Not everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, Nicholas Reid recommends "something old" that is still well worth reading. "Something old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique classic to a good book first published five or more years ago.
A current
American attempt at a novel with a broad social sweep put me in mind of an
American novel that really does have such a sweep.
It’s a curious fact of our age
that we sometimes read novels only after
we have seen film or television adaptations of them. In fact, it is sometimes a
film version that drives us to read the novel. This was my own case with regard
to Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s
Men, still regarded by some as an American classic all these years after it
was a bestseller and won a Pulitzer Prize.
I had already seen, a couple of
times, Robert Rossen’s famous 1949 film version, in which Broderick Crawford
did his Academy Award-winning turn as Willie Stark, the Southern governor so
clearly based on Louisiana’s Huey Long. [See
index at right for my comments on the biography Huey Long by T.Harry Williams] Inevitably, as I read, I found
myself comparing characters and situations with the way they had been depicted
in the film. So perfectly, in the film, did the character actress Mercedes
McCambridge play Willie Stark’s secretary and gofer Sadie Burke, that I saw her
face and heard her voice whenever the character turned up in the novel.
Inasmuch as it deals with Willie
Stark, the 1949 film turns out to have been a reasonable transcription of much
of the novel, for all its compressions and elisions. Willie, the honest,
reformist hick politician, becomes a demagogic governor while still imagining
he is doing good for the people, and never realizing how much he has been
corrupted by power. He believes “good can only be made from evil” without
seeing that evil tends to undermine good. When an assassin finally guns him
down, he still has most of his delusions intact.
But, while I had made allowances
for the unavoidable bowdlerisations of a film made so long ago, reading the
novel confirmed one hunch I had had while watching the film. I couldn’t help
thinking that Hollywood’s version short-changed on the story’s Southern milieu.
Even in the film’s crowd scenes,
there didn’t seem to be any blacks; and indeed in the novel, blacks play no
role in the story’s political machinations because, in an era before the civil
rights movement, white politicians in the South could essentially ignore
blacks, who were still effectively disenfranchised. But unlike the film, the
novel is filled with unapologetic references to “nigger” servants (so called)
and to “papists” (like Willie’s bodyguard Sugar-Boy O’Sheean), and has a sweaty
and fully-described Southern atmosphere replete with events of that strange,
extreme “Gothic” type that we foreigners associate with the American South.
There is a séance scene with a
medium when the novel’s narrator, Jack Burden, is attempting to dig into the
past of one of Willie Stark’s political enemies so that Willie Stark can
blackmail him. There is a scene when Burden watches a doctor perform a lobotomy
and reflects on whether the excised parts of the brain can still think. The old
Confederacy and the Southern past are evoked in the long fourth chapter
(apparently cut out of some early editions of the novel), in which Jack Burden
reflects on a 19th century figure upon whom he once attempted to
write a thesis.
Chief difference between film and
novel, however, is the figure of Jack Burden himself. In every respect, this
narrator (strictly a supporting figure as played by John Ireland in the film)
is the novel’s main character. Indeed scenes directly involving Willie Stark
would probably make up less that 50% of the novel. I suspect Robert Penn Warren
intended Jack Burden to be some sort of representative of liberal guilt. (He
carries the burden of history on his shoulders – the symbolism of the
name is fairly obvious – and in the last chapter he tells his mother that “if you could not accept the past and its
burden there was no future.”). The affluent country-club set to which
Burden belongs is shown to be decent and moral only within very limited
parameters. These people do not actively do anything for the poor, much as they
may deplore the vulgar demagoguery of Willie Stark. Burden’s attraction to
Stark is thus comprehensible. The loud politician who appears to give a stuff
is clearly more attractive than effete wealthy people who don’t. Robert Penn
Warren makes it doubly comprehensible inasmuch as Jack Burden’s father has
absconded, his mother has married and divorced number of times, and the young
man is badly in need of some sort of father figure. Roll on the stark
certainties (more pointed naming) of a man who seems to know where he is going.
To express this theme of liberal
guilt, however, the mid-twentieth century novel has some contrivances that
might have fit more comfortably into a mid-19th century novel.
