night to the roar of rifle fire as batch after batch of Republicans was
   executed, and being most of the time in acute danger of execution
   himself. This was not a chance adventure which "might have happened to
   anybody", but was in accordance with Koestler's life-style. A
   politically indifferent person would not have been in Spain at that
   date, a more cautious observer would have got out of Malaga before the
   Fascists arrived, and a British or American newspaper man would have
   been treated with more consideration. The book that Koestler wrote about
   this, SPANISH TESTAMENT, has remarkable passages, but apart from the
   scrappiness that is usual in a book of reportage, it is definitely false
   in places. In the prison scenes Koestler successfully establishes the
   nightmare atmosphere which is, so to speak, his patent, but the rest of
   the book is too much coloured by the Popular Front orthodoxy of the
   time. One or two passages even look as though they had been doctored for
   the purposes of the Left Book Club. At that time Koestler still was, or
   recently had been, a member of the Communist Party, and the complex
   politics of the civil war made it impossible for any Communist to write
   honestly about the internal struggle on the Government side. The sin of
   nearly all left-wingers from 1933 onwards is that they have wanted to be
   anti-Fascist without being anti-totalitarian. In 1937 Koestler already
   knew this, but did not feel free to say so. He came much nearer to
   saying it--indeed, he did say it, though he put on a mask to do so--in
   his next book, THE GLADIATORS, which was published about a year before
   the war and for some reason attracted very little attention.
   THE GLADIATORS is in some ways an unsatisfactory book. It is about
   Spartacus, the Thracian gladiator who raised a slaves' rebellion in
   Italy round about 65 BC, and any book on such a subject is handicapped
   by challenging comparison with SALAMMB?. In our own age it would not be
   possible to write a book like SALAMMB? even if one had the talent. The
   great thing about Salammb?, even more important than its physical
   detail, is its utter mercilessness. Flaubert could think himself into
   the stony cruelty of antiquity, because in the mid-nineteenth century
   one still had peace of mind. One had time to travel in the past.
   Nowadays the present and the future are too terrifying to be escaped
   from, and if one bothers with history it is in order to find modern
   meanings there. Koestler makes Spartacus into an allegorical figure, a
   primitive version of the proletarian dictator. Whereas Flaubert has been
   able, by a prolonged effort of the imagination, to make his mercenaries
   truly pre-Christian, Spartacus is a modern man dressed up. But this
   might not matter if Koestler were fully aware of what his allegory
   means. Revolutions always go wrong--that is the main theme. It is on the
   question of WHY they go wrong that he falters, and his uncertainty
   enters into the story and makes the central figures enigmatic and unreal.
   For several years the rebellious slaves are uniformly successful. Their
   numbers swell to a hundred thousand, they overrun great areas of
   Southern Italy, they defeat one punitive expedition after another, they
   ally themselves with the pirates who at that time were the masters of
   the Mediterranean, and finally they set to work to build a city of their
   own, to be named the City of the Sun. In this city human beings are to
   be free and equal, and above all, they are to be happy: no slavery, no
   hunger, no injustice, no floggings, no executions. It is the dream of a
   just society which seems to haunt the human imagination ineradicably and
   in all ages, whether it is called the Kingdom of Heaven or the classless
   society, or whether it is thought of as a Golden Age which once existed
   in the past and from which we have degenerated. Needless to say, the
   slaves fail to achieve it. No sooner have they formed themselves into a
   community than their way of life turns out to be as unjust, laborious
   and fear-ridden as any other. Even the cross, symbol of slavery, has to
   be revived for the punishment of malefactors. The turning-point comes
   when Spartacus finds himself obliged to crucify twenty of his oldest and
   most faithful followers. After that the City of the Sun is doomed, the
   slaves split up and are defeated in detail, the last fifteen thousand of
   them being captured and crucified in one batch.
