Read What Am I Doing Here? Page 27


  No. Our journeys were never quite accident-free: the time a soldier lobbed a pick-axe at the car; the time our lorry slid, with gentle resignation, over the cliff (we were just able to jump off); the time we were whipped for straying into a military area; the dysentery; the septicaemia; the hornet sting; the fleas — but, mercifully, no hepatitis.

  Sometimes, we met travellers more high-minded than ourselves who were following the tracks of Alexander or Marco Polo: for us, it was far more fun to follow Robert Byron. I still have notebooks to prove how slavishly I aped both his itinerary and – as if that were possible – his style. Take this entry of mine for 5 July 1962 and compare it with his for 21 September 1933:In the afternoon we called on Mr Alouf the art dealer. He took us to an apartment filled with French-polished ‘French’ furniture, most of it riddled with worm and upside down.

  He had recently converted to Catholicism and, on showing us a signed photograph of Pope Pius XII, crossed himself fervently and rattled his dentures.

  From a cupboard he produced the following:

  A Roman gold pectoral set with blue glass pastes. A forgery.

  A neolithic marble idol with an erect phallus, on an accompanying perch. The perch was genuine, the idol not.

  Thirty Syro-Phoenician funerary bone dolls.

  A ‘Hittite’ figure, bristling with gold attributes, perhaps the one Byron saw in 1933. A fake.

  Various worrying gold objects.

  A collection of Early Christian glasses (genuine). ‘I have many glasses’, said Mr Alouf, crossing himself, ‘covered with crosses. But they are in the bank.’

  Finally, a marble head of Alexander the Great. ‘I have refused twenty thousand dollars for this piece. TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS! All archaeologists agree mine is the only genuine head of Alexander: Look! The neck! The ears!’ Perhaps – but the face was entirely missing.

  From the Levant we would go on to Teheran. There was more money about than in Byron’s day and many more Europeans after it. But the Shah was a pale copy of his father and already he, too, looked pretty silly, and the men around him queasy. One day we went to see Amir Abbas Hoveyda in his office at the Iranian Oil Company (he was not yet Prime Minister): ‘A man with big eyes and despairing gestures. He seemed trapped behind the enormity of his desk. He offered us the use of his helicopter in case we should need it.’

  Once Byron gets to Iran, his search for the origins of Islamic architecture really gets under way. But to construct, out of stone and brick and tile, a prose that will not only be readable but carry the reader to a pitch of excitement requires talents of the highest calibre. This is Byron’s achievement. His paean of praise for the Sheikh Lutf’ullah Mosque in Isfahan must put him at least in the rank of Ruskin. One afternoon, to see how it was done, I took The Road to Oxiana into the mosque and sat, cross-legged, marvelling both at the tilework and Byron’s description of it.

  The ‘experts’ will carp that, while Byron may have had lyrical powers of description, he was not a scholar — and of course, in their sense he wasn’t. Yet, time and again, he scores over sound scholarship with his uncanny ability to gauge the morale of a civilisation from its architecture, and to treat ancient buildings and modem people as two facets of a continuing story.

  Already in The Byzantine Achievement, written at twenty-five, there is a haunting passage that tells in four sentences as much about the schism of the Western and Eastern Churches as any number of portentous volumes:The existence of St. Sophia is atmospheric; St. Peter’s, over-poweringly, imminently substantial. One is a church to God; the other a salon for his agents. One is consecrated to reality, the other to illusion. St. Sophia, in fact, is large, and St. Peter’s is vilely, tragically small.

  On the subject of Iran, he is even more clairvoyant. On reading The Road to Oxiana you end up with the impression that the Iranian plateau is a ‘soft centre’ that panders to megalomaniac ambitions in its rulers without providing the genius to sustain them.

  As is well known, the late Shah-in-Shah saw in the ruins of Persepolis a mirror image of his own glory and, for that reason, held his coronation binge about a mile from the site, in tents designed by Jansen of Paris, where a riff-raff of royalty could dine with the ghosts of his soi-disant predecessors.

