Raging
towards Utopia
Neal Ascherson
KOESTLER:
THE INDISPENSABLE INTELLECTUAL
by
Michael Scammell.
Faber,
689 pp., £25, February, 978 0 571 13853 I
WATCHED
from a safe distance, Arthur Koestler's life was like a Catherine-wheel
breaking free from its stake. Leaping and spinning and scattering
crowds,
emitting fountains of alarming flares and sparks as it bounded in and
out of
public squares and unexpected back gardens, flinging dazzling light
into dim
minds, Koestler's career left scorch marks and illuminations across the
20th
century. When it finally stopped and the flames died, the darkness
suddenly
seemed absolute.
Now
he is almost forgotten. Once, all students with a grain of discontent
about
their world read his books. Many of their university grandchildren,
tomorrow's intellectuals,
have never heard of him. Some critics think that this oblivion is to do
with
the gigantic incorrectness of his personal life, mostly revealed after
his
death: the accusations of rape, or the charge that he bullied his final
wife,
Cynthia, into sharing their double suicide in 1983. A better
explanation is the
change of the times. The whole context in which Koestler fought,
survived,
preached and rampaged - the epoch of totalitarian dictatorships,
millennial mobilizations
and total wars - has vanished. And with it have gone (or at least
temporarily
subsided) the classic moral choices which overshadowed the consciences
of so
many 20th-century men and women: whether to sacrifice a society's today
for a
'brighter tomorrow', whether to ally with the lesser evil to overcome
the
greater, whether to shed innocent blood as the price of breaking
humanity's
chains.
Michael
Scammell has devoted more than 20 years of his own life to producing
this
tremendous, absorbing biography, hoping to restore Koestler and his
work to new
generations. It was a bold thing to take on. In the first place,
Koestler wrote
two books - Arrow in the Blue and The Invisible Writing - which are
among the
most powerful works of autobiography ever composed. To compete with
them, or at
least to cover again the same events and reactions, was courageous.
Second, two
other biographies in English already exist: lain Hamilton's Koestler: A Biography
(1982) and
David Cesarani's Arthur Koestler: The Homeless Mind (1998). But
Scammell has
little time for either work. His bibliography dismisses Hamilton's book
as 'superficial and
ill-researched', and Cesarani's (the one which attacked Koestler as a
serial
rapist) as an 'opinionated, thinly researched and heavily slanted
biography,
masquerading as a study of Koestler's Jewishness' .
Scammell
is entitled to pass judgment on the research of others. His own is
staggering
in scale and detail. He had the good fortune to be shown all the
wonderfully
frank letters and diaries of Mamaine Paget, Koestler's second wife, by
her twin
sister, Celia. But he has also found his way into Comintern files, into
the
sullen reports on Koestler kept by MI5 ('one third genius, one third
blackguard
and one third lunatic'), into documentation from the Spanish Civil War,
and
into the partly unsorted mountain of Koestler papers at Edinburgh
University,
which holds his correspondence with hundreds of often famous friends
and
antagonists throughout the world. Scammell seems to have interviewed
almost every
surviving human being who knew Koestler, and many who died while he was
working
on the book. He found his way to the very cell in Seville prison where Koestler was
held by the
Fascists in 1937. He sought out and questioned the Brazilian cleaner
who entered
the Koestlers' London
flat after their double suicide.
The
book is full of 'psycho grams'. Most people who knew Koestler well, not
least
his many women, felt driven to sketch his extraordinary personality.
Koestler
himself wrote several mordant self-analyses. Scammell from time to time
interjects his own ideas on what - his neglectful mother, his inner
conflict
over his Jewishness in anti-Semitic Central Europe
- made Koestler so pugnacious, so insufferably competitive, so
tyrannical and
ruthless with women and at the same time so passionate in his campaigns
against
cruelty, injustice and hypocrisy.
Anyone
who knew that generation of Central European intellectuals, especially
those of
Jewish origins, will recognize some of the traits in Koestler's
character. But
it seems to me that the roots of his recurrent miseries and explosions
are less
interesting than the roots of his furious creative energy. He shared
with that generation
a profound, Hegelian sense of dialectic process. 'Being' was also
'becoming',
or it was nothing. Every context, every person was a seed with a
destiny which
must be realized.
