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Somerset Maugham
by
Poor Old Willie
A review by Christopher Hitchens
Here is the opening sentence of Anthony Burgess's Earthly
Powers (1980) incidentally, one of the most underrated English novels
of the past century: "It was the afternoon of my eighty-first birthday, and
I was in bed with my catamite when Ali announced that the archbishop had come
to see me."
One knows at once who is the object of this pastiche. One knows it before "Geoffrey,"
described tersely as "my Ganymede or male lover as well as my secretary,"
is further described as responding to the intrusion by "pulling on his
overtight summer slacks." Yet one is tempted to continue quoting, about
the Mediterranean villa and the goings-on there ("I lay a little while,
naked, mottled, sallow, emaciated, smoking a cigarette that should have been
postcoital but was not"). This is quite simply because the parody is so
much better than anything that W. Somerset Maugham ever wrote himself. Poor
old "Willie" was more given to openings like this: "I have never
begun a novel with more misgiving. If I call it a novel it is only because I
don't know what else to call it."
Thus the deadly kickoff to The
Razor's Edge, a story that furthermore turns out to be narrated by someone
named Maugham. There was a time when many readers thought this kind of thing
to be profound, and quite the cat's meow when it came to the delineation of
searing human emotion. Even at that time, however, one shrewd writer and
also near-perfect pasticheur saw through it without too much difficulty.
"How about old S. Maugham, do you think?" P. G. Wodehouse wrote to
Evelyn Waugh.
"I've been re-reading a lot of his stuff, and I'm wondering a bit about
him. I mean, surely one simply can't do that stuff about the district officer
hearing there's a white man dying in a Chinese slum and it turns out that
it's gay lighthearted Jack Almond, who disappeared and no-one knew what had
become of [him] and he went right under, poor chap, because a woman in England
had let him down."
Well, it turned out that one simply could do that stuff, and go on doing it.
Sometimes, for the sake of variety, it's the white woman who goes right under,
or who succumbs in other ways to the lush madness of the tropics. Such is the
case in "Before the Party," "P&O," and "The Force
of Circumstance," though with females there is usually the redemptive possibility
of a return by steamship to dear old England. The best of the sweltering colonial
stories, which I can remember re-reading for the sake of atmosphere in a Malayan
hotel once patronized by Maugham, is "The Outstation." Here we meet
Warburton, a solitary middle-aged Englishman who is the resident administrator
of a jungly area somewhere in the Malay archipelago. Rigid in respect of the
upper lip, he sticks to a stern routine of exercises and always dresses in formal
attire for dinner. His copy of the London Times arrives by sea mail six
weeks late, and sometimes several successive days' editions are delivered by
the same post, but he disciplines himself to open them one at a time, in strict
order. The greatest test of this practice comes during the faraway Battle of
the Somme, when by opening some later editions he could easily discover the
outcome. But Warburton forces himself to keep his nerve, and breaks the wrappers
seriatim. The effect is that of Conrad in tweeds. Maugham's overall debt to
Conrad is so evident that one usually finishes by putting him down and picking
up the real thing.
Just as he was a character in one of his best-known novels, so Maugham worked
assiduously to create a persona for himself in life. And the life was, according
to this admirable biography, a good deal more exquisite, dramatic, torrid, and
tragic than any of the works. Born and brought up in France, Maugham lost his
parents when quite young and from then on was farmed out to mean relatives and
cruel, monastic boarding schools. The traditional ration of bullying, beating,
and buggery seems to have been unusually effective in his case, leaving him
with a frightful lifelong speech impediment and a staunch commitment to homosexuality.
(Ashenden the name of his secret-agent character, was also the name of
a comely youth at the King's School in Canterbury, where Maugham served his
term, so to speak.)
