The Quiet American, Innocence at large
Cultures across the world find innocence an endearing aspect of personality. This is innocence in its meaning of ‘freedom from guile or cunning,’ a synonym for simplicity. But Innocence is also a euphemism for foolish naivety. Graham Greene says in his 1956 novel The Quiet American that in life one needs to be as much wary of innocence as of duplicity.
I read the book more than two decades ago. I found in the
character of the protagonist, a most skillful portrait of innocence ever drawn
in literature. Over the years, details of the plot vanished from memory, but
the poignance, the humour, and the tragedy of Alden Pyle remained and rose
occasionally, whenever I came across similar themes in my readings.
I read the book again, a few days back. My opinion that this
is one of Greene’s finest was reaffirmed.
Greene was war-correspondent of The Times, based in
Vietnam in 1951-1954. He drew extensively on his experiences to lend verisimilitude
to his story. The 1956 novel, it is alleged, was conceived in October 1951.
Greene was driving back to Saigon from a province accompanied by an American
aid worker who lectured him on ‘third force in Vietnam.’
Book is widely acclaimed as a prescient war novel. I found
the story multi-themed. It is a story of love unfolding in a war-ravaged
country. It is also a tragic story of a middle-aged man, who has run away from
a failed marriage under the guise of work. Afraid of the solitude that lies
ahead, he finds love in a foreign land which appears to offer him a chimeric
relief from the loneliness of old age. He is enough of a realist to know that
his circumstances will not let him nurture this attachment for long. Narration
of the innocent idealism of the protagonist which brings much destruction, is
braided with other themes. Book is also a finely conceived murder mystery;
alike Greene’s many other stories.
Thomas Fowler is the narrator, one of the three main characters
in the story – others being Alden Pyle, the undercover CIA agent and Phuong, Fowler’s
Vietnamese live-in lover.
Fowler, a foreign correspondent of an English paper, is based
in Saigon. He has reported Vietnam war for two years.
French are fighting a losing war in Vietnam, trying to defend
a doomed colonialism. Fowler has no illusions about the misery that war is
wreaking on the country. He disinterestedly reports the war, refusing to take
sides. He even desists, as he likes to believe, from arriving at an opinion:
‘It had been an article of my creed. The human condition being what it was, let
them fight, let them love, let them murder. I would not be involved. My fellow
journalists called themselves correspondents; I preferred the title of reporter.
I wrote what I saw. I took no action – even an opinion is a kind of action.’
Fowler’s estranged wife is back home in England. Though he
recognises that his philandering ways and dishonesty have caused his wife much
pain and irreparably soured their relations, he suffers the ensuing dreariness
in his life that is devoid of love.
Greene intertwines human drama – love of an ageing
western man, caught in a miserable marriage, for a young Asian girl, her
impending betrayal, and man’s deceits and lies to preserve her love – with the
war narrative.
Fowler fills the void in his life with Phuong’s company.
Phuong’s shrewd and calculating elder sister wants her to marry the best
candidate among the expats, a marriage that will bring them money and status. She
dispassionately weighs the merits and failing of each. Fowler knows his poor
chances: his advanced years, his inability to marry Phuong because of his
marriage, and his modest means. His catholic wife refuses to divorce him, and he
fears the day he will have to return to England without Phuong: ‘From childhood
I had never believed in permanence, and yet I had longed for it. Always I was
afraid of losing happiness. This month, next year, Phuong would leave me. If
not next year, in three years. Death was the only absolute value in my world.
Lose life and one would lose nothing again for ever’.
Greene expertly depicts the pathos in this tender relation of
a jaded, cynical, middle-aged man. In occasional, short sentences he describes
how Phuong brings love in Fowler’s mundane life: ‘she was the hiss of steam,
the clink of a cup, she was a certain hour of the night and the promise of
rest. … To take an Annamite to bed with you is like taking a bird: they twitter
and sing on your pillow. … I put out my hand and touched her arm – their bones
too were as fragile as a bird’s.’
Pyle is the Quiet American, a dreamy idealist, who sees the
world through the concepts he has imbibed from people he considers expert in worldly matters. He has clear notions as to what is good and what bad. He
refuses to believe the reality that does not agree with the image he has
conjured of it. In Pyle, Greene has created one of the most interesting
characters in literature. Here he describes Pyle’s credulous nature: ‘He never
saw any thing he hadn’t heard in a lecture-hall, and his writers and his
lecturers made a fool of him. … I was to see many times that look of pain and
disappointment touch his eyes and mouth when reality didn’t match the romantic
ideas he cherished, or when someone he loved or admired dropped below the
impossible standard he had set’.
