By Thomas F. Bertonneau
In his monumental Experiment in Autobiography (1934),
the English novelist and public intellectual Herbert George Wells (1866 – 1946)
claims to understand the German dictator Adolf Hitler intuitively. The
discussion will shortly come to that – but first some background.
Writing of his “mid schoolboy stage” at Thomas
Morley’s school in 1878 and 79, and trying to reconstruct his thirteen-year-old
worldview, Wells recalls, along with much else, his adolescent fondness for
indulging in compensatory military fantasies rooted in a rebellious but
invariably thwartedlibido dominandi. “The flavor of J. R. Green’s
recently published (1874) History of the English people had
drifted to me either directly or at second hand,” as the autobiographer writes,
“and my mind had leapt all too readily to the idea that I was a blond and
blue-eyed Nordic, quite the best make of human being known.” Wells remarks
that, “England was consciously Teutonic in those days, [and] the monarchy and
Thomas Carlyle were strong influences in that direction.” Discussion of Britain
as a romantic “Keltic Fringe” hung in the air, as Wells writes; “and the defeat
of France in 1870-71 seemed to be the final defeat of the decadent Latin
peoples.” The convictions that, “We English, by sheer native superiority,
practically without trying, had possessed ourselves of an Empire on which the
sun never set” and that, “the errors and infirmities of other races” were
compelling Britain towards “world dominion” fastened themselves unquestionably
in young Georgie’s mind. The adult Wells would put it this way: “All that was
settled in my head,” such that the array of associated notions informed the
lad’s “active imagination.”
The smallish and high-voiced Georgie, “an
undernourished boy, meanly clad,” as Wells confesses, “liked especially to
dream that [he] was a great military dictator like Cromwell, a great republican
like George Washington or like Napoleon in his earlier phases”; and he “used to
fight battles whenever [he] went for a walk alone” in the vicinity of Bromley,
in Kent.
No one suspected that a phantom staff pranced about me
and phantom orderlies galloped at my commands, to shift the guns and
concentrate fire on those houses below, to launch the final attack upon yonder
distant ridge. The citizens of Bromley town go out to take the air on Martin’s
Hill and look towards Shortland across the fields where once meandered the now
dried-up and vanished Ravensbourne, with never a suspicion of the orgies of
bloodshed I once conducted there.
Wells fondly remembers how he “entered, conquered, or
rescued, towns riding at the head of [his] troops, with [his] cousins and
schoolfellows recognizing [him] with surprise from the windows.” Crowned heads
and elected leaders would converge on his triumph to offer congratulations.
“With inveterate enemies, monarchists, Roman Catholics, non-Aryans and the
like,” Wells adds, “I was grimly just.” It is in recalling the racial theme
that Wells likens himself as he was in those days to the Leader of National
Socialism: “I had ideas about Aryans extraordinarily like Mr. Hitler’s.” Those
ideas would have included the picture of “the Great Aryan People going to and
fro in the middle plains of Europe… varying their consonants according to
Grimm’s Law… and driving inferior breeds into the mountains,” as well as the
thesis that the Aryan accomplishment consummated itself everywhere when it
“squared accounts with the Jews.” Yet as Wells says in distinguishing himself,
“Unlike Hitler I had no feelings about the contemporary Jew.” So it is in
Wells’ attestation, that, “the more I hear of Hitler the more I am convinced
that his mind is almost the twin of my thirteen year old mind in 1879; but
heard through a megaphone and – implemented.”
In addition to these glancing observations about der
Führer, the Experiment in Autobiography addresses the
cases of Benito Mussolini, Oswald Mosley, Vladimir Lenin, and Joseph Stalin,
concerning whom, while omitting Mussolini, Wells could boast of personal
acquaintance. Regarding Mosley, the Experiment recalls that
Wells “met [him] intermittently for years, as a promising young conservative, a
promising young liberal, a promising new convert to the Labour party, with
Communist leanings, and finally as the thing he is.” Wells characterizes Mosley
as “dull and heavy… platitudinous in his speeches,” the jejuneness of the
oratory in the hall “vastly exaggerated by loud speakers,” with the speechmaker
himself the preening object of “idiotic songs about [the] glorious Leader.”
Mosley appears as Lord Horatio Bohun, the purple-shirted would-be Britishduce, in The
Holy Terror (1940), Wells’ second-to-last novel. So much for Mosley.