  Read, therefore, Byron’s comments on Persepolis in the light of the pretensions and downfall of the Pahlevi Dynasty:The stone, owing to its extreme hardness, has proved impervious to age; it remains a bright smooth grey, as slick as an aluminium saucepan. This cleanness reacts on the carving like sunlight on a fake old master; it reveals, instead of the genius one expected, a disconcerting void . . . My involuntary thought as Herzfeld showed us the new (newly excavated) staircase was: ‘How much did this cost? Was it made in a factory? No, it wasn’t. Then how many workmen for how many years chiselled and polished these endless figures?’ Certainly, they are not mechanical figures; nor are they guilty of elaboration for their own sake; nor are they cheap in the sense of lacking technical skill. But they are what the French call faux bons. They have art, but not spontaneous art . . . Instead of mind or feeling, they exhale a soulless refinement, a veneer adopted by the Asiatic whose own artistic instinct has been fettered and devitalized by . . . the Mediterranean.

  If you pursue this vein, you will find that, under the bravura passages, Byron is expounding a very serious thesis – and one of crucial importance for understanding our own time. All he finds most admirable in Persian art – the tower at Gumbad-i-Kabus, the Seljuk Mosque in Isfahan, the incomparable mausoleum of the Mongol Khan Uljaitu, or the buildings of Gohar Shad – results from a fusion (one could say, a chemical explosion) between the old Iranian civilisation and the peoples of nomad stock from the Oxus Basin and beyond. You even feel that Byron’s favourite character, Shir Ahmad Khan, the Afghan Ambassador to Teheran, belongs among these firstrate monuments: in other words, genius visits Iran from the north-east.

  Certainly – in Byron’s day and mine – to cross the Afghan frontier, after the lowering fanaticism of Meshed, was like coming up for air. ‘Here at last’, he wrote of Herat, ‘is Asia without an inferiority complex.’ And it is this moral superiority of the Afghans, together with a fear of the centrifugal forces spinning in Central Asia, that has scared the Russians and the bunch of seedy traitors who have sold their country. (May they boil in Gehenna!) So when I read that the Heratis have been sending women’s dresses and cosmetics to the cowards of Kandahar, I think back to a dress I once saw flapping in the old clothes bazaar in Herat – a gown of flamingo crepe with sequined butterflies on the hips and the label of a boutique in Beverly Hills.

  Even in Kabul, the unlikely was always predictable: the sight of the King’s cousin Prince Daud at a party, the old ‘Mussolini’ blackshirt, with his muddy smile and polished head and boots, talking to — who? — Duke Ellington, who else? The Duke in a white-and-blue spotted tie and blue-and-white spotted shirt: he was on his last big tour. And we know what happened to Daud - shot, with his family, in the palace he usurped.

  I can guess what’s happened to the crippled Nuristani boy, who brought us our dinner from his village up the mountain. We had camped by the river, and he came down the rock face, swinging his crutch and his withered leg and, somehow, hanging on to the dish and a lighted firebrand. He sang while we ate – but they have bombed the village and used gas on the inhabitants.

  I can guess, too, what happened to Wali Jahn. He took me to safety when I got blood-poisoning. He carried me on his back through the river, and bathed my head, and made me rest under the ilexes. But when we came back, five years later, he was coughing, deep retching coughs, and had the look of someone going down to the cold.

  But what have they done to Gul Amir the Tadjik? He was ugly as sin with an unending nose and silver earrings. You never saw anyone so devout. Every time he wanted a rest, ‘There was no God but God . . . ’ but as he bowed his face to Mecca, he would squint out sideways and, when I fell in the river trying to cast a trout fly, God was forgotten in a peal of
girlish giggles.

  Where now is the Hakim of Kande? We stayed in his summerhouse under a scree of shining schist and watched the creamy clouds coming over the mountain. In the evening we saw a girl in red creeping out of a maize field: ‘The corn is high,’ he said. ‘In nine months there will be many babies.’

  What’s become of the trucker who admired my ear-lobes? We left him in the middle of the road. His carburettor had clogged and his hashish pipe had clogged, and the pieces were all mixed up, on the road, and we were in a hurry.

  Or the houseboy at the Park Hotel in Herat? He wore a rose-pink turban and, when we asked for lunch, said:

  ‘Yessir! Whatyoulike? Everthing!’

  ‘What you got?’

  ‘No drink. No ice. No bread. No fruit. No meat. No rice. No fish. Eggs. One. Maybe. Tomorrow. YES!’

