David Langwallner: Legends Of The Fall

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The Fall (1956) by Albert Camus (top) is a crucial text for lawyers, argues David Langwallner (above)

Now, I have written about Camus before for Broadsheet. But this is in a different tone. The readers of Broadsheet have asked for a clinical piece, so here it is: clinical and theoretical.

The crucial text for all lawyers, in my view, is the French novelist Camus’s The Fall. The crucial man of reason. From his involvement in the French resistance to his controversial comments about the Algerian War, this was not a disengaged man of letters. He, unlike his protagonist in The Fall (1956), was not a hypocrite unlike his erstwhile friends De Beauvoir and Sartre.

Now, the longer political tracts on suicide The Myth of Sisyphus (1942), and the classic expression of his anti-authoritarian resistance mentality and his distrust of bloodletting and extremism The Rebel (1951), say multitudes in his classic French prose style and are crucial to our age. But it is the novels where the legacy rests.

The Plague (1947), of course, has brought Camus right back into focus and I have written about it hitherto, in Counsel magazine, and all it says about our present awful coronavirus times and The Outsider/Étranger (1942) has never been unfashionable and hotly debated by multiculturalists which I have also written about in Cassandra Voices.

Thus, the last published novel The Fall (1956) often gets overlooked, not least in that it is, in a way, monothematic unlike the other texts but that is its force, and it is about a lawyer, so hence clinical practice, and it is masterpiece. I would go so far as to say the greatest short novella of the 20th century; a secular version of St Augustine’s Confessions without the same atonement.

At the outset, to preface the book, Camus quotes Lermontov who said of his own epic A Hero of Our Time (1840) where the Byronic hero Parchorin is a superfluous nihilistic figure.

“It is in fact a portrait, not of an individual; it is the aggregate of the vices of our whole generation in their fullest expression.”

That I think is also what Camus is doing: etching a portrait, far from the flattering, of his generation. Perhaps through a lens darkly of many generations, including ours.

Short, crisp, and precise, the book is a detailed exposition on the lawyer as a professional hypocrite. In the Mexico City bar in Amsterdam, that city of half measures, compromises and ambiguity, both beautiful and repulsive, at once, the home of The Night Watch, the Van Gogh Museum and the drug trade and the red-light district. Thus, Jean Baptiste Clamence regales the assembled multitudes as a self-styled judge penitent and the book concerns one such dialogue, or should it be monologue, to a silent presumably willing listener.

Well, Gambon and John Hurt read Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape beautifully. And that is what it is like, a monologue. Maybe Gambon could be persuaded!

We, the readers, are the passive recipients. Just as to any client in the bar, he introduces himself unctuously at the outset of the book:

‘Monsieur, may I offer my services without running the risk of intruding.’

One is reminded of Uriah Heep and his incantation to be humble as a mask of self-deception.

Or later he describes himself as:

‘A charming Janus and a play actor so very much important in an advocate.’

His view of human society is venal, using the example of the piranha fish. It is, in effect, always a question of who will clean up or eat the other, or worse, or better, still depending on your view, comparing the holocaust to vacuum cleaning and admiring, on a purely professional level, the technique and the diligence. The relevance to our deregulated virus times should not go unnoticed.

The view of human nature in short is not benign. As a Parisian lawyer, the book in the classic, confessional French style highlights his own professional hypocrisy.

Often taking charitable cases to make himself look good. He had, he mulishly self-justifies to the reader, rightness of tone, appropriate emotion, persuasion, and warmth. Restrained indignation. The self-esteem of the putative righteous. F For Fake (1973) as the Welles film, set in the world of art forgery, shows. The art of illusion and fakery. And the book is very much one of Lost Illusions of a fake or a busted flush to use an American vernacular expression.

His representation of the innocent threads through the book, though he ambiguously notes that even those innocent of a crime accused have committed others, a dangerous line of argument often pursued by extremists of a religious or fundamentalist nature. The confusion of sin and criminality.

Clemence (Camus) is caustic about religious maniacs and, in a line, I must remember he argues that their moralising makes their Satanism virtuous. Or at least to them it does. It is a common failing of excessively religious people that they do not see the evil in themselves. I am reminded of several members of The Irish judiciary in that respect.

