Brave new World
Chapter 11
AFTER the scene
in the Fertilizing Room, all upper-caste London was wild to see this delicious
creature who had fallen on his knees before the Director of Hatcheries and
Conditioningor rather the ex-Director, for the poor man had resigned
immediately afterwards and never set foot inside the Centre againhad flopped
down and called him (the joke was almost too good to be true!) "my
father." Linda, on the contrary, cut no ice; nobody had the smallest
desire to see Linda. To say one was a motherthat was past a joke: it was an
obscenity. Moreover, she wasn't a real savage, had been hatched out of a bottle
and conditioned like any one else: so couldn't have really quaint ideas.
Finallyand this was by far the strongest reason for people's not wanting to
see poor Lindathere was her appearance. Fat; having lost her youth; with bad
teeth, and a blotched complexion, and that figure (Ford!)you simply couldn't
look at her without feeling sick, yes, positively sick. So the best people were
quite determined not to see Linda. And Linda, for her part, had no desire to
see them. The return to civilization was for her the return to soma, was the
possibility of lying in bed and taking holiday after holiday, without ever
having to come back to a headache or a fit of vomiting, without ever being made
to feel as you always felt after peyotl, as though you'd done something so
shamefully anti-social that you could never hold up your head again. Soma
played none of these unpleasant tricks. The holiday it gave was perfect and, if
the morning after was disagreeable, it was so, not intrinsically, but only by
comparison with the joys of the holiday. The remedy was to make the holiday
continuous. Greedily she clamoured for ever larger, ever more frequent doses.
Dr. Shaw at first demurred; then let her have what she wanted. She took as much
as twenty grammes a day.
"Which will finish her
off in a month or two," the doctor confided to Bernard. "One day the
respiratory centre will be paralyzed. No more breathing. Finished. And a good
thing too. If we could rejuvenate, of course it would be different. But we
can't."
Surprisingly, as every one
thought (for on soma-holiday Linda was most conveniently out of the way), John
raised objections.
"But aren't you
shortening her life by giving her so much?"
"In one sense,
yes," Dr. Shaw admitted. "But in another we're actually lengthening
it." The young man stared, uncomprehending. "Soma may make you lose a
few years in time," the doctor went on. "But think of the enormous,
immeasurable durations it can give you out of time. Every soma-holiday is a bit
of what our ancestors used to call eternity."
ŠŠ..
In the end John
was forced to give in. Linda got her soma. Thenceforward she remained in her
little room on the thirty-seventh floor of Bernard's apartment house, in bed,
with the radio and television always on, and the patchouli tap just dripping,
and the soma tablets within reach of her handthere she remained; and yet
wasn't there at all, was all the time away, infinitely far away, on holiday; on
holiday in some other world, where the music of the radio was a labyrinth of
sonorous colours, a sliding, palpitating labyrinth, that led (by what
beautifully inevitable windings) to a bright centre of absolute conviction;
where the dancing images of the television box were the performers in some
indescribably delicious all-singing feely; where the dripping patchouli was
more than scentwas the sun, was a million saxophones, was Popé making love,
only much more so, incomparably more, and without end.