   The serious weakness of this story is that the motives of Spartacus
   himself are never made clear. The Roman lawyer Fulvius, who joins the
   rebellion and acts as its chronicler, sets forth the familiar dilemma of
   ends and means. You can achieve nothing unless you are willing to use
   force and cunning, but in using them you pervert your original aims.
   Spartacus, however, is not represented as power hungry, nor, on the
   other hand, as a visionary. He is driven onwards by some obscure force
   which he does not understand, and he is frequently in two minds as to
   whether it would not be better to throw up the whole adventure and flee
   to Alexandria while the going is good. The slaves' republic is in any
   case wrecked rather by hedonism than by the struggle for power. The
   slaves are discontented with their liberty because they still have to
   work, and the final break-up happens because the more turbulent and less
   civilised slaves, chiefly Gauls and Germans, continue to behave like
   bandits after the republic has been established. This may be a true
   account of events--naturally we know very little about the slave
   rebellions of antiquity--but by allowing the Sun City to be destroyed
   because Crixus the Gaul cannot be prevented from looting and raping,
   Koestler has faltered between allegory and history. If Spartacus is the
   prototype of the modern revolutionary--and obviously he is intended as
   that--he should have gone astray because of the impossibility of
   combining power with righteousness. As it is, he is an almost passive
   figure, acted upon rather than acting, and at times not convincing. The
   story partly fails because the central problem of revolution has been
   avoided or, at least, has not been solved.
   It is again avoided in a subtler way in the next book, Koestler's
   masterpiece, DARKNESS AT NOON. Here, however, the story is not spoiled,
   because it deals with individuals and its interest is psychological. It
   is an episode picked out from a background that does not have to be
   questioned. DARKNESS AT NOON describes the imprisonment and death of an
   Old Bolshevik, Rubashov, who first denies and ultimately confesses to
   crimes which he is well aware he has not committed. The grown-upness,
   the lack of surprise or denunciation, the pity and irony with which the
   story is told, show the advantage, when one is handling a theme of this
   kind, of being a European. The book reaches the stature of tragedy,
   whereas an English or American writer could at most have made it into a
   polemical tract. Koestler has digested his material and can treat it on
   the aesthetic level. At the same time his handling of it has a political
   implication, not important in this case but lik 
					     					 			ely to be damaging in
   later books.
   Naturally the whole book centres round one question: Why did Rubashov
   confess? He is not guilty--that is, not guilty of anything except the
   essential crime of disliking the Stalin r?gime. The concrete acts of
   treason in which he is supposed to have engaged are all imaginary. He
   has not even been tortured, or not very severely. He is worn down by
   solitude, toothache, lack of tobacco, bright lights glaring in his eyes,
   and continuous questioning, but these in themselves would not be enough
   to overcome a hardened revolutionary. The Nazis have previously done
   worse to him without breaking his spirit. The confessions obtained in
   the Russian state trials are capable of three explanations:
   1. That the accused were guilty.
   2. That they were tortured, and perhaps blackmailed by threats to
   relatives and friends.
   3. That they were actuated by despair, mental bankruptcy and the habit
   of loyalty to the Party.
