Authors: Malcolm Lowry
This was perhaps a matter of opinion⦠But unfortunately it hadn't changed Bolowski's decision to file suit for divorce, naming Hugh as co-respondent. Almost worse was to follow. Bolowski suddenly charged Hugh with attempting to deceive him in other respects, that the songs he'd published were nothing
less than plagiarisms of two obscure American numbers. Hugh was staggered. Could this be? Had he been living in a world of illusion so absolute he'd looked forward passionately to the publication of someone else's songs, paid for by himself, or rather by his aunt, that, involvedly, even his disillusionment on their account was false? It was not, it proved, quite so bad as that. Yet there was all too solid ground for the accusation so far as one song was concernedâ¦
On the daybed Hugh wrestled with his cigar. God almighty. Good God all blistering mighty. He must have known all the time. He knew he had known. On the other hand, caring only for the rendering, it looked as if he could be persuaded by his guitar that almost any song was his. The fact that the American number was infallibly a plagiarism too didn't help the slightest. Hugh was in anguish. At this point he was living in Blackheath and one day, the threat of exposure dogging every footstep, he walked fifteen miles to the city, through the slums of Lewisham, Catford, New Cross, down the Old Kent Road, past, ah, the Elephant and Castle, into the heart of London. His poor songs pursued him in a minor key now, macabre. He wished he could be lost in these poverty-stricken hopeless districts romanticized by Longfellow. He wished the world would swallow him and his disgrace. For disgrace there would be. The publicity he had once evoked on his own behalf assured it. How was his aunt going to feel now? And Geoff? The few people who believed in him? Hugh conceived a last gigantic pogrom; in vain. It seemed, finally, almost a comfort that his mother and father were dead. As for the senior tutor of his college, it wasn't likely he would care to welcome a freshman just dragged through the divorce courts; dread words. The prospect seemed horrible, life at an end, the only hope to sign on another ship immediately it was all over, or if possible, before it all began.
Then, suddenly, a miracle occurred, something fantastic, unimaginable, and for which to this day Hugh could find no logical explanation. All at once Bolowski dropped the whole thing. He forgave his wife. He sent for Hugh and, with the utmost dignity, forgave him. The divorce suit was withdrawn. So were the plagiarism charges. It was all a mistake, Bolowski
said. At worst the songs had never been distributed, so what damage had been done? The sooner it was all forgotten the better. Hugh could not believe his ears: nor in memory believe them now, nor that, so soon after everything had seemed so completely lost, and one's life irretrievably ruined, one should, as though nothing had happened, have calmly gone up to â
âHelp.'
Geoffrey, his face half covered with lather, was standing in the doorway of his room, beckoning tremulously with a shaving brush and Hugh, throwing his ravaged cigar into the garden, rose and followed him in. He normally had to pass through this interesting room to reach his own (the door of which stood open opposite, revealing the mowing-machine) and at the moment, Yvonne's being occupied, to reach the bathroom. This was a delightful place, and extremely large for the size of the house; its windows, through which sunlight was pouring, looked down the drive towards the Calle Nicaragua. The room was pervaded by some sweet heavy scent of Yvonne's, while the odours of the garden filtered in through Geoff's open bedroom window.
âThe shakes are awful, did you never have the shakes?' the Consul was saying, shivering all over: Hugh took the shaving brush from him and began to relather it on a tablet of fragrant asses'-milk soap lying in the basin. âYes, you did, I remember. But not the rajah shakes.'
âNo â no newspaperman ever had the shakes.' Hugh arranged a towel about the Consul's neck. âYou mean the wheels.'
âThe wheels within wheels this is.'
âI deeply sympathize. Now then, we're all set. Stand still.'
âHow on earth can I stand still?'
âPerhaps you'd better sit down.'
But the Consul could not sit down either.
âJesus, Hugh, I'm sorry. I can't stop bouncing about. It's like being in a tank â did I say tank? Christ, I need a drink. What have we here?' The Consul grasped, from the window-sill, an uncorked bottle of bay rum. âWhat's this like, do you suppose, eh? For the scalp.' Before Hugh could stop him the Consul took a large drink. âNot bad. Not at all bad,' he added triumphantly, smacking his lips. âIf slightly underproof⦠Like pernod, a
little. A charm against galloping cockroaches anyway. And the polygonous proustian stare of imaginary scorpions. Wait a minute, I'm going to be â'
Hugh let the taps run loudly. Next door he heard Yvonne moving about, getting ready to go to TomalÃn. But he'd left the radio playing on the porch; probably she could hear no more man the usual bathroom babel.
