Act 1
A small congress hall illuminated by magnificent chandeliers. The walls and ceiling are bright red. A rostrum facing wooden benches made of antique mahogany. A door at the back and a door at the side. A handsome young man of somewhat androgynous features comes in through the back door. He is dressed like a dandy, rather in the style of the American writer Tom Wolfe, in a dazzling white suit and mauve tie, spats, and expensive brown shoes. Although slim, his back seems disproportionately bulky, as if he were carrying something there beneath the shoulders of his jacket. His name is Michael.
MICHAEL [addressing the side door]: You may enter now, Professor Marx.
Enter a Jewish-looking man with a large forehead and bushy beard. He is wearing a black suit.
KARL MARX [testily]: Where am I and why was I brought here?
MICHAEL: This is your big day, Karl. A symposium on your philosophy has been arranged. We painted the walls red to make you feel at home. The most important of the practitioners of Marxism will be brought before you and you can question them about why they did what they did in your name. We want to find out exactly where you and they went wrong.
MARX: Whoâs we? And where am I?
MICHAEL: Iâll answer your second question first. Youâre in the afterlife. âWeâ are the Boss and his associates.
MARX: The Boss?
MICHAEL: Usually known as God. Iâm his special messenger, Michael.
MARX: Nonsense. There is no God or afterlife.
MICHAEL: How do you then explain being here in the Earth year 2004 when you died in 1883?
MARX: Me, die? I donât recall that, although I was very ill in 1883.
MICHAEL: I can assure you that you are dead. In the world beyond, weâre not allowed to tell lies. Not that I ever felt the inclination, unlike some of the Bossâs associates. Let me ask you a question. Do you know the names Lenin and Stalin? Or Mao Tse Tung and Ho Chi Minh? I think you do, although they all came to prominence after your death.
MARX [surprised]: I do. I saw these people in my dreams. Some of the things they did shocked me.
MICHAEL: No, Karl. You did not dream these people. You were allowed to see what they did in your name from the vantage point of the afterlife. The Boss likes to use the afterlife to set people straight. Some are actually punished. Not you, though, because the Boss actually quite approved of you. Even though you didnât believe in Him, He believed in you, in His own way. Helping the struggling masses and all that. You were a good sort, in spite of your pedantry and your vicious polemics with others on the left who didnât agree with you. He didnât much like your letting your family starve, either. But all in all, He was a fan. Hence this symposium. Not everybody in the afterlife gets a symposium all to himself. Youâll be able to confront your followers and your enemies. They will also be allowed to question you. Weâre fair here. Not like on Earth. Between you and me, the Earthâs a bit of a shit hole.
MARX: It certainly is. Thatâs what I was trying to correct. But it seems that things didnât work out. In fact, I may even have made things worse. All those millions of peasants that died under the Bolsheviks. All those people put in slave camps by Stalin. Oh, my God.
MICHAEL: Iâm glad you believe in Him.
MARX: That was just an exclamation.
MICHAEL: I think not. You do realise youâre in the afterlife, donât you?
MARX: Oh, I suppose so.
MICHAEL: And who could have kept you alive but the Boss?
MARX: You may well be right. Iâm so confused.
MICHAEL: Donât worry. The Boss understands the fallibility of the human race. After all, He created it, unfortunately.
MARX: Unfortunately? You mean God repented of having produced man?
MICHAEL: You know that as well as I, old son. Youâre a Jew and have the Old Testament imprinted in your brain. You know what it says there. How Adam and Eve were given free will and chose the wrong tree, the Tree of Knowledge instead of the Tree of Life. Right from the start, the human race was discontented. Thought it could be as powerful as the Boss Himself. Remember the Tower of Babel. The Americans, as you know, put two men on the moon. And now they have two vehicles on Mars. And for what purpose? To be able to examine a few rocks, apparently. Of course, they really have larger schemes afoot, to do with political and military power. You will have noted that the Soviets never managed to get a man on the moon. Capitalism won there, didnât it? And went on to crush your system generally. But we donât really blame you. As I said, the Boss esteems you highly.
MARX: Er, I donât quite know how to put this, but could I talk directly to your Boss, as you call Him? Person to person, so to speak.
MICHAEL: Iâm glad youâve finally admitted you believe in Him. But you canât. Heâs invisible. By definition.
MARX: But people in the Bible saw him.
MICHAEL: No. He appeared as an image in their brains. They assumed it was Him. Nobody has seen Him face to face, even in the afterlife, despite what the lunatic St Paul says.
