Authors: Nicholas Mosley
There was a large crowd for the Professor's lecture: it was quiet and respectful. The Professor was a sturdy-looking man of, I supposed, well over sixty: he had a nut-brown head and hair in a sort of laurel-wreath. When he spoke I did not feel that he was playing any trick; he seemed to watch his words as they came out of him to see how they were doing, but this for him seemed natural. He did sometimes, as if hearing himself, seem to be on the point of shaking his head or laughing: perhaps it was this that made people imagine he was thinking of something else. He also moved his eyes over his audience while he was speaking: this was as if he were trying to see where his words might land; as if he were saying â Is it you? is it you?
He talked about a dispute in the physical sciences that had been going on when he had been a student. There had been a dominant school of thought which had held (I may not get the words right: you know the code?) that when one talked about physical reality one found oneself inescapably involved in paradoxes: light was a matter of both particles and waves: one could measure either a particle's position or its velocity but not both at the same time. This had to be accepted: it was impossible to observe objectivity without objectivity being affected by that by which it was observed. There was a phrase that had been fashionable in this school of thought (I wrote it down) â âReality is a function of the experimental condition.' But there was another school, the Professor said (and it seemed that this was the one which he had liked to align himself with), which held that this sort of limitation was not so much to do with one's inability to know reality as with restrictions imposed on knowing by conceptual thought and language. What was necessary if one was to understand reality
â to see it as a whole, that is, which it was â was to have a more developed idea than usual of what could and could not be done by thought and language: to gain some glimpse of what might lie somehow elsewhere.
Or this is what I understood the Professor to say.
I felt also â He is talking to me? He will know, won't he, that his words are not falling on stony ground?
After the lecture there was an opportunity for people to come up and talk to the Professor: we assembled in a room where coffee and white wine and sandwiches were provided. People queued up for their turn to have their word; he sat in the corner with a special supply of whisky. He seemed both authoritative and yet almost in despair; as if he were benevolent, and yet possibly on the point of screaming like one of those paintings of people trapped in a glass case.
In the queue I rehearsed the opening lines of what I intended to say â What I am going to ask you might seem to have nothing to do with what you were saying: what I am going to ask you might seem to have nothing to do with what you were saying â but then, when my time came and I was in front of the Professor â he had such small amused bright eyes! â everything went out of my head; it was as if all the lights had come on in a theatre.
I said âYou know what you were saying about the experiments that you choose affecting what you call reality â'
He said âYes â'
I said âThen could you not choose your experiments, in order to affect reality?'
He seemed to be thinking of something quite different for a time. He was looking over my shoulder.
He said âYou mean control it â'
I said âYes â'
He said âYou mean like an actress â'
I thought â You mean, you were once in love with an actress?
He said âYou can do that for a time, and then you will stop; or else you will destroy yourself.'
I thought â He is seeing through me to the person he was once in love with?
Then he put out a hand and touched me on the forehead.
He said âOf course you can fix things, and you will succeed for a time: you have to do this, in fact, in order to stay alive. But if you're clever enough for this, then you'll know that it isn't reality. Reality is something beyond yourself: if it's not, what's the point? But it's where all meaning lives, and where all joy lives, and where all love lives: and don't you forget it.'
I said âRight.'
He took his finger away from my forehead. Then he said âYou may have to hit some kind of rock bottom.'
I thought â You mean, before I begin?
Then â But how will I know?
He raised the hand with which he had touched my forehead and he held his fingers pointed and then he opened and shut them once or twice as if they were the mouth of a bird. Then he said âCoo-ee!'
It was this of which I was reminded in the bathroom of the Ritz Hotel. It seemed that I might now lift my hand up and wave to the Professor and say â Coo-ee!
I thought â But you don't mean, do you, that this is anywhere like rock bottom?
So it became established that Desmond and I were lovers: he would occasionally stay up in London for the night; he at last got a room in the flat of a friend where we sometimes went in the afternoons. But now this was done, what on earth was it that we were doing?
We had each been useful to the other as an idea: what was there when we looked at each other as persons?
Desmond, for instance, would hardly like to think he might be on some journey towards rock bottom.
The Professor's words did not seem difficult: when you think you control things, you do not move beyond what began as an idea.
Desmond and I would sit in cafés and pubs: we were like people in an advertisement: we were advertising â what? â that this was what people do who have become established as lovers? Then people who saw us could say â Ah yes, they are lovers: they are sitting in cafés and pubs!
Desmond kept up his more masculine role: he indulged in badinage: he would criticise my clothes. He would say â What, the sales are on at Oxfam?
He was apt to use slogans about making love â One for the road: Chalk it up: Back to the drawing-board. We were like people taking our clothes off at the side of an athletics track; preparing our starting-blocks and fingers.
I thought â Making love is like a life-belt thrown to people who might drown: it hits them on the head; if they sink, is it to rock bottom?
I usually went back to the Indian boy, Krishna, at night. Desmond never asked me about this. I thought â This is the sign that we have both of us got what we wanted?
I did have to make up some story to Krishna: I said that Desmond was my uncle from whom I hoped to borrow money. This was a story he would respect: I do not know if he believed it. I did think from time to time â At least I respect him for requiring a story.
What I was doing, of course (oh we know all this! what do we do about what we know?), was that in being with both Desmond and Krishna I was splitting one side of myself from another. This is obvious: we do it for protection: had not the Professor said â You may have to, to stay alive? But he had also said â You have to give up. And you are saved, are you, by going to rock bottom?
