Copenhagen (10 page)

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Authors: Michael Frayn

BOOK: Copenhagen
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Margrethe
  So this man you’ve put at the centre of the universe—is it you, or is it Heisenberg?

Bohr
  Now, now, my love.

Margrethe
  Yes, but it makes a difference.

Bohr
  Either of us. Both of us. Yourself. All of us.

Margrethe
  If it’s Heisenberg at the centre of the universe, then the one bit of the universe that he can’t see is Heisenberg.

Heisenberg
  So …

Margrethe
  So it’s no good asking him why he came to Copenhagen in 1941. He doesn’t know!

Heisenberg
  I thought for a moment just then I caught a glimpse of it.

Margrethe
  Then you turned to look.

Heisenberg
  And away it went.

Margrethe
  Complementarity again. Yes?

Bohr
  Yes, yes.

Margrethe
  I’ve typed it out often enough. If you’re doing something you have to concentrate on you can’t also be thinking about doing it, and if you’re thinking about doing it then you can’t actually be doing it. Yes?

Heisenberg
  Swerve left, swerve right, or think about it and die.

Bohr
  But
after
you’ve done it …

Margrethe
  You look back and make a guess, just like the rest of us. Only a worse guess, because you didn’t see yourself doing it, and we did. Forgive me, but you don’t
even know why you did uncertainty in the first place.

Bohr
  Whereas if
you’re
the one at the centre of the universe …

Margrethe
  Then I can tell you that it was because you wanted to drop a bomb on Schrödinger.

Heisenberg
  I wanted to show he was wrong, certainly.

Margrethe
  And Schrödinger was winning the war. When the Leipzig chair first became vacant that autumn he was short-listed for it and you weren’t. You needed a wonderful new weapon.

Bohr
  Not to criticise, Margrethe, but you have a tendency to make everything personal.

Margrethe
  Because everything
is
personal! You’ve just read us all a lecture about it! You know how much Heisenberg wanted a chair. You know the pressure he was under from his family. I’m sorry, but you want to make everything seem heroically abstract and logical. And when you tell the story, yes, it all falls into place, it all has a beginning and a middle and an end. But I was there, and when I remember what it was like I’m there still, and I look around me and what I see isn’t a story! It’s confusion and rage and jealousy and tears and no one knowing what things mean or which way they’re going to go.

Heisenberg
  All the same, it works, it works.

Margrethe
  Yes, it works wonderfully. Within three months of publishing your uncertainty paper you’re offered Leipzig.

Heisenberg
  I didn’t mean that.

Margrethe
  Not to mention somewhere else and somewhere else.

Heisenberg
  Halle and Munich and Zürich.

Bohr
  And various American universities.

Heisenberg
  But I didn’t mean that.

Margrethe
  And when you take up your chair at Leipzig you’re how old?

Heisenberg
  Twenty-six.

Bohr
  The youngest full professor in Germany.

Heisenberg
  I mean the Copenhagen Interpretation. The Copenhagen Interpretation works. However we got there, by whatever combination of high principles and low calculation, of most painfully hard thought and most painfully childish tears, it works. It goes on working.

Margrethe
  Yes, and why did you both accept the Interpretation in the end? Was it really because you wanted to re-establish humanism?

Bohr
  Of course not. It was because it was the only way to explain what the experimenters had observed.

Margrethe
  Or was it because now you were becoming a professor you wanted a solidly established doctrine to teach? Because you wanted to have your new ideas publicly endorsed by the head of the church in Copenhagen? And perhaps Niels agreed to endorse them in return for your accepting
his
doctrines. For recognising him as head of the church. And if you want to know why you came to Copenhagen in 1941 I’ll tell you that as well. You’re right—there’s no great mystery about it. You came to show yourself off to us.

Bohr
  Margrethe!

Margrethe
  No! When he first came in 1924 he was a humble assistant lecturer from a humiliated nation, grateful to have a job. Now here you are, back in triumph—the leading scientist in a nation that’s conquered most of Europe. You’ve come to show us how well you’ve done in life.

Bohr
  This is so unlike you!

Margrethe
  I’m sorry, but isn’t that really why he’s here? Because he’s burning to let us know that he’s in charge of
some vital piece of secret research. And that even so he’s preserved a lofty moral independence. Preserved it so famously that he’s being watched by the Gestapo. Preserved it so successfully that he’s now also got a wonderfully important moral dilemma to face.

Bohr
  Yes, well, now you’re simply working yourself up.

Margrethe
  A chain reaction. You tell one painful truth and it leads to two more. And as you frankly admit, you’re going to go back and continue doing precisely what you were doing before, whatever Niels tells you.

Heisenberg
  Yes.

Margrethe
  Because you wouldn’t dream of giving up such a wonderful opportunity for research.

Heisenberg
  Not if I can possibly help it.

Margrethe
  Also you want to demonstrate to the Nazis how useful theoretical physics can be. You want to save the honour of German science. You want to be there to reestablish it in all its glory as soon as the war’s over.

Heisenberg
  All the same, I don’t tell Speer that the reactor …

Margrethe
   … will produce plutonium, no, because you’re afraid of what will happen if the Nazis commit huge resources, and you fail to deliver the bombs. Please don’t try to tell us that you’re a hero of the resistance.

Heisenberg
  I’ve never claimed to be a hero.

Margrethe
  Your talent is for skiing too fast for anyone to see where you are. For always being in more than one position at a time, like one of your particles.

Heisenberg
  I can only say that it worked. Unlike most of the gestures made by heroes of the resistance. It worked! I know what you think. You think I should have joined the plot against Hitler, and got myself hanged like the others.

