Word comes from the great state of California that Gore Vidal,
literary politician, has once again transmogrified into Gore Vidal,
professional politician. Matched against Jerry Brown and other
beauties, Vidal will contend for the United States Senate seat now
occupied by S.I. Hayakawa, who is retiring in order to devote more
time to his naps.
Is this good news or bad for fans of Vidal’s writing, among whom
I count myself? At first glance it would seem that we have here a
source of sorrow. After all, it is likely that a victorious Vidal
would proceed to dissipate his energies in debates over tax cuts,
anti-abortion legislation, and subsidles for farmers, these
high-minded concerns being, of course, a senator’s lot. On the
other hand, a spell on Capitol Hill might serve in the long run to
improve Vidal’s writing by rendering him so weary of public affairs
that politics would never again putrify his prose.
Vidal the politician has always been Vidal at his worst, and the
present collection of his essays offers additional evidence of
this. In “The State of the Union Revisited,” for example, he
reiterates his thesis that every President of the United States is,
in fact, a retainer of the Chase Manhattan Bank. He refers to
“Banksman Henry Kissinger” and “Banksman Jimmy Carter” and argues
that the dying Shah of Iran was admitted to this country for
medical treatment solely because “Banksman Carter” feared that the
Shah would close his American bank accounts if denied entry.
Indeed, says Vidal, the mediocrity of American politicians is
mainly due to the machinations of the Chase Manhattan Bank. “The
Bank prefers to keep the brightest Americans hidden away in the
branch offices. The dull and the docile are sent to Congress and
the White House.” Even Carl T. Rowan can do better than this.
Would a Senator Vidal rise above the rabble? Essayist Vidal, I
fear, offers little encouragement. In “The Real Two-Party System,”
he confesses that he does not vote, and in the book’s title essay
Vidal forthrightly states what he believes to be the Senate’s
purpose: “The Senate should be kept as a home for wise men, much
like England’s House of life-Lords.” In other words, Senator Vidal
would in all likelihood see it as his primary responsibility to
stand up and say wise things about the Chase Manhattan Bank’s
all-powerful role in American politics.
VIDAL ENTERTAINS OTHER statesmanlike notions. He thinks, for
example, that we should switch to parliamentary government. “This
would render it possible for the United States to have, for the
first time in two centuries, real political parties. Since the
parliamentary system works reasonably well in other industrially
developed countries there is no reason why it should not work for
us.” The only other country Vidal considers in this book is Italy,
where he has maintained a home for several years and on which he
meditates in “Sciascia’s Italy.” And how is parliamentary
government faring there? According to Vidal, “Italy’s two great
unloved political parties” operate in a society based on “moral
anarchy,” which makes me wonder if our would-be senator has thought
his proposal through.
Vidal is a champion of many causes. In an essay called “Sex Is
Politics,” he undertakes an intellectual defense of homosexuality.
It is one of his most peculiar performances – not because
homosexuality is unworthy of intellectual defense, but because of
the way Vidal goes about it. In defense of his point of view, Vidal
traces antihomosexual sentiment back to Biblical times, in
particular the book of Leviticus. He writes: “Leviticus was written
either during or shortly after the Jewish exile in Babylon (586-538
B.C.). The exile ended when Persia’s Great King Cyrus conquered
Babylon. Tolerant of all religions, Cyrus let the Jews go home to
Jerusalem, where they began to rebuild the temple that had been
destroyed in 586. Since it was thought that the disasters of 586
might have been averted had the Jews been a bit more strait-laced
in their deportment, Leviticus was drafted.”
Is Vidal inventing history here? This is the first time I have
seen it argued that one of the original five books of Moses was
written in the Sixth Century B.C., rather than several centuries
earlier, as is commonly assumed to be the case. Vidal declines to
share his sources of information with us, and so I am doubly
baffled to read, in the following paragraph, “In earlier days,
Jonathan and David were much admired. Was their celebrated love for
each other an abomination? Obviously not.” Is Vidal saying that the
lives of David and Jonathan preceded the life chronicled in
Leviticus? Or is he saying that the lives of David and Jonathan
preceded the composition of Leviticus? In either case,
this is news to me, and it must be news to an awful lot of Biblical
scholars, too. On top of that, Vidal’s confident assertion that the
love of David and Jonathan was “obviously not” an abomination would
be news to Jonathan’s father, the late King Saul, whose disapproval
is registered right there in the Bible, and can be read by everyone
able to grab hold of a Gideon.
HE IS A VERY odd fish, this Mr. Vidal. Whatever doubts one might
entertain about him, one must recognize his talent. Here in this
book there are essays that are as fine as any written in recent
years. There are charming pieces on screenwriting and on Frank
Baum’s “Oz” books. There is an essay on F. Scott Fitzgerald which
actually manages to say something fresh about F. Scott’s brief but
infinitely belabored life. There is an essay on Christopher
Isherwood in which the subject of homosexuality is treated
gracefully and intelligently, without the propagandistic humbug
that characterizes “Sex Is Politics.” And there is a superb
meditation on Edmund Wilson where we find the following
observation, so wise and true that it ought to be carved into
Wilson’s gravestone, with copies distributed to every aspiring
author in America: “To the end of a long life, he kept on making
the only thing he thought worth making: sense, a quality almost
entirely lacking in American literature where stupidity — if
sufficiently sincere and authentic — is deeply revered, and easily
achieved.”
One thing about Vidal: He is consistently most dubious when he
is most preachy. For that reason I find myself finally wishing him
well in politics. If elected, he could talk nonsense to his fellow
senators, and, having got that out of the way, he could speak more
sensibly to his readers, who, after all, cherished him first, and
will cherish him last.
Mitchell S. Ross is author of The Literary Politicians
and An Invitation to Our Times.