9. Ford Madox Ford and the Devil’s Disciple

A Moveable Feast / 流动的盛宴

1The Closerie des Lilas was the nearest good café when we lived in the flat over the sawmill at 113 rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs, and it was one of the best cafés in Paris. It was warm inside in the winter and in the spring and fall it was very fine outside with the tables under the shade of the trees on the side where the statue of Marshal Ney was, and the square, regular tables under the big awnings along the boulevard. Two of the waiters were our good friends. People from the Dôme and the Rotonde never came to the Lilas. There was no one there they knew, and no one would have stared at them if they came. In those days many people went to the cafés at the corner of the Boulevard Montparnasse and the Boulevard Raspail to be seen publicly and in a way such places anticipated the columnists as the daily substitutes for immortality.

2The Closerie des Lilas had once been a café where poets met more or less regularly and the last principal poet had been Paul Fort whom I had never read. But the only poet I ever saw there was Blaise Cendrars, with his broken boxers face and his pinned-up empty sleeve, rolling a cigarette with his one good hand. He was a good companion until he drank too much and, at that time, when he was lying, he was more interesting than many men telling a story truly. But he was the only poet who came to the Lilas then and I only saw him there once. Most of the clients were elderly bearded men in well worn clothes who came with their wives or their mistresses and wore or did not wear thin red Legion of Honor ribbons in their lapels. We thought of them all hopefully as scientists or savants and they sat almost as long over an apéritif as the men in shabbier clothes who sat with their wives or mistresses over a café crème and wore the purple ribbon of the Palms of the Academy, which had nothing to do with the French Academy, and meant, we thought, that they were professors or instructors.

3These people made it a comfortable café since they were all interested in each other and in their drinks or coffees, or infusions, and in the papers and periodicals which were fastened to rods, and no one was on exhibition.

4There were other people too who lived in the quarter and came to the Lilas, and some of them wore Croix de Guerre ribbons in their lapels and others also had the yellow and green of the Médaille Militaire, and I watched how well they were overcoming the handicap of the loss of limbs, and saw the quality of their artificial eyes and the degree of skill with which their faces had been reconstructed. There was always an almost iridescent shiny cast about the considerably reconstructed face, rather like that of a well packed ski run, and we respected these clients more than we did the savants or the professors, although the latter might well have done their military service too without experiencing mutilation.

5In those days we did not trust anyone who had not been in the war, but we did not completely trust anyone, and there was a strong feeling that Cendrars might well be a little less flashy about his vanished arm. I was glad he had been in the Lilas early in the afternoon before the regular clients had arrived.

6On this evening I was sitting at a table outside of the Lilas watching the light change on the trees and the buildings and the passage of the great slow horses of the outer boulevards. The door of the café opened behind me and to my right, and a man came out and walked to my table.

7Oh here you are,” he said.

8It was Ford Madox Ford, as he called himself then, and he was breathing heavily through a heavy, stained mustache and holding himself as upright as an ambulatory, well clothed, up-ended hogshead.

9May I sit with you?” he asked, sitting down, and his eyes which were a washed-out blue under colorless lids and eyebrows looked out at the boulevard.

10I spent good years of my life that those beasts should be slaughtered humanely,” he said.

11You told me,” I said.

12I dont think so.”

13Im quite sure.”

14Very odd. Ive never told anyone in my life.”

15Will you have a drink?”

16The waiter stood there and Ford told him he would have a Chambéry Cassis. The waiter, who was tall and thin and bald on the top of his head with hair slicked over and who wore a heavy old-style dragoon mustache, repeated the order.

17No. Make it a fine à l’eau,” Ford said.

18A fine à l’eau for Monsieur,” the waiter confirmed the order.

19I had always avoided looking at Ford when I could and I always held my breath when I was near him in a closed room, but this was the open air and the fallen leaves blew along the sidewalks from my side of the table past his, so I took a good look at him, repented, and looked across the boulevard. The light was changed again and I had missed the change. I took a drink to see if his coming had fouled it, but it still tasted good.

20Youre very glum,” he said.

21No.”

22Yes you are. You need to get out more. I stopped by to ask you to the little evenings were giving in that amusing Bal Musette near the Place Contrescarpe on the rue Cardinal Lemoine.”

23I lived above it for two years before you came to Paris this last time.”

24How odd. Are you sure?”

25Yes,” I said. Im sure. The man who owned it had a taxi and when I had to get a plane hed take me out to the field, and wed stop at the zinc bar of the Bal and drink a glass of white wine in the dark before wed start for the airfield.”

26Ive never cared for flying,” Ford said. You and your wife plan to come to the Bal Musette Saturday night. Its quite gay. Ill draw you a map so you can find it. I stumbled on it quite by chance.”

27Its under 74 rue Cardinal Lemoine,” I said. I lived on the third floor.”

