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Green Nazis in Space: New Essays in Literature, Art, and Culture

Page 11

by James O'Meara


  He stood for a second or two, a queer little foreigner, jostled by waiters and a stream of guests.

  Even common objects become queer when associated with John and his kind:

  Both Ng-Gunko and Lo had to learn to fly; and all three had to become familiar with the mannerisms of their own queer aeroplane and their own queer yacht. . . .

  The table was crowded with unfamiliar eatables, especially tropical and sub-tropical fruits, fish, and a queer sort of bread

  After this semantic flood, it’s no surprise to find, fifty years later, in the film Manhunter, another freakishly tall albino, taunted in the tabloids with rumors of being “impotent with the opposite sex” and of “having slept with his mother,” kidnapping the reporter in question, tying him to a chair, and asking, “Do you imply that I’m queer?” And then deliver this evolutionary rant:

  You are privy to a great becoming, but you recognize nothing. To me, you are a slug in the sun. You are an ant in the afterbirth. It is your nature to do one thing correctly. Before me, you rightly tremble. But fear is not what you owe me. You owe me awe! 252

  Well, as we’ve seen, while John may have been born genetically superior, he still needs to withdraw from human society and undergo the “primitive” rites of the shamanic Männerbund, albeit alone, complete with mushrooms and stag hunting. The whole point of the queer powers he acquires, however, is to enable him to telepathically contact others of his kind, so as to create a real Männerbund.

  “At present I am looking for other people more or less like me, and to do it I become a sort of divided personality. Part of me remains where my body is, and behaves quite correctly, but the other, the essential I, goes off in search of them. Or if you like, I stay put all the time, but reach out in search of them. Anyhow, when I come back, or stop the search, I get a bit of a jolt, taking up the threads of ordinary life again.”

  “You never seem to lose the threads,” I said.

  “No,” he answered, “The incoming ‘I’ comes slick into possession of all the past experiences of the residential one, so to speak. But the sudden jump from God knows where to here gives a bit of a jar, all the same.”

  What John acquires is the awareness of his Higher Consciousness, and the ability not only move from lower to higher and back again, but even to live as both, simultaneously. This experience has been a part of Western esoterica ever since Plotinus,253 and, as I’ve noted before, we have our own home-grown and simplified version in the much reviled “New Thought” movement, most recently dumbed down yet further for Oprah’s hordes. Prentice Mulford’s Thoughts are Things provides an excellent summary:

  THERE belongs to every human being a higher self and a lower self—a self or mind of the spirit which has been growing for ages, and a self of the body, which is but a thing of yesterday. The higher self is full of prompting idea, suggestion and aspiration. This it receives of the Supreme Power. All this the lower or animal self regards as wild and visionary. The higher self argues possibilities and power for us greater than men and women now possess and enjoy. The lower self says we can only live and exist as men and women have lived and existed before us. The higher self craves freedom from the cumbrousness, the limitations, the pains and disabilities of the body. The lower self says that we are born to them, born to ill, born to suffer, and must suffer as have so many before us. The higher self wants a standard for right and wrong of its own. The lower self says we must accept a standard made for us by others—by general and long-held opinion, belief and prejudice.254

  In light of what we’ve said about New Thought, it’s no surprise that such consciousness, in addition to plugging John into a sort of mental cyberspace allowing him to contact other such minds, past, present and future, also allows him to develop a control over matter that will give him access to a powerful source of fuel, if not exactly “super powers” à la Green Lantern.255 And, as we will see, it will provide John with his own standard of morality.

  By the spiritual mind is meant a clearer mental sight of things and forces existing both in us and the Universe, and of which the race for the most part has been in total ignorance.

  The higher mind or mind of the spirit knows that it possesses other senses akin to those of physical sight and hearing, but more powerful and far-reaching.256

  The first contact he makes with a Homo superior is, of course, in an insane asylum, and hey, look, it’s our old pal Harry Partch!257

  He gave no trouble, they said, except that his health was very bad, and they had to nurse him a lot. He hardly ever spoke, and then only in monosyllables. He could understand simple remarks about matters within his ken, but it was often impossible to get him to attend to what was said to him. Yet oddly enough, he seemed to have a lively interest in everything happening around him. Sometimes he would listen intently to people’s voices; but not, apparently, for their significance, simply for their musical quality.258 He seemed to have an absorbing interest in perceived rhythms of all sorts. He would study the grain of a piece of wood, poring over it by the hour; or the ripples on a duck-pond. Most music, ordinary music invented by Homo sapiens, seemed at once to interest and outrage him; though when one of the doctors played a certain bit of Bach, he was gravely attentive, and afterwards went off to play oddly twisted variants of it on his queer pipe. Certain jazz tunes had such a violent effect on him that after hearing one record he would sometimes be prostrate for days. They seemed to tear him with some kind of conflict of delight and disgust. Of course the authorities regarded his own pipe-playing as the caterwauling of a lunatic.

  These are all recognizable Partch traits—the “monosyllables” refer to what he called “monophonic,” his intent to unify voice and music, ideally with one instrument,259 perhaps a “queer pipe.” We also find the violent repulsion from and urge to revamp all music, from Bach to jazz.

