Authors: Julian Mitchell
‘You sound as if you want all manufacture to stop at once,’ said Giles. ‘Really, Nicky, you make me feel guilty to eat.’
‘Of course, I’m not against goods being made. But I think the
good
should be emphasized, and that one should consider exactly what is good for whom. Look around. Look at the profits of some of our leading industries. Look at the men eating and drinking on expense accounts. Look at the percentage of national income spent on advertising. Look at the advertisements.’
‘I’ve always wanted to have an expense account,’ said Giles, rather wistfully.
‘But what do you
want,
Nicholas?’
‘Any society must, eventually, be based on love if it is to be a society for all its members, not just a society for the benefit of some of them. By love I don’t mean necking in the streets, I mean love for one’s neighbour, in the old Christian terminology, or, in more modern terms, social responsibility. And I don’t think our society, or any society in the world, is so based. The Communist claims that his society is based on a kind of love. In practice it obviously isn’t. Ours is based on the principle that obedience to the laws will keep things ticking along nicely. Well, that’s something. But if you’re honest with yourself, Charles, you will have to admit that your manufacture of arms cannot be in the interest of your neighbour. I know you’ll say that arms protect us. That is in itself a
condemnation
of our society. But, leaving that aside, is it right that the defence industry should be in private hands? Is it in the interest of the industry to have peace at all? Isn’t a cold war the next best thing to a hot war, from the industry’s point of view? Isn’t its political importance far too great for it to be allowed to remain in the hands of men whose duty, as business men, is to make ever larger profits? Have you ever thought about Herr Krupp? Have you ever
considered
the appalling indictment of our society that his life represents?’
‘For God’s sake,’ I said, ‘I’m not Herr Krupp.’
‘No. But you’ll be dealing with him, and his like. You’ll see his
point of view. You’ll have exactly the same pressures behind you as he had. And, to the shame of Western Europe, has. Do you want to be an arms manufacturer, knowing as you do what arms manufacturers have been responsible for?’
I don’t know if those are the exact words Nicholas used, he talked so much that it was often difficult to remember next day how many subjects had been covered. But that was the gist of it, more or less, and I put it down because it summarized for me the damnable difficulty of being me. I felt I had to do something, and I didn’t only feel it intellectually. I wanted to do something. In any case, I had to have some money from somewhere. I wanted, too, to get out of the whole academic world, and never to think about the meaning of meaning again. I had a sudden hunger for the present and the future. I didn’t care any more about the past.
‘I have to do something, Nicholas,’ I said.
‘Charles,’ said Giles, ‘what do you really care about?’
That flattened me, rather. ‘I don’t know,’ I said. ‘I used to think I cared about Margaret. But I’ve been lying fallow, really, for about a year. And before that I worked quite hard, for me, and thought about history and politics and things a bit, but always in an ignorant, speculative way. I don’t
know
anything.’
‘Well, you know that,’ said Nicholas, smiling.
‘Well, it’s not much help.’
‘You must have something to care about,’ said Giles. He wrinkled up his nose and went on: ‘It doesn’t matter what, I don’t think. Nicky cares about things most people never even stop to consider. Nicky has enormously high principles, and he’ll always keep going on them. I don’t have that kind of intense feeling for the practical applications of moral principles, though I respect it hugely. I’m much more empirical, I’m much more at the mercy of my feelings—I get worked up about political things because I’m outraged or disgusted or I think someone’s being plain stupid. But what I care about is something terribly difficult to describe—it’s not abstract at all, in fact I can only show it, point it out, I can’t give an intellectual formulation of it. And you, Nicky, are not to try and make one for me.’
Nicholas smiled.
‘What—I mean how—do I?
What
are
you trying to say? Demonstrate, if you can’t explain.’
‘Quality of life. That is strictly meaningless, because everyone has a different idea of what is and what isn’t high quality. But it’s
people first, not things. I couldn’t bear a life which didn’t have people like you in it, Charles, people who are serious and worried and unclear. You aren’t serious the way Nicky is. But you are concerned, involved, questioning.’
‘Not much. Not recently, anyway.’