An ideal way to "lock in" homosexual disposition is probably to spend
time as a gynecologist in a slum district of London which, astonishingly
enough, is what the fastidious young man did. Though he would ultimately abandon
medicine, he passed considerable time delivering babies in the abysmal squalor
of Lambeth, on the south bank of the River Thames. As part of his training he
witnessed cesarean births in the hospital, where death was not uncommon. The
experience gave him the raw material for Liza
of Lambeth, his first novel, and also made him surprisingly radical in his
infrequently expressed political views, which were strongly sympathetic to the
Labour Party's social-welfare proposals. The arbitrariness of death and suffering,
moreover, persuaded him that religious belief was merely fatuous.
Throughout Jeffrey Meyers's book one is reminded of the remarkable difference
made to English letters by the Victorian-era law that prohibited homosexual
conduct. Maugham was a young man during the Oscar Wilde scandal, and he developed
all the habits of subterfuge that were necessary to his survival. It seems certain
that he married Syrie Wellcome partly as "cover," and thereby doomed
himself to decades of misery and litigation. But Meyers allows us to speculate
that he did this, and also embarked on a dismal exercise in fatherhood, in order
to satisfy himself as a writer that he had done everything at least once. (My
contribution to the gay-marriage debate would be this: remember what vast unhappiness
was generated in the days when homosexuals felt obliged to marry heterosexuals.)
Syrie was a greedy and impossible bitch to begin with, and did not improve upon
intimate acquaintance, or want of acquaintance, of that kind. If one scans the
few and cringe-making attempts to describe man-woman sex in Maugham's fiction,
or if one attempts to infer anything of his conjugal relations, one is forced
to picture him screwing his courage to the sticking place (or perhaps vice versa).
One of the many great appeals of war for men is that it allows and legitimizes
flight from domestic entrapment. The year 1914 his own fortieth year afforded
Maugham just this chance of deliverance. He spoke French perfectly and he had
a medical qualification, and before his only child, Elisabeth (naturally called
"Liza" for most of her life), was born he had volunteered for the
Western Front. The work of an ambulance man in wartime was the perfect counterpoint
to gynecology and has a vivid connection to gay iconography, as we know
from the poetry of Walt Whitman and also the work of Wilfred Owen and Yukio
Mishima. It's not by coincidence that the pierced and bleeding nudity of Saint
Sebastian (whose name is shared by Waugh's epicene hero in Brideshead
Revisited, with the addition of "Flyte" to suggest arrows) is
the supreme symbol here. Not long after his arrival in the trenches Maugham
met a dashing young American named Gerald Haxton, and never slept with a woman
again. He had found the great entanglement of his life, and though Haxton was
every bit as bitchy and greedy as Syrie, and exhibited many other vices as well,
he seems never or at any rate seldom to have been boring. For the
next several decades it was part of Maugham's job to look after the person whom
he'd ostensibly hired to look after him, and to keep him out of jail.
The succeeding interlude in Maugham's life was also ready-made for his purposes
as a popular novelist. He was recruited by British intelligence. For some reason
they wanted to send him to Western Samoa, which had been German-occupied until
1914. This was his introduction to the Pacific. In a subsequent letter unearthed
by Meyers, Maugham explained his long connection with the region thus:
"The exotic background was forced upon me accidentally by the fact that
during the war I was employed in the Intelligence department, and so visited
parts of the world which otherwise I might not have summoned up sufficient
resolution to go to."
Note the slight clumsiness, which seems to have inflected everything Maugham
ever wrote. Out of this episode, however, came The
Moon and Sixpence, a rather prettily done fictionalization of that other
great refugee from domesticity, Paul Gauguin.
The ludicrous failures of British and American intelligence during the Russian
Revolution, retold many times through the biographies of Bruce Lockhart and
Sidney Reilly, can be encapsulated in the single fact that in mid-1917 Somerset
Maugham was dispatched from the Pacific to Saint Petersburg as chief agent.