Pyle’s actual job is to support a third force in Vietnam, neither
colonialism nor communism, that America thinks is the solution to its present
predicament. Pyle has been in Vietnam only for few days, but he knows what is
good for its people. He has read, and is devoted to, an American political
thinker, York Harding. Harding has no real experience of Southeast Asia, but
has authored many books on it like The Advance of Red China, The Challenge
to Democracy, The Role of the West. Fowler is appalled by Pyle’s brash and
dumb self-assuredness: ‘Pyle was very earnest and I had suffered from his
lectures on the Far East, which he had known for as many months as I had years.
Democracy was another subject of his—he had pronounced and aggravating views on
what the United States was doing for the world.’
Greene gives Phuong a stereotypical character, dull and belittling:
a beautiful, hare-brained, oriental girl. She is the young lover who prepares Fowler’s
opium pipes when he wants to smoke, lets him make love to her when he desires, and finds
joys in collecting silk scarves, seeing pictures of English monarchy in
magazines, and watching sentimental movies. Greene, through Fowler, even denies
her deep emotions of love: ‘They love in return for kindness, security, the
presents you give them – they hate you for a blow or an injustice’.
Book begins when French police arrive at Fowler’s home to
investigate Pyle’s murder.
Story unfolds as Fowler narrates his time in Vietnam since he
met Pyle. Pyle had torpedoed in the tenuously calm life of Fowler a few months
back. Allegedly, he is in Vietnam to work in the economic-aid division of
American embassy. He befriends Fowler and seeks his help to understand the country
better. Fowler’s cynical realism about the country does not penetrate Pyle’s idealism
generated by York Harding.
Fowler once visits Phat Diem to witness a war. Pyle comes to
see him here, amid the dangerous fight, to tell him that he is in love with
Phuong, since the time he met her first. On being asked why couldn’t he wait
till Fowler got back to Saigon, he answers that Fowler might have been killed
at Phat Diem and then it would have been dishonourable for him to marry Phuong.
Fowler sees his world come crashing down. Pyle is unfazed.
He cannot help being in love with Phuong and hates that she had to be Fowler’s
girlfriend. He feels that the only course now is for them both to meet Phuong
together and seek her choice: ‘I never knew a man who had better motives for
all the trouble he caused’. Fowler knows he is no match to Pyle as a
prospective companion: Pyle can offer her marriage, children she loves,
respectable life, youthful body, and a comfortable life. He is annoyed at this
turn of fate and Pyle’s intrusion in his life. But Pyle insists on calling
Fowler his best friend in Vietnam and thinks he is behaving extremely dignified:
‘There was a quality of implacable in Pyle. He had determined I was behaving
well and I had to behave well. … He was impregnably armoured by his good
intentions and his ignorance’.
Greene conceives many fascinating scenes with Fowler and
Pyle. These are replete with witty, humorous, and easy-flowing dialogues.
Pyle and Fowler meet up again in a war zone. They are
stranded in a guard-tower on a night, and discuss topics ranging from religion
to sexual encounters. Tower is attacked by Viet Minh. Fowler breaks his ankle
while running away and Pyle saves his life. Fowler witnesses Pyle’s nonchalance
to danger and observes that ‘he was incapable of imagining pain or danger to
himself as he was incapable of conceiving pain he might cause others’.
Pyle’s naivete about world, his cockiness about what is right,
his insistence to behave honourably, even in the most inclement situations, his
belief that the world is as he has read in his books, and his steadfastness to
follow these ideas verbatim, lends his character a peculiar aloofness, and a
piquant innocence. Fowler feels that Pyle did not have to be in this warring
country, but rather ‘he belonged to the skyscraper and the express elevator,
the ice-cream and the dry Martinis, milk at lunch, and chicken sand witches on
the Merchant Limited’.
Fowler is witness to a series of bomb blasts in Saigon that
kill many innocent bystanders. His contacts in the Viet Minh show him evidence
that Pyle may be involved in these. Pyle has been courting Col The, a renegade
commander, whom he wants to groom as the leader of his third force.