To
put it coarsely, something had to be done about everything. For
instance, you
could not just 'be' a Jew, quietly sitting in Prague
or Vienna
and
enjoying a satisfactory middle-class Jewish existence. To be Jewish was
a
commandment to do something in order to hurry Jewishness towards its
innate
destiny (whether that was Zionnism or assimilation in race-transcending
socialism). It was not enough to be a scientist, when scientific
discovery was
destined to change the self-perception of the human race: a psychology
researcher should let his 'facts' blossom into speculation about
extrasensory
perception or the power of thought to move objects. Abuses like the
Soviet show
trials, or British capital punishment or even quarantine for pets,
contained
the seeds of their own contradiction and demanded the instant
organization of campaigns.
It wasn't enough to be comfortably English, when England
was destined to become part of a united Europe
or perish. A dinner party difference of opinion could not be left
unresolved
but required Koestler to smash his opponent to a pulp (verbally) until
his own
correctness was vindicated. And a pretty woman was not there to be
admired, but
to be instantly besieged and rushed to her destiny in his bed.
This
cosmic restlessness, this inability to leave anything as it was,
infused
Koestler's whole life with energy. Roughly speaking, that life as
described by
Scammell falls into four phases. First came the years in which his lust
for
absolute certainties swept him into fanatical commitments, to extreme
Revisionist Zionism and then to Stalinist Communism. In the next phase,
the
crust of these certainties suddenly gave way and he fell into the
horrible
underworld of his century: a prisoner of Franco, fearing execution
every day,
and then a desperate fugitive – a Communist Jew - as the Nazis invaded France
in 1940.
Profoundly changed by these experiences, Koestler emerged after the war
as the most
militant European intellectual to denounce Soviet Communism (French
admirers
credited his masterpiece, the novel Darkness at Noon, with preventing a
Communist victory in the 1946 referendum on a new constitution), and
his
writings - journalism, novels, manifestos and memoirs - made him world
famous.
In a fourth phase, Koestler- now living mostly in Britain
- gradually transferred his
energies to science and its wilder frontiers. In a string of popular
science
books, he examined the intuitive roots of scientific discovery and the
mystery
of human creativity, and strove obstinately to resurrect Lamarck's
discredited
evolutionary theory which held that acquired characteristics could be
inherited. Brilliantly written though they were, these books provoked
growing
dismay among scientists, and by the time he died Koestler's
investigations into
parapsychology and levitation were embarrassing many of his old
supporters.
Arthur
Koestler, born in 1905, grew up as an only child in a middle-class
Jewish
family in Budapest and Vienna.
Alternately spoiled and neglected by
his mother, he was an undersized, frantically competitive small boy
notorious
for his tantrums. It was not until he became a student in Vienna and
joined a Jewish dueling fraternity
that he had the blissful experience of belonging to a collective, of
acceptance
into a substitute family. The fraternity was simmering with
revolutionary ideas
about Jewish identity. Koestler came to Zionism because it seemed to
offer a
flight from traditional Jewishness, and he was soon bowled over by the
charismatic Vladimir Jabotinsky, the leader of Revisionist Zionism
(which
wanted to impose a Jewish state on the whole of Palestine, including
what is
now Jordan). This was the first of Koestler's surrenders to an
absolutist
ideal. He set off for Palestine, but
soon
discovered that manual labor on a spartan collective farm was not his
style and
returned to Europe. There, in 1930,
he landed
a job in Berlin
with the Ullstein press empire. At 25 he was a successful science
editor,
writing on such subjects as new energy sources or quantum mechanics or
Hubble's
'exploding universe', and bluffing an interview out of Einstein.
Nattily
dressed, with a red sports car, a taste for whisky and a string of
girlfriends,
he might have seemed to have arrived. But he was restless, discontented
with
the reality of Zionism, hungry for another utopia.
Koestler's
conversions followed a certain pattern. First came a fit of blinding
anger and
hatred against oppressors - with Zionism, it was hatred of the Arabs
and the
atrocities they inflicted on Jewish settlers. Then followed a sense of
revelation and great calm, an absolute conviction of rightness. In Berlin, he had
friends
of his own age who had joined the Communist Party, and - unusually for
him - he
found that he couldn't batter down their arguments. Soon another fit of
fury
broke over him, 'seething indignation', a 'furnace', as he considered
the
injustices of capitalism. And then, once again, came the 'mental
explosion', as
'the whole universe falls into pattern ... There is now an answer to
every
question.'