   For Koestler's purpose in DARKNESS AT NOON, 1 is ruled out, and though
   this is not the place to discuss the Russian purges, I must add that
   what little verifiable evidence there is suggests that the trials of the
   Bolsheviks were frame-ups. If one assumes that the accused were not
   guilty--at any rate, not guilty of the particular things they confessed
   to--then 2 is the common-sense explanation. Koestler, however, plumps
   for 3, which is also accepted by the Trotskyist Boris Souvarine, in his
   pamphlet CAUCHEMAR EN URSS. Rubashov ultimately confesses because he
   cannot find in his own mind any reason for not doing so. Justice and
   objective truth have long ceased to have any meaning for him. For
   decades he has been simply the creature of the Party, and what the Party
   now demands is that he shall confess to non-existent crimes. In the end,
   though he had to be bullied and weakened first, he is somewhat proud of
   his decision to confess. He feels superior to the poor Czarist officer
   who inhabits the next cell and who talks to Rubashov by tapping on the
   wall. The Czarist officer is shocked when he learns that Rubashov
   intends to capitulate. As he sees it from his "bourgeois" angle,
   everyone ought to stick to his guns, even a Bolshevik. Honour, he says,
   consists in doing what you think right. "Honour is to be useful without
   fuss," Rubashov taps back; and he reflects with a certain satisfaction
   that he is tapping with his pince-nez while the other, the relic of the
   past, is tapping with a monocle. Like Bukharin, Rubashov is "looking out
   upon black darkness". What is there, what code, what loyalty, what
   notion of good and evil, for the sake of which he can defy the Party and
   endure further torment? He is not only alone, he is also hollow. He has
   himself committed worse crimes than the one that is now being
   perpetrated against him. For example, as a secret envoy of the Party in
   Nazi Germany, he has got rid of disobedient followers by betraying them to
   the Gestapo. Curiously enough, if he has any inner strength to draw
   upon, it is the memories of his boyhood when he was the son of
   a landowner. The last thing he remembers, when he is shot from
   behind, is the leaves of poplar trees on his father's estate. Rubashov
   belongs to the older generation of Bolsheviks that was largely wiped out
   in the purges. He is aware of art and literature, and of the world
   outside Russia. He contrasts sharply with Gletkin, the young GPU man who
   conducts his interrogation, and who is the typical "good party man",
   completely without scruples or curiosity, a thinking gramophone.
   Rubashov, unlike Gletkin, does not have the Revolution as his
   starting-point. His mind was not a blank sheet when the Party got hold
   of it. His superiority to the other is finally traceable to his
   bourgeois origin.
   One cannot, I think, argue that DARKNESS AT NOON is simply a story
   dealing with the adventures of an imaginary individual. Clearly it is a
   political book, founded on history and offering an interpretation of
   disputed events. Rubashov might be called Trotsky, Bukharin Rakovsky or
   some other relatively civilised figure among the Old Bolsheviks. If one
   writes about the Moscow trials one must answer the question, "Why did
   the accused confess?" and which answer one makes is a political
   decision. Koestler answers, in effect, "Because these people had been
   rotted by the Revolution which they served", and in doing so he comes
   near to claiming that revolutions are of their nature bad. If one
   assumes that the accused in the Moscow trials were made to confess by
   means of some kind of terrorism, one is only saying that one particular
   set of revolutionary leaders has gone astray. Individuals, and not the
   situation, are to blame. The implication of Koestler's book, however, is
   that Rubashov in power would be no better than Gletkin: or rather, only
   better in that his outlook is still partly pre-revolutionary.
   Revolution, Koestler seems to say, is a corrupting process. Really enter
   into the Revolution and you must end up as either Rubashov or Gletkin.
   It is not merely that "power corrupts": so also do the ways of attaining
   power. Therefore, all efforts to regenerate society BY VIOLENT MEANS
   lead to the cellars of the OGPU, Lenin leads to Stalin, and would have
   come to resemble Stalin if he had happened to survive.