The room in which Krishna lived in the basement of the hotel or hostel had a lot of political posters on the wall. I had met him with the Young Trotskyites. His particular revolution was to do with the part of South India from which he came; he was part of a religious and racial minority that was being persecuted. He and his friends were demanding independence as if this were something that could be given to them like
money. In the evenings a group of them would crowd into his room: they would perch on the floor, against the walls; listen to speeches beneath the noise of a record-player and the sweet smell of dope. Political people, I suppose, like to sit up late at night with a lot of noise and exhaustion going on and then after a time there can be the impression of enormous events elsewhere.
Krishna got carried away when making love. I thought â But what is the difference between a trick of the guts, and a trick of the mind?
Desmond would turn up in a pub at lunchtime with his sheaf of newspapers under his arm. He would say â Oh what shall we give to old Dirty Lenin today? a junkie wife? parrot's disease? a pregnant daughter?
I wish I could bring Desmond to life: he seemed to try to disarm himself by being awful. But what has been called âbringing to life' is usually to do with characters who are deathly.
I do not feel that I need to try to bring Krishna so much to life: but then he does not play this sort of part in the story.
I thought â If I could find someone who at the same time was dark and passionate and elegant and daft, then could I stop behaving like one of those poor deprived gorgons with snakes in their hair?
There was an evening when the
Die Flamme
people gave a party â
Oh I was getting tired of this, yes! I was becoming somewhat ill at the time. I will be trying to talk of this later.
There was an evening when the
Die Flamme
people gave a party and all the Medusas and flatworms (as you, Bert, once called them) were there â
coelanterates
, whose mouths are the same as their anuses. That is, there was assembled in an enormous ballroom the élite of the London literary world â and not only of the literary world, because the
Die Flamme
style had splashed over into the fashionable, and to possess an invitation to this party had become a matter of snob prestige. Guests were crammed into the auditorium of a huge theatre
that had been turned into a ballroom: there were about a thousand of us wriggling like fish-bait in a tin. One of the forms my sickness had begun to take at this time was to have visions, almost physical, of human beings trapped in mud: they were struggling to get out; they had no hope; everyone was trying to climb up on, and was only pushing down, everybody else. There were these hundreds of people crammed into the ballroom like worms: why did they want to be here? was God, after all, a fisherman in thigh-length boots like a woman? But what would be his catch? Did he every now and then take someone out of the can and put them on a hook: to dangle them in order to attract â what? that which the Professor had called reality, round some corner? It did not seem, in fact, that many of the people at the
Die Flamme
party were trying to get out of whatever it was they were in; they were climbing up on each other's heads, or shoulders, just to stay where they were; to keep others under.
The
Die Flamme
people themselves were in a box on the ground-floor level: they bobbed backwards and forwards nodding and laughing. They were like royalty. I thought â What terrible contempt there is to do with royalty! both that people should want to look on them like this, and that they should allow it.
There was a sculptor in Düsseldorf â do you remember? who used to make hundreds of plastic sheep and sell them to rich industrialists who piled them into attics; it was some comfort to industrialists to have the sheep there: perhaps they themselves could then more easily go on opening and shutting their mouths and bobbing backwards and forwards downstairs. I suppose the social world has always run on some sort of contempt. Where does a worm go, if one gets out of it?
I was not with Desmond at the
Die Flamme
party because his wife was there: she was a short plump woman like a pigeon. About her presence, of course, I had been cool, witty, understanding. But at the same time I had happened to quarrel with Desmond: there are these coincidences, are there not, at least in the unconscious.
What I had quarrelled with Desmond about was the vendetta that the
Die Flamme
people were pursuing against the politician they called Dirty Lenin. One of Dirty Lenin's children, at boarding-school, had attempted suicide. Of course there was no direct connection between this event and
Die Flamme's
vendetta. But, indeed, yes, there are coincidences.
Desmond had puffed and blown his cheeks out.
I had thought â Hurry, hurry, there must be some slide down soon towards the bottom of this slope!
There was one man who was going to be at the
Die Flamme
party of whom I had heard and whom I wanted to meet: I was still, I suppose, shameless about this. But what else is there to do, even if you see it, until you get out, except to keep yourself up on other people's shoulders? This man at the party I shall call Oliver: this was what the
Die Flamme
people called him: they had once run a strip cartoon about him in which he was called Oliver Screw. This was a take-off of Oliver Twist â the joke being that Oliver Twist was someone who asked for more: what Oliver Screw asked for more of was not porridge but women. The real-life Oliver had been a stage-designer; he was now a painter; he had become enormously successful by painting female nudes. These were done in a bony, unerotic, skinnily life-like style; they usually had wrinkles and hairs and they sat or lay with their legs apart and there were bits of everything showing. It had become fashionable for rich women to have their portraits painted by Oliver; their industrialist husbands liked to hang them in their dining-rooms, I suppose, as suitable shepherdesses for their plastic sheep upstairs. Oliver became rich; and also some sort of guru to these people. I imagined him like Rasputin, holding his fingers out to adoring ladies who licked them clean.
He had for a time, in fact, been a good painter: he had been compared with Goya, and Bacon, and so on. Then recently, I understood, he had stopped painting. It was a time, I suppose, when many artists were asking themselves what they were doing.
He was one of the very few people whom the
Die Flamme
people seemed in awe of. They had tried to mock him with their strip cartoon: but this had been, Desmond admitted, like trying to get at Mephistopheles by depicting him as a successful devil.
I had said to Desmond â What's he like?
Desmond had said â He's the sort of shit people go round the bend for.
Oliver turned up at the
Die Flamme
party with a small bearded man with dark glasses and a gold-topped cane who was said to own pop-stars in Hollywood. Oliver was a thick-set broad-shouldered man with tight dark wiry hair and the cut-out face of an actor. He looked Greek, or Turkish.