In respect of Lenin, Wells tended to blinker himself. Leon Trotsky recorded
that Lenin found Wells “incurably middle-class,” and Wells affirms in The
Experiment that Lenin in this case “was a sound observer.” Wells
assesses Lenin and Trotsky this way: They “were of the same vital social
stratum,” that is, middle class, as he, “but the discolouration of their stream
of thought by Marxist pretences and sentimentalities… blinded them to their own
essential quality.”
What of Stalin? Here the relationship grows complex.
Wells the ultra-socialist had no use whatever for Marx or Marxism, as the
remark about Lenin and Trotsky hints. “Marx,” he wrote, “offered to the
cheapest and basest of human impulses the poses of a pretentious philosophy,
and the active minds among the distressed classes fell to him very readily.”
In Stalin, whom he interviewed in Moscow in 1932, Wells
responded to what he at first perceived as the technocratic pragmatist and
potential collaborator in the dream-project of a rationally organized
world-state: “I had to recognize that under [Stalin] Russia was not being
merely tyrannized over and held down; it was being governed and it was getting
on.” Stalin in Wells’ eyes was a “lonely overbearing man… damned disagreeable,”
and yet possessed of “an intelligence far beyond dogmatism.” In The
Experiment, the description of the interview goes on for eight pages
(684 – 691). At moments, Stalin is “friendly and commonplace,” obtusely
recusant in seeing “any sort of parallelism with the processes and methods and
aims of Washington and Moscow,” “not a free impulsive brain nor a
scientifically organized brain,” and yet “never… a man more candid, fair and
honest” while also being “an exceptionally unsubtle Georgian.” The Big
Moustache sat facing Wells – this is the picture The Experiment gives
– and he “sucked thoughtfully at the pipe he had most politely asked my
permission to smoke.” But to the tenor-voiced Englishman, his precise equal in
height, and to the Englishman’s ideas, the vozhd could only
say, nyet, but “reflectively,” Wells adds. As the colloquy
approached its conclusion, three hours after it began, the two men “discussed
liberty of expression.” Stalin told Wells that “he admitted the necessity and
excellence of criticism, but preferred that it should be home-made by the party
within the party organization.” In fairness to Wells, whom Stalin undoubtedly
used, all this happened before the show-trials of 1936 and the attendant
Terror. When elements of the Stalin-personality turn up in fictional guise in
the later Wellsian authorship, the assessment has noticeably changed.
Mussolini receives one mention only in The
Experiment,in a paragraph that Wells devotes to rebutting the Carlylean
theory of the “Great Man.” All the Caesar- and Napoleon-types, Wells argues,
are a mere “outcome of systemic processes.” Wells likens such men to “the
pustules that break out through the skin of many growing young people.” Wells
believes that, “just now we are living in a world where such boils are breaking
out everywhere… from the highly distended Mussolini to our own little
black-head, Mosley.” Thus Mosley again.The modern dictator figures,
in the dialectic of this Cockney Hegelianism, as the blemish-like symptom of a
maturational growth-spurt in the global body-human, as it approaches the
frontier separating its adolescence from its adulthood. The global body-human
perversely resists the passage from the agonies and dramas of its adolescence
and shows great reluctance in giving up its fantasies of war and triumph.
World-Tantrum thwarts World-Spirit.
The dictatorial personality interested Wells from
close to the beginning of his long novelistic and essayistic career all the way
to his final creativity. The development of the dictator-type in Wellsian
fiction must be considered, however, in parallel with the author’s
appropriation of and meditation on another theme, that of Friedrich Nietzsche’s
“Superman,” as it appears in such works asBeyond Good and Evil (1886)
and Thus Spake Zarathustra (1883; 1885). Numerous Wellsian
characters fancy themselves this speculative next stage of human evolution. In
the Dickensian social novel Kipps (1905), a priggish young
lawyer named Walsingham “had been reading Nietzsche, and he thought that in all
probability he was the Non-Moral Overman referred to by that writer.”
