V
My dear David,
You will be
astonished to get a letter of such length from me, I don't doubt. But the news of your appointment only reached
me lately in rumoured form, and there is much you should know about the state
of affairs here which I could not address to you formally as Ambassador
Designate (Confidential: Under Flying Seal) ahem!
Ouf! What a bore! I
hate writing letters as you well know.
And yet ... I myself shall almost certainly be gone by the time you
arrive, for I have taken steps to get myself transferred. After a long series of calculated wickednesses I have at last managed to persuade poor
Errol that I am unsuitable for the Mission which I have adorned these past
months. Months! A lifetime!
And Errol himself is so good, so honest, so worthy; a curious goat-like
creature who nevertheless conveys the impression of being a
breech-delivery! He has put in his paper
against me with the greatest reluctance.
Please do nothing to countermand the transfer which will result from
it, as it squares with my own private wishes. I implore you.
The deciding
factor has been my desertion of my post for the past five weeks which has
caused grave annoyance and finally decided Errol. I will explain everything. Do you remember, I wonder, the fat young
French diplomat of the Rue du Bac? Nessim took us round
once for drinks? Pombal
by name? Well, I have taken refuge with
him - he is serving here. It is really
quite gay chez lui. The summer over, he headless Embassy retired
with the Court to winter in Cairo, but this time without Yours Truly. I went underground. Nowadays we rise at eleven, turn out the
girls, and after having a hot bath play backgammon until lunch-time; then an arak at the Café Al Aktar
with Balthazar and Amaril (who send their love) and
lunch at the Union Bar. Then perhaps we
call on Clea to see what she is painting, or go to a
cinema. Pombal
is doing all this legitimately; he is on local leave. I am en retraite. Occasionally the exasperated Errol rings up
long distance in an attempt to trace me and I answer him in the voice of a poule from the Midi.
It rattles him badly because he guesses it is me, but isn't quite
sure. (The point about a Wykehamist is that he cannot risk giving
offence.) We have lovely, lovely
conversations. Yesterday I told him that
I, Pursewarden, was under treatment for a glandular
condition chez Professor Pombal but was now out of
danger. Poor Errol! One day I shall apologize to him for all the
trouble I have caused him. Not now. Not until I get my transfer to Siam or
Santos.
All this is
very wicked of me, I know, but ... the tedium of this Chancery with all these
un-grown-up people! The Errols are formidably Britannic. They are, for example, both
economists. Why both, I ask
myself? One of them must feel
permanently redundant. They make love to
two places of decimals only. Their
children have all the air of vulgar fractions!
Well. The only nice ones are the Donkins; he is clever and high-spirited, she rather common
and fast-looking with too much rouge.
But ... poor dear, she is over-compensating for the fact that her little
husband has grown a beard and turned Moslem!
She sits with a hard aggressive air on his desk, swinging her leg and
smoking swiftly. Mouth too red. Not quite a lady and hence insecure? Her husband is a clever youth but far too
serious. I do not dare to ask if he
intends to put in for the extra allowance of wives to which he is entitled.
But let me
tell you in my laboured fashion what lies behind all this nonsense. I was sent here, as you know, under contract,
and I fulfilled my original task faithfully - as witness the giant roll of
paper headed (in a lettering usually reserved for tombstones) Instruments
for a Cultural Pact Between the Governments of His Britannic Majesty etc. Blunt instruments indeed - for what can a
Christian culture have in common with a Moslem or a Marxist? Our premises are hopelessly opposed. Never mind!
I was told to do it and I done it.
And much as I love what they've got here I don't understand the words in
relation to an educational system based on the abacus and a theology which got
left behind with Augustine and Aquinas.
Personally I think we both have made a mess of it, and I have no parti-pris in the matter. And so on.
I just don't see what D.H. Lawrence has to offer a pasha with seventeen
wives, though I believe I know which one of them is happiest.... However, I
done it, the Pact I mean.
This done I
found myself rapidly sent to the top of the form as a Political and this
enabled me to study papers and evaluate the whole Middle Eastern complex as a
coherent whole, as a policy venture.
Well, let me say that after prolonged study I have come to the reluctant
conclusion that it is neither coherent nor even a policy - at any rate a policy
capable of withstanding the pressures which are being built up here.
These
rotten states, backward and venal as they are, must be seriously thought about;
they cannot be held together just by encouraging what is weakest and most
corrupt in them, as we appear to be doing.
This approach would presuppose another fifty years of peace and no
radical element in the electorate at home: that given, the status quo
might be maintained. But given this
prevailing trend, can England be as short-sighted as this? Perhaps.
I don't know. It is not my job to
know these things, as an artist; as a political I am filled with
misgiving. To encourage Arab unity while
at the same time losing the power to use the poison-cup seems to me to be a
very dubious thing: not policy but lunacy.
And to add Arab unity to all the other currents which are running
against us seems to me to be an engaging folly.
Are we still beset by the doleful dream of the Arabian Nights, fathered
on us by three generations of sexually disoriented Victorians whose subconscious
reacted wholeheartedly to the thought of more than one legal wife? Or the romantic Bedouin-fever of the Bells
and Lawrences?
Perhaps. But the Victorians who
fathered this dream on us were people who believed in fighting for the
value of their currency; they knew that the world of politics was a
jungle. Today the Foreign Office appears
to believe that the best way to deal with the jungle is to turn Nudist and
conquer the wild beast by the sight of one's nakedness. I can hear you sigh. 'Why can't Pursewarden
be more precise. All these boutades!'
Very
well. I spoke of the pressures. Let us divide them into internal and
external, shall we, in the manner of Errol?
My views may seem somewhat heretical, but here they are.
Well then,
first, the abyss which separates the rich from the poor - it is positively
Indian. In Egypt today, for example, six
per cent of the people own over three-quarters of the land, thus leaving under
a feddan a head for the rest to live on. Good!
Then the population is doubling itself every second generation - or is
it third? But I suppose any economic
survey will tell you this. Meanwhile
there is the steady growth of a vocal and literate middle-class whose sons are
trained at Oxford among our comfy liberalisms - and who find no jobs waiting
for them when they come back here. The babu is growing in power, and the dull story is
being repeated here as elsewhere.
'Intellectual coolies of the world unite.'
To these
internal pressures we are gracefully adding by direct encouragement, the rigour
of a nationalism based in a fanatical religion.