Fowler begins to doubt if it is possible to remain neutral for
long in a war. He now feels that ‘sooner or later one has to take sides. If one
is to remain human’.
He confronts Pyle and tries to reason with him that attempting
to change the socio-political fabric of a country, of whom one knows nothing
and where one is a stranger, can only lead to disaster. Pyle appears blasé and
seems to convey that deaths of few uninvolved citizens are inconsequential when
wars are being fought to carve a new future of a country.
Fowler is dumbfounded by this impregnable gullibility of
Pyle. He tells Pyle, ‘I wish sometimes you had a few bad motives, you might
understand a little more about human beings.’ It occurs to him that ‘there was greater need
to protect’ oneself from innocence, and though ‘Innocence always calls mutely
for protection…we would be so much wiser to guard ourselves against it’. He
wonders if ‘innocence is like a dumb leper who has lost his bell, wondering the
world, meaning no harm’.
Book ends with the scene that opened it. French police
inspector Vigot, who reads Pascal in idle time at his office, comes to Fowler’s
room, allegedly for a chat. He is closing the file on Pyle’s death for lack of
any strong evidence. But he is perplexed by some facts he has unravelled during
the investigations. Greene now, carefully unspools the mystery behind Pyle’s
death, that he has only alluded to earlier.
Greene describes the life and work of foreign correspondents
in Vietnam with derision, marked perspicacity, and a suave humour:
‘Periodically, after an engagement had been tidily finished and the casualties
removed from the scene, they [expat reporters] would be summoned to Hanoi,
nearly four hours’ flight away, addressed by the Commander-in-Chief [of French
army], lodged for one night in a Press Camp where they boasted that the barman
was the best in Indo-China, flown over the late battlefield at a height of
3,000 feet (the limit of a heavy machine-gun’s range) and then delivered safely
and noisily back, like a school-treat, to the Continental Hotel in Saigon.’
There are short, alluring descriptions of the beautiful country:
‘The gold of the rice fields under flat
late sun: the fisher’s fragile cranes hovering over the fields like mosquitoes:
the cups of tea on an old abbot’s platform, with his bed and his commercial
calendars, his buckets and broken cups and the junk of a life-time washed up
around his chair: the mollusc hats of the girls repairing the road where a mine
had burst: the gold and the young green and the bright dresses of the south,
and in the north the deep browns and the black clothes and the circle of enemy mountains
and the drone of planes.’
And meticulous, brief sketches of even the minor characters: ‘He
looked at me with the indifference gaze of a smoker: the sunken cheeks, the
baby wrists, the arms of a small girl – many years and many pipes had been
needed to whittle him down to these dimensions.’
Greene had foreseen the imminent dangers in American policy
of imposing a political system, conceived in a foreign country, on an alien
population with different culture and value system. America’s wars for
democracy continue to this day, with equally devastating consequences.
Afghanistan and Iraq were the latest victims of America’s gratuitous
interference in other countries’ internal affairs of which America had no clue.
Greene was much feted by critics for his acute foresight. His
prediction that American policies in Vietnam would be disastrous for both countries
came to pass in a few years after the book was published.
American critics castigated Greene for disparaging American
world-view in the book. Review of the book in New York Times correctly
summed up the political message in the book: ‘The thesis is quite simply that
America is a crassly materialistic and "innocent" nation with no
understanding of other peoples. When her representatives intervene in other
countries' affairs it causes only suffering. America should leave Asians to
work out their own destinies, even when this means the victory of communism.’
And then lambasted him for harbouring such puerile notions and creating card-board
characters cast in this image. Critic’s ire spilled over and he heaped opprobrium
on Greene’s previous books too.
Greene did ridicule this American view. It is not unreasonable
that his immaculately composed novel should rile an American patriot endlessly.
I never read The Quiet American only as a war novel which
makes an astute political statement. I found in it a sublime commentary on
human condition, love gurgling in the bosom of a dry-as-a-bone middle-aged cynic,
a fascinating picture of innocence, and of course, the pointless horrors of wars.
All these elements are inextricably mixed in the theme. I cannot discern what theme
is in background and what in fore. As I close the book, a quiet satisfaction
and a deep joy suffuse the mind, having experienced, once again, an exquisite
work of creation.
Excellent
ReplyDeleteVery well written!
ReplyDeleteSo beautifully summarised and tightly composed, makes me want to read the whole book now.
ReplyDelete