‘That makes you all the more so now. Do you know that poem of Philip Larkin’s, where the man goes to look at a church, and he looks round it, and he wonders what will happen when we’ve given up going to church altogether? And he says that people will come back, always, because “A serious house on serious earth it is, In whose blent air all our compulsions rest”—I think that’s how it goes. And people will always have a hunger for the serious, and churches will always be serious places “If only that so many dead lie round”. “The hopes and fears of all the years” aren’t in Christ any longer. They’re in tangible things, in the stones of our houses and the pavements of our streets. And people who recognize that are serious people, I think. Sometimes they’re conservative, and look to a tradition of behaviour, a traditional way of getting the best out of life. Sometimes they’re progressive, they feel inspired by the past to improve the present. But they are aware of the past, all of them, and they are aware of the present, too. And for me this awareness is an important part of the quality of life, of living, rather. And I care for that awareness wherever I can find it.’
‘Giles,’ said Nicholas. Then he shrugged, and said nothing else. But he smiled, and I had to stop looking at him.
‘The things are more difficult to describe. A matter of taste, partly. What I like and value may mean nothing to you. But all the things I care about have to do with people, eventually. I only like views or landscapes if they have had or do have people in them in some way. Jungles must be unspeakably boring—simply lushness without any human mark upon it. I suppose the decoration in my room would show you better than anything I say. It should explain, or rather express, my idea of the quality of life. Do you think it does?’
‘I don’t know. I don’t think I’ve ever been in your room.’
‘You must come. Nicky and I are going to give——’
He stopped and looked enquiringly at Nicholas, blushing.
‘It’s all right,’ said Nicholas. ‘I think he can take it.’
‘You tell him.’
‘I expect he’s guessed already.’
Well, yes I’d guessed. So they had definitely decided they loved
one another. I couldn’t think of anything to say very much, since, though I have no theoretical objection to men living together, in practice I find it terribly embarrassing. And it would have sounded awfully silly to say ‘Congratulations’ or something. I don’t know what it is—something to do with the prejudices one has been brought up with, perhaps, or perhaps it’s just an incomprehension of
why
they don’t want girls, and a feeling that they must be lacking somewhere. And I can’t stand all that pansy prancing about and calling each other ‘dear’ and self-consciously being naughty. Like any minority, they have
en
masse
certain qualities that I just can’t take, and if I meet them
en
masse,
which happens practically never, thank heavens, I squirm and feel depressed. But I couldn’t claim that either Nicholas or Giles was in the least effeminate, and I suppose it was just the idea, the thought, probably the ignorance, too, of what they did and felt that embarrassed me. Anyway, I muttered something that no one could hear, about hoping they’d be terribly happy, and Nicholas laughed and said: ‘We’re criminals, you know,’ which didn’t strike me as very funny, and luckily we soon got back to the main subject, which was me and my future.
But we didn’t get very far. Apart from being against the arms industry and business in general, Nicholas didn’t have much to offer. It’s always a mistake to suppose that someone can help you about things like that. You always decide on impulse in the end, not for some brilliantly logical reasons.
‘You should teach,’ he said.
‘I don’t know anything to teach.’
‘You can learn. You’re very young still.’
But I didn’t find that very helpful, or even convincing, and when I mulled over Pitt being Prime Minister at twenty-two, or whatever it was, it seemed to me that I should never be able to catch up on the years I’d spent footling around in the Navy as a national
serviceman,
then footling round at Oxford, and then footling round with Margaret. Footling was, in fact, the first adjective I would have used about myself that morning.
It had been a pretty bad week, all told. First Margaret, then the feverish sense of having to do something that mattered, then the feeling of having just woken up and found myself several miles behind the front runners, and then Jack, and then Nicholas, in fact a whole bubbling turmoil in my head, and a thousand questions and not a single answer. And all the time the word ‘responsibility’ thumping away at my mind with the rhythm of my pulse, and a
sense of urgent need to
think.
So I decided that I would think for a while, and tried to do so, but it wasn’t much use, really, because there were all the parties going on, and the Ball was coming up, and I got very little done in the way of constructive thought, and sometimes I wished I hadn’t got a head at all. But what Giles had said seemed sensible to me. You can’t get away from the past at Oxford.
