Copenhagen (3 page)

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Authors: Michael Frayn

BOOK: Copenhagen
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Heisenberg
  Yes. Yes. Stupid of me.

Margrethe
  Silence again. Those first brief sparks have disappeared, and the ashes have become very cold indeed. So now of course I’m starting to feel almost sorry for him. Sitting here all on his own in the midst of people who hate him, all on his own against the two of us. He looks younger again, like the boy who first came here in 1924. Younger than Christian would have been now. Shy and arrogant and anxious to be loved. Homesick and pleased to be away from home at last. And, yes, it’s sad, because Niels loved him, he was a father to him.

Heisenberg
  So … what are you working on?

Margrethe
  And all he can do is press forward.

Bohr
  Fission, mostly.

Heisenberg
  I saw a couple of papers in the
Physical Review
. The velocity-range relations of fission fragments …?

Bohr
  And something about the interactions of nuclei with deuterons. And you?

Heisenberg
  Various things.

Margrethe
  Fission?

Heisenberg
  I sometimes feel very envious of your cyclotron.

Margrethe
  Why? Are you working on fission yourself?

Heisenberg
  There are over thirty in the United States. Whereas in the whole of Germany … Well .… You still get to your country place, at any rate?

Bohr
  We still go to Tisvilde, yes.

Margrethe
  In the whole of Germany, you were going to say …

Bohr
   … there is not one single cyclotron.

Heisenberg
  So beautiful at this time of year. Tisvilde.

Bohr
  You haven’t come to borrow the cyclotron, have you? That’s not why you’ve come to Copenhagen?

Heisenberg
  That’s not why I’ve come to Copenhagen.

Bohr
  I’m sorry. We mustn’t jump to conclusions.

Heisenberg
  No, we must none of us jump to conclusions of any sort.

Margrethe
  We must wait patiently to be told.

Heisenberg
  It’s not always easy to explain things to the world at large.

Bohr
  I realise that we must always be conscious of the wider audience our words may have. But the lack of
cyclotrons in Germany is surely not a military secret.

Heisenberg
  I’ve no idea what’s a secret and what isn’t.

Bohr
  No secret, either, about why there aren’t any. You can’t say it but I can. It’s because the Nazis have systematically undermined theoretical physics. Why? Because so many people working in the field were Jews. And why were so many of them Jews? Because theoretical physics, the sort of physics done by Einstein, by Schrödinger and Pauli, by Born and Sommerfeld, by you and me, was always regarded in Germany as inferior to experimental physics, and the theoretical chairs and lectureships were the only ones that Jews could get.

Margrethe
  Physics, yes? Physics.

Bohr
  This is physics.

Margrethe
  It’s also politics.

Heisenberg
  The two are sometimes painfully difficult to keep apart.

Bohr
  So, you saw those two papers. I haven’t seen anything by you recently.

Heisenberg
  No.

Bohr
  Not like you. Too much teaching?

Heisenberg
  I’m not teaching. Not at the moment.

Bohr
  My dear Heisenberg—they haven’t pushed you out of your chair at Leipzig? That’s not what you’ve come to tell us?

Heisenberg
  No, I’m still at Leipzig. For part of each week.

Bohr
  And for the rest of the week?

Heisenberg
  Elsewhere. The problem is more work, not less.

Bohr
  I see. Do I?

Heisenberg
  Are you in touch with any of our friends in England? Born? Chadwick?

Bohr
  Hebenberg, we’re under German occupation. Germany’s at war with Britain.

Heisenberg
  I thought you might still have contacts of some sort. Or people in America? We’re not at war with America.

Margrethe
  Yet.

Heisenberg
  You’ve heard nothing from Pauli, in Princeton? Goudsmit? Fermi?

Bohr
  What do you want to know?

Heisenberg
  I was simply curious … I was thinking about Robert Oppenheimer the other day. I had a great set-to with him in Chicago in 1939.

Bohr
  About mesons.

Heisenberg
  Is he still working on mesons?

Bohr
  I’m quite out of touch.

Margrethe
  The only foreign visitor we’ve had was from Germany. Your friend Weizsäcker was here in March.

Heisenberg
  
My
friend?
Your
friend, too. I hope. You know he’s come back to Copenhagen with me? He’s very much hoping to see you again.

Margrethe
  When he came here in March he brought the head of the German Cultural Institute with him.

Heisenberg
  I’m sorry about that. He did it with the best of intentions. He may not have explained to you that the Institute is run by the Cultural Division of the Foreign Office. We have good friends in the foreign service. Particularly at the Embassy here.

Bohr
  Of course. I knew his father when he was Ambassador in Copenhagen in the twenties.

Heisenberg
  It hasn’t changed so much since then, you
know, the German foreign service.

Bohr
  It’s a department of the Nazi government.

Heisenberg
  Germany is more complex than it may perhaps appear from the outside. The different organs of state have quite different traditions, in spite of all attempts at reform. Particularly the foreign service. Our people in the Embassy here are quite old-fashioned in the way they use their influence. They would certainly be trying to see that distinguished local citizens were able to work undisturbed.

Bohr
  Are you telling me that I’m being protected by your friends in the Embassy?

Heisenberg
  What I’m saying, in case Weizsäcker failed to make it clear, is that you would find congenial company there. I know people would be very honoured if you felt able to accept an occasional invitation.

Bohr
  To cocktail parties at the Germany Embassy? To coffee and cakes with the Nazi plenipotentiary?