Walsingham, in love with a freckled girl, “wanted to expand the theme of the
Non-Moral Overman in [her] ear.” This way is not a good way, as it turns out,
to seduce a freckled girl. Again in Tono-Bungay (1906), the nouveau-riche purveyor
of the novel’s namesake health-and-vigor tonic, one Edward Ponderevo, for a
time naively conceives his own identity with “this Overman idee, Nietzsche –
all that stuff.” Once again in The New Machiavelli (1911), the
first-person narrator Dick Remington argues in a political debate that, “all
human life was virtually aristocratic”; from which the conclusion follows that,
“the reality of human progress lay necessarily through the establishment of
freedoms for the human best and a collective receptivity and understanding.” A
loud objection comes from the gallery: “Superman rubbish – Nietzsche. Shaw!
Ugh!”
Yet another self-annointed “Superman” bodies himself
forth in the princely person of Karl Albert, the Prussian warlord who
instigates the catastrophic world-conflict inThe War in the Air (1906).
“Big and blond and virile, and splendidly non-moral,” Karl Albert “seemed [to
many to be] Nietzsche’s Overman revealed.” Having wrecked the world, the prince
latterly seems more like a Homeric primitive, a Cyclops, than an Übermensch; he
dies on Goat Island at Niagara Falls, unceremoniously shot down by the story’s
Cockney protagonist, who mutters justifiably as he fires his pistol, “Dem
that prince!”
The fact that Wells populates his novels with
ridiculous false “Supermen” should not however prejudice readers to conclude
that Wells dismissed Nietzsche’s vatic conjuration of the human telos. On
the contrary, Wells took the notion seriously, at least in the first half of
his career, although his notion of the “Superman” is, typically, his own. Thus
the giant children of The Food of the Gods (1902),
hypertrophied creatures of a nutritional additive that outperforms the guesses
of its concoctors, scheme by the story’s end to supersede mere humanity; and
Wells has persuaded his readers to see things from their point of view. Again
in The World Set Free (1913), a tale of Armageddon-like atomic
warfare and the subsequent reconstruction of the shattered world as a
technocratic unitary society, Wells puts onstage both a false “Superman” and,
as the narrative leads readers to believe, a real one. Ferdinand Charles, also
known as “the Slavic Fox,” is the Serbian monarch, who resists the efforts of
the novel’s utopians to disarm the sovereign nations and incorporate them in the
new world order; he mistakes his own egomania for actual exaltedness. Like Karl
Albert, Ferdinand Charles suffers the fate of being ignominiously gunned down
by the white hats. In distinctive contrast to “the Slavic Fox” is Marcus
Karenin, whom the ruling council of the incipient “World Republic” places in
charge of organizing uniform global education.
“Singular,” the narrator says, “in [his] being a
congenital cripple,” it is due to Karenin “far more than to any contemporary…
that self-abnegation, self-identification with the world spirit, was made the
basis of universal education.” Resembling Nietzsche’s “Blond Beast” not at all,
yet like Nietzsche’s Zarathustra, Karenin preaches “the release of man from
self.” According to Karenin’s light, the men and women of the “World Republic”
must learn “to shed the old Adam of instinctive suspicions, hostilities, and
passions, and to find themselves again in the great being of the universe,” as
the Wellsian phrase would have it. Or again, “The little circles of [people’s]
egotisms have to be opened out until they become arcs in the sweep of the
racial purpose.” Karenin achieves his effect by radiating what amounts to a
charisma of religious conviction in his cause. Wells the religious skeptic even
sees the educational crusade instigated by Karenin as the reinjection of
spiritual vitality into human affairs: “It was the clear vision of Marcus
Karenin much more than any other contemporary influence which brought
[religion] back into the texture of human life. He saw religion without
hallucinations, without superstitious reverence, as a common thing as necessary
as food and air, as land and energy to the life of man and the well-being of
the Republic.” Karenin, as the narrator tells readers, “rephrased [religion] to
the lights and perspectives of the new dawn,” as what one might call
racial-technocratic ecstasy and self-abnegation. At the end of the novel, in a
chapter that amounts to a Platonic dialogue, the dying Karenin goes so far as
to introduce the proposal that human beings might re-engineer themselves
biologically to consummate their social perfection.
Whether Wells himself would go so far poses a
difficulty for interpretation because in his fiction serious speculation and
satiric hyperbole mix themselves up thoroughly. Wells was ever a provocateur and
a thrower of elbows. One should nevertheless remark that Wells seems strongly
to endorse the utopia in The World Set Free, short of
Karenin’s proposal, and that his “World Republic” is governed dictatorially by
a self-appointed committee. The same situation prevails in The Shape of
Things to Come (1933) and in the film of that novel called Things
to Come (1936).
