- While
I was still a boy, I came to the conclusion that there were three grades of thinking;
and since I was later to claim thinking as my hobby, I came to an even stranger
conclusion - namely, that I myself could not think at all.
- I must
have been an unsatisfactory child for grownups to deal with. I remember how incomprehensible
they appeared to me at first, but not, of course, how I appeared to them. It was
the headmaster of my grammar school who first brought the subject of thinking
before me - though neither in the way, nor with the result he intended. He had
some statuettes in his study. They stood on a high cupboard behind his desk. One
was a lady wearing nothing but a bath towel. She seemed frozen in an eternal panic
lest the bath towel slip down any farther, and since she had no arms, she was
in an unfortunate position to pull the towel up again. Next to her, crouched the
statuette of a leopard, ready to spring down at the top drawer of a filing cabinet
labeled A-AH. My innocence interpreted this as the victim's last, despairing cry.
Beyond the leopard was a naked, muscular gentleman, who sat, looking down, with
his chin on his fist and his elbow on his knee. He seemed utterly miserable.
- Some
time later, I learned about these statuettes. The headmaster had placed them where
they would face delinquent children, because they symbolized to him to whole of
life. The naked lady was the Venus of Milo. She was Love. She was not worried
about the towel. She was just busy being beautiful. The leopard was Nature, and
he was being natural. The naked, muscular gentleman was not miserable. He was
Rodin's Thinker, an image of pure thought. It is easy to buy small plaster models
of what you think life is like.
- I had better explain that I was
a frequent visitor to the headmaster's study, because of the latest thing I had
done or left undone. As we now say, I was not integrated. I was, if anything,
disintegrated; and I was puzzled. Grownups never made sense. Whenever I found
myself in a penal position before the headmaster's desk, with the statuettes glimmering
whitely above him, I would sink my head, clasp my hands behind my back, and writhe
one shoe over the other.
- The headmaster would look opaquely at
me through flashing spectacles.
- "What are we going to do
with you?"
- Well, what were they going to do with
me? I would writhe my shoe some more and stare down at the worn rug.
- "Look
up, boy! Can't you look up?"
- Then I would look at the cupboard,
where the naked lady was frozen in her panic and the muscular gentleman contemplated
the hindquarters of the leopard in endless gloom. I had nothing to say to the
headmaster. His spectacles caught the light so that you could see nothing human
behind them. There was no possibility of communication.
- "Don't
you ever think at all?"
- No, I didn't think, wasn't thinking,
couldn't think - I was simply waiting in anguish for the interview to stop.
- "Then
you'd better learn - hadn't you?"
- On one occasion the headmaster
leaped to his feet, reached up and plonked Rodin's masterpiece on the desk before
me.
- "That's what a man looks like when he's really thinking."
- I surveyed the gentleman without interest or comprehension.
- "Go
back to your class."
- Clearly there was something missing
in me. Nature had endowed the rest of the human race with a sixth sense and left
me out. This must be so, I mused, on my way back to the class, since whether I
had broken a window, or failed to remember Boyle's Law, or been late for school,
my teachers produced me one, adult answer: "Why can't you think?"
- As
I saw the case, I had broken the window because I had tried to hit Jack Arney
with a cricket ball and missed him; I could not remember Boyle's Law because I
had never bothered to learn it; and I was late for school because I preferred
looking over the bridge into the river. In fact, I was wicked. Were my teachers,
perhaps, so good that they could not understand the depths of my depravity? Were
they clear, untormented people who could direct their every action by this mysterious
business of thinking? The whole thing was incomprehensible. In my earlier years,
I found even the statuette of the Thinker confusing. I did not believe any of
my teachers were naked, ever. Like someone born deaf, but bitterly determined
to find out about sound, I watched my teachers to find out about thought.
- There
was Mr. Houghton. He was always telling me to think. With a modest satisfaction,
he would tell that he had thought a bit himself. Then why did he spend so much
time drinking? Or was there more sense in drinking than there appeared to be?
But if not, and if drinking were in fact ruinous to health - and Mr. Houghton
was ruined, there was no doubt about that - why was he always talking about the
clean life and the virtues of fresh air? He would spread his arms wide with the
action of a man who habitually spent his time striding along mountain ridges.
- "Open air does me good, boys - I know it!"
- Sometimes,
exalted by his own oratory, he would leap from his desk and hustle us outside
into a hideous wind.
- "Now, boys! Deep breaths! Feel it right
down inside you - huge draughts of God's good air!"
- He would
stand before us, rejoicing in his perfect health, an open-air man. He would put
his hands on his waist and take a tremendous breath. You could hear the wind trapped
in the cavern of his chest and struggling with all the unnatural impediments.
His body would reel with shock and his ruined face go white at the unaccustomed
visitation. He would stagger back to his desk and collapse there, useless for
the rest of the morning.