  Or the man in Tashkurgan who took me to his garden? It was a very hot and dusty afternoon and Peter was looking for traces of the Bactrian Greeks. ‘Go and find your Greeks,’ I said. ‘Give me your Marvell and I’ll find a garden’ — where I really did stumble on melons as I passed and had green thoughts in a green shade.

  Or the mad woman in Ghazni at the Tomb of Mahmud? She was tall and lovely and she stared gloomily at the ground and rattled her bracelets. When they opened the doors, she flung herself on the wooden balustrade, and flapped her crimson dress and cawed like a wounded bird. Only when they let her kiss the tomb did she fall silent. And she kissed the inscription, as if each white marble letter contained the cure for her sickness.

  This is the year – of all years – to mourn the loss of Robert Byron, the arch-enemy of Appeasement, who said, ‘I shall have warmonger put on my passport,’ when he saw what the Nazis were up to. Were he alive today, I think he would agree that, in time (everything in Afghanistan takes time), the Afghans will do something quite dreadful to their invaders – perhaps awaken the sleeping giants of Central Asia.

  But that day will not bring back the things we loved: the high, clear days and the blue icecaps on the mountains; the lines of white poplars fluttering in the wind, and the long white prayer-flags; the fields of asphodels that followed the tulips; or the fat-tailed sheep brindling the hills above Chakcharan, and the ram with a tail so big they had to strap it to a cart. We shall not lie on our backs at the Red Castle and watch the vultures wheeling over the valley where they killed the grandson of Genghiz. We will not read Babur’s memoirs in his garden at Istalif and see the blind man smelling his way around the rose bushes. Or sit in the Peace of Islam with the beggars of Gazar Gagh. We will not stand on the Buddha’s head at Bamiyan, upright in his niche like a whale in a dry-dock. We will not sleep in the nomad tent, or scale the Minaret of Jam. And we shall lose the tastes - the hot, coarse, bitter bread; the green tea flavoured with cardamoms; the grapes we cooled in the snow-melt; and the nuts and dried mulberries we munched for altitude sickness. Nor shall we get back the smell of the beanfields, the sweet, resinous smell of deodar wood burning, or the whiff of a snow leopard at 14,000 feet.

  1980

  9

  TWO MORE PEOPLE

  ERNST JÜNGER: AN AESTHETE AT WAR

  Diaries, Volumes I-III by Ernst Jünger (Christian Bourgois, 1981)

  On 18 June 1940, Mr Churchill ended his speech to the Commons with the words ‘This was their finest hour!’ and, that evening, a very different character, in the grey officer’s uniform of the Wehrmacht, sat in the Duchesse de la Rochefoucauld’s study at the Château de Montmirail. Her uninvited guest was a short, athletic man of forty-five, with a mouth set in an expression of self-esteem and eyes a particularly arctic shade of blue. He leafed through her books with the assured touch of the bibliomane and noted that many bore the dedications of famous writers. A letter slipped from one and fell to the floor – a delightful letter written by a boy called François who wanted to be a pilot. He wondered if the boy was now a pilot. Finally, after dark, he settled down to write his diary. It was a long entry – almost two thousand words – for his day, too, had been eventful.

  In the morning, he had discussed the risks of getting burned alive with a tank driver in oil-soaked denims: ‘I had the impression that Vulcan and his “ethic of work” was incarnate in such martial figures.’ After luncheon, he had stood in the school playground and watched a column of ten thousand French and Belgian prisoners file past: ‘ . . . an image of the dark wave of Destiny herself . . . an interesting and instructive spectacle – in which one sensed the ‘mechanical, irresistible allure peculiar to catastrophes’. He had chucked them cans of beef and biscuits and watched their struggles from behind an iron grille; the sight of their hands was especially disturbing.

  Next, he had spotted a group of officers with decorations from the Great War, and invited them to dine. They were on the verge of collapse, but a good dinner seemed like a reversal of their fortunes. Could he explain, they asked, the reasons for their defeat? ‘I said I considered it the Triumph of the Worker, but I do not think they understood the sense of my reply. What could they know of the years we have passed through since 1918? Of the lessons we have learned as if in a blast furnace?’