Bohr
  Of course not.

Heisenberg
  You don’t say it, because there are some things that can’t be said. But you think it.

Bohr
  No.

Heisenberg
  What would it have achieved? What would it have achieved if you’d dived in after Christian, and drowned as well? But that’s another thing that can’t be said.

Bohr
  Only thought.

Heisenberg
  Yes. I’m sorry.

Bohr
  And rethought. Every day.

Heisenberg
  You had to be held back, I know.

Margrethe
  Whereas you held yourself back.

Heisenberg
  Better to stay on the boat, though, and fetch it about. Better to remain alive, and throw the lifebuoy. Surely!

Bohr
  Perhaps. Perhaps not.

Heisenberg
  Better. Better.

Margrethe
  Really it is ridiculous. You reasoned your way, both of you, with such astonishing delicacy and precision into the tiny world of the atom. Now it turns out that everything depends upon these really rather large objects on our shoulders. And what’s going on in there is …

Heisenberg
  Elsinore.

Margrethe
  Elsinore, yes.

Heisenberg
  And you may be right. I
was
afraid of what would happen. I
was
conscious of being on the winning side … So many explanations for everything I did! So many of them sitting round the lunch-table! Somewhere at the head of the table, I think, is the real reason I came
to Copenhagen. Again I turn to look .… And for a moment I almost see its face. Then next time I look the chair at the head of the table is completely empty. There’s no reason at all. I didn’t tell Speer simply because I didn’t think of it. I came to Copenhagen simply because I did think of it. A million things we might do or might not do every day. A million decisions that make themselves. Why didn’t you kill me?

Bohr
  Why didn’t I …?

Heisenberg
  Kill me. Murder me. That evening in 1941. Here we are, walking back towards the house, and you’ve just leapt to the conclusion that I’m going to arm Hitler with nuclear weapons. You’ll surely take any reasonable steps to prevent it happening.

Bohr
  By murdering you?

Heisenberg
  We’re in the middle of a war. I’m an enemy. There’s nothing odd or immoral about killing enemies.

Bohr
  I should fetch out my cap-pistol?

Heisenberg
  You won’t need your cap-pistol. You won’t even need a mine. You can do it without any loud bangs, without any blood, without any spectacle of suffering. As cleanly as a bomb-aimer pressing his release three thousand metres above the earth. You simply wait till I’ve gone. Then you sit quietly down in your favourite armchair here and repeat aloud to Margrethe, in front of our unseen audience, what I’ve just told you. I shall be dead almost as soon as poor Casimir. A lot sooner than Gamow.

Bohr
  My dear Heisenberg, the suggestion is of course …

Heisenberg
  Most interesting. So interesting that it never even occurred to you. Complementarity, once again. I’m your enemy; I’m also your friend. I’m a danger to mankind; I’m also your guest. I’m a particle; I’m also a wave. We have one set of obligations to the world in general, and we have other sets, never to be reconciled, to
our fellow-countrymen, to our neighbours, to our friends, to our family, to our children. We have to go through not two slits at the same time but twenty-two. All we can do is to look afterwards, and see what happened.

Margrethe
  I’ll tell you another reason why you did uncertainty: you have a natural affinity for it.

Heisenberg
  Well, I must cut a gratifyingly chastened figure when I return in 1947. Crawling on my hands and knees again. My nation back in ruins.

Margrethe
  Not really. You’re demonstrating that once more you personally have come out on top.

Heisenberg
  Begging for food parcels?

Margrethe
  Established in Göttingen under British protection, in charge of post-war German science.

Heisenberg
  That first year in Göttingen I slept on straw.

Margrethe
  Elisabeth said you had a most charming house thereafter.

Heisenberg
  I was given it by the British.

Margrethe
  Your new foster-parents. Who’d confiscated it from someone else.

Bohr
  Enough, my love, enough.

Margrethe
  No, I’ve kept my thoughts to myself for all these years. But it’s maddening to have this clever son forever dancing about in front of our eyes, forever demanding our approval, forever struggling to shock us, forever begging to be told what the limits to his freedom are, if only so that he can go out and transgress them! I’m sorry, but really .… On your hands and knees? It’s my dear, good, kind husband who’s on his hands and knees! Literally. Crawling down to the beach in the darkness in 1943, fleeing like a thief in the night from his own homeland to escape being murdered. The protection of the
German Embassy that you boasted about didn’t last for long. We were incorporated into the Reich.

Heisenberg
  I warned you in 1941. You wouldn’t listen. At least Bohr got across to Sweden.

Margrethe
  And even as the fishing-boat was taking him across the Sound two freighters were arriving in the harbour to ship the entire Jewish population of Denmark eastwards. That great darkness inside the human soul was flooding out to engulf us all.

Heisenberg
  I did try to warn you.

Margrethe
  Yes, and where are you? Shut away in a cave like a savage, trying to conjure an evil spirit out of a hole in the ground. That’s what it came down to in the end, all that shining springtime in the 1920s, that’s what it produced—a more efficient machine for killing people.

Bohr
  It breaks my heart every time I think of it.

Heisenberg
  It broke all our hearts.

Margrethe
  And this wonderful machine may yet kill every man, woman, and child in the world. And if we really are the centre of the universe, if we really are all that’s keeping it in being, what will be left?

Bohr
  Darkness. Total and final darkness.

Margrethe
  Even the questions that haunt us will at last be extinguished. Even the ghosts will die.

Heisenberg
  I can only say that I didn’t do it. I didn’t build the bomb.

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