On the topics of dictators and dictatorship then Wells
shows himself ambiguous. He makes clear in The Experiment that
his lifelong project, his religious mania so to speak, was the
bringing about of a scientifically organized world state. He never entertained
the fantasy that such a state might be enacted piecemeal by the ballot box and
through legislation – hence perhaps his leniency or envy in such cases as Lenin
and Stalin. In a filmed Pathé News press-conference in 1941, for example,
before the United States entered the war, Wells told a roomful of shocked
reporters that, speaking as a private Englishman, he hoped that President
Roosevelt would not commit America to the conflict on the Allied side but
rather that America might join with Russia, also at the time a non-combatant,
to impose an armistice on all belligerents by means of air and sea blockades –
a reminiscence of the “Air Dictatorship” in The Shape of Things to Come –
and so establish de facto a system of non-consultative central
economic planning on a global scale. The imperial alliance would in
effect abolish national sovereignty, which Wells identified as the fecundating
context of the world’s Karl Alberts, Ferdinand Charleses, Oswald Mosleys, and
Benito Mussolinis. Now in two novels of his last phase, The Autocracy
of Mr. Parham (1934) and The Holy Terror(1939), Wells
returned to his exploration of the actual dictatorial century, creating in both
instances something like a roman-à-clef in which it is easy to
see reflections of actual persons, on whom the Experiment-author
comments abundantly in his copious non-fiction. Mosley, Mussolini, Hitler,
Lenin, and Stalin are all present in guises in both, but so is Wells himself.
Neither book is well-known; both are indeed quite unknown but then most of the
Wellsian authorship after 1910 remains unknown.
The Autocracy of Mr. Parham, published in a lavish edition with illustrations by
David Low, bears a subtitle, His Remarkable Adventures in this Changing
World, in the words appearing on the title page, but the original
slipcover adds a description of equal pertinence: “Mr. Wells has an ironic,
amusing and amazing vision of the next world war.” The comic, and by stages darkly
comic, narrative begins by introducing its namesake. An Oxford
professor of history who has written a biography of Cardinal Richelieu, the
fussy, pedantic Parham has been chasing millionaire-industrialist Sir Bussy
Woodcock in hopes of extracting funds for a high-toned review, speculatively christened The
Paramount Weekly.Through his not-yet-materialized magazine, Parham will
address to a select public his intuitions, for example, “how completely out of
tune was the confusion of current events with anything that one could properly
call fine history or fine philosophy” and how “from 1919 onward everything had
gone from bad to worse.” Parham thinks to himself that “an editor… partakes of
the nature of God.” Contemplating Sir Bussy, whose wealth is power, Parham
reminds himself to “beware of power that does not carry on and develop
tradition,” of which – the tradition, that is – he would be the guardian. At
one of Sir Bussy’s dinner affairs, Parham rehearses what he might say to his
sponsor. He would invoke “the grave high figures of the past… Cæsar,
Charlemagne, Joan of Arc” and numerous others who qualify as “builders of
Powers”; he would call on “armoured Angels” and again on “Our Imperial
Destinies… our Glorious Navy [and our] embattled flags!”
That Wells wrote The Autocracy almost
simultaneously with his Experiment more than justifies linking
Parham’s jingoism with the author’s report of his teenaged military fantasies
in the Kentish countryside. As for Woodcock – he resembles his author: Short,
full of energy, candid in speech, with an insatiable appetite for knowledge,
and in reception thereof ever a skeptic and always testing. Whenever Parham
delivers a finely worded aperçu, Woodcock responds with his
habitual, technically noncommittal, but practically dismissive,“Gaw!” Woodcock
keeps Parham around to serve as acicerone to museum-galleries and
concerts and for intellectual decoration at endless champagne dinners and
confabulations, all variously peopled.