  The absent duchess had reason to thank the man who nosed in her private affairs. Captain Ernst Jünger was, at that moment, the most celebrated German writer in uniform. No catastrophe could surprise him since for twenty years his work had harped on the philosophical need to accept death and total warfare as the everyday experience of the twentieth century. Yet he tempered his assent to destruction with an antiquarian’s reverence for bricks and mortar, and had saved the château.

  Indeed, he had saved a lot of things in the blitzkrieg. A week earlier, he had saved the Cathedral of Laon from looters. He had saved the city’s library with its manuscripts of the Carolingian kings. And he had employed an out-of-work wine waiter to inspect some private cellars and save some good bottles for himself. Bombs, it was true, had fallen in the La Rochefoucaulds’ park. A pavilion had burned out, leaving in one window a fragment of glass that ‘reproduced exactly the head of Queen Victoria’. Otherwise, after a bit of tidying up, the place was just as its owners had left it. Moreover, Captain Jünger had other reasons for feeling pleased with himself.

  ‘The Maxims [of La Rochefoucauld] have long been my favourite bedside reading. It was an act of spiritual gratitude to save what could be saved. For properties of such value, the essential is to protect them during the critical days.’

  Easier said than done! ‘The route of the invasion is strewn with bottles, champagne, claret, burgundy. I counted at least one for every step, to say nothing of the camps where one could say it had rained bottles. Such orgies are in the true tradition of our campaigns in France. Every invasion by a German army is accompanied by drinking bouts like those of the gods in the Edda.’

  A junior officer remarked how strange it was that the looting soldiers destroyed musical instruments first: ‘It showed me in a symbolic fashion how Mars is contrary to the Muses . . . and then I recalled the large painting by Rubens illustrating the same theme . . . ’ How strange, too, that they left the mirrors intact! The officer thought this was because the men wanted to shave – but Jünger thought there might be other reasons.

  These diaries – three volumes of them – have recently reappeared in France, where the translation of Jünger’s work is a minor literary industry. To English-speaking readers, however, he is known by two books - Storm of Steel (1920), a relentless glorification of modern warfare, and On The Marble Cliffs, his allegorical, anti-Nazi capriccio of 1939 that describes an assassination attempt on a tyrant and appears, in retrospect, to be a prophecy of the von Stauffenberg bomb. plot of 1944.

  Yet Jünger’s partisans – more French perhaps than German – claim for him the status of ‘great writer’, a thinker of Goethean wisdom, whose political leanings toward the extreme right have robbed him of the recognition he deserves. Certainly, the scale of his erudition is titanic: his singularity of purpose is unswerving, and even at eighty-five he continues to
elaborate on the themes that have held his attention for over sixty years. He is – or has been - soldier, aesthete, novelist, essayist, the ideologue of an authoritarian political party, and a trained taxonomic botanist. His lifelong hobby has been the study of entomology: indeed, what the butterfly was to Nabokov, the beetle is to Jünger – especially the armourplated beetle. He is also the connoisseur of hallucinogens who took a number of ‘trips’ with his friend Albert Hofmann, the discoverer of lysergic acid.5

  He writes a hard, lucid prose. Much of it leaves the reader with an impression of the author’s imperturbable self-regard, of dandyism, of cold-bloodedness, and, finally, of banality. Yet the least promising passages will suddenly light up with flashes of aphoristic brilliance, and the most harrowing descriptions are alleviated by a yearning for human values in a dehumanised world. The diary is the perfect form for a man who combines such acute powers of observation with an anaesthetised sensibility.

  He was born in 1895, the son of a pharmacist from Hanover. By 1911, bored by the conventional world of his parents, he joined the Wandervogel Movement and so became acquainted with the values of Open Air, Nature, Blood, Soil, and Fatherland: already he was the expert beetle-hunter who spent many happy hours with his killing bottle. Two years later, he ran away to the Sahara and joined the Foreign Legion, only to be brought back by his father. In 1914, on the first day of war, he enlisted in the 73rd Hanoverian Fusiliers and emerged in 1918, ‘punctured in twenty places’, with the highest military decoration, the Croix pour le Mérite, an enlarged sense of personal grandeur, and in possession of a meticulous diary that recorded the horrific beauty of trench warfare and the reckless gaiety of men under fire. The Fall of Germany was thus the making of Jünger.