her besides God,
not the
least of which was her growing fondness for Adam Kurtmüller,
the
shy,
sensitive young research colleague to her left, who was now in
conversation with Serge Riley about the latest development or, rather,
scandal
at the meditation centre they both frequented - a different one,
incidentally,
from Stephanie's - in which a promising scientist by name of Gregory
Smith-Solti had been requested to take-up a
new position in the
ranks, in consequence of the fact that he had only recently discovered
he was
gay and therefore not entitled to sit among the men.
"You know, I almost
missed his presence in front of me yesterday," Adam was saying, his
lips
curved into a sardonic smile, his eyes bright with the ironic amusement
which
the scandal in question had engendered, "and was slightly distracted
from
my concentration by the different-shaped head there."
"You're lucky he
didn't make a habit of sitting behind
you,"
Riley disrespectfully joked, warming to his younger colleague's
amusement. "Otherwise you might have
distracted him
from his
concentration. After all,
you can't be sure, can you?"
"No, I guess
not," Adam conceded, before bursting into a little snigger which merely
served to embarrass him in the presence of Stephanie and elicit a
perfunctory
apology on his part. And, as though this
gave him the necessary inspiration, he continued: "I expect he felt
humiliated, having to sit behind the women for the first time,
especially as
he'd been regarded as a heterosexual all along."
"Yes, I expect he
did indeed!" tittered Riley, newly elated
by this
further consideration. "It's the
only occasion I've known such a thing to happen, you know.
Quite remarkable really! I'm
surprised he didn't keep quiet about his
little self-realization and carry on meditating with us in the male
section of
the centre. No-one would have known any
better, would they?"
This semi-rhetorical
question momentarily managed to upset young Adam's moral equilibrium
and thus
precipitate a few additional sniggers, which were duly qualified by a
"Hopefully not!" Still, it was
less than fair of them to treat poor Smith-Solti's
predicament with levity, so Adam quickly brought a degree of
seriousness to
bear on the ticklish subject by reminding Serge of the absolute
necessity of
honesty in such matters, as well as conveying to him his personal
admiration
for Smith-Solti's moral integrity in the
face of
psychological inconvenience and possible social repercussions.
"Oh, I quite
agree," Riley rejoined, slightly taken-aback. "It
was
the correct and proper thing to
do. The question is,
why did it take him so long to discover that he was, in fact,
homosexual? After all, he'd been sitting
among the men
for at least three years. So if the
regulation regarding a person's sexuality - or assumed sexuality - in
relation
to his position in the meditation centre is to be taken seriously, it
would
seem that he has defied convention ever since he first took his place
amongst us. Which is no minor
indiscretion!"
The regulation to which
Riley was referring had been introduced approximately 150 years ago, in
response to a growing demand for greater fidelity to transcendental
ethics. It required that all meditation
centres throughout Europe maintain sexual segregation,
in order to preclude the possibility of anyone's being distracted from
his
devotions by the immediate and visible proximity of members of the
opposite
sex. If one was hoping to attain,
through regular meditation, to a higher level of spirituality, it
wouldn't help
to be surrounded by the visible embodiments of sensuality and thus
exposed, at
any moment, to lustful temptation. On
the contrary, one had need of a context in which there was no place for
sex, if
transcendentalism was to properly flourish.
And so, traditionally, the males sat in the front half of the
centres'
meditation areas and the females sat behind them, out of sight. Nowadays,
however, the sexual
instinct was generally so much weaker than when the law regarding
sexual
segregation had first been introduced, that it was scarcely necessary
to
maintain it. Though
the spiritual authorities were still in favour of its retention, if
only for
form's sake and because it did, after all, signify fidelity to the
nature and
direction of human evolution. So
the males continued to sit in front and the females behind. But in such exceptional cases as that to
which Riley had just referred, it was deemed necessary for the
homosexual to
sit right at the back, behind the women, where he wouldn't be exposed
to carnal
desires at the sight of certain males or, conversely, expose certain
females to
such desires on his account. Moreover, a
further clause of this regulation stipulated that if, due to lack of
space, he
couldn't sit right at the back, he should have at least two-thirds of
the women
in front of him, which quite plainly meant that he shouldn't sit
immediately
behind the men in the first rows of female meditators
but, rather, as far back as possible, in order to be delivered from the
sight
of them. Furthermore he should not,
under any circumstances, have other homosexuals seated immediately in
front of
him, but either in the same row as himself or hidden from view
somewhere among
the female ranks. Since a meditation
centre normally held approximately 350 of each sex, there was
sufficient scope
for making this arrangement feasible, as a rule. Though
it
must be admitted that in some
centres the clause wasn't always scrupulously adhered to, there being
so many homosexuals
in the locale. However, very few people
quibbled with its logic, even among the lesbians who, logically enough, sat right behind the males.
And so, despite the progressive weakening of
the sex instinct, it retained general respect among the meditators,
primarily dedicated, as they were, to spiritual matters.
Hence Riley's concern with regard to Smith-Solti's
delayed sexual self-realization and consequent
social indiscretion of having sat in the wrong half of his meditation
centre
for over three years. And hence, too,
the humour that preceded it. Poor Smith-Solti's personal discovery and appropriate
transference to
another part of the centre had come as quite a shock to his
fellow-transcendentalists, not least of all to Serge and Adam!
"Oh well, I guess
his self-discovery is better late than never," said Adam in sympathetic
response to his senior colleague's previous comment.
"The meditation masters won't punish him
for it."
"No,
not these days," Riley admitted, half-smiling.
"Though they certainly
would have done a century ago. He'd
have been obliged to pay a heavy fine
and/or meditate in solitude for a number of weeks."
"It almost sounds
funny now," Stephanie opined, thrusting her way back into the
conversation
and thereby reminding the two men of her existence.
"One simply can't imagine anyone being
punished, these days, for what, to us, is such a minor offence. I'm sure most people in his situation would
have kept quiet about any such sexual self-realization in those days."
"Not least of all
when of a gregarious nature," Riley rejoined, smiling.
"Still, what Smith-Solti
has been doing, these past few years, is nothing compared to the
alleged
promiscuity concerning Maria Gomez, is it?
In all probability, his sexual incertitude owed more than a
little to
the infrequency of his heterosexual commitments and to the
correspondingly
modest character of his copulatory
appetites, which
we must regard as a credit to our environmental and moral progress. In the future, no-one will have any copulatory appetites at all, so no such
embarrassing
indiscretion will arise. One must assume
that even sensual aberrations like Maria Gomez's will cease to occur."
"I sincerely hope
so!" declared Adam, glancing uneasily at Stephanie who, at that moment,
was staring out through the room's narrow window again at the scene
opposite,
which, in respect of the Senior Administrator and young woman, had
become
relatively calm. Not the slightest
agitation discernible on the faces of the two people, who were now, it
appeared, just sitting quietly, oblivious of each-other's existence. It seemed that they had concluded their
argument.
"Yes, so do
I," Stephanie seconded, suddenly aware of Adam's puzzled curiosity and
anxious not to appear sympathetic towards Maria Gomez herself. "One can only hope that more people will
follow Michael Estov's spiritual example
and thereby
attain to the higher levels of mystical experience.
For in that lies the key to our ultimate
salvation."
"Right on!"
exclaimed Adam and Serge, each of whom felt newly strengthened in his
transcendental resolve.