I personally admire it, but never forget that it is a fighting religion
with no metaphysics, only an ethic. The
Arab Union, etc.... My dear chap, why are we thinking up these absurd constructs
to add to our own discomfiture - specially as it is clear to me that we have
lost the basic power to act which alone would ensure that our influence
remained paramount here? These tottering
backward-looking feudalisms could only be supported by arms against these
disintegrating elements inherent in the very nature of things today; but to use
arms, 'to preach with the sword,' in the words of Lawrence, one must have a
belief in one's own ethos, one's own mystique of life. What does the Foreign Office believe? I just don't know. In Egypt, for example, very little has been
done beyond keeping the peace; the High Commission is vanishing after a rule of
- since 1888? - and will not leave behind even the vestiges of a trained civil
service to stabalize this rabble-ridden grotesque
which we now apparently regard as a sovereign state. How long will fair words and courtly
sentiments prevail against the massive discontents these people feel? One can trust a treaty king only as long as
he can trust his people. How long
remains before a flashpoint is reached?
I don't know - and to be frank I don't much care. But I should say that some unforeseen outside
pressure like a war would tumble over these scarecrow principalities at a
breath. Anyway, these are my general
reasons for wanting a change. I believe
we should reorient policy and build Jewry into the power behind the scenes
here. And quick.
Now for the
particular. Very early in my political
life I ran up against a department of the War Office specializing in general
intelligence, run by a Brigadier who resented the idea that his office should
bow the knee to us. A question of rank,
or allowances, or some such rot; under the Commission he had been allowed more
or less a free hand. Incidentally, this
is the remains of the old Arab Bureau left over from 1918 which has been living
on quietly like a toad buried under a stone!
Obviously in the general re-alignment, his show must (it seemed to me)
integrate with somebody. And now there
was only an embryonic Embassy in Egypt.
As he had worked formerly to the High Commission's Political Branch, I
thought he should work to me - and indeed, after a series of sharp battles,
bent if not broke him - Maskelyne is the creature's
name. He is so typical as to be rather
interesting, and I have made extensive notes on him for a book in my usual
fashion. (One writes to recover a lost
innocence!)
Well, since
the Army discovered that imagination is a major factor in producing cowardice
they have trained the Maskelyne breed in the virtues
of counter-imagination: a sort of amnesia which is almost Turkish. The contempt for death has been turned into a
contempt for life and this type of man accepts life only on his own terms. A frozen brain alone enables him to keep up a
routine of exceptional boredom. He is
very thin, very tall, and his skin has been tanned by Indian service to the
colour of smoked snakeskin, or a scab painted with iodine. His perfect teeth rest as lightly as a
feather upon his pipestem. There is a peculiar gesture he has - I wish I
could describe it, it interests me so much - of removing his pipe slowly before
speaking, levelling his small dark eyes at one, and almost whispering: 'Oh, do
you really think so?' The vowels drawing
themselves out infinitely into the lassitude, the boredom of the silence which
surrounds him. He is gnawed by the
circumscribed perfection of a breeding which makes him uncomfortable in
civilian clothes, and indeed he walks about in his well-cut cavalry coat with a
Noli me tangere
air. (Breed for type and you always get
anomalies of behaviour.) He is followed
everywhere by his magnificent red pointer Nell (named after his wife?) who
sleeps on his feet while he works at his files, and on his bed at night. He occupies a room in a hotel in which there
is nothing personal - no books, no photographs, no papers. Only a set of silver-backed brushes, a bottle
of whisky and a newspaper. (I imagine
him sometimes brushing the silent fury out of his own scalp, furiously brushing
his dark shiny hair back from the temples, faster and faster. Ah, that's better - that's better!)
He reaches
his office at eight having bought his day-late copy of the Daily Telegraph. I have never seen him read anything
else. He sits at his huge desk, consumed
with a slow dark contempt for the venality of the human beings around him,
perhaps the human race as a whole; imperturbably he examines and assorts their
differing corruptions, their maladies, and outlines them upon marble
minute-paper which he always signs with his little silver pen in a small
awkward fly's handwriting. The current
of his loathing flows through his veins slowly, heavily, like the Nile at
flood. Well, you can see what a numéro he is.
He lives purely in the military imagination, for he never sees or meets
the subjects of most of his papers; the information he collates comes in from
suborned clerks, or discontented valets, or pent-up servants. It does not matter. He prides himself on his readings of it, his
I.A. (intelligence appreciation), just like an astrologer working upon charts
belonging to unseen, unknown subjects.
He is judicial, proud as the Calif,
unswerving, I admire him very much.
Honestly I do.
Maskelyne has set up two marks between which (as between
degree-signs on a calibrated thermometer) the temperatures of his approval and
disapproval are allowed to move, expressed in the phrases: 'A good show for the
Raj' and 'Not such a good show for the Raj'. He is too
single-minded of course, ever to be able to imagine a really Bad Show for the
Bloody Raj.
Such a man seems unable to see the world around him on open sights; but
then his profession and the need for reserve make him a complete recluse, make
him inexperienced in the ways of the world upon which he sits in judgement....
Well, I am tempted to go on and frame the portrait of our spycatcher,
but I will desist. Read my next novel
but four, it should also include a sketch of Telford, who is Maskelyne's Number Two - a large blotchy ingratiating
civilian with ill-fitting dentures who manages to call one 'old fruit' a
hundred times a second between nervous guffaws.
His worship of the cold snaky soldier is marvellous to behold. 'Yes, Brigadier', 'No, Brigadier', falling
over a chair in his haste to serve; you would say he was completely in love
with his boss. Maskelyne
sits and watches his confusion coldly, his brown chin, cleft by a dark dimple,
jutting like an arrow. Or he will lean
back in his swivel-chair and tap softly on the door of the huge safe behind him
with the faintly satisfied air of a gourmet patting his paunch as he says: 'You
don't believe me? I have it all in here,
all in here.' Those files, you think,
watching this superlative, all-comprehending gesture, must contain material
enough to indict the world! Perhaps they
do.
Well, this
is what happened: one day I found a characteristic document from Maskelyne on my desk headed Nessim
Hosnani, and subtitled A Conspiracy Among the
Copts which alarmed me somewhat.
According to the paper, our Nessim was busy
working up a large and complicated plot against the Egyptian Royal House. Most of the data were rather questionable I
thought, knowing Nessim, but the whole paper put me
in a quandary, for it carried the bland recommendation that the details should
be transmitted by the Embassy to the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs! I can hear you draw your breath sharply. Even supposing this were true, such a course
would put Nessim's life in the greatest danger. Have I explained that one of the major
characteristics of Egyptian nationalism is the gradually growing envy and hate
of the 'foreigners' - the half-million or so of non-Moslems here? And that the moment full Egyptian sovereignty
was declared the Moslems started in to bully and expropriate them? The brains of Egypt, as you know, is its
foreign community. The capital which
flowed into the land while it was safe our suzerainty, is now at the mercy of
these paunchy pashas. The Armenians,
Greeks, Copts, Jews - they are all feeling the sharpening edge of this hate;
many are wisely leaving, but most cannot.