Clemence at least turns the lenses unsparingly on himself. The book, in an indirect way, reminds me of a recent book by a prosecutor of the Southern District of New York Doing Justice: A Prosecutor’s Thoughts on Crime, Punishment and The Rule of Law which, in the cosmos, I suppose has the moral significance of a Diary of a Nobody by Grossmith, but, no matter, also shows the effect of religious moralism in lawyer-dom with references in abundance to an entity called God.

The book argues that it is not enough that the convicted or soon-to-be convicted criminal be reformed and rehabilitated. It is not enough to admit what we already know. Freedom and absolution require more. You must confess all your sins. Well, that is certainly what Clamence is doing. To all and sundry, without restraint. Perhaps he should be reminded of the right to silence but perhaps not… I am sedulously of the view, at this stage, that the prosecutor mentality, evident also in Valjeart chasing Jean Valgena for the theft of a loaf of bread, is unsuitable for any position of institutional authority.

Jean Baptiste, of course, in his professional career began to look at himself as a delusion ally as a superman but is acutely conscious in hindsight of his own middle-class hypocrisy. In the text, he intimates he did not have, or rather has, no longer friends but accomplices and though he represented the innocent, and they were grateful, it was vanity.

Well, we should all be so reflexive. The reason we are kind to the dead, he argues, is that we owe them no obligation. Well, that is true and an Irish trait that it is the living we should care about which we are not.

The book has remarkably interesting things to say in our post-truth universe about how power determines truth. We are right because we are the powerful and we win.

Thus, our victory determines what is true or not, a dangerous vista in the fascist authoritarian creep that is now evident.

In fact, the protagonist, like the present author, does not like the police. Well, no defence lawyer really does. Clemence, in fact, in an ironic sense, starts to write An Ode to the Police.

The expression of how human society is structured on slavery is also pertinent, albeit slavery with a smile, perhaps a variation of service with a smile, our new corporate feudalism.

Also relevant to our present times, he draws the precise relationship between politics and gangsterism, save that politicians are the gangsters who win. And now it is, of course, corporate and political gangsterdom that rules our universe.

As a self-styled judge penitent, he, of course, now realises and argues that to judge one must first become a penitent. The kind of self-abnegation in the Tridentine and religious maniacs who adorn the Irish profession and trek off to churches in Rome and the Santiago De La Compost walk.

He also elaborates on how judging and condemnation involves crucifixion of a secular and perhaps quasi-religious form. All crucified, all judged. The sea change or the epiphany that leads to self-imposed exile in Amsterdam is his failure to assist a suicide victim who throws herself into the Seine.

Thus, this act of cowardice shows what he is genuinely like, to himself, and not a Good Samaritan and thus off to exile but not before decline. Months of orgy and excess lead to a slippage in the standard of his speeches.

The reference, purely verbal, that I often made to God in my speeches before the court awakened mistrust in my clients. They probably feared that heaven could not represent their interests as well as a lawyer

Though sometimes, it should be said, in a closing speech, God works. Marshall Hall QC at the end of a famous peroration in The Seddon case (1912) representing an old prostitute said:

God did not give her a chance, why do not you?”

And it worked. It often works in Ireland. In God We Trust Inc. But a Hail Mary should not be relied upon at the expense of the scientific and forensic dismantling of the evidence.

Jean Baptiste himself fears, though, the judgment of men not God and regards religion as a huge laundering in the soap sense or indeed money-laundering exercise so evident in mafiosa Catholic countries like Ireland and Italy.

We thus have the lawyer as monster, posing and preening, loquacious and fawning, with avowed but hypocritical good intentions and ostensible and indeed ostentatious charity but, self-serving. It says much for our time and the book concludes with a line worthy of Beckett:

“It’s too late now. It always will be too late. Unfortunately.”

Though Beckett, it should be said, might have said, fortunately. Thus, in 90-odd pages, the lawyer as demon is captured perfectly and the deep-seated hypocrisy of the profession exposed.

There is a certain family resemblance to elements of the Irish profession and the transgression of professional boundaries which allows and permits and endorses public servant barristers to do corporate nixers to serve the agenda of non-public service.

Thus, we should be self-reflexive, but it would be wrong to transliterate this to Mr Camus. He was the opposite. A just man.

But, in our present universe, are we more Jeans Baptise than Camus. That is the problem which Camus fully understood relevant then and now. Thus shallowness, ambition and fraudulence are matters that all lawyers should take account of and turn the lenses on themselves. Many prosecutors are peculiarly incapable of this.