Heisenberg
  To lectures, perhaps. To discussion groups. Social contacts of any sort could be helpful.

Bohr
  I’m sure they could.

Heisenberg
  Essential, perhaps, in certain circumstances.

Bohr
  In what circumstances?

Heisenberg
  I think we both know.

Bohr
  Because I’m half-Jewish?

Heisenberg
  We all at one time or another may need the help of our friends.

Bohr
  Is this why you’ve come to Copenhagen? To invite me to watch the deportation of my fellow-Danes from a grandstand seat in the windows of the German Embassy?

Heisenberg
  Bohr, please! Please! What else can I do? How else can I help? It’s an impossibly difficult situation
for you, I understand that. It’s also an impossibly difficult one for me.

Bohr
  Yes. I’m sorry. I’m sure you also have the best of intentions.

Heisenberg
  Forget what I said. Unless …

Bohr
  Unless I need to remember it.

Heisenberg
  In any case it’s not why I’ve come.

Margrethe
  Perhaps you should simply say what it is you want to say.

Heisenberg
  What you and I often used to do in the old days was to take an evening stroll.

Bohr
  Often. Yes. In the old days.

Heisenberg
  You don’t feel like a stroll this evening, for old times’ sake?

Bohr
  A little chilly tonight, perhaps, for strolling.

Heisenberg
  This is so difficult. You remember where we first met?

Bohr
  Of course. At Göttingen in 1922.

Heisenberg
  At a lecture festival held in your honour.

Bohr
  It was a high honour. I was very conscious of it.

Heisenberg
  You were being honoured for two reasons. Firstly because you were a great physicist …

Bohr
  Yes, yes.

Heisenberg
   … and secondly because you were one of the very few people in Europe who were prepared to have dealings with Germany. The war had been over for four years, and we were still lepers. You held out your hand to us. You’ve always inspired love, you know that. Wherever you’ve been, wherever you’ve worked. Here in Denmark. In England, in America. But in Germany we worshipped you. Because you held out your hand to us.

Bohr
  Germany’s changed.

Heisenberg
  Yes. Then we were down. And you could be generous.

Margrethe
  And now you’re up.

Heisenberg
  And generosity’s harder. But you held out your hand to us then, and we took it.

Bohr
  Yes No! Not you. As a matter of fact. You bit it.

Heisenberg
  Bit it?

Bohr
  Bit my hand! You did! I held it out, in my most statesmanlike and reconciliatory way, and you gave it a very nasty nip.

Heisenberg
I
did?

Bohr
  The first time I ever set eyes on you. At one of those lectures I was giving in Göttingen.

Heisenberg
  What are you talking about?

Bohr
  You stood up and laid into me.

Heisenberg
  Oh … I offered a few comments.

Bohr
  Beautiful summer’s day. The scent of roses drifting in from the gardens. Rows of eminent physicists and mathematicians, all nodding approval of my benevolence and wisdom. Suddenly, up jumps a cheeky young pup and tells me that my mathematics are wrong.

Heisenberg
  They were wrong.

Bohr
  How old were you?

Heisenberg
  Twenty.

Bohr
  Two years younger than the century.

Heisenberg
  Not quite.

Bohr
  December 5th, yes?

Heisenberg
  1.93 years younger than the century.

Bohr
  To be precise.

Heisenberg
  No—to two places of decimals. To be
precise
, 1.928 …7 …6 …7 …1 …

Bohr
  I can always keep track of you, all the same. And the century.

Margrethe
  And Niels has suddenly decided to love him again, in spite of everything. Why? What happened? Was it the recollection of that summer’s day in Göttingen? Or everything? Or nothing at all? Whatever it was, by the time we’ve sat down to dinner the cold ashes have started into flame once again.

Bohr
  You were always so combative! It was the same when we played table-tennis at Tisvilde. You looked as if you were trying to kill me.

Heisenberg
  I wanted to win. Of course I wanted to win.
You
wanted to win.

Bohr
  I wanted an agreeable game of table-tennis.

Heisenberg
  You couldn’t see the expression on your face.

Bohr
  I could see the expression on yours.

Heisenberg
  What about those games of poker in the ski-hut at Bayrischzell, then? You once cleaned us all out! You remember that? With a non-existent straight! We’re all mathematicians—we’re all counting the cards—we’re 90 per cent certain he hasn’t got anything. But on he goes, raising us, raising us. This insane confidence. Until our faith in mathematical probability begins to waver, and one by one we all throw in.

Bohr
  I thought I
had
a straight! I misread the cards! I bluffed myself!

Margrethe
  Poor Niels.

Heisenberg
  Poor Niels? He won! He bankrupted us! You were insanely competitive! He got us all playing poker
once with imaginary cards!

Bohr
  You played chess with Weizsäcker on an imaginary board!

Margrethe
  Who won?

Bohr
  Need you ask? At Bayrischzell we’d ski down from the hut to get provisions, and he’d make even that into some kind of race! You remember? When we were there with Weizsäcker and someone? You got out a stop-watch.

Heisenberg
  It took poor Weizsäcker eighteen minutes.

Bohr
  You were down there in ten, of course.

Heisenberg
  Eight.

Bohr
  I don’t recall how long I took.

Heisenberg
  Forty-five minutes.

Bohr
  Thank you.

Margrethe
  Some rather swift skiing going on here, I think.

Heisenberg
  Your skiing was like your science. What were you waiting for? Me and Weizsäcker to come back and suggest some slight change of emphasis?

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