Parham’s view of politics consists in his obsessesion
about Russia. He recites a set speech about Russia: “Here… in the very centre
of the Old World, illimitably vast, potentially more powerful than most of the
rest of the world put together… is Russia. It really does not
matter in the least whether she is Czarist or Bolshevik” because “she is the
final danger – the overwhelming enemy,” whom “we must circumvent.” Parham
sees in preemptive war with Russia the means for Britain to extend her imperial
rule over the whole world. If the enterprise were “fraught with danger” it
would also be “fraught… with limitless possibilities.” Exhausting the museum
galleries and sating himself musically, and having read or left half-read the
multitude of books that Parham foists on him, Sir Bussy latterly conceives an
interest in psychic phenomena, organizing séances in his London abode, Marmion
House, with Parham in attendance. Events turn fanciful. A human-sized globule
of ectoplasm, claiming the planet Mars as its current abode and identifying
itself as “The Master Spirit,” abruptly takes hold of Parham, transforming him
into that Caesar, Charlemagne, and Joan of Arc of his rhetoric, as “The Lord
Paramount.” Wells having sprinted into the realm of pure imagination (later he
explains it all rationally) he has licensed himself to make things to develop
with amazing swiftness.
The book and chapter titles tell the story in outline.
Book the Third is called The Strong Hand At Last and Book the
Fourth The Second World War. Chapters of Book the Third are
“An Arm Outstretched,” “The Coup d’Etat,” “The Lord Paramount Studies his
Weapons,” “A Little Tour of Europe,” and “War with Russia,” among others.
Chapters of Book the Fourth are “The Big Guns Go Off” and “Facing the Storm,”
among others. Wells possessed a keen ear for oratorical platitude, the
stock-in-trade of The Lord Paramount. Thus at the Cromwellian dismissal of
Parliament in “Coup d’Etat,” concerning the Lord Paramount, Wells offers this:
“It would have needed a soul entirely devoid of imagination to ignore the
profound historical significance of this occasion, and the Master was of
imagination all compact. His stern determination was mellowed but not weakened
by a certain element of awe at his own immense achievement.” Whereas formerly
“gladiators,” as Wells has Parham call them, had dominated Parliament; “now,”
as the Master Spirit sees it, “this once so potent assembly had waxed vulgar,
senile, labourist, garrulous and ineffective, and the day of rejuvenescence,
the restoration of the Phoenix, was at hand.” In turning out the Members and
Lords, the charismatic autocrat explains how, “for the good of His Majesty's
realm and the needs of our mighty Empire I must for a time take… things over
from you”; but, he adds, “when England has found her soul again, when her
health has been restored, then all her ancient liberties of speech and counsel
will return to her.”
In his Grand Council, the Master Spirit sketches his
theory of the state, which doubles as his theory of himself: “A state is a
militant organization, and a militant organization that is healthy and complete
must be militant through and through.” Economics is merely a less intensive
phase of armed conflict. As the Master Spirit explains to his counselors,
“Tariffs are now the normal everyday method of that same conflict for existence
between states which is the substance of all history and which finds its
highest, noblest expression in war.” Parham’s justification of trade-barriers,
identical incidentally to the real-life Mosley’s, resembles a hygienic
principle: “By means of tariffs… we protect our economic life from confusion
with the economic life of other states, we ensure the integrity of our
resources against the day of trial, [and] we sustain our allies and attack the
social balance and well-being of our enemies and competitors.” The inability to
conceive of the market separately from armed conflict tells of Parham’s
philosophical limitations. Parham can only think in bellicose terms. In the
Wellsian view, the mid-century, national dictators corresponded to a vapid,
sloganeering type of mentality; and they emerged against a social background of
mental degeneration. In The Autocracy, of course, Wells is
working in his comic-satiric manner, arranging set-piece imbroglios and scenes
of strutting and preening that anticipate Chaplain’s Great Dictator.Parham’s
“Little Tour of Europe,” for example, takes the Master Spirit around the
Continent to meet his counterparts in the other nations.
They all bear names reminiscent of the Parham-moniker.
Thus, “Von Barheim was now effectual master of Germany.” In France, the Master
Spirit confers with “Monsieur Parème,” who wears “the frock coat without which
all French statesmanship is invalid”; elsewhere the counterpart is “King
Paramitri” or “Count Paroli” or, absent any etiquette, “Parimo de Rivera.” As
in the Chaplain film, but once again anticipating rather than copying it, the scena
di gran buffo involves the Mussolini stand-in. Wells christens him
“Paramuzzi” and he lets him on, while cocking an eye, to be the “pattern of all
the militant great men of the age.” Low’s illustration is especially effective,
with the two gentlemen in the full panoply of their ridiculous uniforms. Parham
says to Paramuzzi at their meeting, “Here is the man,” and Paramuzzi replies, “Ecce
Homo.” Later at the Vittorio Emanuele monument, Paramuzzi calls
Parham, “Caesar Britannicus,” and Parham returns the compliment with, “Hail,
Cisalpine Caesar!” The two men experience in private, as Wells puts it, “a
moment of intense spiritual communion.” The two men see in one another “Power,”“Virility”
and “The Forces of Life.” Parham thinks to himself: “There was glamour about
this Paramuzzi,” who “could bring all the glory of Rome out of his sleeve; he
could make an old hat look like empire, and a swarming and swelling population
of illiterates adequate security for limitless loans.”
