CHRISTOPHER ISHERWOOD - Published 1939
Isherwood was a British ex-patriot who came to Southern California with his friend W. H. Auden on the eve of World War II. These excerpts are from his DIARIES. He became interested in the Hindu gurus who were here and was once an attendee at the Vedanta Society (as I once was.)
Page 233) From 1939.
..." Krishnamurti was a slight, sallow little man with a scrubby chin and rather bloodshot eyes, whose face bore only faint traces of the extraordinary beauty he must have had as a boy. He was very quiet and modest man and never talked in ordinary company about philosophy or religion. He seemed fondest of animals and not at least with children. Gerald complained that he got violently upset about trifles - like catching a train - and showed little sign of inward calm. Certainly, he didn't impress me as Prabhavananda did; but he had a kind of simple dignity which was very touching. And - there was no getting away from it - he had done what no other man alive today has done; he had refused to become a god.
Page 237) From 1940
..."Garbo was at tea with us today. I think Peter is right when he says she's a "dumb cluck." She actually didn't know who Daladier was. If you watch her for a quarter of an hour, you see every one of her famous expressions. She repeats them, quite irrelevantly. There is the iron sternness of Ninotchka, the languorous open -lipped surrender of Camille, Mata Hari's wicked laugh, Christina's boyish toss of the head, Anna Christies's grimace of disgust. She is so amazingly beautiful, so noble, so naturally compelling and commanding, that her ridiculous artificiality, her downright silliness can't spoil the effect.
Page 243) From 1942.
Yesterday. the Swami drove down to visit us. The day passed off quite pleasantly, although there were some embarrassing silences. The Swami, as always, was very quiet and polite. We drove him up to Trabuco. "Is smoking permitted here?" he asked. It isn't. But he smoked.
From
Writing Los Angeles
A Literary Anthology
Edited by David L. Ulin
Library of America publisher
Copyright 2002