SCENE in a tobacconist's shop. Two American soldiers
sprawling across the counter, one of them just sober enough to make
unwanted love to the two young women who run the shop, the other at
the stage known as 'fighting drunk'. Enter Orwell in search of
matches. The pugnacious one makes an effort and stands upright.
Soldier: 'Wharrishay is, perfijious Albion. You heard
that? Perfijious Albion. Never trust a Britisher. You can't trust
the British.'
Orwell: 'Can't trust them with what?'
Soldier: 'Wharrishay is, down with Britain. Down with the
British. You wanna do anything about that? Then you can-well do
it.' (Sticks his face out like a tomcat on a garden wall.)
Tobacconist: 'He'll knock your block off if you don't shut
up.'
Soldier: 'Wharrishay is, down with Britain.' (Subsides
across the counter again. The tobacconist lifts his head delicately
out of the scales.)
This kind of thing is not exceptional. Even if you steer
clear of Piccadilly with its seething swarms of drunks and whores,
it is difficult to go anywhere in London without having the feeling
that Britain is now Occupied Territory. The general consensus of
opinion seems to be that the only American soldiers with decent
manners are the Negroes. On the other hand the Americans have their
own justifiable complaints-in particular, they complain of the
children who follow them night and day, cadging sweets.
Does this sort of thing matter? The answer is that it might
matter at some moment when Anglo-American relations were in the
balance, and when the still-powerful forces in this country which
want an understanding with Japan were able to show their faces
again. At such moments popular prejudice can count for a great
deal. Before the war there was no popular anti-American feeling in
this country. It all dates from the arrival of the American troops,
and it is made vastly worse by the tacit agreement never to discuss
it in print.
Seemingly it is our fixed policy in this war not to
criticize our allies, nor to answer their criticisms of us. As a
result things have happened which are capable of causing the worst
kind of trouble sooner or later. An example is the agreement by
which American troops in this country are not liable to British
courts for offences against British subjects-practically
'extra-territorial rights'. Not one English person in ten knows of
the existence of this agreement; the newspapers barely reported it
and refrained from commenting on it. Nor have people been made to
realize the extent of anti-British feeling in the United States.
Drawing their picture of America from films carefully edited for
the British market, they have no notion of the kind of thing that
Americans are brought up to believe about us. Suddenly to discover,
for instance, that the average American thinks the U.S.A. had more
casualties than Britain in the last war comes as a shock, and the
kind of shock that can cause a violent quarrel. Even such a
fundamental difficulty as the fact that an American soldier's pay
is five times that of a British soldier has never been properly
ventilated. No sensible person wants to whip up Anglo-American
jealousy. On the contrary, it is just because one does want a good
relationship between the two countries that one wants plain
speaking. Our official soft-soaping policy does us no good in
America, while in this country it allows dangerous resentments to
fester just below the surface.
* * *
SINCE 1935, when pamphleteering revived, I have been a steady
collector of pamphlets, political, religious and what-not. To
anyone who happens to come across it and has a shilling to spare I
recommend
The 1946 MS by Robin Maugham, published by the War Facts
Press. It is a good example of that small but growing school of
literature, the non-party radical school. It purports to describe
the establishment in Britain of a Fascist dictatorship, starting in
1944 and headed by a successful general who is (I think) drawn from
a living model. I found it interesting because it gives you the
average middle-class man's conception of what Fascism would be
like, and more important, of the reasons why Fascism might succeed.
Its appearance (along with other similar pamphlets I have in my
collection) shows how far that average middle-class man has
travelled since 1939, when Socialism still meant dividing the money
up and what happened in Europe was none of our business.
* * *
WHO wrote this?
As we walked over the Drury Lane gratings of the
cellars a most foul stench came up, and one in particular that I
remember to this day. A man half dressed pushed open a broken
window beneath us, just as we passed by, and there issued such a
blast of corruption, made up of gases bred by filth, air breathed
and re-breathed a hundred times, charged with the odours of
unnamable personal uncleanliness and disease, that I staggered to
the gutter with a qualm which I could scarcely conquer. . . I did
not know, until I came in actual contact with them, how far away
the classes which lie at the bottom of great cities are from those
above them; how completely they are inaccessible to motives which
act upon ordinary human beings, and how deeply they are sunk beyond
ray of sun or stars, immersed in the selfishness naturally begotten
of their incessant struggle for existence and incessant warfare
with society. It was an awful thought to me, ever present on those
Sundays, and haunting me at other times; that men, women and
children were living in brutish degradation, and that as they died
others would take their place. Our civilization seemed nothing but
a thin film or crust lying over a bottomless pit and I often
wondered whether some day the pit would not break up through it and
destroy us all.
You would know, at any rate, that this comes from some
nineteenth-century writer. Actually it is from a novel, Mark
Rutherford's
Deliverance. (Mark Rutherford, whose real name was Hale
White, wrote this book as a pseudo-autobiography.) Apart from the
prose, you could recognize this as coming from the nineteenth
century because of that description of the unendurable filth of the
slums. The London slums of that day were like that, and all honest
writers so described them. But even more characteristic is that
notion of a whole block of the population being so degraded as to
be beyond contact and beyond redemption.
Almost all nineteenth-century English writers are agreed
upon this, even Dickens. A large part of the town working class,
ruined by industrialism, are simply savages. Revolution is not a
thing to be hoped for: it simply means the swamping of civilization
by the sub-human. In this novel (it is one of the best novels in
English) Mark Rutherford describes the opening of a sort of mission
or settlement near Drury Lane. Its object was 'gradually to attract
Drury Lane to come and be saved'. Needless to say this was a
failure. Drury Lane not only did not want to be saved in the
religious sense, it didn't even want to be civilized. All that Mark
Rutherford and his friend succeeded in doing, all that one could
do, indeed, at that time, was to provide a sort of refuge for the
few people of the neighbourhood who did not belong to their
surroundings. The general masses were outside the pale.
Mark Rutherford was writing of the seventies, and in a
footnote dated 1884 he remarks that 'socialism, nationalization of
the land and other projects' have now made their appearance, and
may perhaps give a gleam of hope. Nevertheless, he assumes that the
condition of the working class will grow worse and not better as
time goes on. It was natural to believe this (even Marx seems to
have believed it), because it was hard at that time to foresee the
enormous increase in the productivity of labour. Actually, such an
improvement in the standard of living has taken place as Mark
Rutherford and his contemporaries would have considered quite
impossible.
The London slums are still bad enough, but they are nothing
to those of the nineteenth century. Gone are the days when a single
room used to be inhabited by four families, one in each corner, and
when incest and infanticide were taken almost for granted. Above
all, gone are the days when it seemed natural to write off a whole
stratum of the population as irredeemable savages. The most
snobbish Tory alive would not now write of the London working class
as Mark Rutherford does. And Mark Rutherford-like Dickens, who
shared his attitude-was a Radical! Progress does happen, hard
though it may be to believe it, in this age of concentration camps
and big beautiful bombs.