Walking in the Shade (31 page)

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Authors: Doris Lessing

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In 1956, when I did not regard myself as ‘really' being a Party member, because of what I disagreed with, I still was thinking of how to save ‘King Street' from itself, still seeing the CP as something that could be reformed and rescued from the baleful influences of the Soviet Union. If a map were made of my opinions, I would have to be described more as a Trotskyist—and in any communist country I would have been shot for saying a hundredth of what I thought.

Now I look at the great ‘monolithic' fanatic movements, and what I am thinking is, So what is
really
going on inside there?

58 Warwick Road

London SW5

19 October

The reaction to the Twentieth Congress has been expressed in party circles throughout the world in the phrase ‘the cult of the individual'. That these words should have been chosen as the banner under which we should fight what is wrong with the party seems to me a sign of the corruption in our thinking. For they suggest that what caused the breakdown of inner-party democracy was an excess of individualism. But the opposite is the truth. What was bad is not that one man was a tyrant, but that hundreds and thousands of party members, inside and outside the Soviet Union, let go their individual consciences and allowed him to become a tyrant.

Now we are discussing what sort of rules we should have in the party to prevent the emergence of bureaucracy and dictatorship. A lot of worried and uneasy people are pinning their faith in some kind of constitution which will ensure against tyranny. But rules and constitutions are what people make them. The publication of the Constitution of the Soviet Union, an admirable document, coincided with the worst period of the terror. The party rules in the various communist parties are (I believe) more or less the same; but the development of the different communist parties have been very dissimilar.

I think that this talk about changing the rules is a symptom of the desire in all of us to let go individual responsibility on to something outside ourselves, something on to which we can put the blame if things go wrong. It is pleasant to have implicit trust in a beloved leader. It is pleasant and comfortable to believe that the communist party must be right simply because ‘it is the vanguard of the working class'. It is pleasant to pass resolutions at a conference and think that now everything will be all right.

But there is no simple decision we can make, once and for all, that will ensure that we are doing right. There is no set of rules that can set us free from the necessity of making fresh decisions, every day, of just how much of our individual responsibility we are prepared to delegate to a central body—whether it is the communist party, or the government of the country we live in, be it a communist or a capitalist government.

It seems to me that what the last thirty years have shown us is that unless a communist party is a body of individuals each jealously guarding his or her independence of judgement, it must degenerate into a body of yes-men.

The safeguard against tyranny, now, as it always has been, is to sharpen individuality, to strengthen individual responsibility, and not to delegate it.

Doris Lessing

The calm, dispassionate, judicious tone of this letter is very different to anything being said privately then.

It was written in 1956 and was published in
The New Reasoner
. At once the CP responded, through Maurice Cornforth, saying to Edward that this must have been a personal letter and he shouldn't have published it. The fact that they could have thought this confirmed how little they understood the emotions raging in the ranks. There was a ferment of meetings, telephone calls, threats from King Street, and the batch of letters I have here would be fascinating, I am sure, to those who lived through all that, but boring to those who didn't.

The second letter: I had intended to write a satirical little novel,
Excuse Me While I'm Sick
, making fun of the new surly iconoclasts, Kingsley Amis et al. (Later John Wain became a good friend.) But I lost interest.

58 Warwick Rd

London SW 5

21 Feb. 1957

My dear Edward,

First, some practical points.

(a) Excuse me while I'm sick. Don't feel bad that I may feel bad because you don't like it. I've rather lost interest anyway. I think, were I to finish it, it would be a quite interesting small novel, which would appeal to a certain number of people; but quite obviously its mood is right out of key with what a very large number of people are feeling who would be its natural readers. Such a book, a sort of intellectual jape, is of value set against a background of accepted moral values. In the absence of any such background, perhaps it is better left. I think in one way it is a pity this book is not going to be finished. But a piece of polemical writing, even if on the surface a frivolous one, is half the magazine it is published in, and clearly the New Reasoner is not the magazine.

But of course our different attitudes over this are a reflection of a much deeper difference, which is why I am finding this letter so hard to write…

But first, about the suggestions in your, I think, second letter. I like the suggested article by Alex Werth. I would be interested in a piece by Hervé. I would very much like to read a bit of Not by Bread Alone, but you must be sure first that it hasn't been translated and published as a whole first—I shall be surprised if it doesn't appear here very soon. They always do publish this sort of thing fast. Like The Thaw, for instance. And they did the Visitors on the radio very quickly.

I think autobiography is a good idea. A really truthful bit of writing about experience in the C.P. at some stormy point would be invaluable, but I shall be very surprised if people are ready to be truthful writers or readers. The instinctive defence against being truthful is so very strong.

I think it would be interesting to have a serious description by someone like Kingsley Amis of his experience with the C.P.
*
It would be typical of the experience of hundreds of thousands of people vis à vis the C.P. But these angry young men have nothing philosophically to utter. Why should they have? They are all artists, not philosophers.

But now my dear Edward—there are a lot of points in particularly your middle letter.

That poem ‘Plea for the Hated Dead Woman'
*
was written ten years ago, and has nothing whatsoever to do with any recent political situation. It was written in a mood when I was hating my mother.

As for my recent novel,
Retreat to Innocence
,
†
I think it was a bad book, because I wasn't facing up to any essential issue—I wasn't being truthful with myself, although I imagined I was, and so it's softcentred and sentimental. I don't hold with it. Though it's got some good bits in it.

But what I am trying to say is more complicated than all this:

Look, when I read your letters I feel as if you were reaching out for some kind of final word or statement from me; as if you wanted something of me, and I ask myself, why? And what is it?