‘If only that so many dead lie round.’ Giles seemed to have something there. And it was certainly a pretty serious earth, I decided.
I do not claim to act always, or even often, with premeditation. I do hope to act always with reason. It seems to me to be a cardinal principle of behaviour that very few circumstances justify unconsidered action. One of the very few is love-making, where deliberate planning is liable to have unsatisfactory results. The same is not true, however, of declarations of love. I am, it turns out, guilty of unpreparedness. Without the word ‘love’ having been mentioned, Delta and I became lovers. Intellectually, I cannot approve of this. Practically, it seems a perfect way of doing things. I wonder how much time is wasted in people circling each other uncertainly, fearful of blunder and rejection. Our courting, if that can be the word, has been brief. Perhaps our love will be correspondingly long. Certainly, after the day Phi came, which was four days ago but seems to be some time last year, time has dramatically slowed down. In a minute we seem to reach each other more deeply than months or years should allow. There has been no self-consciousness, no doubt about what the other was thinking. We have scarcely been apart, it is true. But when we have parted it has been without the least trace of anxiety. (Of course I cannot vouch for Delta feeling exactly the same as me, but as far as I can judge—Jonathan Edwards, where are you?—he does.) In my previous attempts to describe love, I seem to have left out this ingredient—perfect trust. But talking about love is unbearable. One becomes trite at once. One’s prose becomes faintly elevated and unnaturally purple. And unnatural is the one word which cannot be used to describe our love. Although a good many people would think it the only one. Natural to whom? is the question. And we are, after all, as Delta said rather ruefully to me last night, when I’d
said something about this, we are, after all, human. Thank everything. And our love-making is as natural as bird-song.
*
I have telegraphed the editor of the paper, and he has replied:
START WORK JULY
20
TH
. So I start work July 20th. It seems extremely strange. I had thought I was going to be a great intellectual asset to the Labour Party—a distinguished young economist, like most of the leaders once were. But it seems that many of the old clichés are coming true. Variety is the spice of political wisdom, perhaps. At least I shall be learning a trade, the trade of effective words. I have never thought about myself as a writer—I don’t share Miss Emerson’s view about fiction, but I’ve never had any desire to write poems or stories. For me words are weapons to be used against, chiefly, ignorance and indifference. Particularly I must be
concerned
with remaking words, taking them down off the shelf of platitude and setting them to practical tasks. It was George Orwell who said that democracy was now a useless and meaningless word. Very well, then, it must be rebored, because we shall never be able to throw it away. It is the engine of our civilization. No other word will do. If it has lost its power, there are ways of restoring it. By constant re-examination of terms, and attacks on jargon, the political journalist has a role of great importance and
responsibility.
Dishonest ones merely polish the outside of words. Honest ones take words to pieces and replace worn-out parts and then clean and reassemble them. And such a mechanic has to learn his trade. I shall reach no one on
The
Democrat,
or whatever they decide to call it. All my readers will already agree with almost everything I have to say. The function of such a small paper is to stimulate debate among the hard core, to stimulate and guide it, and make sure it sticks to the main point. It won’t be easy. I certainly won’t be the success Delta predicts. Readers of
The
Democrat
will be experienced and devoted hair-splitters. But I shall learn a trade. And then …
*
Delta: I think you’re a genius, Nicky.
Me: shattered.
What love can do.
*
Jack and Elaine came to say goodbye the other afternoon. Delta was here, of course.
Elaine: Do you sleep together?
Delta: Yes. Don’t you?
Elaine: Oh yes, thank goodness. It’s marvellous, Nicholas, you have no idea.
Me: I have some.
Jack: No, you haven’t. It’s no good pretending that it can be
anything
like the same.
Me: I don’t see how one can tell, do you?
Delta: I’m sure someone must know. People must have tried it both ways and written books about it.
Elaine: If there were any books Nicholas would have read them. But it doesn’t matter, because we’re not jealous of you, and you aren’t jealous of us, are you?
Me: No, I’m delighted. What happened?
Jack: Well, it started when I hit Charles, and then—that’s how it started, anyway.
Me: You see, you normal people have so much more excitement in your lives than us dull old queers. I haven’t hit anyone since a pressed boxing-match in the Army. Do you think we should be jealous, Delta?