âTit for tat,' the Consul, still trembling, commented, when Hugh had assisted him back to his chair. âI did that for you once.'
âS',
hombre
.' Hugh, lathering the brush again on the asses'-milk soap, raised his eyebrows. âQuite so. Better now, old fellow?'
âWhen you were an infant,' the Consul's teeth chattered. âOn the P.' O. boat coming back from India⦠The old
Cocanada
.'
Hugh resettled the towel around his brother's neck, then, as if absent-mindedly obeying the other's wordless instructions, went out, humming, through the bedroom back to the porch, where the radio was now stupidly playing Beethoven in the wind, blowing hard again on this side of the house. On his return with the whisky bottle he rightly deduced the Consul to have hidden in the cupboard, his eyes ranged the Consul's books disposed quite neatly â in the tidy room where there was not otherwise the slightest sign its occupant did any work or contemplated any for the future, unless it was the somewhat crumpled bed on which the Consul had evidently been lying â on high shelves around the walls: Dogme et Ritual de la Haute Magie, Serpent and Siva Worship in Central America, there were two long shelves of this, together with the rusty leather bindings and frayed edges of the numerous cabbalistic and alchemical books, though some of them looked fairly new, like the
Goetia of the Lemegaton of Solomon the King
, probably they were treasures, but the rest were a heterogeneous collection: Gogol, the
Mahabharata
, Blake, Tolstoy, Pontoppidan, the
Upanishads
, a Mermaid Marston, Bishop Berkeley, Duns Scotus, Spinoza,
Vice Versa
, Shakespeare, a complete Taskerson,
All Quiet on the Western Front, the Clicking of Cuthbert
, the
Rig Veda
â God knows,
Peter Rabbit;
âEverything is to be found in
Peter Rabbit
,'
the Consul liked to say â Hugh returned, smiling, and with a flourish like a Spanish waiter poured himself a stiff drink into a toothmug.
âWherever did you find that? â ah I⦠You've saved my life!'
âThat's nothing. I did the same for Carruthers'once.' Hugh now set about shaving the Consul who had become much steadier almost immediately.
âCarruthers â the Old Crow?⦠Did what for Carruthers?'
âHeld his head.'
âHe wasn't tight of course, though.'
âNot tight⦠Submerged. In a supervision too.' Hugh flourished the cut-throat razor. âTry and sit still like that; you're doing fine. He had a great respect for you â he had an enormous number of stories about you, mostly variations on the same one⦠however⦠The one about your riding into college on a horse â'
âOh no⦠I wouldn't have ridden it in. Anything bigger than a sheep frightens me.'
âAnyway there the horse was, tied up in the buttery. A pretty ferocious horse too. Apparently it took about thirty-seven gyps and the college porter to get it out.'
âGood lord⦠But I can't imagine Carruthers ever getting so tight he'd pass out at a supervision. Let me see, he was only praelector in my time. I believe he was really more interested in his first editions than in us. Of course it was at the beginning of the war, a rather trying period⦠But he was a wonderful old chap.'
âHe was still praelector in mine.'
(In my time?⦠But what, exactly, does that mean? What, if anything, did one do at Cambridge, that would show the soul worthy of Siegebert of East Anglia â Or, John Cornford! Did one dodge lectures, cut halls, fail to row for the college, fool one's supervisor, finally, oneself? Read economics, then history, Italian, barely passing one's exams? Climb the gateway against which one had an unseaman-like aversion, to visit Bill Plantagenet in Sherlock Court, and, clutching the wheel of St Catherine, feel, for a moment asleep, like Melville, the world
hurling from all havens astern? Ah, the harbour bells of Cambridge! Whose fountains in moonlight and closed courts and cloisters, whose enduring beauty in its virtuous remote self-assurance, seemed part, less of the loud mosaic of one's stupid life there, though maintained perhaps by the countless deceitful memories of such lives, than the strange dream of some old monk, eight hundred years dead, whose forbidding house, reared upon piles and stakes driven into the marshy ground, had once shone like a beacon out of the mysterious silence, and solitude of the fens. A dream jealously guarded: Keep off the Grass. And yet whose unearthly beauty compelled one to say: God forgive me. While oneself lived in a disgusting smell of marmalade and old boots, kept by a cripple, in a hovel near the station yard. Cambridge was the sea reversed; at the same time a horrible regression; in the strictest sense â despite one's avowed popularity, the godsent opportunity â the most appalling of nightmares, as if a grown man should suddenly wake up, like the ill-fated Mr Bultitude in
Vice Versa
, to be confronted, not by the hazards of business, but by the geometry lesson he had failed to prepare thirty years before, and the torments of puberty. Digs and forecastles are where they are in the heart. Yet the heart sickened at running once more full tilt into the past, into its very school-close faces, bloated now like those of the drowned, on gangling overgrown bodies, into everything all over again one had been at such pains to escape from before, but in grossly inflated form. And indeed had it not been so, one must still have been aware of cliques, snobberies, genius thrown into the river, justice declined a recommendation by the appointments board, earnestness debagged â giant oafs in pepper-and-salt, mincing like old women, their only meaning in another war. It was as though that experience of the sea, also, exaggerated by time, had invested one with the profound inner maladjustment of the sailor who can never be happy on land. One had begun, however, to play the guitar more seriously. And once again one's best friends were often Jews, often the same Jews who had been at school with one. It must be admitted they were there first, having been there off and on since
A.D.