The Master Spirit’s war against Russia goes
catastrophically awry. Wells gives it to the businessmen and industrialists,
organized by Sir Bussy, to rescue the world from the bloody mess that Parham
has made of it. The businessmen consult no one, qualifying thus as dictators
too, but as they think in internationalist termsrather than
nationalist ones, Wells approves of them. The details will amuse anyone who
seeks out the book.
The Holy Terror came nearly six years after The Autocracy in
1940 although Wells had finished the manuscript before the outbreak of war in
September 1939. Elements of satire persist but on the whole the book,
purporting itself to be a biography of the first world-dictator, maintains a
serious atmosphere. In Rud Whitlow, a resentment-driven nihilist, Wells
synthesizes his lifetime’s store of personal impressions of men of power,
distilling his protagonist from equal parts of Lenin and Stalin, Hitler,
including the race-obsession, and Mussolini. As mentioned earlier, Oswald
Mosley appears in the narrative, under the name of Sir Horatio Bohun, in a
struggle with whom, Whitlow achieves his first political triumph. A strong note
of ambiguity informs the novel. Whitlow brings about a technocratic World
State, the self-confessed quasi-religious eschato-mania of his
writer-creator; he therefore mediates the realization of the supreme Wellsian
good. Yet the authorial attitude towards the character remains distinctly cool;
where nastiness colors the personality, as it frequently does, Wells refrains
from any mitigation of it. There is, for example, a good deal of homosexual
neurosis in Whitlow’s personality; he associates with men exclusively,
remaining completely alienated from women. Given the pre-politically correct
context of 1939-1940, readers can hardly evade the implication of profound
moral perversity. A streak of cruelty also emerges, as when young Whitlow
imagines hunting tigers with exploding bullets.
Like his author in youth, the adolescent Whitlow
indulges in extravagant military fantasies, informed by the habit that, “he
read voraciously… [in] the history of wars, conquests and campaigns,” whereupon
“he became Caesar, Alexander, Napoleon or Genghis Khan.” Whitlow also
imaginatively assumes such character-guises as Cromwell and Gustavus Adolphus –
crusader-supermen and vehement anti-Catholics. Whitlow’s steady lifelong
anti-Catholicism gives way abruptly late in his career to an outburst of raw
Jew-hatred. But the topic of Whitlow’s childhood reading is not quite closed.
“Fiction,” Wells adds, Whitlow “did not like” because “there were too many of
those incalculable girls in it.”
Where Parham advertises himself in his dream of power
as the Master Spirit, Whitlow early assumes the guise of “the Common Man.”
Despite Whitlow’s globalist, one-world agenda, the totalitarian order for which
he fights puts Anglo-Saxons über alles. It falls to the
Anglo-Saxon, wherever he is all over the world, but especially in England and
North America, to articulate “the Plain Needs of Common Sense.” Early in his
rise, adopting the rhetoric of tactical self-effacement, Whitlow says: “Leaders
are nothing… Parties are nothing… Governments are nothing… Nothing matters but
the common man.” Exchanging the principle of self-effacement for that of self-apotheosis,
Whitlow also says, “I am the Common Man.” This image of “the Common Man” or
“the Common Man Emergent,” as Whitlow thinks to himself in a moment of reverie,
“gathered together humanity, purified it, [and] rendered it.” Whitlow comes,
then, to redeem humanity from disarticulation and to provide it with its
concept. He invents a fictitious autobiography, in which he contextualizes his
own advent historically. From a time “before the dawn of history,” Whitlow
thinks, “the masterful men, the terrifying people, the cruelty dealers, the
punishers, the lords and priests, ruled without challenge, and the common man
knew his master and obeyed the tradition imposed upon him from the cradle to
the grave.” Thus, “History opened out for Rud as the Martyrdom of Man, the
sacrifice of the Common Man, in face of a gathering protest on the part of the
overpowered common people.” Whitlow, who “hated everything established,” gives
voice to that protest.
