Witness:
A Long Work Of Fiction |
By
CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT
From
the Saturday Review, 1952
In the minds of most people, all doubt as to the innocence
or guilt of Alger Hiss came to an end when the jury in the
second Hiss trial brought in a verdict of guilty. The public
and much of the press, taking it as an article of faith that
the jury verdict represents ultimate immutable truth, have
combined to ridicule those in whose minds there still remains
doubt, and to pillory those who refuse to turn their backs
on Alger Hiss.
I
do not share this blind faith in juries. I think Hiss is innocent.
And I am sure that if the verdict was right and he is guilty,
it is the purest chance that the jury guessed the correct
answer. A good way to see how the jury could go astray is
to compare the trial record with accounts written at the time
by top newspaper reporters. Time and again such accounts show
that these men failed to understand important testimony. If
with all their training the reporters couldn't grasp intricate
evidence, how could the untrained jurors be expected to do
better?
One of the most fundamental problems in a case of this sort
is that, for all our fine legal doctrine to the contrary,
in fact the burden of proof was on Hiss to prove his innocence,
rather than on the Government to prove him guilty. Further,
we seem deliberately to make it as difficult as possible for
a jury to reach a rational verdict. We forbid taking notes
by jurors, we deny them a copy of the trial record when they
enter upon their deliberations. But perhaps these hobbles
placed on the jury should come as no surprise in a society
which takes pride in the image of Justice wearing a blindfold.
After
reading this book, I am convinced that Mr. Chambers is the
author of one of longest works of fiction of the year. The
tip-off about the book is that it is too persuasive - on close
examination it becomes obvious that the author is not a detached
teller of truth but rather a pitchman seeking to put across
a bill of goods.
It
is a too-well-scrubbed Chambers who is depicted here. Many
of the lies, eccentricities, and immoralities in his past
are forgotten, which hardly fits in with the air of complete
candor the book tries so hard to convey. At the same time
his "enemies" - i.e. anyone who doesn't believe
his story - are pictured as either snobs or Communists. In
this connection he manages to damn such people as Justice
Frankfurter and Dr. Carl Binger by an ingenious guilt-by-remote
association technique which stops just short of the libel
laws.
Another
giveaway about this book is that Chambers, like the queen
in Hamlet's play, protests his innocence too much. In doing
so he displays a remarkable attitude toward evidence. On the
one hand he is fond of referring to mysterious unnamed witnesses
who have confirmed his story, although, regrettably, they
have never given their testimony in public, On the other hand,
real honest-to-goodness testimony which the public can study
is treated in a peculiar manner. An example is Chambers' account
of a trip to Peterborough, N. H., which was thoroughly disproved
at the trial. The author makes the astonishing statement that
the proven discrepancies in his tale show he was telling the
truth, since "obviously, if I had been lying, I would
have taken care to contrive a better story." This is
not the only example of this wonderful heads-I-win tails-you-lose
approach.
The
trouble with a book that tries to explain away unfavorable
evidence is that it can't explain evidence which comes to
view after the hook is written. Chamber's claim that he hired
his colored maid on the suggestion of his landlady looks ridiculous
in the light of the recent affidavit by a relative of the
landlady that Chambers had no maid when he was living in the
apartment in question. And of course this book went to press
too soon for him to explain away the scientific testimony
which Hiss's attorneys have recently gathered, demonstrating
that the State Department documents were not typed on the
old Hiss typewriter, and that they were not stored away for
ten years in the manner Chambers claims.
Whittaker
Chambers does give in this book a very moving and heartening
account of his return to religion, and of the comfort he has
found in his new faith. Perhaps, then, he will not take amiss
the suggestion that he would do well to study the Ninth Commandment:
"Thou shalt not bear false witness..."
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