28Theres no number,” Ford said. But youll be able to find it if you can find the Place Contrescarpe.”

29I took another long drink. The waiter had brought Fords drink and Ford was correcting him. It wasn’t a brandy and soda,” he said helpfully but severely. I ordered a Chambéry vermouth and Cassis.”

30Its all right, Jean,” I said. Ill take the fine. Bring Monsieur what he orders now.”

31What I ordered,” corrected Ford.

32At that moment a rather gaunt man wearing a cape passed on the sidewalk. He was with a tall woman and he glanced at our table and then away and went on his way down the boulevard.

33Did you see me cut him?” Ford said. Did you see me cut him?”

34No. Who did you cut?”

35“Belloc,” Ford said. Did I cut him!”

36I didn’t see it,” I said. Why did you cut him?”

37For every good reason in the world,” Ford said. Did I cut him though!”

38He was thoroughly and completely happy. I had never seen Belloc and I did not believe he had seen us. He looked like a man who had been thinking of something and had glanced at the table almost automatically. I felt badly that Ford had been rude to him, as, being a young man who was commencing his education, I had a high regard for him as an older writer. This is not understandable now but in those days it was a common occurrence.

39I thought it would have been pleasant if Belloc had stopped at the table and I might have met him. The afternoon had been spoiled by seeing Ford but I thought Belloc might have made it better.

40What are you drinking brandy for?” Ford asked me. Dont you know its fatal for a young writer to start drinking brandy?”

41I dont drink it very often,” I said. I was trying to remember what Ezra Pound had told me about Ford, that I must never be rude to him, that I must remember that he only lied when he was very tired, that he was really a good writer and that he had been through very bad domestic troubles. I tried hard to think of these things but the heavy, wheezing, ignoble presence of Ford himself, only touching-distance away, made it difficult. But I tried.

42Tell me why one cuts people,” I asked. Until then I had thought it was something only done in novels by Ouida. I had never been able to read a novel by Ouida, not even at some skiing place in Switzerland where reading matter had run out when the wet south wind had come and there were only the left-behind Tauchnitz editions of before the war. But I was sure, by some sixth sense, that people cut one another in her novels.

43A gentleman,” Ford explained, “will always cut a cad.”

44I took a quick drink of brandy.

45Would he cut a bounder?” I asked.

46It would be impossible for a gentleman to know a bounder.”

47Then you can only cut someone you have known on terms of equality?” I pursued.

48Naturally.”

49How would one ever meet a cad?”

50You might not know it, or the fellow could have become a cad.”

51What is a cad?” I asked. “Isn’t he someone that one has to thrash within an inch of his life?”

52Not necessarily,” Ford said.

53Is Ezra a gentleman?” I asked.

54Of course not,” Ford said. Hes an American.”

55Cant an American be a gentleman?”

56Perhaps John Quinn,” Ford explained. Certain of your ambassadors.”

57“Myron T. Herrick?”

58Possibly.”

59Was Henry James a gentleman?”

60Very nearly.”

61Are you a gentleman?”

62Naturally. I have held His Majestys commission.”

63Its very complicated,” I said. Am I a gentleman?”

64Absolutely not,” Ford said.

65Then why are you drinking with me?”

66Im drinking with you as a promising young writer. As a fellow writer in fact.”

67Good of you,” I said.

68You might be considered a gentleman in Italy,” Ford said magnanimously.

69But Im not a cad?”

70Of course not, dear boy. Who ever said such a thing?”

71I might become one,” I said sadly. Drinking brandy and all. That was what did for Lord Harry Hotspur in Trollope. Tell me, was Trollope a gentleman?”

72Of course not.”

73Youre sure?”

74There might be two opinions. But not in mine.”

75Was Fielding? He was a judge.”

76Technically perhaps.”

77“Marlowe?”

78Of course not.”

79John Donne?”

80He was a parson.”

81Its fascinating,” I said.

82Im glad youre interested,” Ford said. Ill have a brandy and water with you before I go.”

83After Ford left it was dark and I walked over to the kiosque and bought a Paris-Sport Complet, the final edition of the afternoon racing paper with the results at Auteuil, and the line on the next days meeting at Enghien. The waiter Emile, who had replaced Jean on duty, came to the table to see the results of the last race at Auteuil. A great friend of mine who rarely came to the Lilas came over to the table and sat down, and just then as my friend was ordering a drink from Emile the gaunt man in the cape with the tall woman passed us on the sidewalk. His glance drifted toward the table and then away.

84Thats Hilaire Belloc,” I said to my friend. Ford was here this afternoon and cut him dead.”

85Dont be a silly ass,” my friend said. Thats Aleister Crowley, the diabolist. Hes supposed to be the wickedest man in the world.”

86Sorry,” I said.