These huge capital investments in cotton, etc., cannot be abandoned
overnight. the foreign communities are
living from prayer to prayer and from bribe to bribe. They are trying to save their industries,
their life-work from the gradual encroachment of the pashas. We have literally thrown them to the lions!
Well, I
read and re-read this document, as I say, in a state of considerable
anxiety. I knew that if I gave it to
Errol he would run bleating with it to the King. So I went into action myself to test the weak
points in it - mercifully it was not one of Maskelyne's
best papers - and succeeded in throwing doubt upon many of his
contentions. But what infuriated him was
that I actually suspended the paper - I had to in order to keep it out
of Chancery's hands! My sense of duty
was sorely strained, but then there was no alternative; what would those silly
young schoolboys next-door have done? If
Nessim was really guilty of the sort of plot Maskelyne envisaged, well and good; one could deal with him
later according to his lights. But ...
you know Nessim.
I felt that I owed it to him to be sure before passing such a paper
upwards.
But of
course Maskelyne was furious, though he had the grace
not to show it. We sat in his office
with the conversational temperature well below zero and still falling while he
showed me his accumulated evidence and his agents' reports. 'I have this man Selim
suborned,' Maskelyne kept croaking, 'and I'm
convinced his own secretary can't be wrong about it. There is this small secret society with the
regular meetings - Selim has to wait with the car and
drive them home. Then there is this
curious cryptogram which goes out all over the Middle East from Balthazar's
clinic, and then the visits to arms manufacturers in Sweden and Germany....' I
tell you, my brain was swimming! I could
see all our friends neatly laid out on a slab by the Egyptian Secret Police,
being measured for shrouds.
I must say,
too, that circumstantially the inferences which Maskelyne
drew appeared to hold water. It all
looked rather sinister; but luckily a few of the basic points would not yield
to analysis - things like the so-called cipher which friend Balthazar shot out
once every two months to chosen recipients in the big towns of the Middle
East. Maskelyne
was still trying to follow these up. But
the data were far from complete and I stressed this as strongly as I could,
much to the discomfort of Telford, though Maskelyne
is too cool a bird of prey to be easily discountenanced. Nevertheless I got him to agree to pend the paper until something more substantial was
forthcoming to broaden the basis of the doctrine. He hated me but he swallowed it, and so I
felt that I had gained at least a temporary respite. The problem was what to do next - how to use
the time to advantage? I was of course
convinced that Nessim was innocent of these grotesque
charges. But I could not, I admit,
supply explanations as convincing of those of Maskelyne. What, I could not help wondering, were they
really up to? If I was to deflate Maskelyne, I must find out for myself. Very annoying, and indeed professionally
improper - but que faire? Little Ludwig must turn himself into a
private investigator, a Sexton Blake, in order to do the job! But where to begin?
Maskelyne's only direct lead on Nessim
was through the suborned secretary, Selim; through
him he had accumulated quite a lot of interesting though not intrinsically
alarming data about the Hosnani holdings in various
fields - the land bank, shipping line, ginning mills, and so on. The rest was largely gossip and rumour, some
of it damaging, but none of it more than circumstantial. But piled up in a heap it did make our gentle
Nessim sound somewhat sinister. I felt that I must take it all apart
somehow. Specially as a lot of it
concerned and surrounded his marriage - the acid gossip of the lazy and
envious, so typical of Alexandria - or anywhere else for that matter. In this, of course, the unconscious moral
judgements of the Anglo-Saxon were to the fore - I mean in the value-judgements
of Maskelyne.
As for Justine - well, I know her a bit, and I must confess I rather
admire her surly magnificence. Nessim haunted her for some time before getting her to
consent, I am told; I cannot say I had misgivings about it all exactly, but ...
even today their marriage feels in some curious way uncemented. They make a perfect pair, but never seem to
touch each other; indeed, once I saw her very slightly shrink as he picked a
thread from her fur. Probably
imagination. Is there perhaps a
thundercloud brooding there behind the dark satin-eyed wife? Plenty nerves, certainly. Plenty hysteria. Plenty Judaic melancholy. One recognizes her vaguely as the girlfriend
of the man whose head was presented on a charger.... What do I mean?
Well, Maskelyne says with his dry empty contempt: 'No sooner does
she marry than she starts an affair with another man, and a foreigner to
boot.' This of course is Darley, the vaguely amiable bespectacled creature who
inhabits Pombal's box-room at certain times. He teaches for a living and writes
novels. He has that nice round babyish
back to the head which one sees in cultural types; slight stoop, fair hair, and
the shyness that goes with Great Emotions imperfectly kept under control. A fellow-romantic quotha! Looked at hard, he starts to stammer. But he's a good fellow, gentle and resigned
... I confess that he seems unlikely material for someone as dashing as Nessim's wife to work upon.
Can it be benevolence in her, or simply a perverse taste for
innocence? There is a small mystery
here. Anyway, it was Darley
and Pombal who introduced me to the current
Alexandrian livre de chevet
which is a French novel called Moeurs (a
swashing study in the grand manner of nymphomania and psychic impotence)
written by Justine's last husband.
Having written it he wisely divorced her and decamped, but she is
popularly supposed to be the central subject of the book and is regarded with
grave sympathy by society. I must say,
when you think that everyone is both polymorph and perverse here, it seems hard
luck to be singled out like this as the main character in a roman vache. Anyway,
this lies in the past, and now Nessim has carried her
into the ranks of le monde where she acquits
herself with a sharply defined grace and savagery. They suit her looks and the dark but simple
splendours of Nessim himself. Is he happy?
But wait, let me put the question another way. Was he ever happy? Is he unhappier now than he was? Hum! I
think he could do a lot worse, for the girl is neither too innocent nor too
unintelligent. She plays the piano
really well, albeit with a sulky emphasis, and reads widely. Indeed, the novels of Yours Truly are much
admired - with a disarming wholeheartedness.
(Caught! Yes, this is why I am
disposed to like her.)