This
is a version of the 'conversion experience' so familiar to the
Protestant Reformation.
Convulsions of self-loathing are followed by the delicious inrush of
salvation:
the certainty that one has been elected to the communion of saints, the
'oceanic' understanding of the One Truth, the One Word. Those who go
through
this kind of experience generally emerge as fanatical, even manic
believers.
Koestler certainly did. But it's worth asking whether such conversions
produced
the sort of Communist the Party really wanted. Disciplined,
working-class
activists solidly loyal to the cause and the Soviet motherland were
meant to be
the Party's core. Messianic intellectuals raving about how they had
burst the
chains of their bourgeois inhibitions and found the key to the
universe: they
could be very useful, if correctly handled, but they would never be
completely
reliable.
Koestler
joined the Communist Party, but behaved more like an enthusiastic
fellow
traveler than a trusty cadre. Visiting the Soviet
Union
in 1932, he acquired what Scammell neatly calls his 'bifocals': his
capacity to
witness appalling destitution and muddle and discount them against his
vision
of the glorious Soviet future ('temporary setbacks'). 'Only slowly,' he
wrote,
'does the newcomer learn to distinguish ... underneath a chaotic
surface, the
shape of things to come, to realize that in Sovietland the present is a
fiction, a quivering membrane stretched between the past and the
future.'
Koestler spent a year and a half in Sovietland, journeying through Ukraine, Russia
and Soviet Asia, and in Moscow
met Bolshevik heroes like Radek and Bukharin. But the travel book he
wrote
afterwards was rejected by the Soviet publishers as 'frivolous'. The
shock of
discovering that he was not fully trusted - and he never was - began
the slow
process of his disillusion.
In
1933, the Comintern sent him to Paris,
where he joined the great propagandist Willi Munzenberg and a
constellation of
German left-wing refugees from the new Nazi regime in the 'anti-Fascist
struggle'. These were hungry years for Koestler, but prolific. The
Encyclopedia
of Sexual Knowledge by Dr A. Costler earned him a little money, but he
also
wrote a curious novel for teenagers, Comrade Dickybird, which got him
into hot
water for 'ideological errors' with his Party cell. It was now that he
married
Dorothee Ascher, the first of his beautiful, intelligent wives, under
his
customary conditions of 'no children and no monogamy'.
When
the Spanish Civil War began, Munzenberg sent him to Spain
under cover as a journalist,
where he landed his first and only scoop. In Seville, he walked into a group of
German
pilots flying for Franco- a story which rang round the world as the
first solid
proof of Nazi involvement. But in early 1937, Koestler's luck ran out.
Reporting
from Malaga,
he
was captured when the city fell to the rebels and imprisoned as a spy.
He spent
the next three months in jail in Seville
- the first of many prison sojourns over the next few years - expecting
death
at any moment and listening as men in the cells on either side were
dragged out
for execution. An international campaign for his release, led by
Dorothee but
expertly managed by Munzenberg, eventually succeeded. But this
experience,
unforgettably recorded in his Dialogue with Death, changed Koestler for
ever:
'the most decisive period in my life, its spiritual crisis and turning
point'.
It was not just that his own mental torments revealed to him the
horrific falsity
of the Moscow show trials and the 'slave mentality' demanded by both
Stalinism
and Fascism - the core perception of Darkness at Noon. It was also the
beginning of his slow conversion to 'bourgeois liberal values': to the
importance of truth and doubt, and above all to respect for individual
human
life (which bore fruit 20 years later in his campaign against the death
penalty). And it was in the Seville
cell that Koestler began his search for transcendental certainty, for a
'higher
order of reality ... a text written in invisible ink' which was to
fascinate
him for the rest of his life.
Koestler's
ordeal and the publication of Dialogue with Death made him a celebrity.
Back in Paris,
he
resigned from the Communist Party but asked that this should remain
secret.
With Fascism rampant across Europe,
he was not
ready for final and public defection. In a letter to his Party cell, he
attacked the corruption of Communist ideals but was still hopeful: 'The
Soviet Union is left. Not
Stalin, but the Soviet Union. It's
the only hope offered by this
miserable century. It's the foundation of the future.'