1106. But now they seemed almost the only people
old
as oneself: only they
had any generous, independent sense of beauty. Only a Jew did not deface the monk's dream. And somehow only a Jew, with his rich endowment of premature suffering, could understand one's own suffering, one's isolation, essentially, one's poor music. So that in my time and with my aunt's aid I bought a University weekly. Avoiding college functions, I became a staunch supporter of Zionism. As a leader of a band composed largely of Jews, playing at local dances, and of my own private outfit Three Able Seamen, I amassed a considerable sum. The beautiful Jewish wife of a visiting American lecturer became my mistress. I had seduced her too with my guitar. Like Philoctetes's bow or Oedipus's daughter it was my guide and prop. I played it without bashfulness wherever I went. Nor did it strike me as any less than an unexpected and useful compliment that Phillipson, the artist, should have troubled to represent me, in a rival paper, as an immense guitar, inside which an oddly familiar infant was hiding, curled up, as in a womb â)
âOf course he was always a great connoisseur of wines.'
âHe was beginning to get the wines and the first editions slightly mixed up in my day.' Hugh shaved adroitly along the edge of his brother's beard, past the jugular vein and the carotid artery. âBring me a bottle of the very best John Donne, will you, Smithers?⦠You know, some of the genuine old 1611.'
âGod how funny⦠Or isn't it? The poor Old Crow.'
âHe was a marvellous fellow.'
âThe best.'
(⦠I have played the guitar before the Prince of Wales, begged in the streets with one for ex-servicemen on Armistice Day, performed at a reception given by the Amundsen society, and to a caucus of the French Chamber of Deputies as they arranged the approaching years. The Three Able Seamen achieved meteoric fame,
Metronome
compared us to Venuti's Blue Four. Once the worst possible thing that could befall me seemed some hand injury. Nevertheless one dreamed frequently of dying, bitten by lions, in the desert, at the last calling for the guitar, strumming to the end⦠Yet I stopped of my own accord. Suddenly, less than a year after going down from Cambridge, stopped, first in bands, then playing it intimately,
stopped so completely that Yvonne, despite the tenuous bond of being born in Hawaii, doubtless doesn't know I ever played, so emphatically no one says any longer: Hugh, where's your guitar? Come on and give us a tune â)
âI have', the Consul said, âa slight confession to make, Hugh⦠I cheated a little on the strychnine while you were away.'
âThalavethiparothiam, is it?' Hugh observed, pleasantly menacing. âOr strength obtained by decapitation. Now then, don't be careful, as the Mexicans say, I'm going to shave the back of your neck.'
But first Hugh wiped the razor with some tissue paper, glancing absently through the door into the Consul's room. The bedroom windows were wide open; the curtains blew inward very gently. The wind had almost dropped. The scents of the garden were heavy about them. Hugh heard the wind starting to blow again on the other side of the house; the fierce breath of the Atlantic, flavoured with wild Beethoven. But here, on the leeward side, those trees one could see through the bathroom window seemed unaware of it. And the curtains were engaged with their own gentle breeze. Like the crew's washing on board a tramp steamer, strung over number six hatch between sleek derricks lying in grooves, that barely dances in the afternoon sunlight, while abaft the beam not a league away some pitching native craft with violently flapping sails seems wrestling a hurricane, they swayed imperceptibly, as to another controlâ¦