On the
other hand, what she sees in Darley I cannot
credit. The poor fellow flutters on a
slab like a skate at her approach; he and Nessim are,
however, great frequenters of each other, great friends. These modest British types - do they all turn
out to be Turks secretly? Darley at any rate must have some appeal because he has
also got himself regally entangled with a rather nice little cabaret dancer
called Melissa. You would never think,
to look at him, that he was capable of running a tandem, so little
self-possession does he appear to have.
A victim of his own fine sentiment?
He wrings his hands, his spectacles steam up, when he mentions either
name. Poor Darley! I always enjoy irritating him by quoting the
poem by his minor namesake to him:
O
blest unfabled Incense Tree
That
burns in glorious Araby,
With
red scent chalicing the air,
Till
earth-life grows Elysian there.
He pleads with
me blushingly to desist, though I cannot tell which Darley
he is blushing for; I continue in magistral fashion:
Half-buried
in her flaming breast
In
this bright tree she makes her nest
Hundred-sunned
Phoenix! When she must
Crumble
at length to hoary dust!
It is not bad conceit for Justine herself. 'Stop' he always cries.
Her
gorgeous death-bed! Her rich pyre
Burn
up with aromatic fire!
Her
urn, sight-high from spoiler men!
Her
birth-place when self-born again!
'Please. Enough.'
'What's
wrong with it? It's not such a bad poem,
is it?'
And I
conclude with Melissa, disguised as an 18th Century Dresden China shepherdess.
The
mountainless green wilds among,
Here
ends she her unechoing song
With
amber tears and odorous sighs
Mourned
by the desert where she dies!
So much for
Darley! But as
for Justine's part in the matter I can find no rhyme, no reason, unless we
accept one of Pombal's epigrams at its face
value. He says, with fat seriousness: 'Les
femmes sont fidèles au
fond, tu sais? Elles ne trompent que
les autres femmes!'
But it seems to me to offer no really concrete reason for Justine
wishing to tromper the pallid rival
Melissa. This would be infra dig
for a woman with her position in society.
See what I mean?
Well, then,
it is upon Darley that our Maskelyne
keeps his baleful ferret's eyes fixed; apparently Selim
tells us that all the real information on Nessim is
kept in a little wall-safe at the house and not in the office. There is only one key to this safe which Nessim always carries on his person. The private safe, says Selim,
is full of papers. But he is vague as to
what the papers can be. Love
letters? Hum. At any rate, Selim
has made one or two attempts to get at the safe, but without any luck. One day the bold Maskelyne
himself decided to examine it at close range and take, if necessary, a wax
squeeze. Selim
let him in and he climbed the back stairs - and nearly ran into Darley, our cicisbeo, and Justine in the bedroom! He just heard their voices in time. Never tell me after this that the English are
puritans. Some time later I saw a short
story Darley published in which a character exclaims:
'In his arms I felt mauled, chewed up, my fur coated with saliva, as if between
the paws of some great excited cat.' I
reeled. 'Crumbs!' I thought. 'This is what Justine is doing to the poor
bugger - eating him alive!'
I must say,
it gave me a good laugh. Darley is so typical of my compatriots - snobbish and
parochial in one. And so good! He lacks devil. (Thank God for the Irishman and the Jew who
spat in my blood.) Well, why should I
take this high and mighty line? Justine
must be awfully good to sleep with, must kiss like a rainbow and squeeze out
great sparks - yes. But out of Darley? It doesn't
hold water. Nevertheless 'this rotten
creature', as Maskelyne calls her, is certainly his
whole attention, or was when I was last there.
Why?
All these
factors were tumbling over and over in my mind as I drove up to Alexandria,
having secured myself a long duty weekend which even the good Errol found
unexceptionable. I never dreamed then,
that within a year you might find yourself engaged by these mysteries. I only knew that I wanted, if possible, to
demolish the Maskelyne thesis and stay the Chancery's
hand in the matter of Nessim. But apart from this I was somewhat at a
loss. I am no spy, after all; was I to
creep about Alexandria dressed in a pudding-basin wig with concealed earphones,
trying to clear the name of our friend?
Nor could I very well present myself to Nessim
and, clearing my throat, say nonchalantly: 'Now about this spy-net you've got
here....' However, I drove steadily and
thoughtfully on. Egypt, flat and unbosomed, flowed back and away from me on either side of
the car. The green changed to blue, the
blue to peacock's eye, to gazelle-brown, to panther-black. The desert was like a dry kiss, a flutter of
eyelashes against the mind. Ahem! The night became horned with stars like
branches of almond-blossom. I gibbered
into the city after a drink or two under a new moon which felt as if it were
drawing half its brilliance from the open sea.
Everything smelt good again. The
iron band that Cairo puts round one's head (the consciousness of being
completely surrounded by burning desert?) dissolved, relaxed - gave place to
the expectation of an open sea, an open road leading one's mind back to
Europe.... Sorry. Off the point.
I
telephoned the house, but they were both out at a reception; feeling somewhat
relieved I betook myself to the Café Al Aktar in the
hope of finding congenial company and found: only our friend Darley. I like
him. I like particularly the way he sits
on his hands with excitement when he discusses art, which he insists on doing
with Yours Truly - why? I answer as best I can and drink my arak. But this generalized sort of conversation
puts me out of humour. For the artist, I
think as for the public, no such thing as art exists; it only exists for the
critics and those who live in the forebrain.
Artist and public simply register, like a seismograph, an
electromagnetic charge which can't be rationalized. One only knows that a transmission of sorts
goes on, true or false, successful or unsuccessful, according to chance. But to try to break down the elements and
nose them over - one gets nowhere. (I
suspect this approach to art is common to all those who cannot surrender
themselves to it!) Paradox. Anyway.
Darley is in fine voice this eve, and I listen to him with
grudging pleasure. He really is a
good chap, and a sensitive one. But it
is with relief that I hear Pombal is due to appear
shortly after a visit to the cinema with a young woman he is besieging. I am hoping he will offer to put me up as
hotels are expensive and I can then spend my travel allowance on drink. Well, at last old P. turns up, having had his
face smacked by the girl's mother who caught them in the foyer. We have a splendid evening and I stay chez
him as I had hoped.
The next
morning I was up betimes though I had decided on nothing, was still bedevilled
in mind about the whole issue. However,
I thought I could at least visit Nessim in his office
as I had so often done, to pass the time of day and cadge a coffee. Whispering up in the huge glass lift, so like
a Byzantine sarcophagus, I felt confused.
I had prepared no conversation for the event. The clerks and typists were all delighted and
showed me straight through into the great domed room where he sat.... Now here
is the curious thing. He not only seemed
to be expecting me, but to have divined my reasons for calling! He seemed delighted, relieved and full of an
impish sort of serenity. 'I've been
waiting for ages,' he said with dancing eyes, 'wondering when you were finally
going to come and beard me, to ask me questions. At last!
