Authors: Nicholas Mosley
I tried to think about this. Sometimes Dr Anders would talk as if she were playing another person's roleâthat of myself, or my mother, or some other powerful figure in my unconscious.
I said âYou mean, you don't think I should have liked most of those people at the party?'
She said âGood heavens, why should you?'
I said âI thought you said I should.'
She said âYes I know you did.'
I tried to go back in my mind about this. I was sure she had saidâbut what?âthis didn't seem to matter.
I said âBut you did say, there were all those interesting peopleâ'
âI did say, there were people who could be called interesting. I didn't say you should like them.'
I thoughtâThis is unfair? But perhaps my mother had been unfair. SoâWhat could I learn from this?
I said âYou mean, it's because I've been made to feel guilty about not liking these sort of people that I make up hostile stories about spies and security men?'
I thoughtâAnd I stammer?
She said âThere are after all pretty awful people at those parties.'
After a time I said âThey run the world.'
She said âThey run certain aspects of certain parts of the world.'
I thoughtâYou mean you agree, it would be better if I stopped worrying that I don't think things that go on at those parties important?
ThenâEven my mother did not really want me to feel guilty?
SoâWhy do I stammer?
I said âBut through these sort of people other people either die, or don't die, in Africa.'
She said âGood heavens, don't people either die, or don't die, anyway, in Africa?'
I thoughtâBut now, I have not stammered?
I said âBecause I worry I stammered?'
â A dead body, beside some railings â
Dr Anders said âYou were a very clever little boy. It was difficult for you to take all this on when you were seven.'
I thoughtâDid she say very?
She said âWasn't your mother often worrying about who was or was not dying in Africa?'
I thoughtâBut was she not right?
Dr Anders said âAnd your father wasâwhatâmaking jokes? making films?'
I thoughtâBut was not he right too?
ThenâShould I not make jokes? And should I not care?
Dr Anders said âI just think you might try to look at these people more closely: to see them as not gods nor devils.'
I said âYes.' ThenââI see.'
ThenââThe people at the party?'
She said âIf you like.'
I said âAnd my father and motherâ'
She said nothing.
I said âAnd not go on about them.'
I lay as if in my cocoon; my cot in front of the fire.
She said âYou go on with what you like.'
I thoughtâAnd are there not huge hands that hang like nests in bags from trees â
I said âIt's not that I think they're all wrong and I'm all right.
I know I sometimes sound as if I do.'
She said âWhy not'
â A bright spring day. A pond. A poplar tree â
I said âWhen I stammer, it's like some giant in my head, that I either have to kill, or be killed by.'
I thoughtâWhat was that image?
There were pigeons beyond her window, flying around the spire.
I said âBut there's one thing that really terrifies meâ'
I waited for her to say something likeâWhat?
I said âYou know, that first day, when I came to see youâ'
She said âYes.'
I said âAnd you said, about my high opinion of myselfâ'
She said nothing.
I said âI had an image the other day of everyone being so much happier when they were sort of underneath, like servants or victims.'
I found myself shaking.
She said âAnd you think you're not.'
I said âI think I don't want to be.'
There were the hoofbeats up and down my spine; like the Gadarene swine rushing towards the cliff.
I said âAnd when I stammer I only pretend to be.'
I thoughtâNot to stop myself being killed; but to stop myself killing?
I said âTo stop myself taking the responsibility.'
I thoughtâThe responsibilityâbut for what?
When I looked at her she was sitting beside me with her face in profile like one of those huge statues I had seen pictures of by the banks of the Nile: staring out over the desert; or the water; or whatever it is; or nothing.
I said âDon't you think that's terrifying?'
She had that way of pursing her lips as if making her ledge on a mountain; or preparing to play the flute.
She said âIt would certainly be unfortunate, I suppose, to have a terrifying view of servants or victims.'
Sometimes after I had been to Dr Anders there was so much going on in my head that I wanted to shout and sing in the street: to sayâIcarus, Icarus, you need not have flown too close to the sun! You could have pretended to be something practical like a fighter-pilot in the Battle of Britain.
When I got to Sheila's house there was a man in white overalls doing something with a screw-driver to the front door. I thoughtâIf he is a secret-service agent or security man, will he go away if I insist that such dragons are only in my head?
Sheila's room was on the first floor. From time to time other people seemed to share it with her. I was not sure whether or not these were lovers.
I said âI see you are being put under electronic surveillance.'
She said âWhat, has the old witch finally got you?'
I said âDon't you know about this? There aren't things like ordinary spies any more. There are just microphones and cameras and things, so that people can watch and hear everything going on everywhere.'
Sheila said âI once knew a man like that. He was carried away in a strait-jacket.'
I went to the window and looked out. There was the top of the man's head by the front door: beyond him in the street people moved as if they were in a science-fiction film and their bodies had been taken over by people from Andromeda.
I said âSo it's exactly the same as if there weren't any microphones and cameras and things, because it takes exactly the same number of people to watch and hear everything as it does to do it.'
Sheila went out of the room. After a time her head appeared below beside that of the man in white overalls. She seemed to be arguing with him. Their heads appeared enlarged; their
bodies tapered like tadpoles. After a time the man swam off down the street.
I sat on Sheila's spare bedsprings and bounced up and down. I wonderedâIf there were a man living here who was her lover, would there, or would there not, be a mattress on the spare bedsprings?
Sheila's bed was on the opposite side of the room. I thought I could examine the pillow for hairs.
I wonderedâDo people do things like this because in fact they are jealous, or because they have seen people doing things like this in films?
When Sheila came back I said âWhat was all that about?'
She said âWhat was all what about?'