WHEN
war began in 1939, Koestler was still in France. By now, his first
marriage
had come apart and he was living with the young English sculptor Daphne
Hardy.
She was to be his companion through much of the terrifying episode in
his life
described in Scum of the Earth: internment as a dangerous alien in the
camp of
Le Vernet in the French Pyrenees, flight from the advancing Germans
through a
disintegrating France, enlistment in the Foreign Legion in order to
reach the port
of Marseille; a breakdown and several suicide attempts ('It's world
history I'm
weeping for ... tell the world how my life ended,' he said as Daphne
left him
in Biarritz). He managed to reach Morocco,
then Lisbon and finally, through a
combination
of luck and desperate importuning, wangled himself onto a British
airliner
heading for Bristol.
It was November 1940.
Darkness
at Noon - the title
was chosen by Daphne Hardy - was published in December 1940, while
Koestler was
being held in a cell in Pentonville prison as an illegal immigrant.
Released
after a few weeks, he chained Daphne to the task of typist and
translator as he
started work on Scum of the Earth,
which appeared in July 1941. Here he made plain his final disillusion
with
Soviet Communism following the Nazi-Soviet Pact, and with France,
depicted as betrayed by its corrupt ruling class. The book was an
enormous
success in Britain
and the United
States,
in contrast to Darkness at Noon,
whose full impact - ultimately far greater - was delayed until the
first years
of the Cold War.
After
Orwell's 1984 it was to
become the most influential political novel of the 20th century. As an
account
of idealism and loyalty trampled by a ruthless totalitarian system, it
is
matchless for its eloquence and passion. And yet doubts persist about
its
central drama: the notion that the grotesque confessions at the Moscow trials
were in a
sense voluntary, the final sacrifice of men who offered their lives and
integrity as a last service to the cause they loved. Was it really like
that?
Only a few days ago, I met a Gulag survivor who insisted that Koestler
had been
correct 'absolutely, in every detail' about the motives of those
victims who
admitted the absurd charges of espionage and terrorism and asked for
the death
penalty. And yet other survivors, especially those condemned in the
Soviet-orchestrated show trials in Prague
in the 1950S, objected that this explanation was fanciful: the
confessions were
extracted by old-fashioned torture, including sensory deprivation and
sleep
denial, and by false promises that the death penalty would not be
carried out.
Scammell, while making the point that Koestler did not deny an element
of '
physical coercion', seems inclined to accept that he was right about
the
decisive effect of psychological blackmail, which played on notions of
'objective' guilt.
In
wartime Britain,
Koestler was conscripted briefly into the Pioneer Corps, which he
escaped by
unconvincing pleas of unfitness and by pulling some powerful strings.
He was
rapidly found a job in the Ministry of Information. By now, he was well
connected. Cyril Connolly and 'the Horizon crowd' had adopted him, at
first an
odd and slightly pathetic foreigner in crumpled battledress. He came to
know
Spender, Orwell, MacNeice, Philip Toynbee and John Lehmann, and was
invited to
their parties. The Tribune left-wingers adored him; Michael Foot (as he
put it
himself) 'fell an immediate swooning victim to his wit, charm and
inordinate
capacity for alcohol', and to his murderous style of argument:
'Koestler got
you in a corner, with all escapes blocked, and machine-gunned with
fact,
analogy, the superabundant debating skill.' David Astor, at the
Observer, fell
equally heavily for 'this small passionate man with his excruciating
accent,
his self-mockery and his devotion to his political friends in Europe'.
Women
fell too. Koestler was
insatiable, lusting especially for upper-class English girls, and he
was frank
about enjoying a bit of rough. 'Without an element of initial rape
there is no
delight,' as he put it. Most of his conquests seem to have hated that
part, but
forgave him for the sake of his charm, the electric excitement of his
company.
Why so many husbands and other male rivals forgave him, or at least
never set
about him, remains a mystery. Connolly, unaware that he was sharing
Barbara
Skelton with Koestler, wrote:
Like
everyone who talks of
ethics all day long, one could not trust him half an hour with one's
wife,
one's best friend, one's manuscripts’ or one's wine merchant - he'd
lose them
all. He burns with the envious paranoiac hunger of the Central European
ant-heap, he despises everybody and can't conceal the fact when he is
drunk,
yet I believe he is probably one of the most powerful forces for good
in the
country.
