Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, we recommend "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 four or more years ago.
“NUMBER ONE” by John Dos
Passos (first published in 1943)
Twice before on this blog, I have dealt with books
related to the life of the contentious and populist 1930s Louisiana governor
and senator Huey Long (1893-1935). One was T.Harry Williams’ exhaustive (and
very long!) biography Huey Long. The
other was Robert Penn Warren’s famous novel All the King’s Men, with its protagonist “Willie Stark” quite
clearly modelled on Long, right up to his assassination by a doctor who had a
personal grudge. All the King’s Men
is still regarded as an American classic.
About
the same time I read these two books, I came across a third book related to Long. It was a novel by a
writer who, at the time, was regarded much more highly than Robert Penn Warren,
and whose novel was in fact published three years before Penn Warren’s. This is
Number One by John Roderigo Dos
Passos.
Number One is the story of a political hack and PR man Tyler
Spotswood (“Toby”), employee and speechwriter of Senator Homer T. (“Chuck”)
Crawford. Homer Crawford is observed fighting his opponent Clyde Gailbraith for
his party’s presidential nomination and lining up Governor Steven Baskette to
support him. Tyler Spotswood takes a sentimental fancy to Crawford’s wife Sue
Ann, but the novel generally shows him sinking into self-pity and booze, his
venal political career contrasted implicitly with his little brother Glenn
Spotswood, an idealist who died in the Spanish Civil War. This novel does not
end with Crawford’s assassination, but with Tyler Spotswood being made the
fall-guy in a senatorial investigation into Crawford’s shonky “Every Man a
Millionaire” Corporation. The novel ends with
Tyler Spotswood resigning from the Crawford machine, and going to
another political hack and speechwriter Ed James, with the implication that
they may now work to bring Crawford down.
Even more than Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men, this is clearly a hostile caricature of Huey
Long. It may be set in the late 1930s – with its mentions of the Spanish Civil
War – whereas Long was assassinated in 1935, before that war began. Even so,
the likeness in unmistakable. “Number One” is Crawford’s self-promoted
nickname, just as Long liked to be called “Kingfish”. The hack Ed James helps
him to write his campaign book Poor Boy
to President, just as Long got a hack to ghost-write his campaign book My First Days in the White House.
Crawford’s “Every Man a Millionaire” movement echoes Long’s “Every Man a King”.
I even wonder if Dos Passos’s choice of the name “Crawford” was meant to echo
the Southern “Crawfish” as an allusion to “Kingfish”. Specific events in the
novel are taken from the historical record. Within the first few pages,
Crawford is offering hillbillies advice on how to eat their greens – just as
Long used to win over mountain audiences with folksy advice on cooking. But
secretly, of course, Crawford is very cynical about hicks. At one point,
Crawford threatens to expose the fact that one of his political enemies has
relatives in an insane asylum (Long used the same sort of blackmail). He
becomes involved in an unseemly brawl in a nightclub and comes away with a
black eye – shouting he wishes he had his “sandwiches”, which was apparently
slang for a loaded firearm. He is a thug.
The portrait is extremely hostile. There is no nuance
about it, and no sense that Crawford has (or even originally had) any good
intentions. This is very much in contrast with biographies of Long, which show
that he began his political career with some honest reformist impulses, and
with Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men,
where Willie Stark begins honestly but is corrupted by power. Dos Passos’s
Crawford is no more than the cynical hillbilly bully taking the suckers for a
ride. Through the characters of Spotswood and Ed James, Dos Passos even
suggests that any eloquence or legal knowledge Crawford has is written for him
by others. It is interesting that the perspective is that of a hired
intellectual becoming disillusioned with his political boss – as is the case of
Penn Warren’s Jack Burden in All the
King’s Men – but Spotswood is shallower, boozier and more desperate than
Jack Burden.
In the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, John Dos
Passos (1896-1970) was one of America’s best–known novelists, especially with
his USA trilogy. Certainly on the
Left, he was regarded as a radical and an experimentalist. Politically, and in
the eyes of many critics, things began to go wrong for him in the Spanish Civil
War. Like Ernest Hemingway, he visited Spain in 1937. Unlike the blowhard
Hemingway, he was concerned about the way Communists, in what remained of the
Spanish Republic, were waging war on the non-Communist left, and thus weakening
the republic’s ability to resist Franco. (See on this blog my review of
Nicholas Reynolds’ Writer, Sailor,Soldier, Spy, with its incidental comments on Stephen Koch’s The Breaking Point.) Seeing no real
solidarity on the left, Dos Passos began a long political journey to the right.
By the 1960s he was writing speeches for Richard Nixon and the very
conservative presidential candidate Barry Goldwater. Much of this helps to
explain why he has been shunned by critics in a way Hemingway, with his cheery,
naïve, Hollywood leftism, hasn’t. (Historical note: At first Dos Passos
was so much better known than Hemingway that he had the accolade of a Time magazine cover devoted to him years
before Hemingway was thus noted.)
To
return to Number One, this novel is
the middle third of what eventually became Dos Passos’s District of Columbia trilogy. The first novel, Adventures of a Young Man (1939) was about idealistic Glenn
Spotswood fighting in the Spanish Civil War, and falling foul of Stalinists who
regarded him as a Trotskyite. Though Dos Passos was beginning his journey
rightwards, he still had many of the agitprop and newspaper cut-up techniques
he had been using since his USA
trilogy.
Each of the five long chapters that make up Number One is preceded with a portrait
of an “ordinary” member of the public (a farmer; a mechanic; a miner etc.) so
that Dos Passos can affirm who the “real” people are, and how different these
sturdy toilers are from the conniving politicians who claim to represent them.
This feature reminded me very much of the montages that used to appear in
propaganda films of the day – but that may be where Dos Passos got the idea. It
is surprising, however, to see the scorn and disdain with which the
novelist treats the hillbilly dialect.
[Or maybe not so surprising – see on this blog my review of Nancy Isenberg’s White Trash for ideas on the contempt
even America’s left intelligentsia express for poor whites.]
One
“experimental” feature Dos Passos displays in this novel is a very irritating
one. He has the habit of writing, as one word, two words that would usually be
hyphenated or written as two separate words, thus “Spanishstyle” “cocacola”
“cigarettecase” “dinnerparty” “expensivelooking” etc. I’m glad this particular
affectation did not catch on.
In my reading diaries, I jotted down just two passages
from this novel which clarify where it stands.
In
Chapter One, Chuck Crawford says “It’s my
profound belief, Senator, that there’s more radical economics in the Holy Bible
than those Roosian Reds ever thought of.” This shows that Dos Passos was
aware of Huey Long’s Bible-inspired “Jubilee Year” ideas about having a year to
cancel debts.
Then
in Chapter Five, eventually disillusioned with Crawford, Tyler Spotswood
declares to Ed James “We can’t sell out
on the people, but the trouble is that me, I’m just as much the people as you
are or any other son of a bitch. If we want to straighten the people out we’ve
got to start with number one, not that big wind… You know what I mean. I got to
straighten myself out first, see…” This gives the novel’s title a double
meaning and also shows Dos Passos bidding farewell to collectivism. The
individual has to reform before society will improve. This seems to be the
moral drawn by somebody who has heard “the people” invoked once too often in
left-wing rhetoric – and perhaps is belatedly becoming aware of original sin.
The final words of the novel are “the
people are the republic – the people are you”.
Regrettably,
despite the acuteness of Dos Passos’s idea, this still has the ring of a
propaganda slogan.
In
the end, Number One is an historical
artefact, but not a novel that lives in its own right, as All the King’s Men does.
No comments:
Post a Comment