Science fictional solipsism
The woman who holds the weekly gatherings where
the occult is discussed is called Miss Meta Mostyn Ford.
Miss Ford is the one who helps herself to a packet of magic powder in Angela’s
absence and lets the magic loose, causing all sorts of damage.
She says something very strange while under
the influence:
“No place and no person matters when I am not
there. There are no places and no people existing where I am not. I have
suspected it before, and now I am sure that everything is all a pretence,
except me. Look how easy it was to dismiss that gross grocer from sight. He was
just a bit of background. I have painted him out."
The ‘gross grocer’ is the Mayor, who was made
invisible by her actions.
So while Sarah Brown
believes that she is not real but most other people are, Miss Ford believes the
opposite.
Such
ideas remind me very much of themes such as constructed reality and pantheistic
solipsism that are often found in science fiction.
Only
the narrator or main character is real, everyone else is an actor or construct.
The environment is all specially constructed too, like a stage set. The Truman
Story is a good example of this.
Robert
A. Heinlein wrote a short story called They about a man who suffers from the
delusion that he is one of the few ‘real’ entities in the universe, and that
the other ‘real’ entities have created the rest of the universe in a conspiracy
to deceive him.
I
would not have expected to see similar ideas put forward as early as 1919. Where did
Stella Benson’s inspiration come from?