Whitlow’s monologues, some internal, some divulged
aloud to the inner circle of his movement, are of the essence in The
Holy Terror. The selection of topics might well begin with
Christianity. Unsurprisingly for one who invokes Nietzsche’s category of a
realm of action that lies “beyond good and evil,” Whitlow’s theory of
Christianity appears as though extracted, digest-wise, from The
Twilight of the Idols. Early Christianity “had been an outstanding
effort of the common man to find release from repressions”; it even constituted
“the principal and typical revolt,” and it articulated in “the common
fatherhood of God” what whitlow sees as the proper confraternity of the
auto-apotheotic Common Man. Christianity, however, “had been corrupted early,”
mixing itself in the mélange of Late-Antique cults and superstitions and
becoming “mineralised” in the Catholic hierarchy. “A swarm of Bishops and
Fathers accumulated all over it,” Whitlow says, “and they suffocated it.” Yet
the greatest deficiency of Christianity, in Whitlow’s analysis, concerns its
main codifier: “Instead of a Rud to express it, a lucid, simple Rud, it had
fallen beneath the sway of – Saint Paul.” In the much earlier World Set
Free, by contrast, Wells had put into his mouthpiece Marcus Karenin
words to the effect that the World Republic actually consummated early
Christianity on a higher level.
In The Holy Terror, Wells arranges
for one of Whitlow’s close collaborators to propose that very thesis from The
World Set Free, and to have Whitlow reject it with vehemence: “Clean all
this past stuff off history, and begin again,” he says; “if, after all, we are
only going back to primitive Christianity,” a thesis which he does not believe,
“then,” he says, “let these Christians find it out.” Comparing “the march on
Jerusalem” with “the march on Rome,” Whitlow finds the former lacking. “I’m a
better Nazarene than any Christian alive,” he boasts.
Once Whitlow, through a decade of vigorous publicity
and by organizing a universal mutiny during wartime, has made himself “Master
Director” of the “World Directorate,” his pathological tendencies come to the
fore. He organizes a GPU-like secret police force to quash dissent by torture
and murder; he promotes himself Stalin-like through global propaganda that
elevates him to quasi-divine status, a “God Caesar,” to cite the relevant
chapter-title, and elsewhere in the text the “World Trustee.” Schoolchildren
celebrate the “World Trustee” in those “idiotic songs” that Wells found so
objectionable at a meeting of Mosley’s British union of Fascists. Whitlow also
increasingly isolates himself behind ceremonial protocol and bureaucratic
compartmentalization. In degree like to his isolation he grows ever more
suspicious, seeing conspiracy everywhere. Naturally, “the searchlight of his
suspicions swung round upon the Jews”; whereupon, “focused, the Jew became a
burning centre of mental inflammation.” In Whitlow’s imagination, the Jews wax
intolerable to the extent that they resist Gleichschaltung with
his regime. “When all the rest of the world was becoming one community,”
Whitlow asks himself, “why did they still cling to their peculiarities of food
and observance?” Whitlow’s anti-Semitism settles in as the “nucleus,” in Wells’
terminology, “of a tangle of fear-born impulses to extravagant violence.”
While nursing his Jew-hatred and laying plans for a
global pogrom, Whitlow also turns his suspicion against his
longtime inner-circle, loyal men all; he has his chief of secret police arrest
and murder Chiffan, his old Oxford chum and the one person who might have
qualified as his actual friend. The signs point to an impending slaughter of
Jews and the degeneration of the World Directorate into a global
torture-and-murder tyranny, with the “World Trustee” in a good position to
exercise his disturbed libido at will. One inner-circle member
confides to his comrades: “No one of us ever foresaw the tremendous power of
modern mind-moulding,” and “the old Nazi and Soviet methods have been developed
now to a tremendous efficiency.” They resolve to assassinate Whitlow, only to
discover that the dictator’s private physician has planned likewise and has
executed his judgment in advance of their scheme. The inheritors of the regime
suppress knowledge of the leader’s death, fearing the consequences should the
news deprive the world of its idol. There are plenty of films and recorded
speeches to sustain the illusion. Carstall, who has also been a conspirator
with Whitlow from Whitlow’s beginnings, sums up the Wellsian theory of the
dictator: “All these fellows had the same quality of being driven to do something,
feeling that they were creatures of destiny, they all began like that, and
then, not being able to understand, not being able to give themselves simply to
the thing that gripped them, they went mad.” Thus, by conclusion, “History… is
a case-book for the alienist.”