What a relief!' Everything melted
between us after this and I felt I could take him on open sights. Nothing could exceed the warmth and candour
of his answers. They carried immediate
conviction with me.
The
so-called secret society, he told me, was a student lodge of the Cabala devoted
to the customary mumbo-jumbo of parlour mysticism. God knows, this is the capital of
superstition. Even Clea
has her horoscope cast afresh every morning.
Sects abound. Was there anything
odd in Balthazar running such a small band of would-be hermetics
- a study group? As for the cryptogram,
it was a sort of mystical calculus - the old boustrophedon no less -
with the help of which the lodge-masters all over the Middle East could keep in
touch. Surely no more mysterious than a
stock-report or a polite exchange between mathematicians working on the same
problem? Nessim
drew one for me and explained roughly how it was used. He added that all this could be effectively
checked by consulting Darley who had taken to
visiting these meetings with Justine to suck up hermetical lore. He would be able to say just how
subversive they were! So far so
good. 'But I can't disguise from you,'
he went on, 'the existence of another movement, purely political, with which I
am directly concerned. This is purely
Coptic and is designed simply to rally the Copts - not to revolt against anyone
(how could we?) but simply to band themselves together; to strengthen religious
and political ties in order that the community can find its way back to a place
in the sun. Now that Egypt is free from
the Copt-hating British, we feel freer to seek high offices for our people, to
get some Members of Parliament elected and so on. There is nothing in all this which should
make an intelligent Moslem tremble. We seek
nothing illegitimate or harmful; simply our rightful place in our own land as
the most intelligent and able community in Egypt.'
There was a
good deal more about the back history of the Coptic community and its
grievances - I won't bore you with it as you probably know it all. But he spoke it all with a tender shy fury
which interested me as being so out of keeping with the placid Nessim we both knew.
Later, when I met the mother, I understood; she is the driving force
behind this particular minority-dream, or so I believe. Nessim went on:
'Nor near France and Britain fear anything from us. We love them both. We ask for no aid, no money. We think of ourselves as Egyptian patriots,
but knowing how stupid and backward the Arab National element is, and how
fanatical, we do not think it can be long before there are violent differences
between the Egyptians and yourselves.
They are already flirting with Hitler.
In the case of a war ... who can tell?
The Middle East is slipping out of the grasp of England and France day
by day. We minorities see ourselves in
peril as the process goes on. Our only
hope is that there is some respite, like a war, which will enable you to come
back and retake the lost ground.
Otherwise, we will be expropriated, enslaved. But we still place our faith in you
both. Now, from this point of view, a
compact and extremely rich influence little group of Coptic bankers and
businessmen could exercise an influence out of all proportion to its
numbers. We are your fifth column in
Europe, fellow Christians. In
another year or two, when the movement is perfected, we could bring immediate
pressure to bear on the economic and industrial life of the country - if it
served to push through a policy which you felt to be necessary. That is why I have been dying to tell you about us, for England should see in
us a bridgehead to the East, a friendly enclave in an area which daily becomes
more hostile, to you.' He lay back,
quite exhausted, but smiling.
'But of
course I realize,' he said, 'that this concerns you as an official. Please treat the matter as a secret, for
friendship's sake. The Egyptians would
welcome any chance to expropriate us Copts - confiscate the millions which we
control: perhaps even kill some of us.
They must not know about us. That
is why we meet secretly, have been building up the movement so slowly, with
such circumspection. There must be no
slips, you see. Now my dear Pursewarden. I fully
realize that you cannot be expected to take all I tell you on trust, without
proof. So I am going to take a rather
unusual step. Day after tomorrow is Sitna Damiana and we are having a
meeting in the desert. I would like you
to come with me so that you can see everything, hear the proceedings and have
your mind quite clear about our composition and our intentions. Later we may be of the greatest service to
Britain here; I want to drive the fact home.
Will you come?'
Would I
come!
I
went. It was really a great experience
which made me realize that I had hardly seen Egypt - the true Egypt underlying
the fly-tormented airless towns, the drawing-rooms of commerce, the bankers'
sea-splashed villas, the Bourse, the Yacht Club, the Mosque.... But wait.
We set off
in a cold mauve dawn and drove a little way down the Aboukir
road before turning inland; thence across dust roads and deserted causeways,
along canals and abandoned trails which the pashas of old had constructed to
reach their hunting-boxes on the lake.
At last we had to abandon the car, and here the other brother was
waiting with horses - the troglodyte with the gueule
cassée, Narouz of the
broken face. What a contrast, this black
peasant, compared to Nessim! And what power! I was much taken by him. He was caressing a swashing great hippo's
backbone made into a whip - the classical kurbash. Saw him pick dragonflies off the flowers at
fifteen paces with it; later in the desert he ran down a wild dog and cut it up
with a couple of strokes. The poor
creature was virtually dismembered in a couple of blows, by this toy! Well, we rode sombrely along to the
house. You went there ages ago, didn't
you? I had a long session with the
mother, an odd imperious bundle of a woman in black, heavily veiled, who spoke
arresting English in a parched voice which had the edge of hysteria in it. Nice, somehow, but queer and somewhat on edge
- voice of a desert father or desert sister?
I don't know. Apparently the two
sons were to take me across to the monastery in the desert. Apparently Narouz
was due to speak. It was his maiden over
- his first try at it. I must say, I
couldn't see this hirsute savage being able to.
Jaws working all the time pressing the muscles around his temples! He must, I reflected, grind his teeth in
sleep. But somehow also the shy blue
eyes of a girl. Nessim
was devoted to him. And God what a
rider!
Next
morning we set off with a bundle of Arab horses which they rode sweetly and a
train of shuffle-footed camels which were a present for the populace from Narouz - they were to be cut up and devoured. It was a long exhausting trek with the heat
mirages playing havoc with concentration and eyesight and the water tepid and
horrible in the skins, and yours truly feeling baleful and fatigued. The sun upon one's brainpan! My brains were sizzling in my skull by the
time we came upon the first outcrop of palms - the jumping and buzzing image of
the desert monastery where poor Damiana had her
Diocletian head struck from her shoulders for the glory of our Lord.
By the time
we reached it dusk had fallen, and here one entered a brilliantly-coloured
engraving which could have illustrated ... what? Vathek! A huge encampment of booths and houses had
grown up for the festival. There must
have been six thousand pilgrims camped around in houses of wattle and paper, of
cloth and carpet. A whole township had
grown up with its own lighting and primitive drainage - but a complete town,
comprising even a small but choice brothel quarter. Camels pounded everywhere in the dusk,
lanterns and cressets flapped and smoked.