Delta: I don’t think so, Nicky. We don’t have anyone to hit, do we?
Jack: Well, that was how it started, anyway.
Elaine: And then we went to bed. It was marvellous. Goodness, I must sound ever so fleshly. I
like
being fleshly.
Me: I suppose it’s all right in its way.
Elaine: Don’t be stuffy. We all know you’re not platonic, you’ve said so.
Delta: You’ve no idea how high-flown our conversation is when we’re in bed together. Very high-flown, I promise you. Especially when we wake up.
Jack: If you had any idea of what was in store for you, you wouldn’t sound so happy. Father Gibbons told me I shouldn’t be ‘altogether forgetful of our Saviour’s words about the unrepentant sinner’. He also said a lot about the sacrament of marriage. Quite right, of course.
Elaine: Poor Jack, he’s still in a terrible muddle. He thinks he’s a hoary sinner, but loves it wickedly. He’ll learn.
Me: But what happened?
Jack: Everything sort of exploded.
Elaine: You’d have loved it, Nicholas, there was Jack talking about his lower-class loneliness, and Charles talking about his
upper-class
guilt, and they were both being ever so responsible. It was an absolute hoot.
Delta: Oh dear, class. One thing about being queer is that no one will allow you into his class.
Elaine: Oh, I wouldn’t be without a nice class. Otherwise there would be nothing to react against.
Me: I thought you said everyone was being responsible.
Elaine: I never said
I
was.
Jack: I’ve been thinking, Nicholas——
Elaine: There, what did I tell you?
Jack: I’ve been thinking about religion as a substitute for personal responsibility? Do you think that’s what happened to me?
Delta: Nicky, when they’ve gone away, will you tell me what on earth they have been talking about?
Elaine: Of course he will. We can be the subjects of one of your nice early-morning platonic conversations.
Delta: What makes you think we wake up only in the early morning?
Elaine: Oh, you wicked things, you’ll both go straight to hell. The time of day or night doesn’t matter at all, does it?
Me: I think this conversation is becoming too personal. Elaine is showing a quite unnecessary interest in our private lives, and making eyes at Delta, as well.
Jack: It’s all right, Nicholas, she can be trusted. I only hope, for your sake, he can be, too.
Delta: Well, I’m damned. Elaine, how can you love a man who talks about you like that?
Elaine: It’s because he talks about me like that that I love him. He means it, you see.
Me: Jack, I wish you’d tell me what happened.
And he did, as far as he could. He made it sound as though he was the sort of person who can only believe a thing in the teeth of all the evidence. He’d been getting a curious satisfaction out of not sleeping with Elaine, because this demonstrated that he was strong enough to overcome Satan, or some other Christian jargon like that. I said I thought this was perverted.
Jack: I think you may be right. But you see it was having nothing but Elaine to tell me I
was
strong that set me off in the first place. At least, that’s how I see it now. When I joined the Church it was for Elaine’s sake more than anything else. And then you know how converts are always much stricter than anyone else. Well, that was me, you see. Churches had never entered my life till then, but she’s been all her life. It was a challenge. So I took it up, I thought that, if this was what she and her bloody parents wanted me to be like, I’d show them I could be more like it than they were. At least, I think that’s what drove me on. I don’t know, Nicholas. It’s a new idea to me, and I don’t know how I shall feel on Sunday morning. Might be a bit tricky. Anyway, it made us both bloody miserable, as you know, and it made me a jealous fool, and it made her go out with Charles just to spite me, I reckon. And that wasn’t any way to live a life, was it?
Me: No. But
what
happened
?
Jack: I’m trying to tell you. I had this row with Charles, and we were really going it, and I called him a snob, and he called me things, too, and then I hit him. And then I thought: ‘You’re a bloody fool, aren’t you?’ And I felt a fool, I can tell you. And then we had this long argument over dinner, and he said he thought I was just doing things to try and be a nice
middle-class
boy, which I’m not. And then we went to this party, you see, and I was thinking like mad. And that’s how it all happened, really.
Elaine: All lies, of course. Charles didn’t say that, he was much more long-winded and muddled.
Jack (huge grin): So I told the old fool he could go to hell, and he was likely to get there before me, and he could keep a seat warm for me, if he wanted, otherwise, goodbye.