He had never visited the country before and had only a nodding acquaintance
with the language. He made the trip by railway across Siberia, and in the preface
to Ashenden he wrote about it in this manner:
"I felt the lonely steppes and the interminable forests; the flow of
the broad Russian rivers and all the toil of the countryside; the ploughing
of the land and the reaping of the ripe wheat; the sighing of the wind in
the birch trees; the long months of dark winter; and then the dancing of the
women in the villages and the youths bathing in shallow streams on summer
evenings."
Only the haunting strings of the balalaika, the warm scent of the samovar, and
the glimpse of an onion dome would be required to make this the perfect summary
of all clichés about Russia. Moreover, the ploughing and reaping bit
was presumably "felt" secondhand, since the salient fact of the moment
was that there was no bread. Indeed, the Bolshevik slogan "Peace, Bread,
and Land" was enough in itself to negate the British aim of staving off
revolution while continuing to insist on Russian participation in the war. It
did not, to his credit, take Maugham very long to see that his task was an impossible
one. He gave an account of a meeting with Kerensky, the preferred British candidate,
that confirms the opinion later expressed in my hearing by Isaiah Berlin that
Kerensky was "one of the great wets of history."
A latent connection has often been supposed to exist between homosexuality
and espionage. This seems to "work" in the cases of Anthony Blunt
and Guy Burgess, but it emphatically does not explain the (rather superior)
performances of Kim Philby and Graham Greene. Elements of secrecy and disguise
and "code" may be innate in the gay makeup, but they didn't confer
any advantage on Maugham when he was confronted with Lenin and Trotsky. It was
simply a matter of drawing realistic conclusions, which he generally did. In
any case, by that time he was leading enough of a double life already. And,
as for so many of the homo duplex English literary queens of that epoch, the
solution was abroad.
Maugham's splendid exile at the Villa Mauresque, on the coast between Nice
and Monte Carlo, was the centerpiece of his reputation as well as the answer
to his problems. No longer would he have to fear the deportation of Gerald Haxton,
who as an American was constantly running that risk in his trawlings through
the bars of London. France was Maugham's birthplace, and the British tax inspectors
couldn't follow him there either. He could shelter his growing literary income
and his private life at the same time. The villa had been built by the odious
King Leopold II of Belgium, as a place to house his personal confessor. (Not
even Anthony Burgess could have made that up.) It had a Moorish style, as the
name implies, with some fake-Renaissance appurtenances, but Maugham removed
the vulgar cupola, built a library, and began to assemble a collection of Oriental
art and classical painting.
Comparable, I suppose, to Harold Acton's celebrated retreat in Florence, and
visited by critics such as Kenneth Clark and Raymond Mortimer, the villa managed
to be at once a museum and a discreet place of resort for what was later to
be called the Homintern. That aspect to one side, every page of description
seems to contain a useful hint for one's own retirement: the Bernini fountain,
for instance, and the specially planted avocado trees, with a skilled resident
cook to transform the luscious green fruit into an ice cream flavored with rum.
(This contrasts with the rebarbative lobster ice cream served by Ribbentrop
at a dinner recorded in "Chips": The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon.)
Quentin Crisp was entranced, and summed up Maugham as one of "the stately
homos of England." Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy were slightly
aghast when the tireless staff unpacked and laid out all their belongings, including
the tubes of lubricant and the powder for warding off crab lice. Edna St. Vincent
Millay, making a stop at the villa at a time when Noël Coward and Cecil
Beaton were of the party, exclaimed loudly, "'Oh Mr. Maugham, it's fairy
land here!' ... Noël and Cecil were just a bit taken aback." This
is all quite good fun (Maugham to Emerald Cunard, excusing himself for leaving
early: "I have to keep my youth." Cunard to Maugham: "Then why
didn't you bring him with you?"), but it does begin to pall after a bit,
as it must have done in fact.