Daphne,
bullied, exploited
and serially cheated on, moved out in 1944- By then Koestler had met
and fallen
in love with Mamaine Paget, beautiful and in most things apart from
forgiving
Koestler's awful behavior - wise. There followed seven years of violent
rows,
partings and reconciliations, to which their marriage in 1950 made
little
difference. But her early death in 1954 devastated him, and of all his
partners, Mamaine had the surest hold on what affection he could spare
from
himself.
Returning
to postwar France,
he and Mamaine had plunged into the Existentialist circle. This was the
first
of many rampages in which political argument alternated with stupendous
drinking bouts, a relationship repeatedly broken and resumed until the
chasm
between Koestler's crusading anticommunism and Sartre's visceral
anti-Americanism grew too wide to bridge. Scammell recounts the
all-night
drinking binges ('spectacular bacchanals' on vodka and champagne) as
Koestler,
Mamaine, Camus, Sartre and Beauvoir staggered from one nightclub to the
next,
parting at dawn in floods of alcoholic tears. On separate occasions, a
drunken
Koestler blacked the eyes of both Mamaine and Camus and punched
Beauvoir into
bed (she, at least, never forgave him); Mamaine had a short, intense
affair
with Camus; Sartre made a pass at Mamaine and had a glass flung at him
by
Koestler.
The
intellectual product of
all this was slight, apart from Beauvoir's thinly disguised description
of
Koestler's lovemaking in The Mandarins. In the world outside
Saint-Germain-des-Pres and the bars of Montparnasse, Andre Malraux
disdained
Koestler's project to found a 'League for the Rights of Man', while the
French
Communist Party assailed 'Judas Koestler' for his 'intolerable insults
to
France and its courageous people'. The fact was that his real impact on
French
politics was over by the time he returned to Paris: Darkness at Noon
(Le zero
et l'infini) had already sold 300,000 copies and would sell an
astounding
half-million by 1947, and the damage it did to French Stalinism would
never be
made good.
ON HIS
FIRST VISIT to the United States
in 1948, Koestler was lionized in New York
and Los Angeles.
But now and on his next visits he confronted
a very Koestlerian dilemma: whether to ally with the bad in order to
defeat the
worst. Anti-Communism in America,
as he found it, was not a united front but an uncivil war between two
factions.
Old leftists and liberals disenchanted with Stalinism hated the extreme
right
(the Un-American Activities inquisition was just getting going), which
in turn
dismissed the Partisan Review crowd as irrelevant pinkos. Koestler's
heart was
with the leftists, some of them his old comrades, and for the rest of
his life
he continued to think of himself as in some sense a left-winger. But he
brought
from his Communist years a sense of the brutal necessities of struggle,
and he
insisted that American liberals must accept the support of the powerful
right
wing in any common resistance to Soviet expansion. In 1950 he refused
to join
the protests against the Alger Hiss trial, certain that Hiss was a spy
and that
his uncouth, much mocked accuser Whittaker Chambers was telling the
truth.
Later still, he derided the horror of most of his friends over the
McCarthy
witch-hunts as frivolous and exaggerated.
He made
the same harsh
choices over the Congress for Cultural Freedom, which emerged in 1950.
Koestler
was beyond question its spiritual father: it was a version of his
League for
the Rights of Man idea, its form designed to counter the proliferating
'peace
campaigns' and 'congresses of progressive intellectuals' which were in
effect
Communist fronts. Koestler was not aware for some time that his idea
had been
covertly adopted and funded by the CIA. When he did find out, he was
not in the
least surprised or scandalized. So what? The imperatives of the
struggle
justified all sorts of deception. A similar dilemma soon surfaced
within the
CCF, which held its first congress in West Berlin
on the day the Korean War began. The group of old socialists around
Ignazio
Silone wanted the CCF to concentrate on social and economic issues,
and to
avoid political
alliance with American capitalism. Koestler wanted an all-out political
crusade, and gave a tremendous speech in Berlin,
declaring that there could be no neutral ground in the battle between
'total
tyranny and relative freedom'. What he didn't know was that the CIA,
anxious to
keep the American connection hidden, preferred the Silone line and
found
Koestler altogether too militant and inquisitive.