- Mr. Houghton was given to high-minded
monologues about the good life, sexless and full of duty. Yet in the middle of
one of these monologues, if a girl passed the window, tapping along on her neat
little feet, he would interrupt his discourse, his neck would turn of itself and
he would watch her out of sight. In this instance, he seemed to me ruled not by
thought but by an invisible and irresistible spring in his nape.
- His
neck was an object of great interest to me. Normally it bulged a bit over his
collar. But Mr. Houghton had fought in the First World War alongside both Americans
and French, and had come - by who knows what illogic? - to a settled detestation
of both countries. If either country happened to be prominent in current affairs,
no argument could make Mr. Houghton think well of it. He would bang the desk,
his neck would bulge still further and go red. "You can say what you like,"
he would cry, "but I've thought about this - and I know what I think!"
- Mr. Houghton thought with his neck.
- There was
Miss. Parsons. She assured us that her dearest wish was our welfare, but I knew
even then, with the mysterious clairvoyance of childhood, that what she wanted
most was the husband she never got. There was Mr. Hands - and so on.
- I
have dealt at length with my teachers because this was my introduction to the
nature of what is commonly called thought. Through them I discovered that thought
is often full of unconscious prejudice, ignorance, and hypocrisy. It will lecture
on disinterested purity while its neck is being remorselessly twisted toward a
skirt. Technically, it is about as proficient as most businessmen's golf, as honest
as most politician's intentions, or - to come near my own preoccupation - as coherent
as most books that get written. It is what I came to call grade-three thinking,
though more properly, it is feeling, rather than thought.
- True,
often there is a kind of innocence in prejudices, but in those days I viewed grade-three
thinking with an intolerant contempt and an incautious mockery. I delighted to
confront a pious lady who hated the Germans with the proposition that we should
love our enemies. She taught me a great truth in dealing with grade-three thinkers;
because of her, I no longer dismiss lightly a mental process which for nine-tenths
of the population is the nearest they will ever get to thought. They have immense
solidarity. We had better respect them, for we are outnumbered and surrounded.
A crowd of grade-three thinkers, all shouting the same thing, all warming their
hands at the fire of their own prejudices, will not thank you for pointing out
the contradictions in their beliefs. Man is a gregarious animal, and enjoys agreement
as cows will graze all the same way on the side of a hill.
- Grade-two
thinking is the detection of contradictions. I reached grade two when I trapped
the poor, pious lady. Grade-two thinkers do not stampede easily, though often
they fall into the other fault and lag behind. Grade-two thinking is a withdrawal,
with eyes and ears open. It became my hobby and brought satisfaction and loneliness
in either hand. For grade-two thinking destroys without having the power to create.
It set me watching the crowds cheering His Majesty the King and asking myself
what all the fuss was about, without giving me anything positive to put in the
place of that heady patriotism. But there were compensations. To hear people justify
their habit of hunting foxes and tearing them to pieces by claiming that the foxes
like it. To hear our Prime Minister talk about the great benefit we conferred
on India by jailing people like Pandit Nehru and Gandhi. To hear American politicians
talk about peace in one sentence and refuse to join the League of Nations in the
next. Yes, there were moments of delight.
- But I was growing
toward adolescence and had to admit that Mr. Houghton was not the only one with
an irresistible spring in his neck. I, too, felt the compulsive hand of nature
and began to find that pointing out contradiction could be costly as well as fun.
There was Ruth, for example, a serious and attractive girl. I was an atheist at
the time. Grade-two thinking is a menace to religion and knocks down sects like
skittles. I put myself in a position to be converted by her with an hypocrisy
worthy of grade three. She was a Methodist - or at least, her parents were, and
Ruth had to follow suit. But, alas, instead of relying on the Holy Spirit to convert
me, Ruth was foolish enough to open her pretty mouth in argument. She claimed
that the Bible (King James Version) was literally inspired. I countered by saying
that the Catholics believed in the literal inspiration of Saint Jerome's Vulgate,
and the two books were different. Argument flagged.
- At last she
remarked that there were an awful lot of Methodists and they couldn't be wrong,
could they - not all those millions? That was too easy, said I restively (for
the nearer you were to Ruth, the nicer she was to be near to) since there were
more Roman Catholics than Methodists anyway; and they couldn't be wrong, could
they - not all those hundreds of millions? An awful flicker of doubt appeared
in her eyes. I slid my arm round her waist and murmured breathlessly that if we
were counting heads, the Buddhists were the boys for my money. But Ruth had really
wanted to do me good, because I was so nice. The combination of my arm and those
countless Buddhists was too much for her.
- That night her father
visited my father and left, red-cheeked and indignant. I was given the third degree
to find out what had happened. It was lucky we were both of us only fourteen.
I lost Ruth and gained an undeserved reputation as a potential libertine.