âDo you know that man?'
âHe said he'd come to the wrong house.'
Sheila sat on the bed opposite. She put her head in her hands.
After a time I said âI've been examining your pillow.'
Sheila said âOh God, you're so boring, boring! Is there anything you don't make a joke of?'
I wonderedâWould it help her if I exhibited jealousy by jumping up and down?
I began to take my shoes off.
I thoughtâBut there really are men sitting underground with earphones on in London and Washington and Moscow. And since this is so, should one not provide them with some entertainment?
ThenâBut I am no longer supposed to be interested in things like spies and security men â
SoâDo these phantoms spring from the same roots as being jealous then?
Sheila said âGood God, there are people keeping us brainwashed! Who at this moment are in London and Washington and Moscow keeping us brainwashed! And all you can do is make jokes about it.'
I said âWhat about the cigarette advertisements?'
She said âWhat about the cigarette advertisements?'
I said âAre you being brainwashed?'
She said âYes.' Then âNo.'
I thoughtâBut she's not taking her clothes off.
She was sitting on the bedsprings with her hands between her thighs.
She said âDo you know that between ten and fifteen per cent of the inhabitants of this country live below subsistence level? And that in most other parts of the world the proportions are infinitely higher?'
I wonderedâThose figures are right?
I had been going to sayâWhat the cigarette advertisements show, is that people don't mind much if they die.
I thoughtâShouldn't I be just putting a hand on her breast; tugging at the belt of her trousers?
I said âWouldn't it be better for the people who you say are being brainwashed if they could make jokes about it? Then they might be free to do something practical rather than just talk about the people below subsistence level.'
I went and sat beside her on the bed. I tried to put a hand between her thighs.
I said âAh, the advantages of an unwashed brainâ'
She said âOh shut up!'
It was as if there were something trapped in her; fighting, but not to get out.
She said âLook, will you come and talk to Brian Alick?'
I said âWhy?'
Brian Alick was one of the leaders of the Young Trotskyites.
She said âHe's clever enough for you.'
I wondered againâI am clever?
She said âThere are millions of people degraded and oppressed. You can't say that's funny!'
I said âI don't say it's funny.'
She said âWhat do you say then?'
I said âI say you can't change things just by putting one sort of organisation in place of another. You've got to free things in people's minds.'
She said âYou're a spoilt brat.'
I said âWho said that?'
She said âI did.'
I thoughtâThat man in white overalls: he is her lover?
I said âIt's people like you and Brian Alick who get a kick from people being oppressed. If they weren't, you wouldn't know what to do with yourselves.'
I thoughtâThat's unfair: or isn't it?
ThenâI mustn't take my hand away!
Dr Anders would sayâBut you wanted to hit her?
Sheila said âI just want to say I don't see how you can go on like this. If I were you, I'd simply be dead'
I thoughtâBut by keeping my hand on her, I am condescending, I am degrading her?
I said âJokes are serious. Wasn't it Brecht who saidâ'
Just then the man in the white overalls appeared at the door of the room. He stood there chewing, as if at the inside of his cheeks.
Sheila was saying âWhat did Brecht sayâ'
I thoughtâJokes break up old patterns â
The man in white overalls said in a sad voiceââBrian says would Sunday evening about six-thirty be any good.'
Sheila shouted âYou fucking nit!'
The man said âHe says there's some kind of party.'
Sheila picked up a disc from a record-player and threw it at him.
The man raised one arm like the Statue of Liberty. The disc went past him like a flying saucer.
I thoughtâSheila sent this man to a call-box to ring up Brian Alick?
Sheila shouted âOh God oh Jesus Christ!'
She was holding her head and was rolling about on the bedsprings.
Dr Anders might sayâAnd you still did or didn't think he was her lover?
I could sayâOr didn't mind?
I said âLook, it doesn't matterâ'
I thoughtâBut that is condescending: shouldn't I really hit her? To save her from being the victim she both wants and doesn't want to be?
I said âI don't mind talking to Brian Alickâ'
ThenâBut o fool, is it not sweet reason that sends people mad?
Sheila got up and made a dash for the door. She went past the man in white overalls like King Kong. We could hear her clattering down the stairs. Then there was the noise of a door slammingâit seemed, of the bathroom.
Sheila had looked rather beautiful when she had been rolling about on the bed; like Kali, the hideous Indian goddess, who, when you rolled her over, became the beautiful goddess Devi.
The man in white overalls had gone and sat down on the spare bedsprings. He seemed to have chewed enough on his cheeks and was doing some swallowing.
I said âWhat were you doing to the front door?'
He said âPutting in an entryphone.'
I said âGood God, what would anyone in this house want with an entryphone?'
He said âYou can speak into it downstairs and then people upstairs know who you are.'
I thoughtâThis man, like any comedian, is either halfwitted or witty.
He was like some famous actor, I couldn't remember the name. This actor had a long face and pale curly hair and he specialised in roles of terrible despair and bitterness. Once a group of his friends had taken the front row of the stalls, and had worn mackintoshes because he spat so much.
I said âWhy would Sheila want to know who's coming up the stairs?'
The man said âI think she's a bit fed up you don't come and live with her.'
I thoughtâThat's true? ThenâThat's all right then?
I said âShe's never said that.'
He said âWell, she wouldn't, would she.'
I thoughtâOh God, do I mean it is all right because I am the one on top and we neither of us are happy â
There was a noise of things being smashed up in the bathroom.
I said âYou really think that?'
He said âIt sounds like it, doesn't it?'
I thoughtâThen can I go and sayâBut Sheila, Sheila, you only think you want me to come and live with you because you
think I'm happy!