In
I950, he impulsively
bought a farm in Pennsylvania
and moved there with Mamaine. He had resigned from the CCF a few months
before,
for reasons that even Scammell has been unable to reconstruct: possibly
nervous
crisis brought on by a violent drinking bout, possibly the realization
that
forces behind it no longer trusted him. At Island Farm, he drove ahead
with new
ideas, including a fund for refugee writers and a 'Deminform': a
battery of
radio stations aiming news and free discussion into Eastern Europe and
the USSR,
which the
Americans eventually established in the form of Radio Free Europe and
Radio
Liberty.
His
behavior at Island Farm
was as wild as ever. Drunken car crashes, the pursuit of neighbors'
wives and
quarrels with friends brought Mamaine to the edge of despair. And there
was a
new woman on the scene. Cynthia Jefferies, a pretty young South
African, had
become Koestler's secretary in Paris
and - when more interesting women were not around - his mistress. Now
he
brought her over to Island Farm. This was the most discreditable and
yet
enduring of all his relationships. Brutally bullied, treated as a
secretarial
slave and a sex slave when he felt like it, Cynthia meekly submitted to
a
string of abortions over the years. Koestler's friends liked her, but
were
horrified by her obvious misery. And yet Cynthia was not quite the
doormat she
seemed. To be with Koestler, always on call for his wants, was the life
she had
chosen, and she refused to give it up. Mamaine, in contrast, returned
to London
and decided on
separation.
Koestler
soon followed her,
buying an expensive flat near Harrods. With Mamaine gone, he trapped a
fresh
parade of clever, independent-minded women into his life, some of whom
managed
to remain his friends after escaping. It was now, in I952, that he
apparently
raped Jill Craigie, the wife of Michael Foot, on her Hampstead kitchen
floor.
Scammell is uneasy about this scene, which Craigie didn't reveal until
the
mid-I990s, and remarks that 'the exercise of male strength to gain
sexual
satisfaction wasn't exactly uncommon at that time.' True enough, but
rape it
pretty clearly was, and - as Scammell's biography shows - Koestler had
abundant
form in that particular 'exercise of male strength'.
By now,
he was writing Arrow
in the Blue, soon followed by The Invisible Writing. Of all the genres
Koestler
tried, this line of spiritual and political autobiography suited his
talents
best. Next came Reflections on Hanging, a gruesome and closely
researched
polemic which shook Britain's
educated public to the marrow and opened the way to the abolition of
the death
penalty a few years later. But by the later 1950s, his interests were
turning
more and more to science, or rather to the links between scientific
discovery,
intuition and non-rational perception. The Sleepwalkers called for a
reconnection of science with religion. The Lotus and the Robot, written
after a
visit to India and Japan,
concluded that Eastern spirituality was mostly useless, with the
exception of
Vinoba Bhave's philosophy of grassroots socialism. There followed a
string of
books about cosmology, evolution, extrasensory perception and even the
notion
(The Ghost in the Machine) that human aggression arose from a
'self-integrative
drive' which could perhaps be controlled by medication - a 'mental
stabilizer'
pill.
Exhilarating
and original,
some of these books were widely read, but scientists and Koestler's
legion of
political enemies pounced on their weaknesses. And in his last years
the
thinker who had once preached Marxist determinism became a free-will
fanatic,
searching desperately for evidence that would rehabilitate
Lamarckianism. In
his 1971 bestseller, The Case of the Midwife Toad, a wonderful
scientific
detective story, he merely suggested that Lamarck might not have been
entirely
wrong, but - for once -he was understating his own convictions.
All
through this biography
runs the thread of Koestler's engagement with Jewishness, Zionism and
the
nascent state of Israel.
His sometimes clumsy but blazingly eloquent novel Thieves in the Night
(1946)
used his own experiences to tell an epic story of young pioneers laying
down
their lives to found a Jewish state in Palestine.
Drawn as he had been to the extreme Revisionist wing of Zionism,
Koestler later
produced uneasy justifications for Irgun terrorism. He condemned
indiscriminate
murder, but asserted that 'we have to use violence and deception to
save others
from violence and deception,' and that 'the arsenic of
ruthlessness, injected in
very small doses [could be] a stimulant to the social body'. And he
appalled
moderate Jewish opinion by arguing that diaspora identity was a
fallacy: Jews
should either go to Israel
or abandon the idea that they could exist as a distinct nationality
elsewhere
in the world.