- So
grade-two thinking could be dangerous. It was in this knowledge, at the age of
fifteen, that I remember making a comment from the heights of grade two, on the
limitations of grade three. One evening I found myself alone in the school hall,
preparing it for a party. The door of the headmaster's study was open. I went
in. The headmaster had ceased to thump Rodin's Thinker down on the desk as an
example to the young. Perhaps he had not found any more candidates, but the statuettes
were still there, glimmering and gathering dust on top of the cupboard. I stood
on a chair and rearranged them. I stood Venus in her bathtowel on the filing cabinet,
so that now the top drawer caught its breath in a gasp of sexy excitement. "A-ah!"
The portentous Thinker I placed on the edge of the cupboard so that he looked
down at the bath towel and waited for it to slip.
- Grade-two thinking,
though it filled life with fun and excitement, did not make for content. To find
out the deficiencies of our elders bolsters the young ego but does not make for
personal security. I found that grade two was not only the power to point out
contradictions. It took the swimmer some distance from the shore and left him
there, out of his depth. I decided that Pontius Pilate was a typical grade-two
thinker. "What is truth?" he said, a very common grade two thought,
but one that is used always as the end of an argument instead of the beginning.
There is still a higher grade of thought which says, "What is truth?"
and sets out to find it.
- But these grade-one thinkers were few
and far between. They did not visit my grammar school in the flesh though they
were there in books. I aspired to them partly because I was ambitious and partly
because I now saw my hobby as an unsatisfactory thing if it went no further. If
you set out to climb a mountain, however high you climb, you have failed if you
cannot reach the top.
- I did meet an undeniably grade one
thinker in my first year at Oxford. I was looking over a small bridge in Magdalen
Deer Park, and a tiny mustached and hatted figure came and stood by my side. He
was a German who had just fled from the Nazis to Oxford as a temporary refuge.
His name was Einstein.
- But Professor Einstein knew no English
at that time and I knew only two words of German. I beamed at him, trying wordlessly
to convey by my bearing all the affection and respect that the English felt for
him. It is possible - and I have to make the admission - that I felt here were
two grade-one thinkers standing side by side; yet I doubt if my face conveyed
more than a formless awe. I would have given my Greek and Latin and French and
a good slice of my English for enough German to communicate. But we were divided;
he was as inscrutable as my headmaster. For perhaps five minutes we stood together
on the bridge, undeniable grade-one thinker and breathless aspirant. With true
greatness, Professor Einstein realized that any contact was better than none.
He pointed to a trout wavering in midstream.
- He spoke: "Fisch."
- My brain reeled. Here I was, mingling with the great, and yet
helpless as the veriest grade-three thinker. Desperately I sought for some sign
by which I might convey that I, too, revered pure reason. I nodded vehemently.
In a brilliant flash I used up half of my German vocabulary.
- "Fisch.
Ja. Ja."
- For perhaps another five minutes we stood side
by side. Then Professor Einstein, his whole figure still conveying good will and
amiability, drifted away out of sight.
- I, too, would be a grade-one
thinker. I was irreverent at the best of times. Political and religious systems,
social customs, loyalties and traditions, they all came tumbling down like so
many rotten apples off a tree. This was a fine hobby and a sensible substitute
for cricket, since you could play it all the year round. I came up in the end
with what must always remain the justification for grade-one thinking, its sign,
seal, and charter. I devised a coherent system for living. It was a moral system,
which was wholly logical. Of course, as I readily admitted, conversion of the
world to my way of thinking might be difficult, since my system did away with
a number of trifles, such as big business, centralized government, armies, marriage...
- It was Ruth all over again. I had some very good friends who
stood by me, and still do. But my acquaintances vanished, taking the girls with
them. Young women seemed oddly contented with the world as it was. They valued
the meaningless ceremony with a ring. Young men, while willing to concede the
chaining sordidness of marriage, were hesitant about abandoning the organizations
which they hoped would give them a career. A young man on the first rung of the
Royal Navy, while perfectly agreeable to doing away with big business and marriage,
got as red-necked as Mr. Houghton when I proposed a world without any battleships
in it.
- Had the game gone too far? Was it a game any longer? In
those prewar days, I stood to lose a great deal, for the sake of a hobby.
- Now
you are expecting me to describe how I saw the folly of my ways and came back
to the warm nest, where prejudices are so often called loyalties, where pointless
actions are hallowed into custom by repetition, where we are content to say we
think when all we do is feel.
- But you would be wrong. I dropped
my hobby and turned professional.
 | 
48.
If I were to go back to the headmaster's study and find the dusty statuettes still
there, I would arrange them differently. I would dust Venus and put her aside,
for I have come to love her and know her for the fair thing she is. But I would
put the Thinker, sunk in his desperate thought, where there were shadows before
him - and at his back, I would put the leopard, crouched and ready to spring ©
1961, William Golding |  |
|