  And here is John’s reaction to the music of those “queer pipes”:

  “God! it was music,” he said. “If you could have heard it! I mean if you could have really heard it, and not merely as a cow might! It was lucid. It straightened out the tangles of my mind. It showed me just precisely the true, appropriate attitude of the adult human spirit to its world. Well, he played on, and I went on listening, hanging on to every note, to remember it. Then the attendant interrupted. He said this sort of noise always upset the other patients. It wasn’t as if it was real music, but such crazy stuff. That was why J. J. was really only allowed to play out of doors. . . .”

  This was precisely the case I made for Partch’s music in my earlier article, that it was based on the Traditional, or true, theory of Music as involving the control and purification of the mind, or soul—straightening out the tangles, as opposed to the deliberate ‘entangling’ of tonal, and especially “Romantic” music260—and bringing them into true alignment with the universe. To do that requires a true, or real, system of notes, with all the so-called “overtones” (i.e., the tones arbitrarily ignored by equal temperament), and

  “. . . yes, that’s the starting-point, the very first moment, of what J. J. was working out in his music. If you could hold that always, and fill it out with a whole world of overtones, you’d be well on the way to ‘us.’”261

  Later, this will be the music of John’s utopia, like Richard Halley at Galt’s Gulch. “Presently Tsomotre, the neckless Tibetan, moved to a sort of harpsichord, tuned to the strange intervals which the islanders enjoyed.” Like Partch, the islanders have devised their own instruments, tuned to the natural scale. “He played. To me his music was indescribably unpleasant. I could have screamed, or howled like a dog. When he had done, a faint involuntary murmur from several throats seemed to indicate deep approval.” True to John’s nickname for him, “Fido” can only howl; an all too typical response to a Partch concert!

  Partch also insisted that dance and theatre all be present—monophonic! One voice! Integrity!—and so we have a performance not unlike Partch’s Daphne of the Dunes.

  Shahîn rose from his seat, lo
oking with keen inquiry at Lo, who hesitated, then also rose. Tsomotre began playing once more, tentatively. Lo, meanwhile, had opened a huge chest, and after a brief search she took from it a folded cloth, which when she had shaken it out was revealed as an ample and undulatory length of silk, striped in many colours. This she wrapped around her. The music once more took definite form. Lo and Shahîn glided into a solemn dance, which quickened presently to a storm of wild movement. The silk whirled and floated, revealing the tawny limbs of Lo; or was gathered about her with pride and disdain. Shahîn leapt hither and thither around her, pressed toward her, was rejected, half accepted, spurned again. Now and then came moments of frank sexual contact, stylized and knit into the movement-pattern of the dance. The end suggested to me that the two lovers, now clinging together, were being engulfed in some huge catastrophe. They glanced hither and thither, above, below, with expressions of horror and exaltation, and at one another with gleams of triumph. They seemed to thrust some invisible assailant from them, but less and less effectively, till gradually they sank together to the ground. Suddenly they sprang up and apart to perform slow marionette-like antics which meant nothing to me. The music stopped, and the dance. As she returned to her seat, Lo flashed a questioning, taunting look at John.

  Not that any of this makes an impression on our hapless narrator, the appropriately nick-named “Fido”:

  Later, when I had described this incident in my notes, I showed my account of it to Lo. When she had glanced at it, she said, “But you have missed the point, you old stupid. You’ve made it into a love story. Of course, what you say is all right—but it’s all wrong too, you poor dear.”

  But let’s go back a bit to that “the true, appropriate attitude of the adult human spirit to its world” that J. J.’s music is supposed to inculcate, to which John’s colleagues give a “faint involuntary murmur” that “seemed to indicate deep approval.” This must be an actual doctrine, or better, account of, the nature of the Homo superior’s consciousness, what he sees with that Higher Mind of his. This will require us to first take another look at the encounter with Mr. Magnate, and then jump back to John’s next encounter, with what I’ll call “Spider Baby.”

  Of course, [John] was always either far too brilliant or far too ignorant of life to play his part in anything like a normal manner; Mr. Magnate shifted in his seat, but continued to look his part.

  And here’s John describing his encounter with the vapid intellectuals of Bloomsbury:

  The poor little flies find themselves caught in a web, a subtle mesh of convention, so subtle in fact that most of them are unaware of it. They buzz and buzz and imagine they are free fliers, when as a matter of fact each one is stuck fast on his particular strand of the web.

  This analysis made me feel uncomfortable, for though I was not one of “them” I could not disguise from myself that the same sort of condemnation might apply to me. John evidently saw my thoughts, for he grinned, and moreover indulged in an entirely vulgar wink. Then he said, “Strikes home, old thing, doesn’t it? Never mind, you’re not in the web. You’re an outsider. Fate has kept you safely fluttering in the backward North.”