   Of course, Koestler does not say this quite explicitly, and perhaps is
   not altogether conscious of it. He is writing about darkness, but it is
   darkness at what ought to be noon. Part of the time he feels that things
   might have turned out differently. The notion that so-and-so has
   "betrayed", that things have only gone wrong because of individual
   wickedness, is ever present in left-wing thought. Later, in ARRIVAL AND
   DEPARTURE, Koestler swings over much further towards the
   anti-revolutionary position, but in between these two books there is
   another, SCUM OF THE EARTH, which is straight autobiography and has only
   an indirect bearing upon the problems raised by DARKNESS AT NOON. True
   to his life-style, Koestler was caught in France by the outbreak of war
   and, as a foreigner and a known anti-Fascist, was promptly arrested and
   interned by the Daladier Government. He spent the first nine months of
   war mostly in a prison camp, then, during the collapse of France,
   escaped and travelled by devious routes to England, where he was once
   again thrown into prison as an enemy alien. This time he was soon
   released, however. The book is a valuable piece of reportage, and
   together with a few other scraps of honest writing that happened to be
   produced at the time of the d?b?cle, it is a reminder of the depths
   that bourgeois democracy can descend to. At this moment, with France
   newly liberated and the witch-hunt after collaborators in full swing, we
   are apt to forget that in 1940 various observers on the spot considered
   that about forty per cent of the French population was either actively
   pro-German or completely apathetic. Truthful war books are never
   acceptable to non-combatants, and Koestler's book did not have a very
   good r 
					     					 			eception. Nobody came well out of it--neither the bourgeois
   politicians, whose idea of conducting an anti-Fascist war was to jail
   every left-winger they could lay their hands on, nor the French
   Communists, who were effectively pro-Nazi and did their best to sabotage
   the French war effort, nor the common people, who were just as likely to
   follow mountebanks like Doriot as responsible leaders. Koestler records
   some fantastic conversations with fellow victims in the concentration
   camp, and adds that till then, like most middle-class Socialists and
   Communists, he had never made contact with real proletarians, only with
   the educated minority. He draws the pessimistic conclusion: "Without
   education of the masses, no social progress; without social progress, no
   education of the masses". In SCUM OF THE EARTH Koestler ceases to
   idealise the common people. He has abandoned Stalinism, but he is not a
   Trotskyist either. This is the book's real link with ARRIVAL AND
   DEPARTURE, in which what is normally called a revolutionary outlook is
   dropped, perhaps for good.
   ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE is not a satisfactory book. The pretence that it
   is a novel is very thin; in effect it is a tract purporting to show that
   revolutionary creeds are rationalisations of neurotic impulses. With all
   too neat a symmetry, the book begins and ends with the same action--a
   leap into a foreign country. A young ex-Communist who has made his
   escape from Hungary jumps ashore in Portugal, where he hopes to enter
   the service of Britain, at that time the only power fighting against
   Germany. His enthusiasm is somewhat cooled by the fact that the British
   Consulate is uninterested in him and almost ignores him for a period of
   several months, during which his money runs out and other astuter
   refugees escape to America. He is successively tempted by the World in
   the form of a Nazi propagandist, the Flesh in the form of a French girl,
   and--after a nervous breakdown--the Devil in the form of a psychoanalyst.
   The psychoanalyst drags out of him the fact that his revolutionary
   enthusiasm is not founded on any real belief in historical necessity,
   but on a morbid guilt complex arising from an attempt in early childhood
   to blind his baby brother. By the time that he gets an opportunity of
   serving the Allies he has lost all reason for wanting to do so, and he
   is on the point of leaving for America when his irrational impulses
   seize hold of him again. In practice he cannot abandon the struggle.
   When the book ends, he is floating down in a parachute over the dark
   landscape of his native country, where he will be employed as a secret
   agent of Britain.
   As a political statement (and the book is not much more), this is
   insufficient. Of course it is true in many cases, and it may be true in
   all cases, that revolutionary activity is the result of personal
   maladjustment. Those who struggle against society are, on the whole,
   those who have reason to dislike it, and normal healthy people are no
   more attracted by violence and illegality than they are by war. The
   young Nazi in ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE makes the penetrating remark that
   one can see what is wrong with the left-wing movement by the ugliness of
   its women. But after all, this does not invalidate the Socialist case.
   Actions have results, irrespective of their motives. Marx's ultimate
   motives may well have been envy and spite, but this does not prove that
   his conclusions were false. In making the hero of ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE
   take his final decision from a mere instinct not to shirk action and
   danger, Koestler is making him suffer a sudden loss of intelligence.
   With such a history as he has behind him, he would be able to see that
   certain things have to be done, whether our reasons for doing them are
   "good" or "bad". History has to move in a certain direction, even if it
   has to be pushed that way by neurotics. In ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE Peter's
   idols are overthrown one after the other. The Russian Revolution has