As
Scammell shows, Koestler
was never at peace with his own Jewish identity. Characteristically, he
tried
to solve his personal problem by inflating it to historic dimensions.
The
Thirteenth Tribe, written near the end of his life, attempted to prove
that
Ashkenazi Jews - the main body of European Jewry - were not ethnic Jews
at all
but the descendants of the Khazars, Turkic nomads from Asia
who had converted to Judaism in the eighth century. To the dismay of
most Jews,
the book was a huge success and is still quoted with delight by Israel's
hostile neighbors.
Koestler
finally married the
patient Cynthia in 1965, but only because he couldn't take her with him
to a
fellowship at Stanford if she was not his wife. From now on, he was to
become
slowly more dependent on her. In his old age, they lived mainly in a
house near Cambridge,
and
friends who visited noticed that while Koestler was as bossy and rude
to her as
ever, Cynthia was beginning to dominate the marriage. In 1982,
suffering from
advancing Parkinson's and leukemia, Koestler decided that it was time
to leave,
and composed a lucid suicide note. A much later addition, signed very
shakily
by Koestler, stated that Cynthia had decided she could not live without
him and
would take her life at the same time. This postscript seems to have
been
written shortly before they took their barbiturates and whisky on 28
February
1983. Cynthia was a healthy woman of 55, and Koestler has been fiercely
reproached for coercing her into sharing his suicide. But Scammell and
others -
and I find their case convincing - object that Koestler would not have
wanted
to 'vulgarize' the drama of his own sovereign self-extinction by
turning it
into a joint suicide pact. Cynthia, now in charge, felt otherwise, and
she got
her way.
Did
Koestler change the
world? He certainly changed Britain,
whose insular complacency never ceased to enrage him. The abolition of
capital
punishment was partly his achievement. The Fund for Intellectual
Freedom which
he launched in 1950 was an inspiration for Writers and Scholars
International,
which in turn generated Index on Censorship. He left almost his entire
estate
to fund a chair for parapsychology at Edinburgh University,
which still survives. But his most lasting legacy to this country,
narrow in
scope and yet a triumph of humane imagination, are the Koestler Awards
for
artistic work by prisoners, which still draw thousands of applications
every
year.
Elsewhere,
his tempestuous
leadership of anti-Communist crusades in the Cold War has left little
trace. The
impact of his writing on postwar French politics belongs to history,
and so
does the influence of Thieves in the Night on the UN's decision to
recognize
the state of Israel.
Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty - inspired by his Deminform
proposals - still
exist, but their importance has dwindled since the collapse of Soviet
Communism. His twin autobiographies and Scum of the Earth will always
be read
by those who want to understand the European 20th century, but his
other political
novels and polemics, even Darkness at Noon, have receded towards
obscurity. As
for his popular science books, especially the ventures into fringe
psychology
and non-rational cognition, it's usually assumed that they do not
deserve
revival. That could be a mistake. Koestler's grasp of science was
willful and
erratic. But one can predict that the last word has not been said on
the
inheritance of acquired characteristics, or even on what is unwisely
termed
'extrasensory perception'. Robert Chambers, the pioneer of popular
science journalism,
infuriated Darwin
by anticipating some of his conclusions in Vestiges of the Natural
History of
Creation - but for all the wrong reasons. By the end of this century,
it's
possible that Koestler's apparently eccentric theories will be regarded
in the
same way.
It's easy to conclude that
Arthur Koestler was a disastrous human being, insufferable as a lover
or
husband and often as a friend. But he was precious to many people,
including
some of those whom he hurt, not only for his piercing intelligence but
for his
bursts of generosity and empathy. David Astor told Scammell that he had
found
Koestler 'lovable because of his sensitivity to people, and because of
the
sense of excitement he brought to everything he did'. Elizabeth Jane
Howard,
who had a brief affair with him, called him 'a noble little goblin'.
She wrote
after his death that he was 'entirely brave; had courage on every
level,
physical, moral and spiritual ... His capacity for indignation - that
invaluable ingredient for making things happen - remained with him
always.'
Koestler, who often hated himself, would have been consoled by that
epitaph.