But above all, our moods are very different.

I know full well that all my reactions now are because (if I may use this word I hate so much) I am an artist, and I've exhausted all the experience and emotions that are useful to me as an artist in the old way of being a communist. Someone said flippantly that people left the C.P. because they got bored. You know—Frank Pitcairn, always forget his real name. But he said it because he is an artist.

I shall wither and die and never write another word if I can't get out of this straitjacket of what we've all been thinking and feeling for so long.

But this is not a political attitude, and this is why I don't think you ought to ask me for clarification.

And I suspect you of being an artist, in which case you ought to be finding out what you think by writing it.

It seemed to me the other afternoon that you and Randall shared the same attitude, which was that unless you could present yourselves and justify yourselves as you have been during the last fifteen or whatever years it is, you would have let yourselves down? But all of us have been involved in this thing that has been so corrupting, and there is nothing to justify that which interests people who have not been involved in it. You, Edward Thompson and Randall Swingler don't stand or fall by your explanations now…. If you think this is a very emotional way to take your demand for philosophical clarity, then I retort that your attitude is at bottom not at all a demand for a philosophy, but a terrible need to explain yourselves.

You have been a pure and high-minded communist, and until recently wouldn't accept the evil in it, and your idealism is hurt and your picture of yourself is damaged.

Get thee to thy typewriter, dear Edward. You can communicate your experience in art, and as such it can be communicated. But what has your lost feeling got to do with philosophies?

We are living in a time, I am convinced, when there aren't likely to be any philosophies one can pay allegiance to. Marxism is no longer a philosophy, but a system of government, differing from country to country.

Which is a good thing. Any philosophy which lasts longer than fifty years must be a bad one, because everything changes so fast.

I know I am a socialist, and I believe in the necessity for revolution when the moment is opportune. But whether the economists like Ken and John, or the historians are right as Marxists, I don't know. How should one know? It seems to me that a great many of the concepts we have called Marxist and which are shared by people who aren't Marxists are simply the reflection of the pressures of the time we live in.

I don't want to make any more concepts. For myself, I mean.

I want to let myself simmer into some sort of knowledge, but I don't know what it is.

Do you think there is something to be said for the point of view that being a communist has never been (except for a very few people) a question of intellectual standpoint, but rather a sort of sharing of moral fervours?

I haven't got any moral fervour left. No one who feels responsible for the bloodbaths and cynicism of the last thirty years can feel morally indignant about the bloodymindedness of capitalism? I can't, anyway.

What I feel is an immense joy and satisfaction that the world is going so fast, that the peasant in China no longer starves, that people all over the world care enough for their fellow human beings to fight for what they feel, at the time, to be justice. I feel a sort of complicated gigantic flow of movement of which I am a part, and it gives me profound satisfaction to be in it. But what has this got to do with political attitudes?

I want to write a lot of books.

And the stale aroma of thirty years of dead political words makes me feel sick.

I know quite well, since you are looking for something from me, this letter will make you feel let down. But I can't help it. You shouldn't go asking people like me for certainties.

I feel as I've been let out of a prison.

But above all I am convinced you should get yourself in front of a typewriter and ask yourself what you think.

Love,
Doris

The background to all this was the issue: Should Edward Thompson, John Saville, and the rest get themselves expelled from the Party? I obviously thought not. Yet while all this went on, my conversations with Clancy and others were the purest ‘Trotskyism'. Somewhere we ‘revisionists' still believed that the Party could be purified and reformed. Edward was demanding meetings—open meetings with the leadership to get ‘everything out into the open', which was very much a keynote of the time. Hard to believe now that as late as '56, '57, it could come as a revelation to these intelligent people that ‘King Street' lied, rigged meetings, manipulated votes. All kinds of people were going to King Street demanding the truth and nothing but the truth. There was Haimi Levy, who had gone to the Soviet Union, having told King Street he was going whether they said yes or not, and there met with the infamous Suslov. Haimi wanted to discuss the treatment of the Jews in the Soviet Union. Hundreds—hundreds of thousands—had been murdered, tortured, persecuted. Suslov continued to repeat, throughout the interview, that there was no Jewish question in the Soviet Union, because there were no Jews. Haimi returned to London, demanded that the Party should publicly ‘come clean', and when they refused, he joined Edward Thompson, John Saville, and others.

I clearly wanted the ‘revisionists' not to put themselves in a position where they would be kicked out, because the Party would then be even worse than it was.

Before these letters came from Dorothy Thompson I had forgotten I went to see Gollan. Now I do remember I found him unimpressive. John Gollan succeeded Harry Pollitt as leader of the Communist Party. Pollitt was solid, honest, in so far as it was possible to be, and respected outside the CP. He was a product of the British working-class movement and its struggles against the very hard times of the twenties and thirties. Gollan was a product of the Communist Party—not at all the same thing. I never met anyone who did not respect Harry Pollitt, but people did not have much time for Gollan.

Yet while all this was going on, I was wondering how I could leave the Party without a fuss. That was because journalists lay in wait for defectors, and there would be headlines: So-and-so reveals the truth about the Communist Hell—meaning the British Communist Party. I wasn't going to provide fuel for any headlines, if I could help it. So what was I doing busybodying about, going to see Johnny Gollan and writing letters to Edward Thompson, some at least in the tones of an affectionate but rather bossy elder sister? Alas, the truth must be: the enjoyment of political intrigue, being at the centre of things—in short, power, even in this minuscule way.

 

Facts: There were several meetings at my flat, a convenient venue for people coming in from outside London. The people I remember clearly are Edward Thompson, John Saville, Haimi Levy, Randall Swingler.

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