That Jack Burden’s haughty
socialite friend Ann Stanton should become Willie Stark’s mistress may be
necessary to the plot (it leads Ann’s brother, Dr Adam Stanton, to gun Willie
down), but it seems highly unlikely given what the two characters are. Even
more strained is the novel’s revelation that Jack Burden’s true father is a
judge whom Willie Stark has been attempting to discredit. In the way characters
are related (I won’t go into it here, if you don’t mind), Penn Warren nods to
the idea that society is a unity. But the novel’s main political message is a
fairly Machiavellian one: Some people know how to manipulate others in order to
wield political power. Even the most upright person has a character stain that
can be exploited. Political power may allow some people to do good, but power
itself has the habit of corrupting people and becomes an end in itself. So let
us, like Jack Burden at the end of the novel, retire from politics and meditate
vaguely on Time and Fate as we lick our wounds and let the vulgar run the world
and remind ourselves of how intellectually superior we are.
I’m interested that
stylistically, Penn Warren (through his first-person narrator) does not write
stream-of-consciousness, but in long, epithet-laden sentences describing place
and atmosphere. It is often a deliberate, artful, colloquial-sounding ramble by
an observant narrator. It does, however, sometimes strive for gravitas, especially in that ruminative
fourth chapter about history. Because Jack Burden is the novel’s centre of
consciousness, the novel opens in medias
res with Willie Stark already governor and his rise to power told in
flashback. The ending, however, has some hasty thread-tying in the forty-odd
pages that follow Willie’s assassination.
As a purely personal reaction, I
found myself actively disliking Jack Burden, for all the art with which Penn
Warren outlines his circumstances and psychological needs. Too often, it seems
to me, Jack refuses to acknowledge how much he himself is a parasite on “the
Boss” Willie Stark, for all his criticisms of other people who fill that same
role. He is evasive. In the opening chapter Jack Burden declares:
“I owed my success to [this] principle.
It had put me where I was. What you don’t know won’t hurt you for it ain’t
real. They called that Idealism in my book I had when I was in college, and
after I got hold of that principle I became an Idealist. I was a brass-bound
Idealist in those days. If you are an Idealist it doesn’t matter what you do or
what goes on around you because it ain’t real anyway.”
In other words, his
(philosophical) rationalism allows him to evade moral responsibilities. He
reinforces this view in the sixth chapter, where he refuses to listen to news
of Willie’s misbehaviour because “the
world is full of things I don’t want to know.”
This is, however, a complex
novel. It is quite conceivable that Penn Warren intends us to see Jack Burden as evasive, self-justifying and weak
because Jack is more influenced by the limitations of his privileged upbringing
than he ever admits. In fine, Penn Warren could intend him to be an unreliable
narrator.
Penn Warren does hit on some
resonant phrases. I loved the comment (epitome of much of the novel) in Chapter
2 about “the sound of Willie’s voice
hammering on the eardrums and shaking dead leaves off the oak-trees.”
Throughout the novel, Willie has
a favourite comment: “Man is conceived in
sin and born in corruption and he passeth from the stink of the didie to the
stench of the shroud.” It chimes with his view that good can only be made
of evil, especially when we hear of the influence a very Calvinist form of
Presbyterianism had in his upbringing.
There are also the moments when
Penn Warren lets rip, as when (in Chapter 6) the rationalist Jack Burden speaks
truthfully of “that cold, unloving part
of the mind – that maiden aunt, that washroom mirror the drunk stares into,
that still small voice, that maggot in the cheese of your self-esteem, that
commentator on the ether nightmare, that death’s head of lipless rationality at
your every feast…”
I step back from my criticisms at
such points and admit this novel’s enduring power.
Semi-relevant footnote: As I began by comparing this novel with a
film adapted from it, I should conclude by noting that there was a more recent
film adaptation of All the King’s Men,
made in 2006 with Sean Penn as Willie Stark and Jude Law as Jack Burden. In
many respects it is more faithful to events in the novel than the 1949 film
was, and certainly it has details that censorship didn’t allow way back when.
Regrettably, its inept direction and editing also make it a complete bore. It
featured on some critics’ “Worst of the Year” lists. For all its omissions and
bowdlerisations, the 1949 version at least has pace and memorable performances.
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