Our people pitched us a tent under a ruined arch where two grave bearded
dervishes talked, under gonfalons folded like the brilliant wings of moths, and
by the light of a great paper lantern covered in inscriptions. Dense darkness now, but brilliantly lit
sideshows with all the fun of the fair.
I was itching to have a look round and this suited them very well as
they had things to arrange within the church, so Nessim
gave me a rendezvous at the home tent in an hour and a half. He nearly lost me altogether, I was so
enraptured by the freak town with its mud streets, and long avenues of
sparkling stalls - food of every sort, melons, eggs, bananas, sweets, all
displayed in that unearthly light. Every
itinerant pedlar from Alexandria must have trekked
out across the sand to sell to the pilgrims.
In the dark corners were the children playing and squeaking like mice,
while their elders cooked food in huts and tents, lit by tiny puffing candles. The sideshows were going full blast with
their games of chance. In one booth a
lovely prostitute sang heart-breakingly, chipped
quartertones and plangent headnotes as she turned in
his sheath of spiral sequins. She had
her price on the door. It was not
excessive, I thought, being a feeble-minded man, and I rather began to curse my
social obligations. In another corner a
story-teller was moaning out the sing-song romance of El Zahur. Drinkers of sherbet, of cinnamon, were spread
at ease on the seats of makeshift cafés in these beflagged
and lighted thoroughfares. From within
the walls of the monastery came the sound of priests chanting. From without the unmistakable clatter of men
playing at single-stick with the roar of the crowd acclaiming every stylish
manoeuvre. Tombs full of flowers,
watermelons shedding a buttery light, trays of meat perfuming the air -
sausages and cutlets and entrails buzzing on spits. The whole thing welded into one sharply fused
picture of light and sound in my brain.
The moon was coming up hand over fist.
In the Ringa-booths there were groups of glistening mauve
abstracted Sudanese dancing to the odd music of the wobbling little harmonium
with vertical keys and painted gourds for pipes; but they took their step from
a black buck who banged it out with a steel rod upon a section of railway line
hanging from the tent-pole. Here I ran
into one of Cervoni's servants who was delighted to
see me and pressed upon me some of the curious Sudanese beer they call merissa. I
sat and watched this intent, almost maniacal form of dance - the slow revolutions
about a centre and the queer cockroach-crushing steps, plunging the toe down
and turning it in the earth. Until I was
woken by the ripple of drums and saw a dervish pass holding one of the big
camel-drums - a glowing hemisphere of copper.
He was black - a Rifiya - and as I had never
seen them do their fire-walking, scorpion-eating act, I thought I might follow
him and see it tonight. (It was touching
to hear Moslems singing religious songs to Damiana, a
Christian saint; I heard voiced ululating the words 'Ya
Sitt Ya Bint El Wali' over and over again. Isn't that odd? 'O Lady, Lady of the Viceroy'.) Across the darkness I tracked down a group of
dervishes in a lighted corner between two great embrasures. It was the end of a dance and they were
turning one of their number into a human chandelier, covered in burning
candles, the hot wax dripping all over him.
His eyes were vague and tranced. Last of all comes an old boy and drives a
huge dagger through both cheeks. On each
end of the dagger he hoists a candlestick with a branch of lighted candles in
each. Transfixed thus the boy rises
slowly to his toes and revolves in a dance - like a tree on fire. After the dance, they simply whipped the
sword out of his jaw and the old man touched his wounds with a finger moistened
with spittle. Within a second there was
the boy standing there smiling again with nothing to show for his pains. But he looked awake now.
Outside all
this - the white desert was turning under the moon to a great field of skulls
and millstones. Trumpets and drums
sounded and there came a rush of horsemen in conical hats waving wooden swords
and shrieking in high voices, like women.
The camel-and-horse races were due to start. Good, though I, I shall have a look at that;
but treading unwarily I came upon a grotesque scene which I would gladly have
avoided if I had been able. The camels
of Narouz were being cut up for the feast. Poor things, they knelt there peacefully with
their forelegs folded under them like cats while a horde of men attacked them
with axes in the moonlight. My blood ran
cold, yet I could not tear myself away from this extraordinary spectacle. The animals made no move to avoid the blows,
uttered no cries as they were dismembered.
The axes bit into them, as if their great bodies were made of cork,
sinking deep under every thrust. Whole
members were being hacked off as painlessly, it seemed, as when a tree is
pruned. The children were dancing about
in the moonlight picking up the fragments and running off with them into the
lighted town, great gobbets of bloody meat.
The camels stared hard at the moon and said nothing. Off came the legs, out came the entrails;
lastly the heads would topple under the axe like statuary and lie there in the
sand with open eyes. The men doing the
axing were shouting and bantering as they worked. A huge soft carpet of black blood spread into
the dunes around the group and the barefoot boys carried the print of it back
with them into the township. I felt
frightfully ill of a sudden and retired back to the lighted quarter for a
drink; and sitting on a bench watched the passing show for a while to recover
my nerve. Here at last Nessim found me and together we walked inside the walls,
past the grouped cells called 'combs'.
(Did you know that all early religions were built up on a cell pattern,
imitating who-knows-what biological law?...)
So we came at last to the church.
Wonderfully
painted sanctuary screen, and ancient candles with waxen beards burning on the
gold lectern, the light now soft and confused by incense to the colour of
pollen; and the deep voices running like a river over the gravel-bottomed
Liturgy of St Basil. Moving softly from
gear to gear, pausing and resuming, starting lower down the scale only to be
pressed upwards into the throats and minds of these black shining people. The choir passed across us like swans,
breath-catching in their high scarlet helmets and white robes with scarlet crossbands. The
light on their glossy black curls and sweating faces! Enormous frescoed eyes with whites
gleaming. It was pre-Christian, this;
each of these young men in his scarlet biretta had become Rameses
the Second. The great chandeliers twinkled
and fumed, puffs of snowy incense rose.
Outside you could hear the noises of the camel-racing crew, inside only
the grumble of the Word. The long
hanging lamps had ostrich-eggs suspended under them. (This has always struck me as being worth
investigating.)