Things were not all brittle and witty and artistic, in any case. The Villa
Mauresque exerted a magnetic force on spongers and toadies and climbers of all
sorts, and poor Maugham was always finding his bookshelves and wine cellar and
bric-a-brac subjected to shameless pilfering. Gerald Haxton, caught between
the twin local lures of the Monte Carlo casinos and the waterfront full of sailors,
became mad, bad, and dangerous to know. Through it all, and even through the
Second World War, which saw him expelled from Cap Ferrat, and during a long
and more respectably senescent friendship with his contemporary Winston Churchill,
Maugham kept to a rigorous regime at his desk, and turned out third-rate prose
by the yard, or the furlong. If he put his genius into his life and property
rather than his work, it was because the former were apter repositories for
such talent as he possessed.
The main contradiction seems to be this: Maugham was gay, all right (he probably
exaggerated when he said that he was one-quarter "normal"), but he
wasn't especially pleased about the fact. Pursuing a pet artistic theory of
his, that the paintings of El Greco were revelations of the aesthetic of a repressed
homosexual, he chose to phrase it like this:
"It cannot be denied that the homosexual has a narrower outlook on the
world than the normal man. In certain respects the natural responses of the
species are denied him. Some at least of the broad and typical emotions he
can never experience ... A distinctive trait of the homosexual is a lack of
deep seriousness over certain things that normal men take seriously. This
ranges from an inane flippancy to a sardonic humour."
Deciding that "the homosexual can never reach the supreme heights of genius,"
as Maugham did, may be slightly preferable to the tiresome insistence of some
gays that all great artists have been members of the club. However, if one merely
keeps the name W. H. Auden in mind while reading the above passage, one sees
that Maugham's difficulty was not just a tinge of self-hatred but a real inability
to see literary "genius" when he encountered it. (Though Auden, by
the way, rather liked his stuff.) And this was not merely a question of his
particular repression or guilt. He just got things wrong. One could hardly classify
Kingsley Amis's Lucky
Jim as a gay novel, even subliminally, yet when it was published Maugham
wrote a review praising Amis for his outright attack on the young barbarians
("they are scum") who were then threatening English campuses with
their beery, plebeian subversiveness. As a satire on the "Angry Young Men"
this would have been delicious (and in the long run rather prescient), but it
became painfully apparent that Maugham was being entirely and pedantically literal.
See for yourself: pluck down The Razor's Edge from the shelf. Elliot
Templeton, in lieu of characterization, is described as "well-favored,
bright, a good dancer, a fair shot, and a fine tennis player." More effort
is expended on describing the rugs and drawings that he owns. The sending of
flowers and chocolates is alluded to as if it were a breathless social secret,
and repeated in the first few pages. "Gregory Brabazon, notwithstanding
his name, was not a romantic creature." Come again? A girl enters a room
during dinner and asks,
"Are we late? ... I've brought Larry back. Is there anything for him
to eat?"
"I expect so," smiled Mrs. Bradley. "Ring the bell and tell
Eugene to put another place."
"He opened the door for us. I've already told him."
So that was a waste of dialogue, wasn't it? A little further on we learn of
Gray Maturin that "though built on so large a scale he was finely proportioned,
and stripped he must have been a fine figure of a man." Presumably this
would also be true of him when unstripped.
I deliberately did not look up Edmund Wilson's once celebrated polemic against
the terrifying banality of The Razor's Edge before revisiting the book
myself, but I defy anyone to come to a different conclusion. Even Gore Vidal,
himself no stranger to the Mediterranean-villa milieu, was compelled to agree
that Maugham's success was, in effect, in writing for people who did not have
a clue about English as a medium for either tragedy or comedy. I would add that
mass wants class and always has, and that without the snobbery and the knowing
references to fine chefs, splendid galleries, and refined houses, the enterprise
wouldn't have stood a chance. But the old boy did show generosity and patience,
and set up a prize in his name that encouraged many young writers, among them
Kingsley Amis. Despite his exile and his increasingly distraught public and
private life, Maugham eventually received an honor from the Crown but it
was for "services to literature," rather than for literature itself,
and this distinction represents all the difference in the world.
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