MARX: I would dearly like to know why He made such a mess of man. Adam and Eve went wrong from the start, choosing disobedience. Then Cain killed his brother. Then Sodom and Gomorrah. Why did He let it all happen?
MICHAEL: He did try to correct man, giving him warnings. Remember Noah and the Ark. The idea was to save all the good people from the destruction of the Flood. But even Noah, one of the Bossâs chosen, turned out to be a bit of a drunkard. So imagine what the bad guys were like. The prophets leave us in no doubt. Just one example: Jeremiah. You know what he said.
MARX: He said such a lot. All good stuff. The truth.
MICHAEL: Get an earful of this. In one place Jeremiah repeats the Bossâs words verbatim: âThy children have forsaken me, and sworn by them that are no gods: when I had fed them to the full, they then committed adultery, and assembled themselves by troops in the harlotsâ houses. They were as fed horses in the morning: every one neighed after his neighbourâs wife. Shall I not visit thee for these things, saith the Lord, and shall not my soul be avenged on a nation such as this?â
MARX: I get the point. Magnificently phrased, too. But tell me. If God is God, why did He make such a mess? Didnât He know what was going to happen?
MICHAEL: I was going to say, you must ask Him, but of course you canât. Itâs a tricky question thatâs beyond me. Iâm only a messenger.
MARX: I mean if your Boss is really an all-powerful God, He doesnât make mistakes.
MICHAEL: That point was made by St Augustine, who had trouble in squaring it with his acceptance of the literal truth of the Bible, where it states that God repented, got angry, and so on. Augustine said God cannot get angry or repent.
MARX: And there it is, in black and white, in the Old Testament.
MICHAEL: Between you and me, the Old Testament is right. I myself know the Boss got furious many times. I think all the problem comes from the Devil. The Boss let him loose on the world, to test people, and I think he got out of control. Humanity seemed to admire him. Heâs a handsome fellow, you know, a former close colleague of mine. But he got too big for his boots, and the human race took after him. Thatâs why the world is such a scummy place. Thatâs why you get all those stinking politicians ruling everything and lining their pockets at the same time. Whatâs it they say on Earth? âThe shit floats to the topâ. It certainly does. An honest person doesnât have much of a chance. [Sighs] I repeat, I think the Devilâs out of control. I donât like to say this, but heâs become the real ruler of the world. Thatâs only my opinion, mind, and the Boss has always given me freedom to think as I like, so Iâm not afraid of voicing it. But Iâll tell you something really interesting. [Whispers] I think thereâs something or someone even more powerful than the Boss. Iâve heard the word Brahman muttered several times here. [A deafening thunderclap] Oh my, I think I went too far. The Boss is angry again.
MARX: Youâre talking a lot of nonsense and I must be hearing it in a dream. I actually prefer to believe in evolution. Darwin.
MICHAEL: So you think the human race had its origin in primeval slime. Thinking about its history and its leaders and politicians I can see your point. Of course, you can believe what you want. Free will and all that, given by the Boss to all and sundry. Actually, there was a Jesuit priest in the twentieth century who also believed in evolution. He was a palaeontologist and had terrible trouble from his superiors. You may have had a glimpse of him. Teilhard de Chardonnay, or something like that. Curious name. His family must have been in the wine business.
MARX: Canât say I did. Iâve never had much time for Catholics, however heretical. Look here, why canât we start the symposium? Iâd be more on my own ground there. Nice talking to you, though. And thank you for bringing me here, even if the whole thing is my dream.
MICHAEL: As you wish. After all, it is your day, by the Bossâs command. We have a whole crowd of Marxists waiting outside. You would probably prefer to see them one by one, wouldnât you?
MARX: Certainly.
Michael goes over to the side door and lets in a small, bald man with Mongolian eyes and dressed like Marx in a sober black suit.
MICHAEL: Announcing comrade Lenin.
Lenin goes up to the rostrum in front of where Marx is sitting and bows respectfully.
MARX: Greetings, comrade. You were the first of my followers to actually carry out a revolution. I saw what happened. There was a terrible mess because no one was supposed to start a Marxist revolution in such a backward place as Russia. You jumped the gun, my friend. Trying to emulate your brother, the Peopleâs Will fellow who was executed for his attempt on the life of the Tsar. And youâre not really a European, are you?
LENIN: Racially, very few of us Russians are. But I am surprised at such a remark coming from you, my most esteemed sir. I thought you were an out and out internationalist.
MARX: Never had much time for the Russians, beg your pardon. After all, I am a German. Whatâs it that an English writer said about you lot? âThe Russians are a people that have all the virtues and vices of everybody else, except common senseâ.
LENIN: Shame on...