I thought
that this was our destination but we skirted the crowd and went down some
stairs into a crypt. And this was it at
last. A series of large beehive rooms,
lime-washed white and spotless. In one,
by candlelight, a group of about a hundred people sat upon rickety wooden
benches waiting for us. Nessim pressed my arm and pushed me to a seat at the very
back among a group of elderly men who gave me place. 'First I will talk to them,' he whispered,
'and then Narouz is to speak to them - for the first
time.' There was no sign of the other
brother as yet. The men next to me were
wearing robes but some of them had European suits on underneath. Some had their heads wrapped in wimples. To judge by their well-kept hands and nails,
none were workmen. They spoke Arabic but
in low tones. No smoking.
Now the
good Nessim rose and addressed them with the cool
efficiency of someone taking a routine board meeting. He spoke quietly and as far as I could gather
contented himself with giving them details about recent events, the election of
certain people to various committees, the arrangements for trust funds and so
on. He might have been addressing
shareholders. They listened
gravely. A few quiet questions were
asked which he answered concisely. Then
he said: 'But this is not all, these details.
You will wish to hear something about our nation and our faith,
something that even our priests cannot tell you. My brother Narouz,
who is known to you, will speak a little now.'
What on
earth could the baboon Narouz have to tell them, I
wondered? It was most interesting. And now, from the outer darkness of the cell
next-door came Narouz, dressed in a white robe and
looking pale as ashes. His hair had been
smeared down on his forehead in an oiled quiff, like
a collier on his day off. No, he looked
like a terrified curate in a badly-ironed surplice; huge hands joined on his
chest with the knuckles squeezed white.
He took his place at a sort of wooden lectern with a candle burning on
it, and stared with obvious wild terror at his audience, squeezing the muscles
out all over his arms and shoulders. I
thought he was going to fall down. He
opened his clenched jaws but nothing came.
He appeared to be paralysed.
There came
a stir and a whisper, and I saw Nessim looking
somewhat anxiously at him, as if he might need help. But Narouz stood
stiff as a javelin, staring right through us as at some terrifying scene taking
place behind the white walls at our backs.
The suspense was making us all uncomfortable. Then he made a queer motion with his mouth,
as if his tongue were swollen, or as if he was surreptitiously swallowing a
soft palate, and a hoarse cry escaped him.
'Meded! Meded!' It was the invocation for divine strength you
sometimes hear desert preachers utter before they fall into a trance - the
dervishes. His face worked. And then came a change - all of a sudden it
was as if an electric current had begun to pour into his body, into his
muscles, his loins. He relaxed his grip
on himself and slowly, pantingly began to speak,
rolling those amazing eyes as if the power of speech itself was
half-involuntary and causing him physical pain to support.... It was a
terrifying performance, and for a moment or two I could not understand
anything, he was articulating so badly.
Then all of a sudden he broke through the veil and his voice gathered
power, vibrating in the candlelight like a musical instrument.
'Our Egypt,
our beloved country,' drawing out the words like toffee, almost crooning
them. It was clear that he had nothing
prepared to say - it was not a speech, it was an invocation uttered extempore
such as one has sometimes heard - the brilliant spontaneous flight of
drunkards, ballad singers, or those professional mourners who follow burial
processions with their shrieks of death-divining poetry. The power and the tension flooded out of him
into the room; all of us were electrified, even myself whose Arabic was so
bad! The tone, the range and the bottled
ferocity and tenderness his words conveyed hit us, sent us sprawling, like
music. It didn't seem to matter whether
we understood them or not. It does not
even now. Indeed, it would have been
impossible to paraphrase the matter.
'The Nile ... the green river flowing in our hearts hears its children. They will return to her. Descendants of the Pharaohs, children of Ra,
offspring of St Mark. They will find the
birthplace of light.' And so on. At times the speaker closed his eyes, letting
the torrent of words pour on unhindered.
Once he set his head back, smiling like a dog, still with eyes closed,
until the light shone upon his back teeth.
That voice! It went on
autonomously, rising to a roar, sinking to a whisper, trembling and crooning
and wailing. Suddenly snapping out words
like chainshot, or rolling them softly about like
honey. We were absolutely captured - the
whole lot of us. But it was something
comical to see Nessim's concern and wonder. He had expected nothing like this apparently,
for he was trembling like a leaf and quite white. Occasionally he was swept away himself by the
flood of rhetoric and I saw him dash away a tear from his eye almost
impatiently.
It went on
like this for about three-quarters of an hour and suddenly, inexplicably, the
current was cut off, the speaker was snuffed out. Narouz stood there
gasping like a fish before us - as if thrown up by the tides of inner music on
to a foreign shore. It was as abrupt as
a metal shutter coming down - a silence impossible to repair again. His hands knotted again. He gave a startled groan and rushed out of
the place with his funny scrambling motion.
A tremendous silence fell - the silence which follows some great
performance by an actor or orchestra - the germinal silence in which you can
hear the very seeds in the human psyche stirring, trying to move towards the
light of self-recognition. I was deeply
moved and utterly exhausted. Fecundated!
At last Nessim rose and made an indefinite gesture. He too was exhausted and walked like an old
man; took my hand and led me up into the church again, where a wild hullabaloo
of cymbals and bells had broken out. We
walked through the great puffs of incense which now seemed to blow up at us
from the centre of the earth - the angel and demon-haunted spaces below the
world of men. In the moonlight he kept
repeating: 'I never knew, I never guessed this of Narouz. He is a preacher. I asked him only to talk of our history - but
he made it ...’ He was at a loss for words.
Nobody had apparently suspected the existence of this spellbinder in
their midst - the man with the whip! 'He
could lead a great religious movement,' I thought to myself. Nessim walked
wearily and thoughtfully by my side among the palms. 'He is a preacher, really,' he said
with amazement. 'That is why he
goes to see Taor.'
He explained that Narouz often rode into the
desert to visit a famous woman saint (alleged by the way to have three breasts)
who lives in a tiny cave near Wadi Natrum; she is famous for her wonder-working cures, but
won't emerge from obscurity. 'When he is
away,' said Nessim, 'he has either gone to the island
to fish with his new gun or to see Taor. Always one or the other.'
When we got
back to the tent the new preacher was lying wrapped in his blanket sobbing in a
harsh voice like a wounded she-camel. He
stopped when we entered, though he went on shaking for a while. Embarrassed, we said nothing and turned in
that night in a heavy silence. A
momentous experience indeed!
I couldn't
sleep for quite a while, going over it all in my mind. The next morning we were up at dawn (bloody
cold for May - the tent stiff with frost) and in the saddle by the earliest
light. Narouz
had completely come to himself. He
twirled his whip and played tricks on the factors in a high good humour. Nessim was rather
thoughtful and withdrawn, I thought. The
long ride galled our minds and it was a relief to see the crested palms grow up
again. We rested and spent the night
again at Karm Abu Girg. The mother was not available at first and we
were told to see her in the evening.
