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George
Orwell As I Please Tribune, 27 October 1944 |
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Reading, a week or two ago, Mr
C.
S. Lewis’s recently-published book, Beyond Personality (it is a
series of reprinted broadcasts on theology), I learned from the blurb on the
dust jacket that a critic who should, and indeed does, know better had
likened an earlier book, The Screwtape Letters, to The Pilgrim’s
Progress. ‘I do not hesitate to compare Mr Lewis’s achievement with
Pilgrim’s Progress’ were his quoted words. Here is a sample,
entirely representative, from the later book:
Well, even on the human level, you know, there are two kinds of pretending. There’s a bad kind, where the pretence is instead of the real thing, as when a man pretends he’s going to help you instead of really helping you. But there’s also a good kind, where the pretence leads up to the real thing. When you’re not feeling particularly friendly but know you ought to be, the best thing you can do, very often, is to put on a friendly manner and behave as if you were a much nicer chap than you actually are. And in a few minutes, as we’ve all noticed. you will be really feeling friendlier than you were. Very often the only way to get a quality is to start behaving as if you had it already. That’s why children’s games are so important. They’re always pretending to be grown-ups – playing soldiers, playing shop. But all the time they are hardening their muscles and sharpening their wits, so that the pretence of being grown-ups helps them in earnest. The book is like this all the way through, and I think
most of us would hesitate a long time before equating Mr Lewis with Bunyan.
One must make some allowance for the fact that these essays are reprinted
broadcasts, but even on the air it is not really necessary to insult your
hearers with homey little asides like ‘you know’ and ‘mind you’, or
Edwardian slang like ‘awfully’, ‘jolly well’, ‘specially’ for
‘especially’. ‘awful cheek’ and so forth. The idea, of course, is to
persuade the suspicious reader, or listener, that one can be a Christian and
a ‘jolly good chap’ at the same time. I don’t imagine that the attempt
would have much success, and in any case the cotton wool with which the
B.B.C. stuffs its speakers’ mouths makes any real discussion of
theological problems impossible, even from an orthodox angle. But Mr
Lewis’s vogue at this moment, the time allowed to him on the air and the
exaggerated praise he has received, are bad symptoms and worth noticing. I notice that in his new book, Adam and Eve, Mr
Middleton Murry
instances the agitation against Mosley’s
release from internment as a sign of the growth of totalitarianism,
or the totalitarian habit of mind, in this country. The common people, he
says, still detest totalitarianism: but he adds in a later footnote that the
Mosley business has shaken this opinion somewhat. I wonder whether he is
right. On the face of it, the demonstrations against Mosley’s release were
a very bad sign. In effect people were agitating against Habeas
Corpus. In 1940 it was a perfectly proper action to intern Mosley, and
in my opinion it would have been quite proper to shoot him if the Germans
had set foot in Britain. When it is a question of national existence, no
government can stand on the letter of the law: otherwise a potential
quisling has only to avoid committing any indictable offence, and he can
remain at liberty, ready to go over to the enemy and act as their gauleiter
as soon as they arrive. But by 1943 the situation was totally different. The
chance of a serious German invasion had passed, and Mosley (though possibly
he may make a come-back at some future date – I won’t prophesy about
that) was merely a ridiculous failed politician with varicose veins. To
continue imprisoning him without trial was an infringement of every
principle we are supposedly fighting for. |
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Copyright
The Estate of Eric Blair Reproduced here under educational Fair Use law |
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