Standards have fallen of the cliff. Worldwide and the narrow sliver that holds the platinum chip standard of justice, the English profession visibly creaking at the edges with the Jean Baptistes worldwide in the ascendant.

David Langwallner is a barrister specialising in public law, immigration, housing and criminal defence including miscarriages of justice. He is emeritus director of the Irish innocence project and was Irish lawyer of the year at the 2015 Irish law awards. His column appears here every Tuesday and Friday. Follow David on Twitter @DLangwallner

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22 thoughts on “David Langwallner: Legends Of The Fall

  1. Tom

    I doubt coherent thought would produce such garbled, unintelligible writing. And the self-aggrandizing and self-satisfied tone hardly signals a worthwhile reflection on God.

    1. Pat

      +1

      I reckon the deliberate poncy style is to get people riled up for clicks or whatever.

      good luck to him though – writing is hard

      1. Pat

        Oh boo hoo. You knew what would happen when you came in here wearing tights and an Elizabethan ruff collar

        ;)

  2. Fearganainm

    Camus wasn’t a half bad goalkeeper which of course raises an important question – could he have kept out Salah’s shot at the weekend?

  3. Gabby

    In an early paragraph you have a misprint ‘Jean Baptiste Clarence’, but you correct it to Clemence in subsequent paragraphs. Conor Cruise O’Brien, a francophile, wrote an account of Camus and his writings in the Fontana Modern Masters series edited by major literary critic Frank Kermode. In analysing the judge-penitent O’Brien drew attention to the religious significance of that character’s name i.e. John the Baptist who symbolically washed Jewish sinners of their sins, including Jesus to whom he apologised for being unworthy to wash His feet + the French word clemence meaning what it seems in English, clemency. O’Brien, who tended to be an agnostic most of his active life, understood the religious significance of what an agnostic non-croyant Camus was trying to say in the novel. It is useful to remember the Gospel admonition: Judge not lest you be judged; and various references to hypocritical shows of charity and godliness.
    Camus was a moralistic writer in a long French literary tradition, but he pursued his themes in nonfiction essais and newspaper articles. (I have the Pleaide collection of his Essais.) His moralistic writings in the 1950s prompted Catholic and reformed theologians to invite him to conferences. He politely thanked them for their esteem but made it clear that he was an incroyant. In the Ireland, England and USA of today it would require a moralistic agnostic writer of Camus’ subtle insight and writerly elan to tap the consciences of pharasaical godserving politicians and clergy.

    1. david langwaLLNER

      I agree with all you have said gabby but it only fortifies why he was the great genius rationalist and tolerant inteltect of the age

      O Brians monograph which I have read was churlishly typical not that he was not a great mind the last great mind Ireland has produced

      simply this Camus was a radical conservative and socialist equally

  4. Lilly

    Having seen first-hand the limitations of your chosen profession, what would you pursue if you were 18 again?

    1. david langwaLLNER

      woodcutter or kantean philosopher in middle europe or house husband to a good women since you ask

  5. Gabby

    Yes, a radical conservative, but he abhorred what Auden called ‘the necessary murder’ in furtherance of left as well as right ideology. Ni victimes ni bourreaux written after the liberation of Paris argued against bloodletting actions by ‘resistants’, not least the obscene epurations against women alleged to have collaborated horizontally. I doubt whether Camus regarded socialism as a holy word seeing what had been done in its name. Orwell in England was a lifelong grassroots person & less likely to philosophise.
    O’Brien is a special case. They will argue for and against him for a long time. His inaction on the Jadotville siege in Katanga has been condemned posthumously. He had a sharp penetrating pen. He called himself a liberal conservative in the Burkean tradition.

    1. Ben Madigan

      “J’ai lancé la bombe sur votre tyrannie, non sur un homme.
      — Sans doute. Mais c’est l’homme qui l’a reçue.”

  6. Verbatim

    Your writings always entitice me to look further into the references that you make and the ideas shared.
    The humanities and arts are under assault around the world. While the cost of education keeps rising, entire disciplines are being slashed.
    Thinkers like Camus are dead if they’re not read, casualties in this all-out war on critical and creative thinking, Time to revisit Camus and pass on his book to young student lawyers.
    Good one “Santiago De La Compost” ;-)

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