  John’s alienation and objectivity, and his precocious, Magic Christian-like encounters with various social strata and professions, allow him to perceive humans as merely playing roles, within the inter-connected web of the universe. His later shamanic experiences—remember the mushrooms?—would only confirm this insight.262

  He gets a powerful, negative confirmation with his next encounter, with a deformed, infant-like child whose super-intellect has soured into pure hatred:

  He hated everything, including hate. And he hated it all with a sort of sacred fervour. And why? Because, as I begin to discover, there’s a sort of minute, blazing star of worship [Stapledon’s italics] right down in the pit of his hell. He sees everything from the side of eternity just as clearly as I do, perhaps more clearly; but—how shall I put it?—he conceives his part in the picture to be the devil’s part, and he’s playing it with a combination of passion and detachment like a great artist, and for the glory of God, if you understand what I mean.263And he’s right. It’s the only thing he can do, and he does it with style. I take off my hat to him, in spite of everything. But it’s pretty ghastly, really.

  All this sounds remarkably like Alan Watts’ description of “the real story” to be found in Hinduism or Zen, or indeed the “secret” Western traditions,264 and confirmed in mystical experience:

  So then, here is the drama: My metaphysics, let me be perfectly frank with you, are that there is the central self, you can call it god you can call it anything you like and it’s all of us. It’s playing all the parts of all the beings whatsoever, anywhere and everywhere and it’s playing a game of hide and seek with itself. It gets lost, it gets involved in most far out adventures, but in the end it always finds a way back to itself.265

  But especially of his way of shoe-horning Christianity into it, as “the most far-out game of them all”:

  The insides of most Protestant churches resemble courthouses or town halls, and the focal point of their services is a serious exhortation from a man in a black gown. No golden light, no bells, incense, and candles. No mystery upon an altar or behind an iconostasis. But people brought up in this atmosphere seem to love it. It feels warm and folksy, and leads, on the one hand, to hospitals, prison reform, and votes for all, and, on the other, to sheer genius for drabness, plain cooking ungraced with wine, and constipation of the bright emotions—all of which are considered virtues.

  If I try to set aside the innate prejudices which I feel against this religion, I begin to marvel at the depth of its commitment to earnestness and ugliness. For there is a point at which certain types of ugliness become fascinating, where one feels drawn to going over them again and again, much as the tongue keeps fondling a hole in a tooth. I begin to realize that those incredibly plain people, with their almost unique lack of color, may after all be one of the most astonishing reaches of the divine Maya—the Dancer of the world as far out from himself as he can get, dancing not-dancing.266

  The “true attitude to life,” the sight from the eternal side of things, is that of a vast cosmic web; one can in some moods find this comforting; in others, it is the nightmare vision of ‘being caught in a web,’ or of total determinism. John and his kind, like Watts, seem to find it to be the former.267

  Watts’ notion of “fascinating ugliness” leads us to another important theme: the disquieting or even repulsive “beauty” of John and his kind. Here is Jacqueline:

  But though passably ‘human,’ according to the standards of Homo sapiens, she was strange. Were I an imaginative writer, and not merely a journalist, I might be able to suggest symbolically something of the almost “creepy” effect she had on me, something of its remote and sleepy power. As it is I can only record certain obvious features, and in general that curious combination of the infantile, or even the foetal, with the mature. The protruding brow, the short broad nose, the great distance between the great eyes, the surprising breadth of the whole face, the marked furrow from nose to lips—all these characters were definitely foetal; and yet the precisely chiselled lips themselves and the delicate moulding of the eyelids produced an expression of subtle experience suggestive of an ageless divinity. To me at least, prepared of course by familiarity with John’s own strangeness, this strange face seemed to combine idiosyncrasy and universality. Here, in spite of a vaguely repulsive uncouthness, was a living symbol of womanhood. Yet here also was a being utterly different from any other, something unique and individual. When I looked from her to the most attractive girl in the room I was shocked to find that it was the normal beauty that was repulsive. With something like vertigo I looked once more at the adorable grotesque.

  Jacqueline, unlike J. J. and, in fact, most of John’s contactees268 has found a kind of modus vivendi:

  Of course she gave herself for money, like any member of her profession, or of any other professio
n. Nevertheless, her heart was in her work, and she chose her clients, not according to their power to pay, but according to their needs and their capacity to benefit by her ministrations. She seems to have combined in her person the functions of harlot, psycho-analyst and priest.

  This harks back to an old social character, the literate, free-spirited, delightfully risqué (if you go for that kind of thing)269 salon hostess of the French Enlightenment. Hence, her age, although her large eyes and short hair make her resemble a more recent, less intellectual type, the gamine, à la Gigi—she even has an elderly, crusty companion—actually her daughter!—for Hermione Gingold to play. The very American version would be the decidedly anti-intellectual and thoroughly mercenary Holly Golightly. (Capote hated the film in which Audrey Hepburn played her as Gigi.) She also seems to be what lot of modern, college educated prostitutes—or “sex workers”—like to think of themselves as: sort of a hands-on psychotherapist.270

  Ng-Gunko, John’s next contact, also connects with the idea of conventional ugliness becoming a higher kind of beauty, through the suggestion of higher realms or dimensions. As Guénon would point out, symbols need to be read inverted—terrestrial ugliness coming celestial beauty, and vice versa.271

 

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