Here an odd scene took place for which Nessim
appeared as little prepared as I. As the
three of us advanced through the rose-garden towards her little summerhouse,
she came to the door with a lantern in her hand and said: 'Well, my sons, how
did it go?' At this, Narouz
fell upon his knees, reached out his arms to her. Nessim and I were
covered with confusion. She came forward
and put her arms round this snorting and sobbing peasant, at the same time
motioning us to leave. I must say I was
relieved when Nessim sneaked off into the rose-garden
and was glad to follow him. 'This is a
new Narouz,' he kept repeating softly, with genuine
mystification. 'I did not know of these
powers.'
Later Narouz came back to the house in the highest of spirits and
we all played cards and drank arak. He showed me, with immense pride, a gun he
had had made for him in Munich. It fires
a heavy javelin under water and is worked by compressed air. He told me a good deal of this new method of
fishing under water. It sounded a
thrilling game and I was invited to visit his fishing island with him one
weekend to have a pot. The preacher had
vanished altogether by now; the simple-minded second son had returned.
Ouf! I am trying to
get all the salient detail down as it may be of use to you later when I am
gone. Sorry if it is a bore. On the way back to the town I talked at
length to Nessim and got all the facts clear in my
head. It did seem to me that from the
policy point of view the Coptic group might be of the greatest use to us; and I
was certain that this interpretation of things would be swallowed if properly
explained to Maskelyne. High hopes!
So I rode
back happily to Cairo to rearrange the chessboard accordingly. I went to see Maskelyne
and tell him the good news. To my
surprise he turned absolutely white with rage, the corners of his nose pinched
in, his ears moving back about an inch like a greyhound. His voice and eyes remained the same. 'Do you mean to tell me that you have tried
to supplement a secret intelligence paper by consulting the subject of it? It goes against every elementary rule of
intelligence. And how can you believe a
word of so obvious a cover story? I have
never heard of such a thing. You
deliberately suspend a War Office paper, throw my fact-finding organization
into disrepute, pretend we don't know our jobs, etc...' You can gather the rest of the tirade. I began to get angry. He repeated dryly: 'I have been doing this
for fifteen years. I tell you it smells
of arms, of subversion. You won't
believe my I.A. and I think yours is ridiculous. Why not pass the paper to the Egyptians
and let them find out for themselves?'
Of course I could not afford to do this, and he knew it. He next said that he had asked the War Office
to protest in London and was writing to Errol to ask for 'redress'. All this, of course, was to be expected. But then I tackled him upon another vector. 'Look here,' I said. 'I have seen all your sources. They are all Arabs and as such unworthy of confidence. How about a gentleman's agreement? There is no hurry - we can investigate the Hosnanis at leisure - but how about choosing a new set of
sources - English sources? If the
interpretations still match, I promise you I'll resign and make a full recantation. Otherwise I shall fight this thing right
through.'
'What sort
of sources do you have in mind?'
'Well,
there are a number of Englishmen in the Egyptian Police who speak Arabic and
who know the people concerned. Why not
use some of them?'
He looked
at me for a long time. 'But they are as
corrupt as the Arabs. Nimrod sells
his information to the press. The Globe
pay him a retainer of twenty pounds a month for confidential information.'
'There must
be others.'
'By God
there are. You should see them!'
'And then
there's Darley who apparently goes to these meetings
which worry you so much. Why not ask him
to help?'
'I won't
compromise my net by introducing characters like that. It is not worth it. It is not secure.'
'Then why
not make a separate net - let Telford build it up. Specially for this group, for no other. And having no access to your main
organization. Surely you could do that?'
He stared
at me slowly, drop by drop. 'I could if
I chose to,' he admitted. 'And if I
thought it would get us anywhere. But it
won't.'
'At any
rate, why not try? Your own position
here is rather equivocal until an Ambassador comes to define it and arbitrate
between us. Suppose I do pass this paper
out and this whole group gets swept up?'
'Well,
what?'
'Supposing
it is, as I believe it to be, something which could help British policy in this
area, you'll get no thanks for having allowed the Egyptians to nip it in the
bud. And indeed, if that did prove to be
the case, you would find....'
'I'll think
about it.' He had no intention of doing
so, I could see, but he must have. He
changed his mind; next day he rang up and said he was doing as I suggested,
though 'without prejudice'; the war was still on between us. Perhaps he had heard of your appointment and
knew we were friends. I don't know.
Ouf! that is about as much as I can tell you; for the rest,
the country is still here - everything that is heteroclyte,
devious, polymorph, anfractuous, equivocal, opaque, ambiguous, many-branched,
or just plain dotty. I wish you joy of
it when I am far away! I know you will
make your first mission a resounding success.
Perhaps you won't regret these tags of information from
Yours
sincerely
Earwig
van Beetfield
* *
* * *
Mountolive studied this document with great care. He found the tone annoying and the
information mildly disturbing. But then,
every mission was riven with faction; personal
annoyances, divergent opinions, they were always coming to the fore. For a moment he wondered whether it would not
be wiser to allow Pursewarden the transfer he
desired; but he restrained the thought by allowing another to overlap it. If he was to act, he should not at this stage
show irresolution - even with Kenilworth.
He walked about in the wintry landscape waiting for events to take
definite shape around his future.
Finally, he composed a tardy note to Pursewarden,
the fruit of much rewriting and thought, which he despatched through the bag
room.
My dear P.,
I must
thank you for your letter with the interesting data. I feel I cannot make any decisions before my
own arrival. I don't wish to prejudge
issues. I have however decided to keep
you attached to the Mission for another year.
I shall ask for a greater attention to discipline than your Chancery
appears to do; and I know you won't fail me however disagreeable the prospect
of staying seems to you. There is much
to do this end, and much to decide before I leave.
Yours
sincerely,
David
Mountolive
It
conveyed, he hoped, the right mixture of encouragement and censure. But of course, Pursewarden
would not have written flippantly had he visualized serving under him. Nevertheless, if his career was to take the
right shape he must start at the beginning.
But in his
own mind he had already planned upon getting Maskelyne
transferred and Pursewarden elevated in rank as his
chief political adviser. Nevertheless a
hint of uneasiness remained. But he
could not help smiling when he received a postcard from the incorrigible. 'My dear Ambassador,' it read. 'Your news has worried me. You have so many great big bushy Etonians to choose from.... Nevertheless. At your service.'
* *
* * *