The Holy Terror prefigures George Orwell’s 1984 in at
least one way. The cult of personality that Whitlow fosters for himself and
under the propaganda of which he retreats into homicidal paranoia anticipates
Orwell’s “Big Brother.” Critics tend to appreciate 1984 as
though its literary context was narrow; in fact Orwell’s dystopia belongs to a
tradition and the Wellsian authorship contributes mightily to that tradition.
Orwell might have extrapolated the socialist-totalitarian state of Oceania, for
example, from the pattern of The Holy Terror’s “World Directorate”
under Whitlow’s psychological disintegration. Orwell’s Oceania is what the
“World Directorate” would have become had not the assassin of Whitlow nipped
the trend in its bud. But then both Wells and Orwell drew on the same empirical
pattern – the Stalin dictatorship. The literary precedence of The Holy
Terror in the dystopian subgenre is nevertheless appreciable. As one
character says in breaching the topic of what to do about Whitlow, “This
infernal secret police of his is arresting people, making them vanish, killing
them.” A perfected surveillance-technology makes the nascent police-state even
more threatening. One is not so far from Orwell’s monitory “telescreen.” It
would be quite within the realm of plausibility, in fact, to trace elements of 1984 beyond The
Holy Terror all the way back to Wells’ own early dystopia, When
the Sleeper Wakes (1910), which depicts a future London enclosed under
a vast roof and ruthlessly supervised against dissidence, in thought or speech,
not to mention deed, by an authoritarian regime.
Yet the cofounders of the “World Directorate” in The
Holy Terror do succeed in nipping the evil trend in the bud and they
thereby get to have their cake and eat it. They preserve their revolutionary
abolition of finance, organized religion, and all other inherited institutions
and customs, and they presumably bequeath their achievement to the future.
However much Wells had come to distrust dictators by the time he got around to
writing The Holy Terror, he had never lost his conviction that
dictatorship was the unavoidable path to a reconstructed civilization. The
rescuers and renovators of civilization in The World Set Free, for
example, act according to a nakedly dictatorial plan. “We are just going to lay
down our differences and take over government,” they say frankly; and they are
going to do it “without any election… without any sanction,” under the
assumption that, “the governed will show their consent by silence.” Twenty
years on, the black-clad “Air Police” of “Wings over the World” in the film Things
to Come also acts, oblivious of any consultative principle. Raymond
Massey, in his role as John Cabal, supreme architect of the film’s novum
ordo seclorum, tells Ralph Richardson, in his role as the neo-feudal
“Chief” of a barbarous post-catastrophe remnant-state, “We shall clean you up.”
Seventy-five years of additional data unavailable to
Wells given his mortal dates convince me that Wells judged quite wrongly about
the rationale and desirability of the sovereign nation-state, whose
revivification today might constitute a bulwark against the international
attack on freedom. Wells was quite right, however, in seeing the century beyond
his death as the battleground of what, in ’42 to ’44 (1944),
he called “the crisis of the world revolution.” Although an ardent
internationalist and repudiator of the sovereign state, Wells increasingly
grasped, as the decades went past, that corruption and diremption might afflict
international agendas quite as readily as, in his view, they afflicted
nationalist agendas. By the time he wrote The Mind at the End of its tether, for
example, in 1945, he despaired of any salvation for civilized existence. I
repeat here what I have written elsewhere about Wells: That to the degree he
advocated a utopian scheme rooted in notions of progress and technocratic
management, to the same degree he warned, over and over, that catastrophe was
at least as likely as the “bout of sanity” by which his fictional utopias
generally have their birth. As for Wells’ internationalism, it differs greatly
from today’s internationalism: It is thoroughly Anglo-Saxon in concept, even in The
World Set Free to the extent of abolishing all natural languages
except English. Despite his quirks, Wells is today increasingly a writer with
whose work people on the intelligent right should grapple. I believe, for
example, that Wells would indignantly have rejected the Nanny State and would
have responded to Multiculturalism with a hearty, Gaw!
For all that – and on the basis of a lifetime’s loving
and conflicted involvement in his work – I commend Herbert George Wells to
intelligent readers.
No comments:
Post a Comment