Delta: You said that to Charles?
Jack: Oh my God. No, to Father Gibbons.
Delta: Nicky, you
will
explain when they’ve gone, won’t you?
Me: I don’t think I can. It’s not at all clear.
Jack: Listen, Delta, don’t ever let them tell you that stuff about the sacrament of marriage. You just tell them you know that it takes two to tango, and they don’t even need a licence if they don’t want one.
Elaine: Silly Jack. They’re married already, can’t you see, and they couldn’t get a licence even if they wanted one.
Jack: It’s a pity in a way. You can have sex your way, I suppose, but
you can’t ever have the feeling of partnership, of being a regular pair.
Delta: You’re wrong, you know. We may not be husband and wife, but there are other forms of partnership.
Jack: Maybe. I’m against it myself, but then no one has ever been silly enough to ask me.
Elaine: You’re being horribly illiberal, Jack.
Jack: No, it’s not that. I hope you’ll be happy. I just can’t see it, that’s all. Damn it, it’s not natural.
Delta: I withdraw from the conversation. Nicky will now give a sermon.
Elaine: No he won’t, we haven’t got time. I’ll give Jack a little lecture on our way to——Goodness, look at the time! We must fly.
Me: Jack, be a success, and don’t let her hair get in your eyes.
Elaine: Oh, if only you knew!
Delta: And try and be nice about us, won’t you? We promise not to corrupt any of your children.
Jack: That’s it, you see. You can’t have a family without children. But forget what I said.
Me: No, honesty is always welcome. We can’t have children, it’s perfectly true. But we can still love each other.
Elaine: Well, God bless, and I hope you do. Because we haven’t got any children yet, and we’re terribly happy.
Delta: Now that’s a really nice thing to say, Elaine, and thank you.
Jack: I’m a mean man, Nicholas, and I’m sorry.
Me: That’s all right. Give my love to your future parents-in-law.
Jack: And I talk about
you
having difficulties.
When they’d gone Delta said: ‘Are all our friends going to treat us like that, do you think?’
Me: Yes, to begin with. But wait till our queer friends find out, and then see how much nicer it is to have Jack and Elaine around.
Delta: It’s not going to be easy, is it?
Me: Know thyself. It’s up to us, not them.
Delta: I like Elaine.
Me: I’ll tell you all about them.
Delta: Not now, Nicky. There’s something very special I want to tell you.
Me: What?
Delta: I want to see you in the daylight.
Me: But we can be seen, Delta.
Delta: I’m not ashamed, are you?
Me: Of course not.
Delta: Then come on.
There is one window from which we could have been seen by someone with very sharp eyes in the house opposite. But, as Delta said, we had nothing to be ashamed of.
*
Delta says I should burn this notebook, but I shan’t. Once, when I was dancing with Phi in a club in Paris, some ordinary couples came in. I wanted to stop, feeling suddenly foolish. But he said: ‘If you ever feel ashamed of loving a man, or a woman, you will never be able to love him properly. I don’t mean you have to flaunt it about, that’s merely vulgar, dear. As vulgar as feeling ashamed. Now let’s start again, you seem to have lost the step.’ Dear Phi.
*
The dossier on Nicholas Sharpe.
b.
1931. Norwich. Father
d.
1953, Birmingham. Mother, living, Hastings. Father’s profession: shopkeeper, clerk, shopkeeper. Only child.
Educated: geographically scattered primary and grammar schools; Oxford, B.A. 1954; Paris, no degree; Louisiana State University, M.A. 1958; unfinished Ph.D., Oxford. National service: Army, corporal.
Hair: black. (Also chest, etc.)
Eyes: brown.
No distinguishing scars.
Spectacles.
Height: Five feet, ten inches.
Weight: 160 pounds.
Bachelor.
First sexual experience: thirteen.
Knowledge of opposite sex: minimal till seventeen, then disastrous.
Virgin: nought to thirteen, seventeen to twenty-three.
Homosexual.
Politics: left of left-centre.
Religion: the human race.
Ambitions: unlimited.
Profession: none.
Publications: none.
Immediate intentions: love, politics, journalism and the human race.